Tuesday, December 30, 2008

Weekly Wednesday Clicks

This week's Wednesday clicks would come a little earlier as I think I might be rushing through the day to complete quite a lot in a very short time. Anyway, there have been some very interesting sites that I managed to troll out from the world wide web so brace yourself and enjoy the links.

On a personal note, I got back from Penang on Monday and I was totally exhausted. I guess the 9 hour drive up on Saturday and the 5 hour drive down on Monday took a huge toll on me but the trip was fun and relaxing. I really didn't know that prices of food in Penang has gone up, I ended up paying RM8 for "char koay teow" and worse of all, "tau sar pneah" was completely sold out. I got loads of photos to sort through, process and deliver so will be very busy over the next couple of weeks.

penang-view

4 comments:

Friday, December 26, 2008

Movie Review: IP Man

Ok, the movie is not pronounced as "ai-pee man" but rather "eep-mun". It is a dude's name and not a movie about IT geeks gone wild or crudely put it as the next geek flick. On the contrary, this movie reminds me of the good old kung-fu flicks that I watched as a boy and this movie does not disappoint.

ipman

"Ip Man is adapted from the life story of Ip Man, the grand master of the Wing Chun style of kung fu and sifu (master) of legendary kung fu superstar Bruce Lee. This movie will be the first important record of the master's life. Ip's persistent devotion to Wing Chun is a classic example of the love and respect shown to wushu and the freedom and spirit it represents. Ip Man is a concept, a spirit, a way of thinking - and it represent a new peak in Hong Kong's wushu movies. "

Based on a true story and coupled with realistic fight scenes, like I said earlier, this movie does not dissapoint. Everything about this movie was excellent and I figured that I would enjoy this show.

ipman1

The movie brings us back to China just before the Sino-Japanese war, a city called Fushan which was famed to house many martial arts practitioners. With martial arts being popular and people wanting to show that their own style of martial arts is popular, the scene portrays a city where martial arts dojos are the cash cows of the city's economical height.

ipman2

Ip Man was not one of those who set up a training schools and teaching disciples but his reputation of a skilled martial artist precedes him and his humility reminded me of how Jet-Li portrayed "Wong Fei Hong" in the "Once Upon a Time in China" series.

ipman3

The supporting casts of Simon Yam, Fan Siu-Wong and Lynn Hung added the much needed sense of drama, romance and friendship which makes this movie complete. If you thought that "Crouching Tiger and Hidden Dragon" was a real kungfu flick, you are sadly mistaken. This is as real as it gets, there are not fancy flying about waving your swords through the air. This is real down to earth martial arts at its best.

I give it a 9/10 rating. If you haven't watched it, what are you waiting for, catch the next available show!

6 comments:

Blessed Christmas and a Happy New Year

I would like to take this opportunity to wish everyone a Blessed Christmas and a Happy New Year.

xmas2008_web

This time of the year, I pray that I don't burn out rushing for deadlines and finish all of my post processing. Running out of space on my computer, just checked and there is only 2.16Gb left on my HDD which stores all my photos. Definitely need a HDD upgrade, 1TB hard disks are getting cheap nowadays!

Off to Penang tomorrow for some much needed R&R but will be bringing my laptop to do a little bit of post processing as well.

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Sunday, December 21, 2008

How Ironic

Ok, here I am on a weekend after a long shoot in Malacca yesterday, sitting at Starbucks sending out some emails for work and trying to clear up some of them before the work week starts tomorrow. Whilst everyone is going off for their Christmas holidays, I got an interesting email which might lead me to be located down south in sunny Singapore next year onwards. But that is a different post all together.

Anyway, back to my point. So here I was at 1 Utama and before heading into Starbucks, I decided to pop over at Jusco and I noticed their new slogan which was to not use plastic bags. Wow, I thought, what a wonderful campaign and what a wonderful way to prevent people from using plastic bags. Usually supermarkets would freely give out loads of plastic bags and unless they do something about it, people's behaviour will not change so easily.

I went into La Boheme and decided to get a couple of buns to ease my appetite which was screaming at me for not finishing my instant noodles which I made for lunch. Lined up behind a very long queue and usually when there is a long queue, my eyes start to wonder around the store. Then I noticed the cashier, she was wearing a badge which showed the same slogan and not use plastic bags to save the environment. And whislt wearing the badge, here she was packing everyone's buns and pastries into plastic bags.

What really hit me was the way they freely used plastic bags, i.e. for every bun/pastry that you have, you get a small mini pastic bag to wrap it up before being put in a much larger plastic bag. If you had 15 buns there, high chances was that the cashier would probably used about 8 mini plastic bags and a large plastic badge.

How frigging ironic!

3 comments:

Wednesday, December 17, 2008

Wednesday Clicks

Christmas is almost upon us and I thought I would have missed posting this week's Wednesday clicks as I am away on training and I have no access to the internet when I am on training. But I decided to stick with my schedule and still post this before heading out for dinner with my cell.

  1. Timothy shares his experience with queue cutters in Hong Kong here. Not a bad strategy by our neighbouring Asian countrymen (not the Hongkies) :)

  2. Steve Jobs is skipping MacWorld? Who will present the new Mac Mini?

  3. Check out this interesting Nikon D3 which is nicknamed the "Wedding Photographer Edition"

  4. Twitter chooses Google over Facebook, er, what does that mean to me?


Tomorrow is my last day at my PMP training to prepare myself to sit for the PMI project management certification. One thing I learned is to bring loads of coffee over there and try to avoid the traffic jams at PJ State.

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Monday, December 15, 2008

Some updates here and there

Ok, I gave up trying to figure out how to migrate Wordpress Permalinks to a new structure and update all of my old previous posts. I managed to find a plugin by Dean but it doesn't seem to work with Wordpress 2.7. I am really trying to figure out how I can change the permalink structure of all my previous posts. If anyone has any idea, do let me know!

On another hand, I have finally gotten used to Twitter and started updating my statuses on Twitter as well as Facebook. Do add me as a friend on Facebook here as well as check out my Twitter statuses here. Its so fun to be able to see some of my friend's statuses online as they go through their day.

Had an extremely tiring weekend, the whole of Saturday I was busy with a wedding shoot in church and at Mandarin Oriental with Louis. The shoot lasted from 4.30am (the time I woke up) till late at night and was my feet sore as well. On Sunday, I managed to head to church in the morning and then to Cyberview Lodge to check out the wedding fair there (for reasons kept a secret! hahahaha). After the fair, I headed over to Alamanda in Putrajaya with munZ and realised that the place was packed!

On a fun note, I attended a wedding last night as a guest (see how I would highlight that) and really enjoyed myself chatting with my colleagues and friends over a couple of glasses of wines. It was good to be able to sit down and enjoy the wedding but my voice is becoming rather rasp at the moment after last night's countless "yam-seng" sessions. Needless to say that my colleagues manage to bring the groom down with their drinks.

Today was an exceptionally funny day for me as I managed to convince myself that I am totally absent minded. I drove all the way to the office today and totally left my work laptop at home. Had to spend some time checking out with the other teams here in the office to see if there are any additional machines I could borrow. Thank God for virtual storage of my work files. Else I wouldn't have any access to my working documents.

1 comments:

Wednesday, December 10, 2008

Technical Difficulties

I just changed some settings on my blog hence there will be some technical difficulties accessing my older posts using the older URL's. Note that the changes affect the URL of each post link. New posts will be named after the title of the post for better references rather than an fugly number which Wordpress first provides.

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Wednesday Clicks

Yay, its the 2nd time I am posting the Wednesday Clicks and after about 20 more times, it becomes a habit.

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Tuesday, December 9, 2008

Shooting for Free?

This topic has been brought up numerous times since the moment I picked up my first DSLR and started shooting. I always thought that as an amateur, shooting for free to gain exposure and knowledge was all part and parcel. After attending a couple of workshops and heavily investing in equipment, sometimes the whole idea of shooting for free doesn't get to me as well to others in the industry.

Then there was last week when Ian had a chat with me online and he gave me this link. It gives a good point of view from a photographer in the US that in times of an economic crisis and how he has thought up of some ideas to combat that.
Maybe you want to shoot conceptual portraiture. But if The Money says that it wants you to shoot little Billy's bar mitzvah, guess who is gonna win in the absence of that conceptual portrait assignment?

A check is a good thing. It puts food on the table and keeps the business running. But that same check can also keep you from growing in the direction in which you want to grow.

Now this is a very power statement as a good friend of mine told me last week that when you work for someone else, you are working under that person's vision and not your own. Of course if you vision is aligned with the company's vision then by all means, you are in the right job. But nevertheless everyone needs their paycheck to survive.
My problem is, right now no one is beating down my door to shoot the kinds of people I want to shoot in the ways that I want to shoot them. I am getting plenty of work, but not the kind that furthers what I want to do. So to get closer to my goal, I have decided to take money out of the equation whenever it makes sense to do so.

So, I am approaching people I want to photograph and offering to do it directly for them, at no charge. And that includes usage, too -- no holding back. That is my offer -- I photograph you, and in exchange for your time you get what I hope will be high-quality images to use.

Client: Why are you doing this? What is this for? Why free? Do you suck as a photographer or something?

Because I want to grow by photographing extremely interesting people. It is for my portfolio and whatever use you can find for it. Because that is the fastest way to get the photos I want into my portfolio. And you can judge the last question for yourself after seeing my work.

This really opened up my eyes and I even learned a new term from Ian, TFCD (Time for CD) where the CD is actually now a DVD with the high quality images. He summarizes all his thoughts into 4 points which are the following.

  1. Tenet One: Free Buys Access

  2. Tenet Two: Free Removes Boundaries

  3. Tenet Three: Free Buys You Near Total Control

  4. Tenet Four: Free is Powerful Karma


The last point was interesting because he then talked about what can we do with our cameras and how can we make a difference.
How much good could you do with your camera? And for many of you, specifically, how much of a difference could you make for someone with your new-found lighting skills?

How much would your portfolio benefit from regularly shooting exactly what you want to shoot?

If you are an amateur, this just might get you past practicing your light on your cat and your superhero figurines. If you are a pro, it is easy to think of some cool projects that could add a new dimension to your portfolio.

The point is very clear, every athlete practices and every sportsman makes sure that they put in time and effort into training so that when the time comes where it really matters, they can reap the benefits of their training.

His final point was also very clear. He brings up the very obvious perception that others might perceive of you which is "But I Don't Want to be Branded as a Free Photographer".
You wouldn't be. You are not working for free because people asked you to. You are offering to collaborate on a project. And therein lies a huge difference.

When a company or organization asks you to work for free they may be (okay, probably are) taking advantage of you. When you are in control, no one can take advantage of you. You have the ability to offer your work for free, but you retain the ability to decline a request to work for free.

I guess the key word here is being in control of what we do. Chase Jarvis as well has these words to say.
1. FREE already happens all over the place, right now, today, but people rarely talk about it. It’s not always unhealthy nor malicious. Photographers do stuff for free all the time. Good or bad, wrong or right, whatever your opinion. True, people often don’t speak about it publicly or openly, but it does exist on widespread basis. In fact, since my soapbox has long been about removing the black box of photography, I’ll let you in on a little secret...FREE happens at every level of the industry, from simple favors to entire ad agencies doing entire campaigns pro bono, or at a huge loss in the hopes of getting to do something cool, interesting, or something that will ultimately come full circle to help the world, help themselves, or help their business succeed.

2. FREE has a place. Should all assignment photography be free? Of course not. That’s totally absurd. Only a tiny tiny fraction could ever be considered. Should some people give their work away in some cases to meet certain objectives? Sure, under certain circumstances depending very specifically on level, quality, career stage, business cycle, or perhaps a whole host of other considerations. There are a number of dynamic factors that require consideration, and both wisdom and moderation have their places. But don’t bother with the slippery slope argument or the stigma argument. I ain’t buying it. FREE has a place and it has since the beginning of business. It’s certainly not everywhere and it may not even be often, but it has a place. Why? See point one above.

So the question comes back again to us, should we shoot for free? Not all the time, we have to learn to say no to certain projects and when we do shoot for free, its not about shooting an assignment for free, it has to be a collaboration. The benefits has to be mutual. Here is another interesting quote for another article based on the whole category of shooting for free.
No, there ain't no such thing as a free lunch.

But when it comes to photography, getting a free image has never been easier.
Lots of photographers will work for free – just the opportunity to shoot will be enough for them.
Lots of photographers will publish for free – just the exposure will be enough for them.
Lots of photographers will exhibit for free – just having people see their image is enough them.

Notice that there has to be of some mutual simbiotic synergy between who we shoot and who is shooting. Martin Joergensen has this to say.
Being a pro, standing on the sideline yelling “amateurs stay home!” is going to bring you nothing but a sore throat and frustration. The amateurs are coming. If you are good enough you have nothing to fear. The magazines who want free images and won't pay for photo gigs will never be your customers. Sell your work to those who pay. When German magazine Bild cooperates with discount grocery Lidl to sell cheap cameras to people and offer to publish their images... well, there's not much you can do about it. If Bild wants to bring low quality, citizen-shot photographs, it's their choice. If the readers like it and the magazine sells, complaining will bring you nowhere.

If newspapers publish “promotion” shots taken by amateurs who get free access to concerts in exchange for images... well, forget pursuing the matter and make sure you take better and more relevant images, which the newspaper can't be without, and will buy from you at the price you charge.

If bride and groom decide to get their DSLR-toting cousin to shoot their wedding in stead of hiring a wedding photographer... well, that's their choice, and nothing which overpaid wedding shooters can do much about.

Just be better than the free guys and girls. So much better than no one will doubt that you are worth it. Or be cheaper than the best. And if you aren't good enough for either... be free!

Now that is indeed quite truthful and something for all of us to ponder in any industry that we do. I guess in terms of how it relate to us, its the same when we work overtime for our companies without getting any overtime pay or how we do "favours" for our colleagues or how you see that law firms offer their services "pro-bono" to some charity organisations. Heck, even emails, spreadsheets, web space and blogs are free online!

There will always be free stuff about, it is just how do you position yourself in the midst of all this.

Sources:

5 comments:

Monday, December 8, 2008

Aching feet

My feet is aching from two days of shooting and yet here I am getting ready to go for brunch with some of my Sheffield pals. Had loads of fun over the two days but raring for more! So many photos to back up and process but I got to find the time to work them out.

The one surprising thing yesterday was that I managed to test out the new Canon 5D Mk2 during a shoot and man, it was an awesome camera. We used the camera to take family portraits and even ring shots at full 21MP resolution! How cool was that. After the shoot, the camera even spent the night with me but since I am such a big Nikon supporter, it stayed in the box throughout the night before heading back to it's owner this morning.

Another surprise for me was that I came back from a busy weekend only to find that Louis has announced the launch of his newly redesigned blog. Go and check it out here.

Its time for some banana leaf rice!

3 comments:

Wednesday, December 3, 2008

Weekly Wednesday Clicks

I have always pondered on a theme of a post that I can post on a weekly basis whether may it be a weekly photo or whether it may be a weekly joke or something. Well I have decided to start with a weekly "Wednesday Clicks".

This post will mainly be for me to share with everyone some interesting links that might interest some of you here.

So lets begin for today!

  1. Reuters has an interesting image gallery here to further illustrate how much Venice is under water than it being the usual romantic place where every couple would love to travel to. You can also check out their photo blog here. (link courtesy of ShaolinTiger)

  2. Images of a new DSLR being unboxed can be found here. For certain reasons, I shall not name the DSLR (hehehe)

  3. Some interesting bit of musings from LKS thinking that the Dewan Rakyat practices double standards against opposition MPs.

  4. The new Nokia N97 gets a makeover and it is moving towards the success of Sony's Xperia.

  5. Xiaxue tries her hand at photoshop and she is quite good at it!


Hope these links will keep you entertained for the next couple of hours. See you next week with more links!

3 comments:

Tuesday, December 2, 2008

Photography Workshop: A Photographer's Day Out

Just would like to highlight to everyone out there that there is a photography workshop, entitled "A Photographer's Day Out", being held on the 13th of December (next Saturday) at Centrepoint Bandar Utama organized by Integricity Visuals.

[caption id="" align="alignnone" width="850" caption="Photography Workshop"]Photography Workshop[/caption]

This workshop will be held by my good friend, Grace, and will be aimed at photography enthusiasts at the beginner level. Sign up quickly and get to know other photography enthusiasts where you can learn from each other and network up with people around.

1 comments:

Monday, December 1, 2008

Nikon D3x, its finally here, am I impressed?

Update: I added some more info on the specs of the new camera :)

In my last two posts there were a lot of hype about the Nikon D3x and I did manage to scour the internet for some good old rumours about the launch and perhaps leaked details. Now that the official leaked details are out and that it has been displayed on Nikon's Pro magazine, I can't help but look at myself and think that it doesn't really matter that much to me.

Yes its great to have the extra megapixel count, and yes its expensive. Perhaps I might be more interested in it when I start doing commercial photography or landscape photography. But at the moment, I have to improve on my own skills first. Make do with what I have and then I can only progress onwards from there.

Anyway if you are interested in the camera, you can find out more information about it here, here and here.

What will be the market's response to this camera especially at the time of a financial crisis amidst a global recession?

Tecnical Specs:

  • 24.5-megapixel CMOS FX format sensor

  • Full resolution shooting at 5 FPS

  • ISO from 100-1600 (expandable to 50-6400)

  • TIFF, JPEG or NEF (RAW) file formats up to 138MB (wah lau eh! nowonder there are already 16Gb CF cards available already)

  • Newly updated EXPEED image processing system

  • Expected price, USD$8000.


Image gallery available here.

Other related links below.

3 comments: