Showing posts with label Photography. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Photography. Show all posts

Saturday, 14 December 2013

70D

I bought a 70D as a back up to my 6D last week, replacing a 600D I'd originally got as a back up in May but didn't like. It arrived at the shop while I was at work last Tuesday so my aunt, who was going into town anyway, collected it for me. However, as I don't see daylight from Monday to Thursday and yesterday was wet, I hadn't had a chance to try it out properly until today.
I went to East Cowes with my aunt and Monty the puppy this morning, mostly for a shopping trip to Waitrose but also to give Monty a walk and for me to point the new camera at anything nautical that might pass in front of the lens. Unfortunately ships were thin on the ground but the Red Funnel car ferry Red Falcon obliged.




Monty


Molly, at home before we left



The 70D is very much like my old 7D in a lot of ways, especially the AF system. It doesn't feel as robust as the 7D did and the controls are a little different but, otherwise, it's very similar. The image quality is much better than the 600D but - as to be expected - not as good as the 6D, because the 6D has a full-frame sensor while the 70D has an APS-C sensor. I don't have to do much to 6D images and never have to add sharpening but the 70D files need a little sharpening as the 600D, 7D, 40D and 20D (and my past Nikons) did before them.
I'm off to Southampton tomorrow - that's the plan at the moment - for Christmas shopping so hopefully I'll have more photos to post, although the weather forecast is utterly dismal.

Thursday, 6 June 2013

Photos, etc.

I am currently out of work, having been made redundant last October, and am having no luck whatsoever finding anything new, apart from a bit of meagre temping here and there. Therefore, in an attempt to make a bit on the side, I am hoping to sell a few of my photos and, if anyone wants to buy them for personal use, please contact me at info@ship-photo.com. For commercial use then the going rates for freelance photos apply but these are negotiable (again, email me).

This has not just been prompted by my annoyance at the lack of any work but also my annoyance at a well-known, reasonably-sized Southampton-based transport company who contacted me for the use of one of my photos recently but then baulked at actually paying the going rate. Sorry, but while private individuals are one thing, companies, particularly one which can well afford to pay photographers' rates, are quite another.

I suppose that, if it weren't for an employment agency getting arsey with me for refusing to pay for safety shoes for one day's - yes, one day's - work and my mother being seriously ill in intensive care in hospital and things not looking good, then I wouldn't be as annoyed as I am.

By the way, if anyone needs a reliable and conscientious person for some office admin work - full or part time - then here I am.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Onto happier things, the new cruise ship Royal Princess is coming in tomorrow (Friday) and I am planning to be in Cowes to photograph her passing Egypt Point. Not only that, the German cruise ship Deutschland is visiting Cowes tomorrow afternoon and I am hoping a couple of friends will be about.

As things stand, Royal Princess is due to pass Cowes (Prince Consort buoy) at around 0955 and due to dock in Southampton at 1130.

On Saturday, there is the Thames Ship Society Solent cruise. As the weather forecast continues to be excellent with plenty of sunshine these should be two great days of photo-taking!

Wednesday, 1 May 2013

Legalised copyright theft?

A rather nasty little piece of government legislation has been rushed through and is awaiting royal assent. This effectively enables anyone to take photographers' and artists' work and use it without asking first. This tends to happen a lot anyway, especially with stuff uploaded onto the internet, but is technically illegal - until now. It  allows for so-called 'orphaned works', i.e. those with no identifiable or traceable author, to be used by anybody but, in reality, any image can be taken, metadata stripped out and the image passed off as someone else's.

Ok, for hobbyists such as myself this might not seem such a big problem but for people who make a living from photography, as a few of my friends do, this is a very big deal indeed because their work can now legitimately be taken and used without so much as a 'Please, thank you or kiss my arse' - but, even as a non-professional, why SHOULD anyone's photos be taken without their permission and used by someone else with no acknowledgement and no credit? It's the principle of the thing.
We have to accept that uploading to the internet is fraught with peril, because photos are downloadable with the click of a mouse, but to effectively legitimise it is wrong on every level.

It seems to me that the appalling coalition Government we have here are very keen to stamp out piracy when it is Joe, Jane and Junior Public doing the copying, such as illegally downloading films and music (which, let me add, I absolutely do not condone) but, when it comes to stealing the public's own intellectual property the Government is very happy to let us be screwed over. The last line of The Register's article is right, we have, indeed, been 'royally fucked'.

In the meantime, here is a Petition against the legislation concerned.

Sunday, 7 April 2013

Portsmouth, 6th April 2013

Spring partly sprung on Tuesday but then vanished again but, yesterday, Saturday 6th April, it reappeared with blue skies and bright sunshine although the wind was still cold. Fred. Olsen's Boudicca was in Portsmouth and with a couple of Brittany Ferries' ships also on the schedule, I decided to take a rare trip to Portsmouth for some photography.
I don't tend to go to Portsmouth much these days as I am not particularly interested in naval ships and the rest of the traffic is mostly the regular ferries of Wightlink, Brittany Ferries, Condor Ferries and LD Lines (the latter's ship/s tend to arrive and depart in the evening) and also, when I am travelling elsewhere I tend to go via Southampton, especially when driving, but, as it would make a change, I decided to go over for the afternoon.

I had thought about using the vehicle ferry from Fishbourne but parking the car would be an issue, considering spaces at the terminal are limited and there is nowhere else to park in the village so decided on the Wight Ryder service from Ryde Pier. I have not used that service since 2010 when I was travelling up to Heathrow on my way to the States to see friends and go to an amateur astronomy convention in Texas.

Wightlink were hosting a Party-on-the-Pier and, as I walked up the pier, dozy families walking four or five abreast, rather than in twos or single file, walking down meant I had to walk round them because there was no way they could possibly make room. Yeah, thanks, I'll just step into the path of that oncoming taxi, shall I? Dozy adults, dozy kids. It's probably the shock of the bright sunlight...no it isn't, people are always dim like that and it's no wonder some kids grow up with no respect for anyone or anything (Christ, now I sound like my late Nan :p )
At the terminal, an octet playing classical music with a variety of wind instruments (oboes, flutes, that kind of thing) in the boarding/café area and a covers band murdering old pop numbers were trying to outdo each other. It was deafening and there was no escape, made all the worse by the fact I loathe covers bands and don't like classical music.
Rantette over...

I ran into my friends Andrew and Donna Cooke and we went up to the top, outer, deck of Wight Ryder II - the great thing about the new Wight Ryders is that they have an outside deck which is a decent platform for photography and, on a lovely sunny day like yesterday, meant a pleasant trip across an unusually quiet Solent.
Once I got to the Round Tower, I checked the football results and found Southampton had beaten Reading 2-0. Get in! Good result and another step towards safety...I had to keep shouts of joy and rhetoric to a minimum, bearing in mind I was in 'enemy territory' and the Skates were at home (there were a few people in Pompey blue wandering around; they drew 0-0).
The tanker Maersk Rapier was alongside the jetty at Gosport, she'd already been there for more than a week.



I went straight to the Round Tower where I'd later meet up with my friend Dave, another ship enthusiast, and waited for Mont St. Michel to emerge.
While I was waiting for Mont St. Michel, the reefer Star Leader arrived.



Her stern is an interesting shape and I wonder if that is some fuel-saving design?









Once Mont St. Michel had gone, it was time to head to the Still and West pub until 5pm when Boudicca was due to sail. As it as she was 20 minutes late, apparently because some unfortunate person needed to be taken off the ship and away by ambulance. It's always a shame when someone is about to start a cruise or other holiday but end up needing medical treatment instead. Hopefully it's nothing serious.






It was at this point that my new 32Gb SD card decided it didn't want to play any more, meaning I had to do a quick switch. I was not best pleased but have found out that the card I've got isn't quite fast enough for the 6D, itself not the fastest camera on the planet, therefore it created a buffering problem.
Brittany Ferries' Bretagne was on her way in, but quite a way distant and, as time was getting tight for my 1815 ferry back to Ryde I did consider giving her a miss and catching up with her at another date. As it was, I decided I had enough time and waited.




I left the Round Tower a little after 6pm, which didn't give me a lot of time to get to the harbour for the 6.15pm back to Ryde but, luckily Dave gave me a lift and I made it with minutes to spare (how many times have I legged it along the concourse of Portsmouth Harbour Station over the years??!). I went straight up on deck and found Crown Garnet, another reefer, coming in. I thought I would miss her but this was an example of perfect timing.


A small Norwegian car ferry, Sea Horse II, was to be found nestling under the Spinnaker Tower.



And here are the best of the rest from the day...

Cosco Shengshi on her way down the Solent from Southampton. I wouldn't normally bother with a long distance shot like this but I like the sky. I did nothing to the saturation, the sky was this nice golden colour.



And the usual Wightlinks going about their lawful occasions







Plus the Gosport ferries



One of the pilot boats


Portsmouth certainly has done a great job of tarting up the waterfront and I wish Southampton would to the same with Mayflower Park and Town Quay. It's a great place to visit, even if the ferry scene isn't what it was in days gone by. Even the Round Tower has had money spent on it, with new seating and some new railings put in.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

I wasn't planning on travelling much this year, due mainly to costs, but it appears as if things might change a little bit. I already have the four-night trip on Aurora on 24th April (cruise no R302 to Zeebrugge and Amsterdam) lined up but I am also going to be doing a day trip to Cherbourg on Brittany Ferries' Barfleur, on 20th April. Barfleur is a ship I have seen on a number of occasions but not yet travelled on.
She spent last summer along the coast at Dover, operating for DFDS as their Deal Seaways before returning to Brittany Ferries. There are photos of her in that guise over on Dover Ferry Photos.

Mooted with friends are also trips to Oostende from Ramsgate on TEF's Ostend Spirit, a ship I've sailed on just once as Pride of Calais, and possibly a trip to Spain to see, and hopefully sail on, Oleander, one of my faves (the Townsend Thoresen Spirit class were the best ferries of all-time, along with Pride of Dover and Pride of Calais, in my completely unbiased opinion) and a ship that I never actually managed to sail on - surprisingly enough, although my schedule never allowed me to, but I've seen and photographed her a number of times. She's an old ship, guzzles fuel like it's going out of fashion and who knows how much longer she'll be around, although I have heard she is well looked after, so I feel I ought to see her one last time and sail on her before the inevitable one day happens.
The TEF trip from Ramsgate is likely, the one to visit Oleander a bit more in the 50/50 category.

It's looking as if 2013, crap in so many other ways (death of friends, death of pet, other problems), is shaping up to be a great year of photography.

Saturday, 2 February 2013

Sunny Southsea

I hadn't been to Portsmouth for a photo-taking trip for quite a few years so decided to go over to Southsea on the hovercraft (Freedom 90 was the craft in use today) for a couple of hours today (I was also meeting an old friend who I hadn't seen for a number of years, so it was nice to catch up over a pint).

There wasn't a lot on the move, as it's still in the depths of winter, although I did catch Commodore Clipper, Mont St. Michel, St. Faith and Wight Ryder II. Again, like most trips of late, it's as much about a change of scene as anything else.

Commodore Clipper was on her way out, on her regular sailing to the Channel Islands...




...while Mont St. Michel was on her way in. Unfortunately, the sun was in the wrong place - or rather, I was in the wrong place relative to the sun - and the photos are washed out, but I won't complain too much as it's just nice to see the sun, instead of endless gloom.











Wight Ryder II was also approaching, on her regular run from Ryde PH


WR II's larger colleague St. Faith left the harbour on her way over to Fishbourne. The youngest of the Saint class ships, St. Faith entered service in 1990. Of all the Solent car ferries over the years, the Saint class are my favourites not least for the fact that they have a bow and stern, rather than being double-ended.




I am currently doing a temporary job for the next few weeks. It's a pretty crummy filing job, which has another three weeks to run, but when it finishes, I am planning a few days on the continent, taking photos at Calais, Ostende and - hopefully - the Hook of Holland. Of course, this depends on finances.

Thursday, 22 November 2012

Big Mary - Part 2

After leaving the Corbiere anchorage near Jersey, it was a quiet overnight journey round the Cherbourg peninsula (and Patsy was happy as we spotted Celebrity Constellation in the Channel, on her way to Southampton). It was formal night, a necessary evil of cruise ship travel and a hang over from the old days of ocean travel, so we put our posh clobber on and went to dinner. After dinner was over, we went to the Winter Garden - I wonder why it is called that, when it has a tropical ambience with banana plants and other rain forest vegetation painted on the ceiling? - where Patsy knows the banjo player in the Queen's Room Orchestra, an elderly chap named Stevie. The band were playing jazz numbers which, frankly, I can't stand but it was entertaining to watch Stevie do a charming little dance as he sang a number and it went down well with the other passengers.

We arrived in Le Havre early next morning and found it was pretty busy with ships moving in and out of the harbour. Patsy doesn't really do 'horribles', as she calls anything that isn't a cruise ship, so she left me to it as I photographed the comings and goings.

Hoegh Berlin, built 2005, 68871 GT, IMO 9295842, Bahamas flag

Leto, built 2006, 35881 GT, IMO 9311880, Liberian flag


Mare Picenum, built 2011, 81499 GT, IMO 9449405, Italian flag

V.B. La Heve

V.B. Sainte Adresse

MSC Ingrid, built 1999, 53208 GT, IMO 9181651, Panama flag

Coastalwater, built 2000, 2140 GT, IMO 9205158, Dutch flag

Chembulk Tortola, built 2007, 11534 GT, IMO 9342786, Panama flag

Guanabara, built 2007, 57462 GT, IMO 9384992, Bahamas flag

V.B. Superenzo
Amur Star, built 2010, 8537 GT, IMO 9480368, Malta flag




As we waited to depart in the evening, I tried some more low light photography, including the cracking sunset, plus the arrivals of MOL Celebration and the dredger Victor Horta.





Victor Horta, built 2011, 5682 GT, IMO 9525704, Belgian flag


MOL Celebration, built 2008, 86692 GT, IMO 9321251, Bahamas flag



It had been a glorious day, weather-wise, with sunshine and light winds and the night was clear. I've already posted the photo immediately below but, as I am pleased with it, I'll post it again.



Unfortunately, this didn't last long, and the fog returned sometime before dawn. Queen Mary 2's horn woke me up at about 0400, with one blast every two minutes. I'd not long got to sleep so I wasn't best pleased, especially as I was feeling ill after having drunk far too much in the Golden Lion that night...can't complain, I suppose, as it was self-inflicted!

To be continued...