Salt Spring Photos

Salt Spring Photographer John Cameron

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Starship

May 4, 2012

Starship

While walking the shady trail at Burgoyne Bay with Cameron the wonder westie, we came upon a patch of sunlight with some healthy dandelions. One had already gone to seed. And the sun created some marvellous catchlights*.

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Behind the scenes:
Photo:Canon EOS-1D Mark IV, Canon EF 100mm f/2.8 Macro, ISO 800, f/11, 1/800 sec

I took along only one lens on this walk, a 100 macro. It’s an ‘inexpensive’ fun lens that seems to get the most use during spring.

Depth of focus can be tricky when working very close to a subject. In this case I wanted the dandelion in focus but the ground out of focus. Sometimes I use the Simple DoF (simple depth of field) iPhone app as a guide. If I had it in this case it would have told me that on this camera with this lens using an aperture of f/11 at about two and one half feet, would give me one inch of sharp focus.

To ensure a sharp image with no camera shake, I bumped up the ISO (‘film speed’ for us old timers) to 800. No problem with noise (‘grain’) on today’s modern digital cameras.

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*catchlights
Catchlights are simply the bright reflection of a light source; in this case, the sun.

You can often see catchlights in a person’s eyes, particularly in portrait photos. In natural light portraits, for example with window light, you sometimes see a bright spot in the eyes. Portraits with catchlights often seem more alive than those without.

We’re not talking about ‘red-eye’, which looks awful and is normally caused by having a flash too close to the lens.

The shape of the catchlight is determined by the shape, size, and proximity of the light source. In this first example, I’m at grass level looking up at the baby so the reflection of the sky is creating a type of catchlight:
child portrait with sky catchlight

In the next example, catchlights in Rosie’s eyes are produced with studio flash units and umbrellas:
catchlights in studio portrait

In the last example, musician Zav RT is standing near a window. The catchlights are created by a white reflector which is bouncing the window light back at her face. No other light sources were used.Zav RT in window light with catchlights

Filed Under: Musings, Nature

It’s Perfect

April 26, 2012

It's Perfect

I pass this perfect driveway quite often. I’ve yet to see a fir cone or other nasty bit out of place and spoiling the view. I wonder if the horses notice…

Farm Living on Salt Spring

Filed Under: Animals, Architecture, Ganges, Musings, People

Foxglove Green

April 3, 2012

Chris and Marilyn

Chris and Marilyn Schmah of Foxglove Farm and Garden Supply hiding out in the greenery (above) and in their gorgeous greenhouse (below).

Foxglove is a longtime Salt Spring business and certainly worth exploring if you visit the Island. I hope to be going back soon to capture the uniqueness and the old Salt Spring charm of the interiors.

The Schmahs at Foxglove Farm and Garden Supply

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Photographer’s note: the story behind the photos

You rarely get a glimpse of ‘behind-the-scene’ in a photo. Which probably makes sense. A photo is what it is.

But here’s a glimpse of what’s behind these two photos:

This was a last minute magazine assignment, a cover and an interior shot for a Q&A section. Last minute as in a Sunday shoot with a Monday a.m. deadline. I had pretty much figured that the cover photo needed to be in the greenhouse, had to feature Chris and Marilyn, and still had to identify the branding and give a sense of (and perhaps exaggerate the) scale.

The Greenhouse Shot
We were lucky with the weather as the forecast storm came in hard and left early. It was heavy overcast during setup then broke into partly clear during the shoot. It gave us an interesting directional light and some condensation the glass. The light was too harsh though so I set up two strobes to provide fill front and left. The strobes were powered by a portable supply. Some distractions were removed from the background and some plants moved to the foreground. A super-wide tilt-shift lens gave just over 100 degrees coverage which, shifted, provided the scale. The Schmahs, although distortion free, were only six feet from the camera. The greenhouse shot is shown full frame.

The Head Shot
My idea was augmented by Chris’ use of ferns. Ferns were arranged on the greenhouse floor with space left for two heads. We setup near a scaffold which was being used to replace a roof vent. This allowed me to shoot pretty much straight down with a portrait lens. A screen was added at the last minute to block the sun which by this time was blaring into the greenhouse. No additional lighting was required. The Schmahs chose their own clothing and it couldn’t have been more perfect. By the way, this image is presented here upside down. Not sure why, but it looks much better this way. YMMV

The whole shoot, including setup and takedown took about 90 minutes. (Planning and communication took about three hours.) We had several more ideas to try, but decided what we had worked well. The image editing took another hour or so. The images were uploaded Sunday evening.

Filed Under: Architecture, Musings, People, Photog's Favourites

A Study in Contrasts

March 23, 2012

A Study in Contrasts

The big happy face and sunny, colourful fresh food painted on a Thrifty’s van provide a vivid backdrop.

The man pushes a cart through the driving wind and rain while on his bottle collecting route in downtown Salt Spring.

*note
This website has had a major update under-the-hood. The site is now responsive. So, no matter what device you view it with, the elements of the site rearrange for the best fit. You can test this responsive behaviour by changing the size of your browser window. To see how it looks on different page widths, type or paste saltspringphotos.com onto this page.

Filed Under: Ganges, Musings, People, Photog's Favourites

A Twist on the Teacher’s Apple

February 28, 2012

SD64 Teachers Feb 27, 2012

A high school student visits Gulf Islands School District teachers during yesterday’s after-school demonstration on Fulford-Ganges Road. At 5 pm, those croissants looked yummy!

SD64 is home to some of the brightest, most passionate and most dedicated teachers in the country. The Island people know it and were vocal with their horns as they went by. It was reminiscent of October, 2005.

“Since 1992, contract negotiations for BC public school teachers has been on a province-wide basis, negotiating a single contract with the British Columbia Public School Employers’ Association (BCPSEA). Since that time, each contract has been legislated into law by the government of the day because the teachers and employers have failed to reach an agreement.” Wikipedia

Before 1992, local teachers and the local school board successfully negotiated all contract agreements…

Filed Under: Ganges, Musings, People

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Photos by John Cameron

Photographs of Salt Spring Island and areas reachable by ferry and road (and sometimes off-road).

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