My new Camera Equipment

I recently decided to take my photography a little more seriously and have invested in a lot more equipment, and that has been very expensive! I’ve been using my trusty Sony A200 as that was my first ever introduction into the world of SLR photography. Although I knew the basics of shutter speed and aperture, I never really appreciated the other important bits such as white balancing and metering. I finally got around to reading a great book called ‘Understanding Exposure‘ by Bryan Peterson that I was bought for Christmas ages ago.  I recommend this book highly to anyone who enjoys their photography and has access to an SLR.  It really opened my eyes to a new way to take my photos, I’m now a lot more careful and gone are the days of using my SLR like a glorified point and shoot camera, and hoping that the improved quality of the camera will do the rest.

I decided that I could do with a prime lens, and a 50mm SAL-50F18 seemed to fit the bill.  I was able to now take far more creative photographs using the wide aperture to blend away the background, and really make whatever I’m focusing on in a image stand out.  Because it has quite a large aperture it also makes the viewfinder usable in lower light (the A200 has quite a small viewfinder and can be a little awkward in certain situations) as well as being able to take photos in the same light.

It then dawned on me that the on-board flash on my Sony is actually quite naff.  For one, it’s really ‘in your face’ and tends to dazzle people and cause really harsh shadows.  It also doesn’t extend far enough away from the camera body (and I can only consider this a design flaw) as sometimes I can see a shadow of my lens.  Wouldn’t it be great to have an external flash that could be angled to bounce light off of ceilings, walls or any object and diffuse the light making shadows far less harsh, as well as being able to light the subject the way I wanted?  My answer was yes so off I headed to Jessop’s and bought myself a Sony HVL-F42AM flash.  It’s a beast, I can light up my entire garden at night with it as if it were daylight, but it’s also subtle enough to throw light on something without it being too noticeable that flash was used – something I’ve learned from reading On-Camera Flash Techniques for Wedding and Portrait Photography by Neil van Niekerk.  It can also be removed and mounted on its own stand and triggered remotely.  There is a downside however, Sony decided to use the on-board flash of their camera’s to trigger the flash, so you actually end up with horrible harsh flash of the SLR too.  I have to either keep my distance, or cover the flash slightly which is silly in my opinion.  Other manufactures use wireless to trigger their flash guns, Sony should have done the same!

Suddenly, my old Crumpler Muffin Top 4000 camera bag was no longer large enough to hold all this new equipment.  There was only one thing for it, I needed a full on backpack so I could really nerd out.  I got myself a Crumpler Messenger Boy Full Photo backpack which has loads of storage space, it’s an entire backpack dedicated to holding everything camera related with loads of compartments, and adjustable separators to tweak it around my gear.  There’s even a compartment which would perfectly hold an Asus Eee Pad Transformer Android tablet – if only I had one :-(

You know what else would be great?  A new camera!  I’ve been very interested in getting a newer SLR, because although the A200 generally does a great job, it is after all an entry level SLR and there are a lot of good features I’ve been missing out on and I felt that I now had the knowledge to take advantage of it all.  It was a toss-up between a Sony A580 or a Sony A55.  They are very similar cameras in some ways, they share a lot of the same features, but there’s a couple of huge differences.  The A580 is conventional, it has a mirror that moves out the way whilst the shutter is open to let the light reach the sensor at the back.  The A55 is Sony’s new breed of SLR’s that have a semi-translucent, fixed mirror, that reflects 30% of the light to the viewfinder, and the remaining light to the sensor.  This allows it to take faster shots (10 FPS) and focus continuously whilst doing so.  Another big difference is that instead of a normal viewfinder that has all the light reflected from the mirror, the reduction in light would mean it would be too dark to see anything in most circumstances.  Sony’s answer was to use an electronic viewfinder instead.  I think a lot of SLR owners cringe at the thought, but there are benefits to it which I’ll touch or later.  Realistically, it’s what you expect to find on a Camcorder, and nobody complains about them.

This took a week or so of researching before I was ready to go one way or the other – for me this might as well have been a lifetime, it’s not they way I work…  I headed up to Jessop’s to get a feel of them both.  Initially I actually preferred the A580, even though I’d set my mind on the A55.  I eventually still decided to get myself the A55 and have been using it ever since (not quite the whole story, I did buy it online from CameraBox who went bust, and I had to get a refund via my credit card company).  The EFV has grown on me, yes it’s strange to see an electronic image, but it can overlay information on screen that a normal viewfinder cannot.  The battery life takes one hell of a beating however.  I know I could take around 1000 photo’s with my A200 but I doubt I’d get more than 300 with the A55 without charging it.  It makes it an awkward choice for a holiday camera because although it’s much smaller than my A200 and weighs less, has awesome features and has built-in GPS which makes it the obvious winner – the battery is a major concern.

Finally – and I really mean it has to be finally for the considerable future on pain of death from my girlfriend (she doesn’t say it, but I see it in her eyes) – I bought myself a Carl Zeiss 16-80mm pro lens.  It’s a beautiful thing!  OK, the build quality isn’t great.  It’s good don’t get me wrong, but for the price it is, it should have screamed quality.  Luckily it does in the optical department where it really counts.  Practically everything I’ve done recently has been with this new lens, even my 50mm prime hasn’t seen a look-in.

So that’s it, it’s been a wild month, my bank card still hasn’t got over the shock and trembles whenever I open my wallet, but I have a lovely selection of new equipment and I have the enthusiasm to use it (I even got up at 4:30 am on a Saturday to take photo’s of the sunrise over Caldecotte lake).  Now I just have to nail that perfect shot……..

Sony, PSN and my PS3

I’m fairly sure that everyone knows about the hack on the Playstation Network resulting in it being down for 25 days.  If you don’t, well yeah, Sony got themselves hacked and private user information (name, address, date of birth etc) was stolen and they didn’t even bother to encrypt it not to mention that credit card details were also stolen.

Unfortunately for me once it all came back online my PS3 crashed whilst I was playing Darksiders.  I tried turning off the PS3 but I ended up having to turn it off at the back.  I left it ten seconds and then switched it all back on but noticed that the game icon wasn’t appearing on the XMB.  I tried a few times but it wouldn’t appear, so I tried an audio CD which worked (unfortunately it was my girlfriend’s Taylor Swift CD so I didn’t exactly test it for long).  I started assuming it was only BD’s that were affected and trying a Blu-ray movie confirmed that.

I started scouring the internet for others with the same problem, it didn’t exactly take too long to find lots of posts out there.  I found a really helpful one that explained how to get into an engineer menu.  The plan is to then restore the system without wiping out save games and downloads etc.  The PS3 said that I had corruptions on the disk so it would wipe it.  This was fine with me and once it completed and rebooted my game icon re-appeared.  I fired up Darksiders again and ran upstairs and did a little victory dance in front of Amy :-)  Unfortunately though after about 5 minutes of playing it hung again.

I started to think that because the PS3 had mentioned corruptions I should delete the install data for the game and try another save game too.  Once again around 5 minutes in it crashed – disaster struck again.  I did a few more system restores that night, did a bit of testing with movies, it seems that the drive is struggling reading parts of the disc, but can read to some extent  I’ve bought a BD cleaning disc that should arrive soon, I’m really hoping that it’s just a dirty lens..  My PS3 is out of warranty and it’s already the 2nd one I’ve had to buy brand new due to my first one getting the “yellow light of death”.  I will seriously be pissed off if my only real option is to buy a 3rd PS3 because of hardware faults.

Today I also learned that the web site Sony have that allows (or in most cases at the moment forces) people to change their PSN password has been compromised.  All a hacker needs to know is your email address and date of birth and they can change your password.  All this data was allegedly leaked when Sony got hacked.  How the hell can a company take nearly a month to get their system up and running again, make promises that they have the best technical minds working on the problem and then just a few days later have yet another massive cock up!!??

I’m a huge fan of Sony, but they are seriously starting to wind me up with dodgy hardware and complete and utter incompetence with my personal information.

Sort it out Sony FFS!!!!

Posted from Milton Keynes, England, United Kingdom.

Stepping up a level in Photography

I like taking pictures and when I bought my Samsung Innov8 smart phone I was taking them whenever I could – as it had a 8 mega pixel camera (which was pretty much the only phone out at the time with a camera that good).  The lens was pretty good and so was the sensor (the bit that actually does all the work).  Unfortunately I was a plank and left it on the train on my way to work and funnily enough nobody was kind enough to return my £550 phone :-(

Continue reading

Killzone 2 Review

Well I’ve had a chance to play the game a bit now and I must say in general I’m impressed.  The graphics and gameplay are fantastic.  Many people say that Killzone 2 isn’t ground breaking for storyline but really, what FPS have ground breaking stories these days?  Not many I can tell you.  The story in my opinion isn’t what makes a good FPS, I’m not really playing it to get to know the characters, I’m playing it to shoot and blow things up mainly.  If it has a story then that’s an added bonus, and I think Killzone 2 does have a pretty reasonable story. Continue reading

KillZone 2

It’s arrived!!!  Not that I’ve been waiting for it or anything…

KillZone 2 Collector's Edition

KillZone 2 Collector's Edition

Shopto.net are the best.  They are the only supplier in the UK as far as I know to sell this Limited Edition brush metal case version, and they delivered it a day early!  Now I just need to get home and play it – hopefully nobody is using the other PS3 as mine died the other day :-(

Guitar Hero: World Tour

I recently bought Guitar Hero World Tour after playing it on my girlfriend’s brother’s 360. It’s a great game, really good fun with a group of you!

I was playing it at home so much that Amy decided to buy me the whole band bundle as an early birthday present. I now have two guitars, a microphone and DRUMS! Woohoo. I love the drums, the neighbours don’t, but that doesn’t matter does it!?

So yeah, if you have a PS3 and Guitar Hero 4, then add Kellos to your PSN friends list, and I’m more than up for playing it online :-)