by successfulbob | landscape photography, Lumix GX7, Lumix Lounge, photography, photography education, video
The water dances, trickles and flows across the red rocks leaving music in it’s wake accompanied by the morning song of our avian friends…
Thought I’d share a video on beautiful Oak Creek at Red Rock Crossing in Sedona, Arizona. I am once again extremely fortunate to live in absolutely beautiful place. Here are a couple minutes of peace and tranquility. Turn up the volume sit back, relax and listen.
Two Minutes of Tranquility. Enjoy!
The Initial photo starting the video is an HDR rendition blended together from a five stop capture. Processed three of the images in Camera RAW and layered them together in ®Photoshop and used masks to blend them together. This allows me to process the image exactly the way I want without the strong ‘HDR’ look. The scene definitely called for some help in taming the dynamic range.
Here’s the HDR version….
Here is a single capture from the Cathedral Rock scene…
Images and video were captured with Lumix GX7 and the 12-35mm f2.8 Vario Lens. Just after sunrise for about an hour. I was not pushing things captured in Mpeg format cause I know I’m only going to make a YouTube Video. The files were processed in Adobe Premeire Pro. Been trying to learn the program but found it to be a bit deep (because it has so many possibilities) so I’ve been a bit slow to take it up. But I found on KelbyOne.com there are some great Premeire Pro intro videos from Brandon Ford that got me over the hump and this is my first official test.
By the way, if you are/were a NAPP member don’t let it lapse as you are now subscribed to KelbyOne training at the old NAPP rate of $99 per year. If you let it lapse you’ll only get back in at the higher rate. I’m finding the content there to be professionally produced and a great value. Tons of tutorials and tons of videos on all the Adobe products and they are producing more each week. Even at the higher rate it’s a great deal if you want to learn a lot from the best.
Yours in Photography, Bob
by successfulbob | landscape photography, Lumix GX7, Lumix Lounge, photography education
I really enjoy the panoramic format and I thought this scene from my morning hike called out for it. I’m always amazed at how plant life is able to grab a purchase on the rock formations.
This scene is from Courthouse Butte in Sedona, Arizona. I think this will make a pretty nice watercolor. The trailhead is about 7 minutes from my house and there are a bunch of variations for catching about a 3 mile hike in the AM.
Another trail in Sedona leads to Oak Creek at Cathedral Rock. This was some calm water where I was shooting reflections of the trees and a dog jumped in the water and added some beautiful patterns…
Images made with Lumix GX7 and the 12-35 mm f2.8 Vario lens.
I’m thinking about presenting some workshops in Sedona for limited numbers of people. Photograph at dawn til about 8AM. Have some breakfast. Process some images and work on Photoshop and other artistic techniques then photograph sunsets. Probably be a day and a half or two days. Interested? Get in touch.
Yours in Photography, Bob
by successfulbob | Lumix GX7, macro, photography, photography education
Here’s an extension of the another post on getting in close by adding tubes to the lens… Playing with flowers and their pistols.
Small roses photographed after a short shower.
Day lilly image close-up. Playing and practicing
Vello Econo AF Extension Tubes. The Econo tubes were only $49.95 I’d thought I’d give them a whirl. More info here. The Lumix GX7 was great with the 35-100mm f2.8 Vario lens having the view of the image on the screen and being able to set the point of focus exactly where you want it to be.
Yours in Photography, Bob
by successfulbob | Lumix GX7, Lumix Lounge, macro, photography
Getting in close can really change how you can see the world…
But, purpose built macro lenses can get pretty pricey and with the new micro 4/3rds systems still growing it’s selection of lenses I was looking for a way to get in close without breaking the bank. Enter extension tubes. If you use them it allows you to convert any of your lenses to give you a whole new look. There is obviously the traditional extension tube manufaturing company Kenko that run around 180 bucks. I found a similar economy version made by a company called Vello. And they even call it Econo AF Extension Tubes. Since the Econo tubes were only $49.95 I’d thought I’d give them a whirl. Happy to report they work just fine. And, a bonus is that the auto-focus works just fine. With the Lumix GX7 having the view of the image on the screen and being able to set the point of focus exactly where you want it to be.
The kit contains a 10mm and 16mm tubes. You can use them alone or you can stack them for a 26mm extension. Ideally you want to be on a tripod when using extension tubes but if you are really steady and have the camera set at a fast enough shutter speed you can get away with hand holding as I have done here because I was on a trip and left the tripod at home.
Without just a little info you won’t be excited about this photo. The wasp is smaller than the tip of my little finger and the flowers are about the size of the last joint on my little finger.
Captured with the Lumix GX7 and the 35-100 mm f2.8 Vario Lens at 100mm with, I believe, 26mm of extension tubes attached. ISO 400 – f8 at 1/60th sec. Note that the lens was at it’s longest setting in order for the tubes to focus properly. You can’t zoom throughout the entire range on a zoom lens.
I’ll revisit this idea in some future posts as I really like the different perspective you achieve by getting in close. As always if you have any question don’t hesitate to ask or drop a comment on the page.
Yours in Photography, Bob
by successfulbob | photography - art quote
Once you move past learning the basics and advanced features of your camera gear it’s time to push the creativity button.
Oh, wait! there is no creativity button. Darn it!
“Creativity comes from trust. Trust your instincts. And never hope more than you work.”
Rita May Brown – novelist, poet, screenwriter, activist
The last line of this quote is the base and most important part. Work. It’s the most important part of creativity. It’s great to have ideas. It’s great to have concepts. But without digging in and working hard to make it happen it never will… Once you have made a commitment to an idea work it for all it’s worth. And, trust you are heading in the right direction…
by successfulbob | black & white, fine art photography, landscape photography, Lumix GX7, Lumix Lounge
Sometimes you just have to play…
I was experimenting with some slow shutter speeds and the ocean. Don’t consider this a finished piece but a sketch of the direction I want to head with this series. I might want to get horizons to line up a bit more maybe not. Probably get the tones to match a bit more… Or maybe not! Sometimes you just have to put things together and live with them for a while… Let me know what you think.

Breakwater on the beach – Rehobeth Beach, Delaware
captured with a Panasonic Lumix GX7 and 12-35 f2.8 Lumix Vario lens. Had a variable neutral density filter added to get a slower shutter speed to allow the water to become more ethereal…
Yours in Photography, Bob
by successfulbob | art books, kudos, Lumix GX7, Lumix Lounge, photography books, photography education
Julianne Kost rocks!
Saw her presentation at the Sedona Photofest last week and picked up more ideas for my creative work. She has been an inspiration to me for many years and even seeing her program again I always get fired up about creative imaging all over again.
This post is a salute to Julianne turning a lemon into lemonade. In case you didn’t know she is not a fan of flying. OK maybe that’s a bit to soft. She really is uncomfortable flying. But, as she speaks to image makers all across the country for her job at Adobe flying is a big part of her work. So she chooses to get the best view from 30,000 feet and started capturing and creating interesting images from the air and compiled them into a book called ‘Window Seat’. I got my copy autographed back in 2006 and still pop back into the pages for ideas. In addition to sharing her images she gives some tips, tricks and ideas on how the final images were created using Photoshop.
As I flew across the country this week from Phoenix to Philadelphia I made some photos from my own window seat and share them with you here.
Phoenix from the tarmac while waiting for some crossing traffic.
Phoenix neighborhood… a study in line and form.
It feels like an ocean wave working it’s way over the desert hills.
It was a really good cloud day. Fun shooting them from above for a different perspective.
My images were created using a Lumix GX7 my favorite travel camera using the 35-100mm f2.8 Vario Lens. Julianne suggests a bit wider lens and shooting at f2.8 to make sure the outside of the window does not get in focus. In using the longer lens I was able to isolate and crop in on details as they unfolded. Be aware that as the plane is traveling over 500 MPH if you see something fire the shutter fast or it’s gone. Also don’t tilt the camera too far down as you’ll be shooting through too much glass and get the bottom of your capture blurred.
Order up Julianne’s book. You’ll get lots of ideas and inspiration to find your own personal project turning lemons into lemonade…
Yours in Photography, Bob
by successfulbob | black & white, graphic design, landscape photography, Lumix GX7, Lumix Lounge, photography, photography education
I really enjoy the use of this preset on my Lumix GX7.
It’s called Impressive Art. It adds a slight glow to hard contrast lines, saturates and shifts colors and punches up the contrast. I’ve used this with success as is on a few videos for a totally different look. (take a peek at video here)
But my favorite way of using this setting was suggested by my fellow Lumix Luminaries to use Impressive Art but adjust output to Black and White. It gives a very graphic look to the image. I like it and have already used this setting to generate happy clients for my biz.
Here are a few from the canal in Lewes, Delaware. I was enjoying an evening Dogfish IPA at the bar and was attracted to the shadows, lines and reflections on the water… I couldn’t just sit there!
Reflections
Shadows and Line.
Shadows, Line, Reflections.
When using the presets on the camera make sure that you are capturing in jpeg. If you just shoot RAW you will see only the hint of what you thought you were capturing as the camera jpeg disappears when you download it. For the best of both worlds choose to capture in RAW + jpeg. Then you will have the camera settings but also access to all the information presented to the camera so you can do your own processing
by successfulbob | people photography
I am one of the ‘Faces Of PPA’!
Professional Photographers of America (PPA) asked, and is asking, its members to provide a self portrait for the Faces of PPA campaign. I went to one of my favorite places for photography in Sedona – Cathedral Rock at Crescent Moon State Park and made this by setting my camera up on a tripod and asking a passerby to fire the shutter. This is a still from a series of images that created an animated GIF with Oak Creek running underfoot… Always have to take it step further when I can.
From the ‘Faces of PPA’ campaign. Here’s a link to a larger version on Facebook.
If you are a member of PPA why not get your image and comments in to the Faces campaign???
Yours in Photography, Bob
by successfulbob | art books, photography, photography - art quote, photography books, photography education, success education
Always looking for inspiration outside of photography to help with the creative side… And today let’s take a walk far, far away from the photographer’s world and into getting the brain to fire on all cylinders for some creativity.
“Only that day dawns to which we are awake.” Henry David Thoreau, in Walden
Have you ever driven somewhere and wondered how you got there??
Do you enjoy the cascade of water flowing over you during your shower? Do you even feel it?
What was the last really good meal you had? Were you actually there for it and can remember it? In detail?
Do you really look at yourself in the mirror or are you so busy doing whatever it is you are doing you don’t really see?
“What the hell does this have to do with creativity Bob??” You ask.
Here what I believe. We are so busy living in the past or the future that there is no way to truly harness our brains for as much creativity as possible. By that I mean we spend way too much time fretting over something in the past like an angry conversation that keeps playing over and over in our head. Or, we are constantly worried about the possibility of something that might go wrong in the future. Or, trying so hard to get to that ‘successful’ place that will make us finally make us happy – you know, having more money, or being able to travel to that magical destination, or finding a new partner… Pick that thing that’s always in the future that we KNOW will make us happy, rather than being happy now.
If we enjoy THIS moment – RIGHT NOW – and live in this moment as much as possible we open up our brains to concentrate on what we are working on with no distractions from the past or future will allow us to be open to new ideas and creative combinations.
The job of the brain is to create thoughts. LOTS of thoughts. Many of these thoughts can take us away from where we might want to be at any one moment. It is also responsible for doing many things automatically to keep us alive like breathing, our heart beating, muscles moving so we can walk and move. The problem comes when we are so busy allowing our brain to do so many things automatically we don’t control our thoughts and allow our them to control us our life can pass by in a flurry and we have not had a chance to enjoy it – or be as creative as we might be.
How do you gain back control? Meditation is a great way to find out how the brain is working to our detriment. “Wait a minute Bob, I’m not going to sit in a corner looking at my navel!” I don’t suggest that by any means. What I do suggest is learning how to “be in the moment”. Learn a practice called Mindfulness.
I’m still workng on it myself but finding it to be extremely helpful and this is a great place to start. A book called Whereever You Go There you Are, – by Jon Kabat-Zinn Give it read. (I’ve given you a link to the Kindle version as the hard copy is currently out of stock) Try some of his suggestions and let me know how it’s been a help to you. It’s under ten bucks and a little bit of your time. I think you will be extremely surprised… in your everyday life as well as your creative life.
Your in Photography, Bob