Belated Seasons Greetings


Okay, so these are delayed season’s greetings. Midvalley on my Minolta 50mm F1.4 at F1.4 with Pro Tama 0.45x wide angle converter for extra softness (oddly, softer around the center.)


50mm F2.0.


The Curve. 50mm F5.6. I prefer subtle out-of-focus where you can sort of see the background. (This is a note to those stuck on a 50mm F1.8 at Aperture Priority, F1.8 all the time. 😛 )


The Minolta 70-210mm F4 beercan lens returns! I don’t bring this lens out often. This troupe was rather unacrobatic, so I’ll omit their performance at Berjaya Times Square.


Rewind to my office. The lion swallowed a man trying to grab an angpau as his only escape!


Lions watching National Geographic on Astro MAX in the office.


Fully electronic with noise and lights!


God of something. Uh, the knowledgeable and wise shall comment.


Now that’s what I call a good lion dance! Proper jumping acrobatics and stuff.


Amazing. They both jump and land on the poles, while keeping correct distance.


There is a risk of wardrobe malfunction should the front guy jump before the rear guy does.


Hooray confetti!


And then, come midnight 26th February 2007, fireworks were blasting all over my neighborhood. I ran all over with just my Sony A100 and 50mm F1.4 in bulb mode, holding down until the sound of fireworks stopped. I held it too long and ambitiously, so I’ll omit them fireworks shots. 🙁


Fire, flare and ghosts.


My neighborhood gave THX a run for their money. By the time I ran close to where I suspect fireworks were being launched, it had already ended. Fireworks were then heard on the other end! I must’ve went each corner twice. This is one of the few rare ones where I get to catch firecrackers.


The Chinese celebrate their famous invention – gunpowder.


Finally, I found a launch spot. Alas, it was too late.

Emo Hair, Shoe Stare

Hey Albert, so what kind of music do you listen to?

Geez, I thought the hair was obvious. I am a rocker! Heavy metal flows through my veins.

However, Google seems to think otherwise; Google Image Search says I have an emo hairstyle.

Thanks suelingz for finding me, smashpOp for alerting me, and Jed for taking the picture.

Unfortunately, I have perfect 20/20 vision and have no reason to wear glasses. Who knows, I might look hot in emo glasses.


For the record, this is an example of what an emo hairstyle looks like. George of Dreaming To Sleep on vocals sounds exactly like an American emo vocalist. Syefri plays bass in the background. (Taken from an old blog entry. Hello Natalie the hot dancer!)

In the meantime, I have come up with a breakthrough discovery in the hidden language of women.

Many a time I have been out with a chick, and I bump into another chick (or congregation of chicks).

Chick to chick: “Hey, nice shoes! Where did you get them from?

This almost always happens!

I’m not sure if that is a snide hint to me to replace my starving artist shoes. However, I have surveyed around, and this phenomena does not happen to every guy I know. However, the one coincidence I can concur from this is that it seems to happen to relatively uh… good-looking guys. (Unless there’s another variable I have not noticed.)

Therefore, I suppose that “Hey, nice shoes! Where did you get them from?” really means:

Hands off, he’s mine!

(I have discounted the possibility of the chicks all being fashionistas, because some of them are laid back T-shirt and jeans wearers.)

Outtakes


Outtakes from Shelley Leong and Az Samad at No Black Tie, January 10th 2007.


Regina and Tracy!


Mike, on the strings.


5 second exposure. I’m not sure if this was Reggie’s artsiness or Shelley’s.


This was Reggie’s work; she rotated a long exposure to get the effect on the candles. Just when you think you’ve thought of everything!


Checking the guestlist.


Why isn’t anybody here?


No Black Tie is the most beautiful regular gig/live music space I know of.


Some gigs crowd up the stairs.


4 seconds rear sync. Spot the Vignes!

Oh and I’ve finally updated my links! Added Punkstereo, Norman and Avril-who-really-is-named-that-in-her-identity-card. More will come later once I’m done pruning.

Hot Beyond Red


What do you do when you see blistering hot skies?


You shoot infrared, of course! (This was with my Canon Powershot A520, circular polarizer, red filter, linear polarizer using this method.)


I turned it so that enough light would come in to expose the reds, to balance out infrared rays which appear purple. This was 0.5 seconds.


Slow-shutter stuff! 0.6 seconds.


0.5 seconds.


1/3rd of a second.

Anyway, the 52mm Hoya R72 infrared-pass filter had been adequate for my Canon Powershot A520. However, when fitted to the Sony A100, it was a different story – the exposure times were now in seconds, and it was predominantly red. What I did not realize then, was that the red is actually the little red that the R72 lets through!

The Hoya RM90 infrared-pass filter is a true infrared-pass filter; it blocks all natural light, letting only infrared through.

The Hoya R72 infrared-pass filter lets very little red in instead. However, on older point-and-shoot digicams the infrared-block filter was weaker, so in long exposures more of the infrared purple appears than the red.

The circular polarizer, combined with the linear polarizer, and turned so that it was darkest, was mostly black… but let in some violet!

The smarter of you might realize what I figured. 🙂


That’s right, combine the Hoya R72 filter with the two polarizers to kill off all natural light! The R72 took care of everything except red, while the two polarizers removed everything but violet (which is on the other end of the color spectrum from red.)

Note that the filters are screwed in reverse, because I did not have a 55-52mm step-down ring to fit the 52mm filters on my Sony 18-70mm F3.5-5.6 kit lens. 🙁 I used two UV filters, 55mm and 52mm, superglued to each other, instead.

The orange tape is there to show alignment; when the two tape markers are aligned, the polarizers do not let any light through (except a bit of violet.)

I then made my maiden voyage to Digicolor, Jalan Ipoh, where I discovered they had the same thing – a China-made, brandless infrared-pass filter! The price? RM55 for a 77mm true infrared-pass filter!

The 77mm Hoya RM90 infrared-pass filter would’ve been RM600 from some sources.

They also have 77mm warming circular polarizers for RM55 too! If I got any lens with anything larger than 55mm I’d get a set of 77mm filters. 😀

And so, I got Grace one, plus a 58-77mm step up ring for her Canon 18-55mm F3.5-5.6 kit lens. I got to take it for a test run. 🙂

Oh, and they have loads of step up and step down rings, all on a huge rack! Mount reverser rings (to put a lens front first on a SLR body) and reverser rings (to make two lenses face each other, to do super macro, albeit without superglue) all for under RM30! China-made madness!


From left to right, top to bottom: Sony A100 at 50mm F3.5 1/2s ISO1600 using Hoya RM90 equivalent; Sony A100 at 50mm F3.5 1/10s ISO1600 using Hoya R72; Sony A100 at 50mm F1.4 1/4000s ISO1600 using Hoya RM90 equivalent; Sony A100 at 50mm F11 1/320s ISO100 no filter; Sony A100 at 18mm F3.5 30s ISO400 using Hoya RM90 equivalent; Sony A100 at 18mm F9 1/80s ISO100 no filter; Canon Powershot A520 at 35mm equivalent F2.6 1s ISO200 using Hoya RM90 equivalent; Canon Powershot A520 at 35mm equivalent F2.6 1s ISO200 using Hoya R72.


Canon Powershot A520 at F2.6 1/10s ISO200 using Hoya R72.

The Hoya R72 is still very usable, especially on the Canon Powershot A520, where it can separate areas by the infrared intensity; purple for infrared and red for others.


Sony A100 at 50mm F4 1s ISO1600 using Hoya R72 and two polarizers.

I can get a similiar effect using the R72 and two polarizers on the Sony A100, if I dial in the right amount on the polarizers. Note the slight red tint in the skies!

So what about my infrared-modded Fujifilm Digital Q1?


35mm equivalent (this was taken with the webcam manual focus lens, before I put SLR lenses on the Q1) F3.5 1/2000s ISO100 using Hoya R72.


Same exposure, without filters this time. The blue gets to leak into the picture! In most cases the Q1 captures mostly infrared unless it is in a flourescent-lit room.

S.A.D.


Getting all wet!


Flashback, February 15th 2007.


Singles’ Night, KL Jamasia. As with all singles’ nights I’d been for, this was no different, not escaping the curse of ultimately being a fete de la sausage.

Maybe, one guy will leave with the only hot chick and her friend. Lucky bastard. :D:D:D


Which may or may not explain how I teleported here, to Project Bazooka’s Singles’ Traffic Light party!


…albeit quite late, but in time for the band I’d came for – Bittersweet.


Happy Britpop ala Supergrass. Stuff you wanna pump on your stereo.


Happy mod people.


This is why I rarely shoot at F1.4. Softness!


Smashing time.

Look Ma, No Pictures!

So I caught Stranger Than Fiction and The Holiday, two movies featuring two comedians I like doing serious roles; Will Ferrell (best in Anchorman and the Cowbell SNL skit) and Jack Black (best in School Of Rock, and maybe Tenacious D: Pick Of Destiny whenever I get to see it.)

Despite the many questions of the believeability of Stranger Than Fiction, like, “Did her character manifest in real life… or is Karen in her book?“, it is certainly more believeable than The Holiday, where Jude Law knocks on your door (wow!) and he has big-eyed kids (awww!) and he is a widower (AWWW.) Bloody Hallmark channel trite.

Those scriptwriters take every chance they get to put an AWWW moment in. Are we supposed to start crying in the first 15 minutes of the movie?

In Stranger Than Fiction, Will Ferrell plays Harold Crick, an IRS taxman who suddenly hears the voice of novelist Kay Eiffel (played by a very sombre Emma Thompson). She then narrates that he is going to die… which freaks him out. Will looks distraught, which really isn’t that much of a departure from him, because ALL his movies feature him going through a rough patch. He also always beds a hot chick (except in Kicking And Screaming, I think…)

Stolen from IMDB’s Quotes:

Harold Crick: [talking to Ana while holding a cardboard box with multiple small paper bags inside] I brought you flours.

(The joke being that Ana is a baker that Harold has the hots for. That scene was a lot more real and more sweet because he was a gangly nerdy taxman, as opposed to the super suave Jude Law who has everything set romantically, being an editor, which was by far the least romantic job held by any of the characters in The Holiday.)

Meanwhile, in The Holiday, Jack Black is always animated and always gets a singing skit. I tire of seeing it when it’s not appropriate.

The ending for Stranger Than Fiction might disappoint, but the irony of that is already stated in the movie.

Dr. Hilbert: It’s not great, it’s okay.

The movie is the novel! The beautiful irony of that made me realize how brilliant it was.

Both movies have a lot of hidden references; The Holiday makes it most obvious, with each character having a few references to previous movies. Heck, the movie was written with the four stars in mind! Stranger Than Fiction has loads of references to The Beatles.

I wonder now if Sacha Baron Cohen will do a serious role. Yeah, the guy behind Ali G, Julien (he goes “I like to mooove it mooove it!” in Madagascar)

I don’t quite know how he would outdo the masterpiece that is Borat: Cultural Learnings of America for Make Benefit Glorious Nation of Kazakhstan, really. I loved the hidden irony and parody; Borat is a reporter from a fictional Kazakhstan who comes to America to learn its culture and document it for his country to see.

Random quotes stolen from IMDB:

Borat: My neighbor Nushuktan Tulyiagby is still assholes. I get iPod, he get iPod mini. Haha! Everyone know iPod mini for girls!
Borat: Go, kids! Smash the Jew chick before it hatches!
Azamat: [points to two cockroaches] The Jews have shifted their shapes!
Borat: You telling me the man who try to put a rubber fist in my anus was a homosexual?
Borat: My moustache still tastes of your testes!

Yes, there are some pretty gross scenes there (which came about since Talladega Nights: The Ballad Of Ricky Bobby, where Sacha plays Jean Girard, a gay racecar driver who kisses Will Ferrell.)

While it seems like Borat is a highly ignorant chauvinist ape from a faraway land, he is really parodying the Americans in their ignorance of outside culture. For example, in his fictional Kazakhstan, they believe that Jews transform into ogres and that they must be killed. (Sacha is Jewish, heh.)

That’s Just Prime!


I’ve never been a fan of collecting Optimus Prime, but this Transformers Classics version was too awesome.


Awesome full articulation! I’d say, the best, most-well balanced designs I’d ever seen (not counting the giant Masterpiece Optimus Prime that is.)


I then realized that I had a few Primes, really. (From left: Transformers Classics Optimus Prime, Transformers Energon Powerlink Optimus Prime, Transformers Alternators Optimus Prime, Transformers Energon Powerlink Rodimus, Transformers Cybertron Excellion. Transformers Beast Wars Optimus Primal is in front.)


…I also have a collection of trucks (addition being Transformers Energon Powerlink Barricade.)


Primes, transformed!


Transformers Classics

50’s Rage


The 50’s are in! From left, Olympus Zuiko 50mm F1.8; Canon 50mm F1.8 Mk II; Minolta 50mm F1.4 (pre RS), Fujinon 50mm F1.4 (without body).

I recently bought the Olympus from Mustaffa, a friendly guy who teaches black-and-white film processing! (Which is what every self-respecting B&W shooter does, pushing and pulling, dodging and burning, and having your own darkroom with funky chemicals.) Learning that would save a lot on film processing fees, so if you’re interested, email him at mustaffaaziz8@yahoo.com.

Sure, you could shoot black-and-white on digital but you don’t get the same contrast range.


From left: My Olympus OM-2000, Mustaffa’s Leica M6 TTL, his Olympus OM-2.

I finally got to touch a Leica rangefinder! Yes, it was way brighter than Kingsley’s Yashica Electro GSN 35, and the yellow secondary image was very obvious. Its film winder was a lot more refined and discreet, and he installed a soft shutter button.

The cloth shutter, of course, was very quiet.


The OM-2 was also an amazingly engineered camera, with fabric shutter, air cushion dampeners, and various springs to make its mirror so much softer than any other SLR. I couldn’t find the air tunnel they claim softens the sound.


My Olympus family. From left: Vivitar 2x teleconverter, Vivitar 24mm F2.0, Olympus Zuiko 50mm F1.8, Olympus Zuiko 35-70mm F3.5-4.8, Olympus Zuiko 70-210mm F4.5-5.6.


The Olympus Zuiko 50mm F1.8 is amazingly sharp! I think this was either F5.6 or F8. Click on the picture for a bigger view.


I love Fujifilm Superia film. This was the ASA200 version. Gotta love them emerald greens!


Using the 50mm F1.8.


24mm F2 (colors and lightness not adjusted. I love how the contrast is there, but doesn’t kill the shadows. Or maybe my OM-2000 overexposes just a bit.)


Near Burger King, Desa Sri Hartamas.


And now, guess what this is!


Below it, lies this. Yep, Jeff of Ampang Park had a broken Canon 50mm F1.8 Mark II lens lying around, and let me try my hand at fixing it. Note the 5-blade circular aperture.


The front element.


The front element, when reversed in front of another lens, gives awesome barrelling distortion and a closeup factor of about +20, I think. Shot at 35mm F36 ISO1600 with flash (to get enough focus to reach Jeff!) Yes, the Sony 18-70mm F3.5-5.6 lens was already at infinity.


Switching the lens to Manual Focus disengages the gears.


The front element, mounted on my infrared-modded Fujfilm Digital Q1.


20mm, F22, 1/60, ISO400 with flash.


18mm, F3.5, 1/10, ISO400. Focusing changes the strength of the effect.


45mm, F5.6, 1/15, ISO400.


50mm, F22, 1/80, ISO400 with flash.


This is goood sheeet.

Oh yeah after I was done playing with it, I just applied some force and popped it back on. It worked like magic and focused when I tried it on a Canon EOS 5 at Jeff’s the next day! I didn’t intend to disconnect it again though it had a cool effect. However, if you do permanently disconnect your Canon 50mm F1.8 Mark II, you know you could use the front element for some funky stuff. 😀

Eye Eye, Kept Turn


On the 28th of January 2007, I took a long walk from Titiwangsa Monorail station to the Eye On Malaysia!

Some photography enthusiasts did not want to go because they figured that everybody else had shot the EOM. Bollocks! If you are as enthusiastic, you’d inject your own style and make radically different pictures.

I went there with that mindset.

…and, for the first time, I brought my tripod out. 😀


2.5 second exposure, ISO100.


30 second exposure. Yeah, everybody has done this…


81 second exposure, on bulb mode. I held it down as long as I could; I’ve never held bulb mode this long before and don’t intend to find its limit. 😛


But first, smashpOp, Jenifur and Rames jump!

The bright spotlights inspired me to try this; Aperture Priority at F1.4 on my Minolta 50mm F1.4 gave me a bright 1/160 seconds. No flash was used! First time I’ve seen KLCC out-of-focus, even! Coincidentally, 1/160 is the Sony A100’s built-in flash sync speed.


Another, in front of the Eye On Malaysia. This was at 50mm, F1.4, 1/250th of a second.


And then, I zoomed. WHOA! Initially discovered this during an accidental pan shot.


I zoomed in and out on my Sony 18-70mm F3.5-5.6 kit lens while snapping away to get different permutations.


I thought I struck gold when I discovered the neon lights of the Eye On Malaysia had a refresh rate of 100 Hertz (blinking 100 times a second). Yes, I counted the number of flickers and divided it by the shutter speed.


And then whoa! Fireworks.


Out-of-focus fireworks remind me of Quake 2. Yes, the game I made a few models for.


I always wanted to zoom in on fireworks.


I also tried unsuccessfully to pan with fireworks. This looks like yarn though.


Initially a plain long exposure, the fireworks came on and I unlocked it from the tripod.


30 second exposure…


Though it depends when you hit the shutter (this, also 30 seconds.) Furry.

And now, for shots from my Olympus OM-2000.


Olympus 70-210mm F4.5-5.6 lens with Vivitar 2x teleconverter, giving 420mm F11.


Another 420mm shot, with boosted saturation.


Vivitar 24mm F2.0. I love how the shadows are so well exposed! Color/luminosity not tweaked. Took wideness of lens for granted, making Jenifur out-of-focus.

I love Fujifilm’s emerald-ish color! This was Fujifilm Superia ASA200.


Having two cameras, especially one that didn’t need dark frame subtraction (which explains the Busy sign after long exposures), was great.


True undestructive bulb mode!


Since I finally had a tripod near my house, I could do bulb mode on the traffic lights near my house! (No color/lightness tweaks.)


The virginal Sony version; got the green-yellow-red succession in 11 seconds hence the darker exposure.

If you bothered, you could count the seconds the lights are green, shoot 2 seconds before it turns yellow, and hold for 6 seconds (2 seconds for each color).

My first successful attempt was here.

Just as I was writing this, feeling all accomplished, I found out that TV Smith beat me to it! He is the man on the front of alternative photographic technique.

Seasoned Greetings

You know you’re getting old when a hot chick smiles at you at your grandma’s open house… and she gives you an angpau. 🙁

Fun things to do? Toss glitter over the front entrance and tell them it’s for good luck. They can’t sweep it away!

Oh, and has anybody flipped through ASTRO channels lately? The new ones are mostly Chinese! It’s like MEASAT-3 launched and hovered right over Taiwan.

Happy Chinese New Year!


(I scouted the neighborhood while fireworks were blasting, but didn’t manage to catch any. So here’s some from the beercan.)


Outside Ampang Park.


Gotta love the creamy bokeh.