Yearly Archives: 2011

Two years with the Panasonic G1

Twenty-four blissful months.

As a street snapper I am convinced that someone on Panny’s design team for the G1 shares my avocation. It’s been two years now since I bought mine and the file counter now says 13,566, so I have been averaging over 500 snaps monthly with this little wonder and have never been happier.

Lock-ups? None. Breakdowns? None. Bad exposures? One or two which were my fault. Backache from carrying the camera? None. Obtrusiveness? None.

To see what I wrote after one year of ownership click here. I haven’t checked but can say with reasonable assurance that 95% of those snaps have been made with the splendid 14-45mm kit lens, the rest shared by the Oly 9-18 and Panny 45-200mm optics.

What would I change? Not much. With less than 1% of my snaps being out of focus (I use auto everything except ISO where I mostly use ISO 320) and maybe some of those in poor lighting being grainier than I would like, faster focus and a better sensor is about all I would ask, both claimed enhancements in the G3 body which I have on order. The latter seems to be forever out of stock but it’s not like I am dying without it. I skipped the G2 as I have no use for the movie mode or touch screen and the sensor was unchanged. Indeed, the only time I use the LCD screen in the G1 is to check battery charge status.

These two happy years have proved to this street snapper that the eye and brain are muscles like any other. Use them often and they become sharper, faster, more acute. The fitness for purpose of Panny’s G1 has done wonders for my vision and reactions, taking me back to those early years with the Leica M3 when I was still a young pup making his way in tired old monochrome.

But results talk and BS walks, so here’s a little bit of fun.

Sitting happily in a coffee shop on 24th Street in San Francisco’s Mission District I set myself the task of snapping the next twenty or so interesting passers by while munching my cream cheese bagel and drinking the fine cup of joe served there.

I liked ten of the twenty – all were well exposed and so on, but these have the most interesting faces. A diversity of cultures, styles and dress which makes this vibrant area so fascinating for the street snapper. My window seat afforded me a wide angle of view, making anticipation easier. It’s amazing how fleeting these moments are.

Enjoy, and here’s to the Panasonic G1, the best street snapper yet. Time stamps are below each snap.

12:04

12:11

12:15

12:19

12:23

12:26

12:29

12:32

12:36

12:45

All with the kit lens at 25mm, 1/1000, f/5.6, ISO 320.

Diptychs and Triptychs

Giotto did these a while back, too.

A friend having recently decorated a room, asked for something Big, Wide and Green for the wall, so I suggested the idea of a triptych.

Once we agreed on the snap I suggested some variations. The tool used to make the red outlines is Xtralean’s ImageWell.

In case you think this is original, that old dauber Giotto was doing this sort of thing some 700 years ago:

Giotto c. 1320.

A related use of multiple images is to show two or more taken a brief moment apart. In this diptych I have used the Print->Custom Package function in Lightroom 3 to place two similar images next to one another, ready for printing on 13″ x 19″ paper. This is the serenely beautiful young woman I snapped the other day and wrote about here:

Diptych ready for printing in Lightroom 3.

Lightroom 2 could not place different images on one sheet, but if that is what you use search the web and there are simple code changes to the print template which will permit this, easily conferred with any text editor like TextEdit, which comes with every Mac.

Shadows

A passing moment.

This one was quite literally over in the blink of an eye. I saw the runner coming and there was but one chance for the snap.

24th Street shadows. G1, kit lens @45mm, 1/1250, f/5.6, ISO 320.

Lennart Nilsson

A Swedish master.

Lennart Nilsson (b 1922) is best known for his endoscopic photographs of the early stages of development of a human fetus. They remain as startling today as when he took them for LIFE in 1965.

Click the picture for his web site. The pictures are pure magic.

Click the picture.

Devorah Sperber

An unusual digital artist.

Mention of the Stein show at SF’s MOMA prompts me to add that a far more interesting show, with insights into Stein’s collecting, writing, sponsorship of artists and friendships with photographer, is to be seen at SF’s Contemporary Jewish Museum.

The size of the show is far more manageable than the overblown offering at MOMA and you come away with a better understanding of the woman and her work. While her writing is pure, undiluted crap, we owe her a debt of thanks for sponsoring so many struggling artists and photographers.

The fact that Stein continues to inspire contemporary artists is seen in the last of the five rooms of the CJM show and one of the pieces on display there is quite startling.

Detail View: “After Picasso,” 2006, by Devorah Sperber, 5,024 spools of thread, stainless steel ball chain
and hanging apparatus, clear acrylic viewing sphere, metal stand (104″-122″ h x 100” w x 60”- 72″d)

Sperver has done nothing less than recreate, on a large scale, Picasso’s famous 1906 portrait of Gertrude Stein. Her choice of pixels is ….5,024 spools of thread! Viewed though the small magnifying glass some feet in front of the spools, the compressed and right-way-round image of Stein is a perfect reproduction of Picasso’s masterpiece.

It’s easy for me to say that anyone could do this. Simply create a look-up table for the colors of each pixel on your computer then order $30,000 worth of spools of thread. Tell your nine year old to assemble it according to your table and there you have it. All you need add is a $5 magnifying lens. And just imagine the image taking to life as your child gradually assembles it!

Simple to say because I didn’t think of it and neither did you. This is a different kind of digital imaging.

You can visit Devorah Sperber’s web site here.