Category Archives: Photographs

Berkeley, CA

Scummy town.

The town of Berkeley remains a liberal stronghold, but truth be told, it’s a pretty scummy place. Downtown is replete with indigent men sprawled on the sidewalks and you have to think the City fathers can do better than this. However, wander up Berkeley Way or University Avenue into the hills and you will arrive at the UC Berkeley campus and it is very well worth the trip for architecture aficionados.


Typical downtown denizen of the streets. iPhone5 snap.


Boarded up tenement building.


Window.


Gate.


Berkeley Post Office – waiting to be redeveloped when the USPS goes belly-up.


Americana. One of the smallest hot dog huts ever, in a parking lot.


Save our Post Office. Good luck with that.


And you thought the deep south had an exclusive on this garbage?


BErk1927. Downtown mural.


Not for tobacco.

More on the UC Berkeley campus and its architecture here. A quite different experience.

All on the Nikon D3x and 35/1.4 Sigma, except the first.

At the camera show

Old stuff.

My buddy at Kaufmann’s Cameras in San Mateo suggested I swing by this camera show:

In a poorly lit hall vendors display their wares on trestle tables. Entry was $6. Prices are rarely marked. The predominant pricing mechanism seems to be that of the kasbah. Haggle.

Most of the gear is pretty tired film era hardware, but there were some interesting things.


A KEH employee checks a customer’s camera offered for sale.


The Contarex – the camera which bankrupted Zeiss Ikon. Both the ones
with lenses I tried were faulty. Repairs are almost impossible, owing
to the vast mechanical complexity.


Mountains of lenses, mostly crap.


Psst! mister. Wanna cheap Rolex? This about
sums up the sleazy feel of this operation.


I bought a 77mm filter UV for my 16-35 Nikkor G from this nice man for $12.
Of course, when I got home I checked B&H and they have it for $9 ….


Lovely 8″ x 20″ wooden plate camera.


Six Pack Joe. Strangely I was the only person actually using a camera!

Don’t go to one of these fairs expecting to find bargains. With eBay providing perfect price discovery in the marketplace for old gear, bargains are as rare as integrity in politics. But if you want to go along and enjoy handling a nice selection of mechanical era hardware, it’s quite fun. I could not resist trying a few Nikons – F, F2, F3 and F4 – reveling in their magnificent construction.

All on the Nikon D3x with the 35/1.4 Sigma at full aperture, ISO400. The Sigma’s AF nailed focus every time.

Nikkor 35mm f/1.8G AF-S DX lens

Cheep, cheerful, handy.


Mounted on the D2x with the included lens hood.

This ‘plastic fantastic’ APS-C lens sells new for under $200 with a 5 year Nikon USA warranty. Given Nikon’s repair reputation in the US that probably does not mean much but at the price asked with hood, caps and soft case, there’s a lot to like.

I bought it on a whim for those lazy days when I just can’t be bothered to use manual focus, assuming there was little downside.

Nikon wisely deletes the focus and depth-of-field scales from this optic, both utterly useless on modern AF lenses. It also has that handy feature where you can manually override the focus just by grabbing and turning the focus collar, something which is impossible with the previous AF-D series of optics. The included hood clicks on nicely, using a bayonet fit, and the lens accepts standard 52mm filters like most Nikkors ever made before the AF era.

I like this lens a lot. Focus speed is decent if not stellar but the biggest surprise in store is that it is surprisingly useful on full frame.

When images are loaded into LR or PS, the lens’s EXIF file data will invoke the Adobe profile which ships with their applications. That profile was created on an APS-C body and is very useful, taking out minor vignetting and fairly severe barrel distortion, which really has to be removed when snapping architectural subjects.

But you can do much better. Curious to see whether a profile created on an FF body would bring back the heavily vignetted corners, I created a profile using my D3x and Adobe’s Lens Profile Creator software. Because vignetting varies significantly with aperture, I went all in and made this profile at each of f/1.8, f/2, f/2.8, f/4, f/5.6, f/8, f/11, f/16 and f/22! 81 chart shots in all …. You can use this profile with both APS-C and FF files. It does a far better job on the latter than the one Adobe ships.

If you put the profile here on a Mac –

Replace ‘Tigger’ with your user name on a Mac.

– LR and PS will automatically choose it in preference to the stock one provided by Adobe.

The stock Adobe profile resides here on a Mac – there is no need to delete it if adding my profile in the location shown above.

The respective Windows locations are:

Windows 7 or Vista: C:\User\(User Name)\AppData\Roaming\Adobe\CameraRaw\LensProfiles\1.0

Windows XP: C:\Documents and Settings\(User Name)\Application Data\Adobe\CameraRaw\LensProfiles\1.0

You can find my enhanced profile here. On FF, extreme edge definition is excellent from f/4 through f/11. There’s a lot more to this self-effacing lens than meets the eye.

Here are before and after images on full frame where the lens really is 35mm focal length – ideal for street snapping, no sensor crop involved.. The first pair at f/1.8, the second at f/11. In each case the right-hand image is after applying my profile:


In the snaps below I used my lens profile with the APS-C sensor in the D2x.


Walking the pup. D2x, f/2.8.


San Mateo Post Office. In its usual schlocky under-capitalized way, this failing
business is letting a landmark heritage building rot into oblivion. D2x, f/2.8.


Bits missing and waiting to rot. D2x, f/2.8.


Inside the St. Matthew station USPO. No corner shading whatsoever using my profile. D2x, f/1.8.


Magnificent period detail. D2x, f/4.

Any Nikon APS-C body – such as the D1 and D2 series, the D70, D90, D100, D200, D300, the D7000 or even later bodies – constrained by a lower quality, slow kit zoom lens would benefit from this inexpensive optic. It has excellent resolution and can continue being used with few excuses once the user upgrades to an FF body, provided you also use my profile, above. Further, the discipline imposed by a fixed focal length lens, dictating proper composition before the button is pressed, can only enhance the snapper’s skill set and improve the results. Finally, it’s nice not to have to remember to limit this lens to APS-C bodies only if you use both APS-C and FF.

Some Nikons – the D3 series and the D4 – offer an optional 5:4 aspect ratio frame (too square for my taste) which crops vertical strips either side of the full frame. This format should have no issues with across the frame resolution using this 35mm lens.

Filoli reopens

At last.

After the usual long quarter closure for the winter months, that gem in the Woodside countryside named Filoli reopened this week, and I was sure to be there on the opening day. The large gardening crew has been busy during the hiatus but the orgy of color which is the fruit of their labors will not come into view until a few weeks hence.

Meanwhile, on an overcast day, the vibrance of the muted colors and the beauty of the home were not one bit diluted in this fan’s eyes.


Yours truly in the library.

All on the Nikon D3x with the 50mm pre-Ai f/1.4 Nikkor except the last where the 16-35G lens was used, the camera placed on a corner table with delayed action.

Victor the cobbler

Looking good!

After I complained mightily to Sigma about the bad AF on the 35/1.4 I had borrowed from a local business, Sigma USA was kind enough to send me a brand new one in Nikon mount from the shipment received at the end of January and it arrived yesterday. I have it to try out on a free three week loan.

What better way to start giving the Sigma a work out than locally? I had just caught a glimpse of the local cobbler’s workshop when dropping a pair of shoes off the other day and it looked fascinating, everything a cobbler’s workshop should be. Almost like a Hollywood set, in fact. So when picking the shoes up yesterday, I just had to get back there to photograph it.

“Pindelski, is that Czech?”

“No, Polish. My folks were refugees, finally escaping to the west before the Russians closed the borders in 1947. You?”

“I am a Czech Armenian, part of the Jewish diaspora which spread across the world because of persecution. I came to America in 1986.

This store has been here, on B Street in San Mateo, since 1876. I prefer it messy. It’s comfortable that way”

Fellow refugees, bonding.

So when it came time to pick up my shoes, whose heels remain spread over a vast area of San Francisco’s sidewalks, I couldn’t wait to ask Victor if he would let me take a look at his workroom. He was only too happy to oblige, and it did not disappoint. The Sigma and Nikon D3x came along and absent a bit of toning down of the nasty highlights from the fluorescent tubes in the first two images, these are pretty much straight out of the camera. I did use the lens correction profile I had created earlier for this lens, as it corrects significant vignetting at f/1.4 and f/2. You can download it here and absent whatever claim I have to pride of authorship, I really recommend you use it. My wealth will change by exactly $0.00 if you download it.



Victor Sargas.


At work.


There’s always work to be done.


“I prefer it messy.”


Ancient cobbler’s lathe.

After the poor first experience with the Sigma’s AF (s/n 50004444) things are beginning to look up with this loaner (s/n 50004693). The three dimensional rendering and vibrant colors are significant optical accomplishments in a lens this fast. I wish it was lighter, but at the quality level offered I’ll grudgingly settle for a sore neck and shoulder. It is not cheap at $900 + tax, but it’s a lot cheaper than the Nikon version which, based on the sample I borrowed, is inferior and costs a good deal more.

Snapped on the Nikon D3x with the lens at f/2, ISO 400. Victor gets his large wall print tomorrow.