Graham Leggate

Tag: Nikon 24-70 f/2.8

Natural History Museum, London

by on Oct.23, 2011, under HDR, Holiday, Photography

Love the museums in London. Below is a HDR taken by balancing the camera on some stair railings. For this type of shot a wide angel lens would have been great. In any case here is my effort with a 24-70 (Nikon f/2.8) on a cropped sensor body (Nikon D90).

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National Centre for the Performing Arts, Beijing – Pano

by on Oct.20, 2011, under HDR, Photography

I eventually got around to editing a HDR Panoramic version of the National Centre for the Performing Arts. What a fantastic building!

National Centre for the Performing Arts, Beijing

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National Centre for the Performing Arts, Beijing

by on Sep.23, 2011, under HDR

Below is one of the images taken of the “egg” in Beijing. Also known as the National Centre for the Performing Arts, or the Opera House.  The Centre, is a dome of titanium and glass surrounded by an artificial lake. The building seats 5,452 people in three halls and is almost 12,000 m² in size, I was really surprised on how big the building is. Shooting on a cropped sensor with a 24-70 you can’t actually get the entire building in a single frame. I ended up shooting a bunch of images to stitch together, which I will do when I get some time. Below is a HDR of 3 images taken at 2 stops apart.

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Lido, Italy

by on Aug.14, 2011, under HDR, Holiday

I have started slowly processing some images from our recent holiday, which now feels like it was ages ago (thanks to work!).The image below is taken along the Riviera Santa Maria Elisabetta. The building with the green dome is called Parrocchia Santa Maria Elisabetta, which is a Catholic church.

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I nearly shed a tear :(

by on Feb.10, 2011, under Photography

Black Rapid RS-7 Camera Strap

Last Sunday we were at a 3 year olds birthday party in a park. I was helping our daughter in the toilet, when I had my biggest camera accident to date. I bent over and the camera strap slipped off my shoulder sending my Nikon D90 and Nikon 24-70 f/2.8 lens first in to the tiled concrete floor! It felt as if the camera travelled in slow motion, yet there was nothing I could do to stop it. The sound of the lens hitting the ground was defining. I felt sick as I looked down to see bits of broken plastic on the floor :( Ami looked at me and looked at the bits of plastic on the floor and said to me, “daddy, your camera broke, don’t worry you can use mummy’s”. Thankfully I had the lens hood on, and it took most of the damaging force. Anyway, lesson learnt… get a new camera strap. So with out further ado, I would like to introduce the Black Rapid R-Strap, RS-7. What a great feeling strap, I’m looking forward to many long hours of shooting with it. My gear feels safe, light and comfortable. Check out blackrapid.com to see the range of straps.

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Environmental Portraits

by on Jan.24, 2011, under Photography

A blog post for the family in the U.K. Some pictures of Amelie and James. The first two images were shot at the weekend around a friends place. Amelie was having fun jumping on the trampoline whilst James was keeping us busy exploring anything he could reach. Both were taken on the Nikon D90 with the lovely Nikon 24-70 f/2.8.

Amelie on the trampoline

Amelie Jumping

James - 18 Months, trying to keep out of trouble

James - 18 Months, trying to keep out of trouble

Having Fun in CS5 - Homeless James

Environmental Portrait of James, if he was homeless

This picture of James was floating around in my Aperture library. Taken using the Nikon D90 and a Nikon 50mm f/1.8.  When I saw James with dirty finger nails, I thought there is only one treatment for this image. So I did some work on it to give him a grubby homeless appearance. Love him heaps, look at that face, how could you not :)

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Multiplicity

by on Jan.16, 2011, under Photography

Not sure why I did this… but I did. Done as a bit of a laugh for my own amusement, but I’m sharing it. Easy shot; camera set on a tripod, fire off 3 frames, and for each frame move the model, then overlay the three images in CS and apply a mask to rub in/rub out the bits you want.

Multiple Exposure Image

Multiplicity

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