Three days of attending Steve Simon's "The Passionate Photographer" Workshop at the GPP week this year yielded surprisingly results.
Read MoreThe Fringe Festival
The Fringe Festival - How best can I describe it? wacky, chaotic, frenetic, creative. Did I mention crazy?
Read MoreFragments of the Ordinary
Instead of bemoaning the lack of interesting subjects, what I needed to do was to confront my immdiate surroundings and use them as a source for my subjects and stories. That I want I really needed to do is work on a personal documentary where I focus on shifting content towards the peripheral, the everyday, banality, plasticity and all.
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GPP2015 - A week of City, Architecture & Street Photography
Another tremendous week working and shooting during GPP 2015.
Read MoreDubai Dhow & Abra Yards
The traditional dhow making is a dying art. There are currently two shipyards located in the Jaddaf area which still make these ships in the traditional manner in an effort to valiantly keep Dubai's seafaring heritage alive.
Read MoreLahore at Night
Night market in Lahore - frenetic, chaotic, complicated, fantastic.
Read MoreGlobal Village, Dubai
Another evening of low light photography - this time in Global Village Dubai
Read MoreA walk around London
Walking around - Edgeware Road, Oxford Circus, Regent Street, Notting hill, Portobello Road and Spitalfields market.
Read MoreBrick Lane
With its narrow streets crammed with curry houses, old synagogues, drapers stores, colourful markets and just a hint of the memory of Jack the Ripper, Brick Lane is one of the liveliest, if gritty, streetscapes in London
Read MoreMore Low Light - at the Deira Corniche
Another set of low light images albeit this time images were made at the Dubai Corniche.
Read MoreNight time Street photography in Bur Dubai
Bernard, Vikas, Sally, Jonathan and I met up for a bit of night photography in one of the old markets in Bur Dubai. Surprisingly the weather was quite tolerable. Once the sun went down, it cooled down to 33 degrees (centigrade) and the wind help to cool us down even further. The market was full of barbershops, material shops, tailors, butchers, cobblers, supermarkets, mom and pop stores selling a wide variety of wares. It was surprisingly bright due the large number of florescent lighting in and around all the store fronts. We walked around for about 2 hours including a 20 min pit stop at a local juice bar. It was quite a lot of fun and we are hoping to repeat the experience. In terms of the images shot, we experimented with a variety of camera and lens and shooting modes. Jonathan was shooting with a Leica / 50 mm f2.5, Sally had a nikon and Vikas was shooting with a Mark3D. Bernard and I were shooting with the Fuji XT. As usual, he had the 55-200 lens while I was shooting with the kit lens ( I did carry my 55 m along but didn't get the chance to try it out). It was interesting to compare our approaches. He shot in very close while I shot wide so we had different perspectives of the same scene. For example, when I shot this image, he shot this one.
There was a lot of contrast created due to the bright lights and the dark backgrounds. I decided that in processing the images I would try and simulate the Kodak T400 black and White film adjusted for a bit of less grain than what one would have found on if shooting with the actual film. It's a bit more of a dramatic high contrast look and not something that I have tried before. I am still of two minds on whether I like the digital processing or not. There was a lot of storefront and reflections that had to be incorporated in the images. In some case, they added to the drama and in some cases they really were a pain to deal with. There are quite a few shooting and processing challenges that need to be mastered in night street photography.
I am definitely going to go back and shoot more street in Bur Dubai at night.
In the heat of the Night
Images made while walking around the streets of Bur Dubai (old Dubai) by night.
Read MoreVinales, Cuba
The countryside of the Vinales Valley in the Pinar Del Rio province is beautiful, definitely worth the visit.
Read MoreEarly Morning Photowalk at the Dubai Souk
I went down to the Dubai Souk with a photography mate - Bernard and my new acquisition, the Fujifilm XT along with the kit lens (which is damn good in it's own right) and the 56 mm. I came across both Bernard and the XT during the Gulf Photo Plus Photography Festival in Dubai in March this year. Before I go further, I would like to caveat something. I am not writing a full blown review here. There are a number of websites who have done extensive technical reviews which the reader can easily research on the web.
From a shooting perspective, one of the best "not so techy" reviews out there so far, in my opinion, is the one posted by David Nightingale recently. So stop right here if you haven't read it. Read it and then come back to my post.
(Click here to read David's review)
A compelling and accurate write up. I don't think I can add any comments of substance to the review but what I can do is - vouch for the veracity of that review. Why? because first, I have the privilege of being very much acquainted with David and two, I pretty much went through the same shooting and conversion experience as David (albeit I was not included in the top ten list who were given a free kit (lol).
You have got to respect Fujifilm's marketing strategy. Not only have they improved their camera line over a short period of time, they take on board the suggestions given to them by serious photographers all over the world and they give photographer pros and wannabes (like myself) the opportunity to test the camera out, no holds barred, no conditions attached. How much better could that get? During the Gulf PHoto Plus Week this march, I discovered that Fujifilm had set up shop and was loaning it's various camera models and lens to all GPP participants for free. Of course, I wasn't going to forego that opportunity so I borrowed an XT with the Kit lens as a lark. I had just bought the Sony Alpha 7 with the 35 mm lens and I didn't' think that the XT shooting experience could be any better than the Sony.
I was wrong.
It's far, far better.
For all the reasons that David Nightingale has laid out in his review.
And because when I shoot with it, my heart fills with joy. Really.
And because they offer a much broader range of lens. More options than Sony. Much better glass. (What was I thinking when I bought that camera? Ah yes, I got lost in the full frame, lightest camera argument)
My only request right now is if Fuji can update their firmware to allow for better HDR shooting. I want to be able to shoot 5 exposures one EV apart.
But I digress - back to the photo walk on saturday. Both Bernard and I were shooting with the XT, I was using the 56 mm and he was using the 55-200 mm. Bernard was full of fantastic photo stories and information and the XT was doing it's thang. An all around amazing morning that I hope to repeat again.
We shared our images after the fact and both of us had images which were beautifully rendered, skin tones and all.
Keep Calm and Snap On
Key learnings from David's "Shoot the Street" Workshop at GPP
Read MoreSmiles
When the voices of children are heard on the green And laughing is heard on the hill, My heart is at rest within my breast And everything else is still. (William Blake)
Read MoreThis is not India but it could have been.
Going back to my post regarding diasporas and the influence of migrant communities on "foreign" landscape, this is an image I took in dubai. This goes back to my fascination around migrant communities and how they influence their immediate landscape. The link to my original post is below the image.
Read MoreRole Reversal?
Standing on a street corner, I noticed these two mannequins looking like they were checking out the passerby's and I actually managed to catch a moment!
Read MoreSouthall, London
The first thing I noticed were the bilingual signs, in English and Gurumuki (a Punjabi language). Then there were the Kabab Shops, the street food stalls selling samosas and Indian sweets, the bright fabrics hanging in shop front and women dressed in colorful saris and shalwar kameezes.
Read MoreAn Old Woman with her friends
This woman sitting on the steps of her house, with her goat and her cat. So much poignancy in a frame.
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