A friend sent me a link to the RIBA Pix site the other day suggesting I put forward some of my photos after seeing this request for new Photographers. I sent an email over and have had some of my images selected for use in the library.
Hopefully it’ll be a good way of getting my name noticed and maybe earning a few royalties from sales. We’ll see. I’ll be shooting a lot more in the coming weeks for the library as they seem to be a bit short on images of contemporary work.
Last week I was able to go and shoot another completed building for work. I wanted to do a proper job so I arranged to hire a tilt shift lens for the day. I spent a fair bit of reading about precisely how they work online with various videos as well as the previous evening practicing. I wasn’t interested in the tilt or swing operation, just the shift for keeping verticals straight on the elevations. I hired one of these, a Nikon 24mm PC-E ƒ3.5.
Previously I had been using my standard zoom and keeping it fairly wide, as well as fully level on the tripod and then correcting the barrel distortion in PT Lens, then correcting the vertical lines in Photoshop. Pretty time consuming to edit all the shots like that really but the best I could do with my equipment.
It took me a while to get used to actually using the lens but once I did I was incredibly pleased with it. I would go so far as saying it was a complete revelation. It’s very sharp although I often had trouble focusing it properly in low light for the dusk shots towards the end of the day – it’s manual focus only – and there’s no split screen to help with focusing. However it was great to be able to compose the shot properly in camera rather than shooting wide and cropping down later after correcting perspective. I also got a fair few shots that I was completely unable to get before using my previous approach. It also felt a lot more creative to get these shots on site and know that they worked before leaving site.
Editing the shots was also much much quicker. Set white balance, minor exposure adjustments, sharpen, then export. I got all my shots edited down in around 3 hours rather than the full day I would have needed before. If I was doing this professionally I’d want to use this lens on a full frame body such as a D700 or D3 to take advantage of the properly wide angle rather than the 36mm of the cropped sensor on the D300. If I hire it again I’ll also get a much stiffer tripod with a geared head as getting the camera completely level is so important with this lens.
Anyway at £1400 it’ll be a while before I can afford this one! However if I can get a few commissions I could imagine that it’d pay for itself pretty quickly.
Found out a few more of my images have been published which is always good. A total of three pages and six images in the 2010 RIBA London Charted Practice Review. I’ve also added them to the tearsheets section on my portfolio site.
I’ve been trying to build up my portfolio with the aim of getting a commission (or more hopefully) with Architects in London. I did a quick site based on WordPress recently but didn’t really like the way it displayed multiple images. I don’t think blogging software is ideally suited to a photo portfolio site really, it’s always going to be a bit of a compromise. So the next version is based on indexhibit which is a rather nice lean CMS for artists, designers, photographers and the like. It’s pretty basic at the moment but looking to sort out the fonts and graphics soon. I though it more important to add content as I have time and as I shoot more stuff. Pretty pleased with it so far. I like that it’s simple, less corporate and just about the images.
Another few images published. This time in RIBA Journal. Unfortunately they didn’t manage to credit me which is a shame. Nice to get a double spread image though.