Took a few shots with the new Canon 10-22mm yesterday and then used the new HDR Toning adjustment tool in Photoshop CS5 to get this effect...
Thursday, October 28, 2010
Monday, October 25, 2010
My Review of Sennheiser HD202 Semicircumaural Closed Back Hi-Fi or DJ Monitoring Headphones
Originally submitted at Adorama
Sennheiser HD202 Semicircumaural Closed Back Hi-Fi or DJ Monitoring Headphones
Unbeatable value
Pros: Good Bass, Durable, Great Sound, Good Value, Comfortable
Cons: Cord is really long
Best Uses: Traveling, Relaxing, Working, With My Computer, Home Audio, Music, Portable Devices
Describe Yourself: Video Editor, Frequent Traveler, Gear Head
Primary use: Personal
Was this a gift?: No
I bought a pair of these a couple of years ago in Australia and they were on sale for $50. At the time I though that was amazing value for money as I previously spent $80 on some Sony headphone that were terrible. I recently lost my Senheisers and did not hesitate to track them down again. This time they were only $25 which I reckon would be very hard to beat.
(legalese)
Sunday, September 19, 2010
Inaugural 'Do cool stuff for fee day' in NYC
Stop 1: James Farley post office on 34th St. to check out a shoot for a Law & Order SVU episode. Unfortunately they were doing all the shots inside and after a failed attempt at infiltrating the building and about an hour stalking around trying to catch a glimpse of Benson, Stabler... or Ice T, I moved on.
.jpg)
Stop 2: The High Line garden. This was once an elevated railway line through the lower west side of Manhattan, delivering food throughout the area. Last year it was transformed into a public park with stairs at various points along the way.
The High Line was built in the 1930s, as part of a massive public-private infrastructure project called the West Side Improvement. It lifted freight traffic 30 feet in the air, removing dangerous trains from the streets of Manhattan's largest industrial district. No trains have run on the High Line since 1980. Friends of the High Line, a community-based non-profit group, formed in 1999 when the historic structure was under threat of demolition. Friends of the High Line works in partnership with the City of New York to preserve and maintain the structure as an elevated public park. More


Stop 3: Orchard Beach and City Island, Bronx. I took the 6 train all the way to the end of the line, Pelham Bay Park. I then jumped on a bus which took me about 1/2 the way to Orchard Beach which is closed if it's not Summer or a weekend. I walked the remaining mile or so which was well worth it. The beach was massive and the sand was clean and white. There were a few swimmers and fishermen about but it was deserted for the most part.



I walked on to the small bridge that connected City Island to the mainland and walked around checking out a few of the docks and lobster shacks. I found a bar that had some cuisine more in my price range and sat down for a late lunch... Philly Cheese & onion rings.



.jpg)
Stop 4: Long Island City. I got the train all the way back to midtown and then over the East River to Long Island City just in time for the sunset. I sat there for over an hour shooting a pretty nice time lapse of the skyline including the Empire State Building and the Chrysler Building.



Sunday, August 29, 2010
Rock the Bells NYC
I had been to the show in Vancouver last year and it was awesome. This year one of my all time favorite hip hop acts, A Tribe Called Quest, were performing in their home city and there was no way I was going to miss it.
DJ Premier did an intro set and he was followed by three other hip hop legends, Slick Rick, Rakim and KRS-1. At the beginning of Rakim's set I managed to sneak backstage and hang out for a while, getting some pics with Method Man and having a chat with Primo (DJ Premier). I scored a Ol' Dirty promo shirt from his son and a Phife Dawg T from one of his groupies.
Lauryn Hill came on before Tribe and in my opinion, totally destroyed the old school vibe, yelling and screaming over a set of hard rock tracks that were unrecognizable and not at all what you would expect from her.
Tribe lived up to all expectations and played a set of tracks entirely from their first two albums to the crowds delight.
Wu Tang were next and got everybody hyped up with another old school set. We didn't make it through to see Snoop's set as we were suffering mild sunstroke and dehydration after 11 hours in the 35C (95F) heat drinking mostly beers and Monster.

The view from the ferry on the way to Governors Island

DJ Premier starts off proceedings

Some great T's getting around

Me and Meth

Boy Jones (Ol' Dirty's son)

Slick Rick (showing his age)

Rakim comes off stage

Chris Rock

Me and Primo

Busta
Saturday, August 28, 2010
Philly with Ben, Jordan & Rocky
We went straight from the bus station to meet a couple of his friends at a bar downtown then we all went to the famous Geno's for a Philly Cheese-steak. Unfortunately I ruined mine with excessive amounts of the hottest hot sauce known to man.
We went back the following day and sampled the wares at Pat's which is Geno's most fierce competition and located right across the street. Jordan had ordered for us at Geno's but now it was our turn to learn the propper etiquite whern it comes to ordering a Philly Cheese in Philly.
Compliments of eHow... (read full article)
Expect to order your meal in two phases. At the first window, you will order your Philly cheesesteak. At the second window, you order French fries, other sides, and your beverage.
Skip the friendly greeting at the window and don't expect one. Your Philly cheesesteak order should consist of exactly three words. The first word is a number, indicating how many cheesesteaks you want. So, if you want one, the first word is "One." The second word indicates the type of cheese you want on your sandwich. The third and final word is either "with" or "without," indicating your preference for fried onion. So, an order for the most authentic Philly cheesesteak would simply be, "One, whiz, with." That's it.
Take your cheesesteak, which will be handed to you in a matter of second. Move down to the second window, where you can order other items and pay for your meal.
I got it right, got my cheese-steak and could actually taste the steak this time which was great!
After Pat's we strolled down through the 9th Street Italian Market district and sampled some freshly made mozzarella at Claudio's Specialty Foods and some water ice with frozen custard.
Jordan had to go to class from 6-9pm so we dropped him off and drove around exploring north-east Philly for a bit, taking pics and playing some pool at a random bar. We then met up with one of Ben's old bosses from Qatar for an Italian dinner at Radicchio Cafe which was pretty darn tasty!
Jordan met up with us later on and just after midnight we drove right up to the top of the 'Rocky Stairs' at the Philly Art Museum and took a bunch of pics and watched as random groups of drunk people showed up to do their own reenactments of the famous scene.
We also got some great pics of the boat houses of Boathouse Row which are all lit up year-round at night with Christmas lights.
The next day Ben and I walked around downtown and had an awesome mini feast at the Reading Terminal Market before hoping on a bus to NYC.








Sunday, August 22, 2010
Boston Red Sox
I met up with 3 other people who were pretty random acquaintances... Katlynn who we met in Denver on our US road trip, Jesse who I couch-surfed with in Boston a few weeks earlier and a girl from Chicago who was couch-surfing with him for a couple of nights. We were all keen to go but none of us had tickets. The weather was pretty foul though and the game was delayed a couple of hours and after having a beer and a bite to eat at the House of Blues across the street from Fenway Park we hit the streets and took advantage of the poor weather to bargain a scalper down to $15 for each ticket.
We walked around for about 10 minutes then found 4 seats just out of the rain on 1st base behind the Red Sox dugout... sweet! Apart from a 45 minute rain delay in about the 3rd innings the weather held out. Oh, they beat the Toronto Blue Jays in case anyone was wondering?






Thursday, July 29, 2010
BOSFCPUG Philip Bloom DSLR Workshop

See the complete Flickr set from BOSFCPUG
He went over...
* Differences in the cameras
* Lens selection: When to use the right lens for your shots
* Choosing the right accessories for your DSLR
* Lighting for DSLR filmmaking
* Recording proper sound for DSLR filmmaking
* Timelapse recording with your DSLR
* Production workflow techniques
* Philip's post editing best practices using Final Cut Pro, Adobe Creative Suite 5 and Avid
Recommended Lenses for the Canon HDSLR Cameras
EF-S
Canon EF-S 17-55mm f/2.8 IS USM Lens
Amazon: http://amzn.com/B000EW8074
EF
Canon EF 70-200mm f/2.8L II IS USM Telephoto Zoom Lens
Canon EF 16-35mm f/2.8L II USM Ultra Wide Angle Zoom Lens
Tokina 11-16MM F/2.8 ATX 116 Lens for Canon EOS AF Digital - Tokina ATX116PRODXC
Zeiss ZE/ZF/CP.2 lenses
Leica 'R' lenses
Old Nikon lenses using a Fotodiox Reverse Mount Adapter
Time Lapse - What You Need

Intervalometer
The Intervalometer that I bought was the Satechi TR-C which was only about $60US on Amazon. It seems to work fine and is a great alternative to the $180 Canon TC80N3. Philip did a time lapse of the workshop and was actually using the Satechi on his 5D.

Satechi TR-C Timer Remote Control for Canon EOS Digital Rebel XT, XTi, XSi, & ELAN SLR Cameras by Satechi
Amazon: http://amzn.com/B001CCH2MO
Awesome Philip Bloom Time Lapse
Sky from Philip Bloom on Vimeo.
Some of my Time Lapse attempts
Lawn Lunch - Time Lapse Tilt-shift from Jeremy Aiken on Vimeo.
Portland, Maine - Tilt-Shift Time Lapse from Jeremy Aiken on Vimeo.
Car Parking from Jeremy Aiken on Vimeo.