Category Archives: Pictures

A Gripping Tale

And now, for Part Two of my gripping tale of how I hold my Sony Alpha 700. Part One is here.


This is the standard, intuitive grip. The thumb lands on the AF/MF button, but the Drive, WB and ISO buttons are notably out of reach, on the top surface. A few friends who had the A700 also wondered if we had the common affliction of having Asian-sized hands.

wkcheang also reports discomfort, that the bottom-right corner of the camera leaves uncomfortable pressure upon his palm. I never faced such a problem; I always felt it to be soft and rounded.


Those of you who have had a smaller SLR would probably tuck their last finger under the grip. I used to do that with my ol’ Sony Alpha 100.


However, when I do that with the A700, something else happens – my thumb can now reach the top three buttons with ease, and the first joint of my thumb presses the AF/MF button and operates the rear dial!

The aforementioned pressure to the palm is also gone.


And this is the leftie grip which I learnt from Asyraf and Ted. With some amount of dexterity, you could even operate everything with your left hand alone!

Mega, Dude!


26th October 2007 was when I saw Dave Mustaine in flesh in Fort Canning Park, Singapore. Yes, the original guitarist for Metallica, since sacked for drug and alcohol problems, who then formed his own thrash metal band, Megadeth! A few albums later, he discovered neo-classical shredder Marty Friedman, and they made the sweetest, crunchiest, progressive blend of thrash and speed metal. Those times did not last, but Megadeth is still playing thrash metal and keeping it true. I can’t say the same for Metallica.

(Apologies for the low-quality pictures, I was using my Nokia N70 because cameras were not allowed in.)

And so, YK, Tarquin and I waited. A sound engineer would come up on stage and test a guitar, to which we’d shout in the dopiest Californian drawl, “Hey wait a minute! You’re not Dave!

A slow guitar intro started the set, with the familiar chugs of Sleepwalker coming in. This was what I thought was the most intense of the songs from the new album, United Abominations, and they picked a good starting song! The crowd shifted about with human bodies moving like ocean waves.

I always wondered if they’d play their older stuff, or keep strictly to the new album, since it was a United Abominations Tour Of Duty anyway.

Thankfully, Take No Prisoners came on! Once the main riff hit at 0:36 (well, on the album, anyway), we all jumped, dancing in circles with elbows out. Undoubtedly, the crowd energy was more intense with the stronger hits. We all chanted along, “Don’t ask what you can do for your country! Asssk! What your country! Can dooo! For you!” This song was off Rust In Peace, their first album with Marty, of many to come of my favorite Megadeth lineup.

Wake Up Dead was next, from an older, more plainly thrash metal album – Peace Sells… But Who’s Buying. They fast-forwarded to Skin O’ My Teeth from Countdown To Extinction, followed by a speech.


YK and I were like, “Whoa dude! He looks just like in pictures, with the blond curly hair and I’m-forever-second-place snarl!

What’s next? Washington Is Next! From this point on it could be made clear that Megadeth was playing a healthy mix of the old and new, evenly spaced out! Then, there was one of their slowest songs, A Tout Le Monde (which is the only song from Youthanasia.) The brooding In My Darkest Hour, from So Far, So Good… So What! then came on.

The ascending chromatic chord progression that would also be heard in Metallica – The Call Of The Ktulu were heard in chord form. Hangar 18! Eight or more solos of bliss! Alternating between the bluesy licks of Dave and the melodic neoclassical of Marty, while mucking around with rhythm changes, the whole lot of us were singing the solos aloud. We were not alone!

Interestingly, Megadeth performed the songs exactly as you’d hear them on the album, 32nd note by note. Dave’s voice followed the original recordings, not the voice on the remastered album. I found that amazing because you’d feel like you were teleported into that era when the album was produced!

James Hetfield however, uses his newer voice on older songs. Of course, James sounded worse in Metallica’s first album, heh.

I don’t know why Megadeth played note-by-note though; after all, guitarist Glen Drover was from King Diamond and you’d expect some amazing degree of technical prowess from Dave and him. Then again, it might be the case of the classical piano player who can’t make up a solo jam to save his life.


James Lorenzo on bass was from White Lion. Who’s the drummer? Shawn Drover is Glen’s brother.

Next up: Gears Of War, from their United Abominations album, and She-Wolf from Cryptic Writings. Apparently, this was a Singapore exclusive. Then, there was The System Has Failed from the album of the same name.

I am positive, however, that crowd participation was greater with songs from the Rust In Peace album, as Tornado Of Souls showed. Ashes In Your Mouth, from Countdown To Extinction, and Never Walk Alone… A Call To Arms returns to the new.

They took a break, and returned when an orchestra could be heard. Jeng-jeng JENG! Or however it was pronounced, we all mouthed the riff to Symphony Of Destruction (off CTE)! They played the extended version. This began a flurry of crowd favorites, like Trust (off CW) and Peace Sells… But Who’s Buying? (off an album the same name).

Thank you and goodnight, they said, but we all knew what to do. Call for an encore! “Holy Wars!“, chanted the crowd.


They returned obligingly, with one of their most technical, progressive metal songs. “Brother will kill brother, spreading blood across the laaand, killing for religion, something I don’t understand“, we sang along. For once, they mucked with the song, and slowed down the classical riff before the second half of the song.

Except, of course, that they played Mechanix instead, which can be heard as a slower Metallica – The Four Horsemen elsewhere. Oddly, I liked Metallica’s Kill ‘Em All album because a lot of it was contributed by Dave. Again, this was a Singapore exclusive!

Thank the devil then, for they returned to the second half of Holy Wars, The Punishment Due. I was finally satisfied.

Oh, and I won’t be uploading videos due to my inability to hold the phone completely still, or shut up during the riffs or sing the wrong lyrics. So here are some videos from Mark/Halcyon, a Korean guitarist who plays excellent covers!

Megadeth – Holy Wars… The Punishment Due Cover
Megadeth – Peace Sells Dual Cover
Metallica – Battery Cover
Eric Johnson – Manhattan Cover

Get A Grip

Some people ask, what’s up with the Sony A700 vertical grip? Why is the shutter button not at the corner of it?

The answer is ergonomics.


Xian Jin, with a Nikon D80, Nikkor AF-D 85mm F1.8 and the MB-D80 battery grip. Notice that his right hand is higher up. In fact, he is pulling the camera up so that his left eye will be able to look through the viewfinder.


Me with Asyraf‘s Canon EOS 1Ds Mk I with Canon 50mm F1.8 Mk II. With this, the vertical grip is built into the body. Personally, it felt like I wish my left eye was at the same level as my nose to hold this more comfortably. My right hand certainly felt like it was reaching for the top level of a cupboard.

The 50mm is a slow focuser with the 1Ds, but that’s another story.


However, this is not so with the Sony Alpha 700, Sony Carl Zeiss 16-80mm F3.5-4.5 DT and Sony VG-C70AM portrait grip. (This is not mine; it’s George‘s.) My right hand no longer feels awkward, and I can lower my elbow, for better stability. Also, more of the camera’s weight is held by my right hand.

Thanks to KJ for taking this shot.

Also, the joystick and all buttons accessible by the right hand are duplicated on the vertical grip. This is different from say, the Canon 40D, which has fewer buttons, and you cannot reach the joystick when in portrait mode without stabbing your eye first.

An added bonus is that the Drive, WB and ISO buttons which are originally harder to reach with the right hand in landscape orientation are now very easy to reach with the left hand. Also, the Fn button of the A700 can be reached with your left thumb in portrait orientation!


A normal landscape orientation grip. Note that the distance between both hands is almost the same in both landscape and portrait grip!

That said, I will not be getting the vertical grip so soon. I don’t have space in most of my camera bags for it, and I can make do with the chunky grip of the A700. Sometimes, I prefer to rotate the camera clockwise (with vertical grips it’s always anti-clockwise.)

Vote For Cleanliness!


I’m all for peace and harmony.

However, when you’re having dinner at a mamak near Paul’s Place and it gets raided and you get sent to a lockup too, you know that there’s something wrong with the people in authority.

When you get police knocking on your door and you so unfortunately know someone and you become the scapegoat suspect, you know you’re screwed the system is screwed (and it will screw you too).

Now if you’ve committed an offense, like driving under the influence of alcohol, and you get off with a lighter fine, that is corruption which does not seem so bad compared to people who have not done anything wrong who are thrown into deeper shit.

I’m a registered voter and I will vote. Even if the average apathetic Malaysian thinks there is no point, that everyone else thinks peace, I think that the people in authority should not be complacent.

Why bother? Not like it will change anything.

It’s that attitude that does not change anything.

I hope that the crowd who showed up for the Bersih Rally and braved the rain, chemical or otherwise, and the smoke, (from cars? Unlikely…) will do their duty. Shift the statistics. Show them that we care about where we’re going.

Azira and Su Ann, you guys are my heroes.

A question though: How does anybody know the true number of people who showed up? 100

Sunrise Set


Uncle Albert, when are you going to update your blog with pictures from the Sunrise Mont Kiara Jazz Fest 2007?

Awww Ashley is so cute, how can I not update? Here’s from the 24th August 2007 night.


Ariff Akhir does not bite, honestly. Lagu Malas is an all-time favorite.


He got Jaya Satriani to shred for him!


…which makes Ariff’s usual folk and blues a little trippy.


And… well, it does seem like there is a shortage of bassists in the scene. Meet Alda the band slut!


Next up, in key and on key…


Arthur Kam & Vitalique!


Also featuring Elvira (also with Asiabeat.)


Drummers are usually hard to shoot due to insufficient lighting on them. 210mm F4 1/8s ISO400 with the Cosina 70-210mm F2.8-4. Heck, most of the shots in this entry are from that lens.


Are we brothers?” “I don’t know man, I got some complicated syncopated jazz bass passages to play…


Arthur Kam. For some reason I think jazz bands where the drummer is featured in the name of the band have a tendency to avert to fusion or funky jazz.


…and the winner for the lucky draw is… (note that wireless microphones will someday be powered by the Yellow Coverage Fellow.)


Sheila Majid ended the night!


Guitar and bass.


What percussive instrument do I hit next?


Sheila’s daughter comes on stage to sing (with her brother, too.) Plus awww factor!


She brought a massive crowd and I could see why; she had this warmth that spoke to every one of us.

My other Sunrise Mont Kiara Jazz Fest 2007 post is here:
Return Of The Sunrise

A-O Kay

Okay, this is old news, and I’ve been running around with a Sony Alpha 700 with Version 2 patched in, but here it is anyway:

Click here for Sony Alpha 700 Version 2 firmware update.

I quote the page:

The Firmware update improves the following issues:
* The picture sharpness is better under low contrast conditions.
* Noise is reduced when working at high sensitivity ISO setting.
* The flash control is better at close range with a non-ADI control lens.

Unfortunately, I did not have a controlled environment to test the before-and-after pictures. Also, I rarely ever flash at close range with a non-ADI control lens.

David Kilpatrick over at Photoclub Alpha has published a great article about the Sony A700’s improved Advanced Dynamic Range Optimizer. I have to agree, as I’ve seen amazing results with the new DRO (on the Sony A100, DRO was meek and humble.)

DRO set on Level 4 or 5 looks like a HDR image, with less fakeness! I’ll post my own pictures in a separate post.

Click here to read Advanced DRO – the A700�s magic bullet

And now, for geeking on a different mount – the Four-Thirds mount has a new professional body in the form of the Olympus E-3!

I have to admit, I really like its specifications, and after touching one in real-life I am convinced it is awesome.

It’s got a white-balance sensor! Wireless flash is finally supported, with compatible flash units. Highlight/shadow spot metering is interesting.

Kelvin WB can be set from 2000K to 14000K (insane!) when competitors go from 2500K to 9900K only.

Of course, there’s always good ol’ One Touch WB (you can bind the Fn key to that). This would make it the JPEG shooter’s dream.


Its 2.5″ LCD screen may seem old, at 320×240, and not as bright as the Sony A700 (at 640×480). However, it swivels! Perfect for the random times when you’d want to camwhore with it.

And yes, Live View is not fun when you don’t have a swivel screen. Thank goodness the E-3 has that! In addition to that, when pressing the AEL/AFL button to trigger AF in Live View, the screen freezes its last frame and shows you which AF point is being focused on. This is unlike the Canon 40D, which blacks out while focusing. (Canon has by far the worst implementation of Live View AF, this generation.)

The grip is rubbery. It is also chunky, like my Sony A700. It also goes into the fashion of having separate vertical grips, yay! The buttons are all over but are in the right place.

The E-3 claims to have the world’s fastest AF with the Olympus Zuiko Digital 12-60mm F2.8-4.0 SWD. Having tried it, I’ll believe that claim! In Live View, however, it seems notably slower, despite seeing it focus in the viewfinder as you press AEL/AFL (minus the mirror flapping bit.)

Honestly, I did not feel disappointed with its AF, unlike some other more expensive professional-level bodies which I tried.


The Olympus Zuiko Digital 50-200mm F2.8-3.5 SWD, equivalent to a 100-400mm F2.8-3.5 on film.

However, I do have a gripe with it. I’d like to be able to set different AF modes for Live View and uh… viewfinder mode.

I’d want to use S-AF[MF] (Single AF, with Manual Focus Override) for viewfinder mode. Half-pressing the shutter should AF, and this is the amazingly fast AF they advertise of.

I’d want to use MF for Live View mode. NOT S-AF[MF] because, if I focused on something using AEL/AFL but did not shoot, and waited for the moment and pressed the shutter all the way down, using S-AF[MF] would REFOCUS if the object had moved out of the AF point, causing a random shutter lag, very unbecoming of dSLRs! Thus, MF is best for Live View, where I tap AEL/AFL to focus anyway.

Fortunately, the AF mode is on the top-left ala the Canon 1D series, but it is a hassle to press the Live View button and then change the AF mode accordingly.


A good reason to go into the Olympus line is for the Four-Thirds lenses, like this here Olympus Zuiko Digital 14-35mm F2.0. With a 2x crop factor, it feels like a 28-70mm of film, or about a 18-50mm of APS-C. Yes, F2.0! You don’t ever get F2.0 zooms elsewhere.

Unfortunately, the Four-Thirds system is still new, and you won’t find second-hand lenses, and third-party manufacturers don’t make much Four-Thirds-mount lenses, possibly due to the different range. However, you can get an adaptor for most mounts to the Four-Thirds mount, but that means the lens has to be operated manually, preferably one with an aperture ring.

Mirror, Lens?

A few months back, there was a competition on ClubAlpha.net, Sony’s official Alpha forum. Take a picture of yourself with the A100, it said.


I shot this with my Sony A100 with Sony 18-70mm F3.5-5.6 DT at 70mm F36 (to get as much of both of us in focus.) Of course, this was not valid because the camera itself was not in the picture. (That’s my Minolta Dynax 7 used as a frame.)


40mm F36. This time, the Dynax 7’s back was opened and it was set to a 10 second exposure (to give me enough time to get into the reflected frame.) The apparent mirror in the frame is a real mirror held to the back of the camera!

Needless to say, I didn’t win anything because I wasn’t (apparent) in the shot, or the camera wasn’t in the shot.

Sing And Pore

I was in Singapore for the weekend, to catch Megadeth and Heaven And Hell. But that’s not what this blog entry is about!

I stayed off Clarke Quay, a 5 minute walk from the camera geek hub of Singapore – Funan IT Mall, Peninsula Plaza and Peninsula Shopping Centre. These three places also had guitars, while Funan had computer equipment… very much like Bintang Walk, the geek hub of Kuala Lumpur.


Look mommy, the first ever digital SLR – it was a Kodak!

Singapore was indeed heaven for people afflicted with Gear Acquisition Syndrome; all sorts of weird, rare lenses and cameras were available. Loads of old Sigma lenses, in all mounts – Nikon F, Contax/Yashica, Olympus OM (yes, manual focus), Minolta MD (yes, manual focus), Pentax K, and Minolta AF.

Loads of old Minolta 28-80mm F3.5-5.6 kit lenses (both in silver and black).


P&G Photographic Centre in The Adelphi had the Vivitar Series 1 Q-Dos for Minolta MD mount, for SGD320! This rare lens had a switch that would add a red and blue filter to make stereoscopic images! They also had loads of M42 lenses, ironically all 28mm F2.8 lenses.

I have never felt so much love for my Minolta X300.


Loads of old Minolta MD mount lenses. (Back has 50mm F1.4 and 135mm F2.8 lenses, a weird 35-70mm F3.5, 35mm F2.8, 28mm F3.5, and the original push-pull design of the Leica-collaborated Minolta 70-210mm F4 MD, which later became the beloved autofocusing Minolta 70-210mm F4 beercan lens.


The Camera Workshop in Peninsula Shopping Centre had a new Konica Minolta 7 Digital for SGD1650! They also had the great Minolta 24-105mm F3.5-4.5 for SGD405, the original companion to the Dynax 7 film SLR, also sold there!


Sweet mother of god, the Minolta Dynax 9 professional film body.


Guess what lens this is!


…a Pentacon 300mm F4, with M42 mount!

The Tamron 200-400mm F5.6 wasn’t hard to come by, either, at SGD820, in different mounts; Cathay Photo, Peninsula Plaza, stocked Teleplus 2x MC4 and MC7 teleconverters for all AF mounts. In Malaysia, we can only find the Canon and Nikon mount ones! These were a cheap SGD150. Cathay also had the Sony A700 (one of the few who had it) and the Portrait Grip for 449 SGD. Lensbabies in all generations and mounts were there, with the LB 2.0 going for SGD255.

Prime Camera Center had a mint Minolta Dynax 9, a professional film SLR, for SGD1800!

K13 in Peninsula Plaza had the unheard of brother to the well-loved Minolta 70-210mm F4 beercan; the auto-focus Minolta 70-210mm F3.5-4.5, for SGD280!


They also stocked converters to Canon EOS mount, in the key of Yashica/Contax, Olympus OM, Nikon, Leitz and Carl Zeiss. Quite like what FourThirds is doing, too.

However, the one thing that made me wish I had a credit card right there was Alex Photo, Peninsula Plaza, which had a Canon FD 58mm F1.2 for SGD300 and a Minolta Rokkor 58mm F1.2 for SGD400!

Yes, that means that I could make myself a 58mm F1.2 Pete Ganzel edition by sticking a Minolta AF mount on it! Or, I could just use it on my Minolta X300 film SLR, which has a Minolta MD mount…

I headed down to Orchard Road, and got lucky in Lucky Plaza. Photo Graphic & Video Mania had the Sigma 24-70mm F2.8 for A-mount for SGD735. APO Foto had the Sony 70-200mm F2.8G SSM for SGD3450! The Sigma 24mm F1.8 for A-mount was also interesting at SGD560, while they also stocked the (reboxed) Vivitar Series 1 70-210mm F2.8-4 for SGD355.

Oh, and the Dynax 9 in a box. For SGD2300!


Back to Funan IT Mall, Alan Photo had the goodies, like the Canon 200mm F1.8L USM (that rare-earth one, replaced with a dimmer 200mm F2L IS), the big ol’ Nikkor primes (200mm F2, 300mm F2.8, 400mm F2.8, 500mm F4, 600mm F4).


Yes, that’s a white AF-S Nikkor 300mm F2.8D next to the AF-S Nikkor 200mm F2 VR, the only VR lens brighter than F2.8. All the other big Nikkors became redundant when Canon rolled out IS versions of all these big telephoto lenses.

(OF course, Konica Minolta/Sony never made their lenses redundant, by implementing in-body stabilization; and we get to pick stabilized 20mm F1.8 lenses, 24mm F1.4 lenses, 135mm F1.8 lenses, 500mm F8 reflex mirrors, 600mm F4 lenses, etc.)

Who Kicks A Punch?

And now for more Sony Alpha 700 talk after 6 not-super-geeky entries!


Five frames per second, combined into one frame. There is no way a multiple exposure can create this scene, by the way; the bird is darker than the sky.

Then there’s the ultimate companion to the A700, the great Sony Carl Zeiss 16-80mm F3.5-4.5 DT lens. It recently got an review in a local magazine which gave it a medium rating.

First off, I’ve never quite felt that local photography magazines were that credible anyway.

Second, the review claims that the lens has average contrast and poor image quality.


I don’t know about their review unit, but I disagree with their comment. Fazri shot KJ and I with the Carl Zeiss on my Sony A700, set at Vivid mode, 50mm F4.5 1/160s ISO1600. If I went to Standard color I’d still get an equivalently, insanely, crispy image. It would not have the same Velvia-esque punch, but it would still have oodles of detail.


KJ, you aren’t the handsomest bastard around, but I cannot help but stare at this cropped and resized picture of you. Note that this is shot wide open. Note that in addition to the moustache stubble, you can also see the texture of the skin under the moustache! Also note the area between the nose and KJ’s right eye.

The area between KJ’s nose and his left eye is slightly out of focus, but still appears well-defined, due to how Carl Zeiss lenses are designed; areas near the focus point don’t blur out as quickly as any other lens with the same focal length and aperture.

Ah heck.

Click here for a 100% crop, unedited, with EXIF data for all to see.

There, you also get to see what ISO1600 on the A700 looks like. I can’t even imagine what it would look like if the ISO was set lower!

Broken Images


They said the KTM Komuter train was going to be late. And then, I saw a steam carriage carrying an entire KTM train in the opposite direction on my side of the track! I knew I was screwed.


…though not as pissed off as this toilet was.


Ceiling cat is… missing.


Innovative parking solutions.


Pipe dream!