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Master Class: The Celtic Rim

(continued)

Four Lessons


Master Class: The Celtic Rim
© Jim Richardson
Click photo to see more images.

Lesson 1: Research It

"The first and easiest way to get good travel pictures is to go when others aren't there. Do your research first, of course. Look at as many pictures as you can of where you're going, not necessarily to find out what to see but to see what the clichés are, so you can avoid them. Once you arrive, go straight to the postcard racks. This will tell you two things -- one, what are the signature places of that location and two, what are the photographic clichés."

Lesson 2: Explore It

"Very often the first thing I do when I arrive somewhere is go find the town bulletin board, and root through it until I find the announcement that the dog trials will be on the green on Saturday afternoon, or that the pipe band will be practicing at 7:00 on Tuesday evening. You should seek out those kinds of events, because they act as bridges between cultures. As a photographer and a traveler you need to be open to all kinds of experiences."

Lesson 3: Light It

"You should get really good at adding just a little light with strobes, bouncing it off a wall or ceiling so that it blends in with the existing light. This works well in a pub, for example, when your main subject might be a darker area in the foreground and the background is more brightly lit; the flash balances the two. But one of the wonderful things about digital photography is that you can shoot at high ISO settings, with no flash, and still get really good image quality."

Lesson 4: Shoot It

"I use wide-angle lenses a lot. Wide-angles let you create layers of depth, images with something in the foreground, in the middle ground, and then the background. Or say you're in that pub and you want to capture the atmosphere of the place, the separate conversations happening all around you. Because it lets you get closer to your subject yet still take everything in, the wide-angle lets you make a picture that has the feeling of being in the middle of it all."

Richardson on the Nikon D3

"Forty years ago, when I was starting out, I remember we used to push Tri-X in Acufine developer to E.I. 1250, and we thought that was screaming fast," photographer Jim Richardson remembers. "Now, 40 years later, we have the Nikon D3, a camera that can do color that looks immensely better at ISO 6400. Which means there's really no end to a photographer's day -- almost no limit to how low the existing light can be and still allow you to get a picture.

"I used to shoot assignments for National Geographic in which the highest film speed you could use, at least if you wanted to preserve quality, was ISO 100. Basically you just had to edit the world before you even started shooting. There were many pictures you missed because you simply didn't have the sensitivity you needed. The Nikon D3 changes how you photograph. It lets you shoot things you just couldn't shoot before.

"Even when I did my Geographic story on the Flint Hills of Kansas just a couple of years ago, I felt the upper limit for a good digital SLR was ISO 1600. I struggled to do shots of the night sky at that speed. But I think the D3's ISO 6400 is as good as, or better than, what I was getting back then at ISO 1600. And when you combine that with the ability to fine-tune white balance, all of a sudden we as photographers are able to open up the night."

"Even the small details of the camera make it much easier to do that kind of work. I was recently shooting outside at night, this time for a story in Niger, and it was so dark I couldn't see to keep the camera level. So I turned on the D3's Virtual Horizon feature, which converts the f-stop scale to a leveling indicator, and was able to get a picture that wasn't cockeyed. Still, the D3's viewfinder is amazingly big and bright. You can actually focus manually again!

You can go down the list of the D3's individual features and compare and contrast, but that doesn't give you the whole picture. It's the combination of features and the way they're implemented that makes the camera so good. That and its quickness. Not so much in terms of frames per second, but quick the way a Leica rangefinder is. Of course it's bigger, but it has a kind of responsiveness that makes it a really great camera for people photography."

Wide-Angle Star: The AF-S Nikkor 14-24mm f/2.8G ED

It still takes a little mental math to arrive at the narrower angle of view produced by familiar focal lengths when they're used on a digital SLR that has a smaller-than-35mm image sensor, as most do. For example, Nikon's new AF-S Nikkor 14-24mm f/2.8G ED zoom has the equivalent (in 35mm) of a 21-36mm range when used on a Nikon D300, or any Nikon D-SLR other than the D3. But while its focal lengths make it sound like yet another optic shortened to widen angles of view for digital photography, this astounding chunk of glass covers a 35mm-sized frame -- and therefore delivers its true, nominal 14-24mm ultrawide range when used on the Nikon D3, Nikon's first D-SLR with a full-frame image sensor.

Does that combination of range, sensor coverage, and constant maximum aperture come at the expense of optical quality or rectilinear performance? In a word, no. But we'll let Richardson speak to that: "I don't think I've ever shot a better 14mm lens," he says, comparing the 14-24mm to the single-focal-length 14mm wide-angles offered by Nikon and most other makers. "I shot the night sky in Africa, and even at f/2.8 at 14mm the stars in the corners of the frame were just about as sharp as the stars in the center. No little coma wings on the stars in the corner -- stunning for a 14mm lens." We concur.
-- R.H.


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