Lead me not into temptation (especially bookstores)

A guy at work had a t-shirt that says "Lead me not into temptation" and then is smaller print below it says "(especially  bookstores)".  I need that shirt. I was wandering the streets of Palo Alto after dinner Friday night when headed into the Borders to see if they might happen to have any ultra-cheap, beautiful photography coffee books on deep discount.  :-)  A boy can dream, right?   Well imagine my surprise when I found Philippe Bourseiller's Call of the Desert for $12.95.

This is a really pretty, thick, large format coffee table book covering North Africa.  It's really pretty to look at but there aren't many words in it.  There are few stories about the pictures and the captions for the photos are all at the back of the book.  There are no page numbers which makes it difficult to find things.  Oh well - it's a pretty book.

For $12.95, I'll take it.  What else have you got?

Next up was a book about Ansel Adams by Lauris Morgan-Griffiths called Ansel Adams - Landscapes of the American West for $19.95.

This is a REALLY BIG BOOK, measuring 17 inches high by 14 inches wide.  There are a lot of double-truck images which work out to about 27" x 17".  This is a difficult book to read if you don't have a good way to support it!  The text is OK and there's enough background on each picture to give you a sense of why it's in the collection.

I've now spent a lot of time going through the various photography coffee table books I've got, gathering design ideas for the book on Yellowstone images I'd like to put together.  I've got more than enough source material - I just have to put it all together.

Adobe continues install stupidity in CS4?

According to this Hardmac.com rumor, Adobe's installer is STILL refusing to install the Creative Suite on case-sensitive file systems.  This is an issue that bit me hard earlier this year when I had to reinstall my Mac just to install CS3.  According to the same page Adobe is also disabling installs on SSD drives (flash drives, Solid State Drives, etc.) So if you just bought a MacBook Pro with the Solid State storage option to make a rough, tough, shock-resistant traveling photo editing station, you're out of luck!

It would be nice to see some sort of in-depth explanation from Adobe about why these limitations exist.  Combined with the superficial crappiness of the Adobe Installer (and updater) apps, little gotchas like this just make Adobe look bad.  The install is one of the worst parts of the Adobe experience - at least give us a little info so we don't feel like you're just doing it to us for the fun of it!

Does anyone out there know why these limitations exist?

Back from Wyoming/Yellowstone, and Adobe CS4

Although our flight ended up delayed by 24 hours, we made it back to California OK.  I got a lot of great shots and I've decided that I'm going to put a book together with my shots from this trip and our trip 2 years ago for Christmas.  I made a simple test book of my shots from Vietnam and I learned a lot from that experience.  I want to give it another try and see if I can do (a lot) better. Last time I used to book printing module in Apple's Aperture software and printing service and I was happy with how easy it was to use.  I don't actually own Aperture though and my 30 day trial is over so this is a good excuse to try some other tools.  The next logical choice would be Blurb, and I've downloaded their BookSmart software and I was surprised at how limiting it is, although people seems to really like the printing quality/value.   Luckily you can just upload pre-rastered pages from anything that outputs and use them purely as a printing service.   (As a side note, I believe that you can set up Aperture to output pages of any size and use Aperture for the layout without using Apple's printing.)

I have Adobe's InDesign and I've always wanted to get more familiarity with Adobe's Creative Suite so I'm going to give it try on this project.   On a whim, I went to Barnes and Noble to see if there were any books out for CS4 yet and to my surprise, there was already a copy of Adobe InDesign for Dummies on the shelf.  (Pretty fast, since CS4 started shipping last week.)  I checked the copyright page and it's copyrighted 2009!   Is that legal???

In Wyoming

We've been in Wyoming for a couple days now and everything is going well.  We're staying at a friend's hay ranch and we've taken a trip up to Silver Gate, Montana and spent some time in Yellowstone and had a quick trip to Grand Teton National Park. The wildlife viewing has been excellent and the aspens are beautiful.  Our Internet here is spotty but I hope to have some photos  shortly.

Going to Cody, Wyoming

I'm taking a spontaneous last-minute vacation to a ranch outside Cody, Wyoming next month and I'm looking forward to the photographic opportunities of both Eastern Yellowstone and the more open plains of Wyoming.  According to Wikipedia, Cody is a town of 8,800 people with a real airport, a newspaper,  and rodeos at least 90 nights a year.  According to The Internet, houses cost a couple hundred thousand dollars although it's easy to spend a million dollars on a really nice new ranch house on a huge piece of property. But I'm more intrigued by a different side of "The West" - the downfall, depopulation, and wasting away of lots of little towns across the American heartland that just don't have the stamina to keep going.

I have a book called "Ghosts in the Wilderness - Abandoned America" that chronicles various small towns and homesteads in the Dakotas, Colorado, and Wyoming that are simply being abandoned due to lack of people.  The photographs are large and wonderful - abandoned trucks, crumbling plaster living rooms, and wide open plains that remind me of the picture of Bunny Lebowski's Kansas homestead.

The reasoning behind the abandonment of small towns in America makes perfect sense - millions of acres of prairie don't need little towns every 10 miles anymore to take care of them.  People grow up watching TV and want to move to the Big City but nobody ever grows up and wants to move out in the middle of nowhere.

The formula for finding an abandoned town seems pretty clear - look for a highway and a set of train tracks that runs a long ways between two cities that are still surviving and scattered in between are probably a few towns under a couple hundred people and falling.

Will we find anything cool to take pictures of?  Will we have perfect weather for sunrise shots of the mountains?  Will we find a 1930's pickup truck resting ever so perfectly by the side of the road?  We'll see...

Photobooth at a wedding

testing out the photobooth Last weekend I went to wonderful wedding where in addition to being a guest I set up a self-service photobooth for people to take their own pictures.  This is a quick rundown on what worked, what didn't, and what I'd do differently.  I'd never set up a self-serve thing before and overall I learned more about people and crowds than photography.  :-)

I've seen photobooths at events before and I was looking forward to setting one up.  People inherently take different pictures of themselves when they're in control of the picture.  Kids especially like to ham it up when they think they can get away with it and even adults act more spontaneous when there's not the pressure of a photographer telling them to ham it up.

In the simplest sense, a photobooth is just a camera on a tripod with a way to trigger it.  Here was the list of requirements I laid out:

1) It has to be easy to use.  People shouldn't have to do anything besides smile and push the button.  People don't want to think.

2) It has to be able to run mostly unattended.

3) The images have to be high quality because people should be able to make some decent sized prints.

4) This was going to be set up in an outdoor courtyard from about 2:00pm until 9:00pm which means the ambient light went from bright to zero over the course of the day.

5) I wanted to be able to accommodate large groups of people.

6) I'd like to shoot at f/8 for sharpness and ISO 400 for noise in order to get the best quality out of the Canon 40-D.

7) The fewer wires running on the ground the better, since hordes of small children and drunken revelers might be running around with little supervision.  That means wireless triggering.

photobooth setup with tripod and two strobes

In order to get sharp pictures (especially outdoors, at night) some sort of flash is needed.  In order to light groups of 10 people or so for a hours at a time I opted for plug-in studio flashes (Alien Bees) instead of speedlights like a Canon 580 EX II.  That means no TTL metering, so we're shooting on manual mode with changing sunlight throughout the day. I ended up adjusting the exposure a couple times throughout the day and just metering with the histogram.   The only real exposure problems were white shirts (and dresses) getting too close to one of the umbrellas which led to over exposure.

Everything was shot in RAW so there was a lot of latitude for post-processing.  A total of about 600 shots were taken which worked out to about 7.5 GB of data.

The trigger for the photobooth. As simple as possible with everything besides the button taped over.

Because I wanted to keep the wires to a minimum I elected to go with a PocketWizard radio system.  I used a PocketWizard Plus transmitter with a big label saying "Push Me!" as the trigger, with everything else covered with black electrical tape.  All the switches and most of the writing was covered up to make the trigger as plain and simple as possible.  The last thing I wanted was somebody to accidentally switch it off or change the channel.

The transmitter talked to a PocketWizard MultiMAX set in relay mode, connected to the Canon 40-D twice.  (One cable for triggering and one cable for flashing)  There was a PocketWizard Plus receiver on one of the Alien Bees flashes with a splitter and a thin wire run around to the other Alien Bees flash.   (It's important to trigger the Alien Bees electrically and no rely on the photo eye because people invariably use their own cameras with flashes and it would cause the Alien Bees to flash at the wrong time.)

Detail of PocketWizard MultiMAX in relay mode with pre-trigger cable and PC cable for photobooth

The trigger cable between the two flashes was a pain and I wouldn't choose to do that again - I just don't have enough PocketWizards to do it completely right.

I can't understate how important the "User Interaction" portion of this setup is.  It's crucial to keep things as simple as possible because people are thinking about the wedding, their friends, their kids, having fun - everything except how to follow instructions.

Downsides:

Photo Review: The biggest downside was there was no way to review the pictures.  Next time I'd like to have the camera shooting tethered and an LCD monitor setup that displays recent pictures so people can see the pictures being taken.  I lieu of that I had an X marked on the ground and a box to show the bounds of the frame.  (the framing got messed up when someone re-aimed the camera, but it was still close.)

User Tampering: The camera was just sitting out on the tripod and ballhead and was very accessible (although weighted down with a 15 pound sandbag).  I had the zoom and focus rings taped over but at some point somebody re-aimed the camera and the blue lines on the floor made it in the frame.  Also, despite the sandbag on the center post of the tripod it may have gotten jostled or shifted.  People also wanted to mess with the camera to try to review the images but the pre-trigger cable means that none of the buttons on the camera work

Equipment:

Here's everything you should need if you're going to set one of these up like this:

  • Camera with remote trigger and flash ability (I ended up at 24mm)
  • Tripod with sandbags for stability/safety
  • 2 A/C powered strobes (I used an AB 400 and an AB 800)
  • 2 white shoot-through umbrellas
  • 1 PocketWizard transmitter
  • 1 PocketWizard MultiMAX to receive the trigger pulse and then trigger the flashes
  • 1 PocketWizard receiver for each flash
  • 1 lightstand with sandbags for each strobe
  • more extension cords than you would expect
  • gaffer's tape
  • electrical tape
  • painter's tape
  • a sign with simple instructions
  • velcro ties or cable cuffs to secure cords
  • a least one spare of everything