New Skillshare class — The Photographer’s Ephemeris

I just pub­lished a new online class with Skill­share on how I use The Pho­tog­ra­pher’s Ephemeris. The first 25 peo­ple to use this link can watch it for free: http://skl.sh/20ovlvt

The Pho­tog­ra­pher’s Ephemeris is an appli­ca­tion that uses Google Maps to pre­dict where the sun and moon will rise and set on any date, any­where on earth. I demon­strate how to use TPE to align the sun or moon for a pho­to shoot, take you on loca­tion and process the images.

The Photographer's Ephemeris
The Pho­tog­ra­pher’s Ephemeris

Light Painting Event in Half Moon Bay

Light Painting Event in Half Moon Bay

July 17 and 18

Click here to see and download your drawings from the “Pay it Forward” art project . (Pictures are now up! Thank you for playing.)

Click here to view my new Light Drawing video course for free on Skillshare.

 

Trombone portrait
Trom­bone por­trait
In association with Coastal Arts Enterprises
and produced by Lainey Sainte Marie,

we will be light paint­ing por­traits and light draw­ing live on Fri­day evening , July 17 from 4 pm to 9 pm and again on Sat­ur­day after­noon, July 18 from 12 noon to 5 pm. Free! 

Come play with us and cre­ate some unique pho­to­graph­ic art. Images will be uploaded to Flickr the next day and avail­able for down­load, again for free! We sup­ply the lights, cam­era and action.

We will be at the Coastal Arts Muse­um (at Zabal­la Square)

300 Main St., Half Moon Bay, CA 94019

Three faces, light painted
Tai of a dif­fer­ent col­or

Paint a por­trait or draw from your imag­i­na­tion!

light drawn horse image
run­ning horse

Con­tact me here for more infor­ma­tion.

After the Pumpkin Festival

I had a great time at Half Moon Bay’s Pump­kin Fes­ti­val this year. Thanks to Made on the Coast sup­port­ing local artists, I had a booth sell­ing my pho­tographs on Main Street which pro­vid­ed an oppor­tu­ni­ty to meet so many peo­ple and get some expo­sure.

If you asked about up com­ing projects, here are a few links.

Pigeon Point Light­house Pro­jec­tion Event

PPLS projection test-1

Sat­ur­day, Novem­ber 15th is the annu­al cel­e­bra­tion of the first light­ing in 1872 and they nor­mal­ly have activ­i­ties and music dur­ing the day. Since the Fres­nel lens was removed in 2011, they no longer light the orig­i­nal lamp, an event that attract­ed thou­sands of peo­ple. This year I will be pro­ject­ing images of the coast­side and past light­ings onto the light­house to bring back some of that expe­ri­ence and raise aware­ness of the restora­tion chal­lenges. Look to the light­house as it gets dark. Read more about the light­house here.

This event is made pos­si­ble through a gen­er­ous grant from the Made on the Coast Emerg­ing Artist pro­gram and the Half Moon Bay Beau­ti­fi­ca­tion Com­mit­tee.

Coast­side Pho­tog­ra­phers Meet Up Group

Coast­side Pho­tog­ra­phers is 200 strong and rich with fun lov­ing pho­tog­ra­phers look­ing to share pho­to walks and exper­tise with any­one with a cam­era. We meet pri­mar­i­ly along the San Mateo Coun­ty Coast at var­i­ous times each month. Check out our web page for future and past meets at Coast­side Pho­tog­ra­phers.

Pho­tog­ra­phy Class­es

In asso­ci­a­tion with the Half Moon Bay Parks and Rec, I teach Basic and Inter­me­di­ate pho­tog­ra­phy class­es. Check my sched­ule in the cur­rent Activ­i­ty Guide here. Watch for a spe­cial 3 night class in Jan­u­ary ded­i­cat­ed to Night Pho­tog­ra­phy and Light Paint­ing.

Johnston House Light Show

On Tues­day, Octo­ber 7 at about 6:30 pm, at the John­ston House, join me, just after sun­set, for a pro­jec­tion pre­sen­ta­tion of his­toric images, Galen Wolf paint­ings and pho­tos from around the San Mateo Coun­ty Coast.

johnston house-3
His­toric pho­to of the John­ston House pro­ject­ed onto the John­ston House.

The John­ston House is locat­ed at 110 Hig­gins-Puris­ma Road, here in Half Moon Bay, CA.

The weath­er is look­ing good to view a great sun­set on the ocean (about 6:45 pm) and, about 10 min­utes lat­er, a full moon rise behind the John­ston House.

Johnston House Moon Rise
Full moon ris­es behind the John­ston House

As it gets dark,  I will begin a video pre­sen­ta­tion on the front of the John­ston House, show­ing pho­tos of the John­ston House jux­ta­posed from the past and present.

There will also be pho­tos of Galen Wolf paint­ings, an artist that doc­u­ment­ed life in San Mateo Coun­ty in the 1930s and pho­tos I have tak­en on the Coast­side.

Oxalis Field
Oxalis Field pho­to pro­ject­ed onto the John­ston House

Bring your cam­era and a flash­light and some­thing to sit on, if you like.

After the pre­sen­ta­tion, I will attempt to per­form some light draw­ing which will also be pro­ject­ed onto the house.

This is a free event! Bring your friends and fam­i­ly! See you there!

This event is made pos­si­ble by Made On The Coast, The Half Moon Bay Beau­ti­fi­ca­tion Com­mit­tee, The John­ston House Foun­da­tion and pre­sent­ed by me, Stu­art Nafey.

Made on the Coast

Coastside Photographers Meetup Group

Coast­side Pho­tog­ra­phers is a new Half Moon Bay based pho­tog­ra­phy Meet­up group and I am the orga­niz­er!

Sunset at Pigeon Point Lighthouse
Pho­tog­ra­phers line the bluffs for a Pigeon Point Light­house sun­set.

The idea is to focus on pho­to oppor­tu­ni­ties unique to the San Mateo Coun­ty coast­line. There are many (200+) bay area pho­to relat­ed groups in Meet­up, none cen­tered in Half Moon Bay. I know plen­ty of coast side pho­tog­ra­phers that trav­el over the hill to attend lec­tures and pho­to walks (myself includ­ed) and I want to help us get togeth­er local­ly.

For now, I will orga­nize pho­to walks as nat­ur­al align­ments and com­mu­ni­ty events occur. Long term plans include reg­u­lar meet­ings to talk and learn, but find­ing a venue to accom­mo­date the group, which has grown to over 150 mem­bers as of this writ­ing, is the chal­lenge. A few local cof­fee shops have offered their ser­vices, but I have yet to take them up on those offers. The library has no meet­ing rooms for us and only allow library spon­sored activ­i­ties, at least until the new library is built. The Recre­ation Depart­ment charges a hefty fee unless you are a cer­ti­fied non-prof­it.

But the future is promis­ing. We have already had 4 suc­cess­ful meets since we start­ed at the end of Jan­u­ary and mem­ber­ship grows every­day.

Sur­pris­ing­ly, we have mem­bers from all over the bay area. For those that must trav­el, I try my best to update sched­uled meets as to chang­ing weath­er and traf­fic con­di­tions.

If you are inter­est­ed in join­ing or check­ing us out, click through to Coast­side Pho­tog­ra­phers. This will take you to our Meet­up web­site where you can read about us, view our pre­vi­ous meets, sug­gest ideas in the Dis­cus­sion Forum, check out the post­ed pho­tos and read our Poli­cies and Guide­lines.

It is free to join (free to sign up with Meet­up) and most meets will be free. Occa­sion­al­ly, I plan to hold tech­ni­cal sem­i­nars and charge a fee.

Take that cam­era out of the bag, charge the bat­tery and come join us as we pho­to­graph the coast!

Organizing Your Photos via Adobe Lightroom

A word about orga­niz­ing your pho­tos and Col­lec­tions in Light­room

I store all my pho­tos on a sep­a­rate exter­nal hard dri­ve ded­i­cat­ed only for pho­tos. I have one fold­er named “Pic­tures” on that dri­ve. With­in that fold­er are more fold­ers named with gen­er­al cat­e­gories — Art, Hol­i­days, Music, Peo­ple, Projects, Places, Plants, Sports and Vehi­cles.

Inside each of those fold­ers are sub fold­ers that fur­ther define the con­tents. For instance, in the Music fold­er, sub-fold­ers have names of spe­cif­ic musi­cians and bands. The Places fold­er has a Cities fold­er, a Parks fold­er and a few more. The Sports fold­er has Soc­cer, Surf­ing, and Hula Hoop sub-fold­ers. The Vehi­cles fold­er has sub-fold­ers for Cars, Planes, Trains and Boats. Those fold­ers are where I store all my pho­tos.

Even though I use Light­room to import and orga­nize these fold­ers, the pic­tures can only be in one place and in one fold­er on the one hard dri­ve. Those fold­ers are all dis­played in the actu­al hier­ar­chy in the Fold­er Pan­el of the Light­room Library. (I cre­ate dupli­cates as a back­up on anoth­er dri­ve and will write about that lat­er.)

What if a pho­to fits into more than one of my cat­e­gories? That is where Col­lec­tions come in.

The pow­er­ful advan­tage of Col­lec­tions is being able to cre­ate a Col­lec­tion of pho­tos that live in dif­fer­ent fold­ers and even on dif­fer­ent hard dri­ves. And any one pho­to can also reside in more than one Col­lec­tion.

Col­lec­tions are vir­tu­al. Pho­tos in Col­lec­tions nev­er move from their per­ma­nent home on your hard dri­ve. They stay in the fold­er where you first import­ed them. Light­room clev­er­ly remem­bers the Col­lec­tions you cre­ate, the pho­tos you place in them and any edit­ing you make to those pho­tos. Light­room nev­er makes changes to the orig­i­nals.

I uti­lize Col­lec­tions when work­ing on projects. After review­ing and rat­ing pic­tures from a pho­to shoot, I might cre­ate a Col­lec­tion of the best pho­tos that require fur­ther edit­ing. I might make a Col­lec­tion of pho­tos that have a sim­i­lar theme, which will prob­a­bly include pic­tures from many dif­fer­ent fold­ers on my hard dri­ve.

Orga­niz­ing is a joint effort of (1) know­ing how files are stored on your hard dri­ves and (2) using the tools in the Light­room Library, includ­ing Col­lec­tions, rat­ings and key­words. Mas­ter these con­cepts and you will eas­i­ly man­age the huge num­ber of pic­tures you are col­lect­ing in this dig­i­tal pho­tog­ra­phy world.

Full Moon Rising — August 30 Photo Op

When

Weath­er per­mit­ting — always a con­sid­er­a­tion in Half Moon Bay — I am invit­ing cam­era folk to join me in pho­tograph­ing the near full moon ris­ing behind the John­ston House on Thurs­day, August 30. I plan to be set­up by 7:00pm and expect the moon to appear by 7:25 and the sun set­ting at 7:40.

Where

The Pho­tog­ra­pher’s Ephemeris tells me to be near the inter­sec­tion of Main Street and Hig­gins Canyon Road look­ing east toward the house.

Camera Tips

The moon is no larg­er on the hori­zon than it is when direct­ly over­head. In order to increase the per­ceived size of the moon, you pho­to­graph it along side a land­mark, from a dis­tance and with a long lens, zoom­ing in as much as you can to frame the pic­ture. I have a 70–300mm lens but will be using my 70–200mm instead. It is a high­er qual­i­ty lens that gives me sharp­er pic­tures. More megapix­els in your cam­era helps when crop­ping to retain a high res­o­lu­tion pho­to­graph. I use a Nikon D7000 with 16MP but have tak­en decent pho­tos with the 10MP D80.

Exposure

Expo­sure is a bit tricky. You might think that an evening shot would require a wider aper­ture or a slow­er shut­ter speed, but the moon can be very bright in a dark sky and to retain crater detail, an under exposed pic­ture (accord­ing to the cam­er­a’s light meter) might be best.

The pic­ture below was tak­en with the D80 and the 70–300mm lens at 100 ISO, f/8.0 aper­ture and 1/50 shut­ter speed. The orig­i­nal pic­ture was both under exposed for the house and hills and a bit over­ex­posed for the moon and the sky. I then, using Light­room,  light­ened the bot­tom half and dark­ened the sky which brought out details in both. Brack­et­ing your expo­sure and lay­er­ing via HDR should improve that process.

moon rise over the Johnston House
A near full moon ris­ing behind the John­ston House, Half Moon Bay, CA

Some folks sug­gest start­ing at f/16 with a shut­ter speed equal to your ISO set­ting. Those are fast shut­ter speeds, but use a tri­pod any­way. And be ready to man­u­al­ly adjust your set­tings, as the moon ris­es quick­ly. In the bay area, the earth is spin­ning around 818 mph which give you only a few min­utes to catch a shot like this.

But the Full Moon is on Friday

It sure is. Those pesky moun­tains block our view of the hori­zon and, in this case, the moon does­n’t appear until 26 min­utes after the actu­al rise. Since the sun sets as the moon ris­es, by the time we see it, the sun is long gone. By shoot­ing the day before the full­ness, you can get some of that gold­en hour sun­set light on the John­ston House and less extreme con­trast in your expo­sure.

Update: Local SF and noc­tur­nal pho­tog­ra­ph­er Phil McGrew sug­gests the “Lunar 11” rule. Start with an f stop of 11 and a shut­ter speed the same as your ISO set­ting, sim­i­lar to the “Sun­ny 16” rule which is to start with f/16 and shut­ter speed the same as your ISO when in a very sun­ny envi­ron­ment.

Update 2: Despite per­fect­ly clear evenings the pre­vi­ous 2 nights, the marine lay­er blan­ket­ed the coast with low lying clouds and we saw nei­ther the blue moon rise or the sun set. Next month is anoth­er sto­ry when, on Sep­tem­ber 29, full moon ris­es 24 min­utes before the sun­sets and may be the best pho­to op here in Half Moon Bay.

Treat Social Club Photos

We took our Light Doo­dles Pho­to Booth to the Treat Social Club last night and had a great response to the por­traits ses­sion. The peo­ple were fan­tas­tic, the music was stel­lar and the light show amaz­ing.

I did get some time to talk with the video direc­tor for some cool insights to the soft­ware used. I built a slideshow of our light draw­ings which includ­ed sev­er­al tan­go themed pic­tures which seemed to dis­play just as the accor­dion played and the dancers were tan­go­ing. And then a yel­low giraffe head would pop up. Very trip­py. Here are a few shots.

Lori with light painted trombone projected on a wall
My shot of a light paint­ed Lori on trom­bone became the default image for the evening

3 people form a light painted totem pole

Red an green man in a blue cloud

Vis­it the Light Doo­dles web site or see the full por­trait gallery here.

Light Painting Portraits Tonight

Our Light Doo­dles pho­to booth will be cre­at­ing col­or­ful por­traits at the Treat Social Club tonight, Tues­day, August 21. It appears to be a mul­ti­me­dia extrav­a­gan­za that occurs once a month and we are excit­ed to be invit­ed. Tonight fea­tures Tan­go music and dancers and new music by Sascha Jacob­sen, Adam The­is and Eric Gar­land, plus oth­er spe­cial guests and film pro­duc­ers. Come back tomor­row to view the results!

Light drawing of tango dancers

The Milky Way — Finding and Photographing

For those of us who like to sleep late, July through Sep­tem­ber are the best times to find and pho­to­graph the Milky Way and the SF bay area based Star Cir­cle Acad­e­my can help you. Look to the south­ern sky from just after sun­set to mid­night this time of year.

Depend­ing where you are, just look­ing might not be quite enough. Noc­tur­nal pho­tog­ra­ph­er Steven Chris­ten­son has post­ed 2 help­ful arti­cles on the Star Cir­cle Acad­e­my blog on the sub­ject of find­ing and pho­tograph­ing the expanse that is our home galaxy and is hap­py to answer ques­tions in the com­ments.

The Elusive Milky Way – How to Find It!

The Elusive Milky Way – Capture an Image

I have yet to cap­ture a Milky Way pho­to I want to share, so I link to one of Steven’s below.

A 180 degree vertorama of the Milky Way from horizon to horizon

If the pic­ture looks a bit strange, it is a 180 degree ver­tora­ma (a series of stitched pic­tures) tak­en straight over­head from hori­zon to hori­zon. The west hori­zon is at the top of the pho­to.

Walk towards the light... frame and shoot!