Parties

Chanukah Comedy Night @ Chabad of Laguna Beach.

I like my iPad. I do. But when it deletes an entire post because my finger brushed against the wrong button I feel like feeding it to the cows hanging out a few feet from my car.Being as most of my writing is completely ad hoc, and follows my thoughts of the moment, I'm going to have a really hard time rewriting all that was written. Rethinking all that was thought. Retracing whatever steps my mind took on its mad journey towards the "post" button (I'm pushing the save button every other word now).

Here goes:

Part of my wonderfully varied professional life is teaching a bunch of Tweens (also known as the Bar Mitzvah Class/Group/Dudes/Peoples-of-the-younger-sort) about our wonderful Jewish Heritage (I think, come to think of it im not exactly sure what I'm supposed to be teaching them (Dear Rebbetzin Goorevitch, that was a joke. I know exactly what im supposed to be teaching). The indoctrination process takes place at the quaint Chabad of Laguna Beach, located smack dab (who made up that one?) the world renown Pacific Coast Highway (and unlike the cheap knockoff in Northern Cali, this one is actually on the coast).

This same forementioned (my iPad refuses to recognize that as a word. Is it right?) Chabad house hosts an annual (?) Chanukah Comedy night (because they both start with a "C", that's why on Purim, many Chabad houses host "Paloozas" (not that anyone actually knows what a palooza is)). And being that in between teaching, cow watching, designing, and flying around with a cape and tights (you didn't know that was me? That's because I combed my hair to the side and removed my glasses) I am also a semi-professional photographer, I was asked to capture the memories on my cheap Chinese flash cards.

I was quite excited. A. There was food. B. I could test out my new ridiculously expensive new lens (Nikkor 85mm AF-S 1.4G for the techinally inclined) in an environment where it could shine. I am happy to say that it exceeded my expectations (which were quite high already). Sharp as a woman in labor's tongue, fast as a nursing woman's mood changes (that's a joke. My wife is awesome.), quick to focus, and — (bet you don't know where to find that dash on your keyboard) here's the awesome part — keeps the focus on moving subjects! Hooray!

I used my flash and fake fong diffuser for most of the shots (until the comedy part started, then they were all available light).

The Pics (a lot):

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DSC_6408.jpg Looks good. Eh? I think this was with the 55mm micro.

DSC_6436.jpg That's EJ. A graduate if the Chabad of Laguna's Hebrew School, a past student of mine, and an awesome flutist.

DSC_6474.jpg Deep in discussion. Those are my star indoctrinees.

DSC_6494.jpg I told the guy on the right that we had three kids under four and my wife was expecting (we were since blessed with a beautiful Ephraim Zusha). He though we were absolutely insane. On another note, I must say, I am getting much better at this flash thing.

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DSC_6524.jpg I'm not sure why I have so many pics of Dino. Must be his ultra photogenicness (hmmm, my iPad refuses to recognize that as a word also. Weird).

DSC_6536.jpg The Bar Mitzvah class got to introduce each of the candle lighters with a cute personalized poem. 'twas nice. dino here is trying to memorize his part. 'twas nice. dino here is trying to memorize his part.

DSC_6557.jpg One of the honorees with the wonderful Goorevitchs.

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DSC_6570.jpg I always forget this couples name. I was the mashgiach at their sons wedding. Bonnie something. Whatever it may be, they are a really neat family.

DSC_6580.jpg The kids doing their introduction/poetry thing.

DSC_6605.jpg Yay!

DSC_6630.jpg Now starts the comedy part. The dude was mighty funny. Comedy is like pickles for me. I never want them, but once I have a bite I think "wow. These are good, I should have them more often".

DSC_6646.jpg I love how this lens locks in the focus in low light. Yummy.

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DSC_6717.jpg Demonstrating how one could drive and take off ones sweater at the same time. Every time I look at these pictures I laugh.

DSC_6737.jpg For some reason I loved how the shadows looked.

DSC_6747.jpg The Tomkins. Parents of the famous Jake. Proud owners of a Mammoth Mountain bumper sticker.

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DSC_6789.jpg Not sure what I like about this one.

DSC_6814.jpg This was hilarious. He was showing how whenever there is a bench with a table, people sit on the table and put their legs on the bench. So he invented a row above the tables so people could put their food there. But instead of putting their food there, they sat on them and put their feet on the table. And on it went. I guess you had to be there.

DSC_6756.jpg Mushka hates having her picture taken. Ha.

DSC_6819.jpg I love old couples.

DSC_6839.jpg And the Goorevitches.

Overall I was very happy with the shoot. There were no pieces of art, just good captures of a fun night. I feel like there was consistency from shot to shot, there was good use of flash and the best part: hardly any post processing. Just corrected exposure on a few and batch processed them all through Photoshop with a few minor actions.

What I really should use more though is a moderate wide angle. I'm really eying the new Nikon 35mm, however, its very pricey and I've heard it has some focus issues. We'll see. But it would complement the 85mm perfectly. I'd hardly ever need another lens (I'm trying to convince myself. I'm sure if I try hard enough I could do it.).

And for the record, I ended up typing this in the SimpleNote app and copying the whole thing over. You'd think wordpress would get its act together. Nope. I shouldn't complain. It's free (but is anything really free? Sorry. Not going down that path. I need to sleep).

Good Night.

Getting Paid to Eat Sushi

Sleep is God's way of saying "I love you". Yes, the rumors are true. I am in love with sleep (as the saying goes (not sure where the saying "how the saying goes" comes from, sayings don't really "go" anywhere, probably Joseph Heller): distance makes the heart grow fonder).

I also enjoy sushi. And when I was asked to shoot a Bar Mitzvah, and they were serving sushi, I jumped at the opportunity.

Before doing so I picked up this ridiculous inverted-dome looking device that fits over my flash to make the light a bit less harsh. It does weaken the light a bit but overall it looks much nicer than direct flash (that white face, harsh shadow look that screams: FLASH). Although it did make me look a bit less cool than I like, it did have this I'm-so-cool-I-don't-even-have-to-look-it appeal.

Overall I was satisfied with the job I did, though I wish I knew how to use the flash a bit more. Almost everything was shot in full manual mode with a lot of trial and error (more of the latter). The main thing I did learn (and an important lesson it is) is that flash is more for poor lighting than low lighting. In the beginning I was trying not to use flash as much as possible (which is doable with a fast lens and an awesome camera like the D700), and most of those pictures did not come out that hot.

Lesson #2: Getting good pictures is as much about good people skills than technical ability. Be comfortable, don't impose, be humorous (some wine helps) etc.

On to the pics.

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The Three Musketeers (aka the three stooges). Cute family. (If I had my flash on a bracket, it would have been higher and wouldn't have had those nasty reflections on the glasses)

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I wasn't set up for family portraits (they weren't planning on it originally). Ideally I would have an umbrella in front (to the side) and another flash hitting the wall to give some more separation. Next time.

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Da Boyz

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This kid was way too photogenic.

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Dancing pics are new to me. No clue what I was doing.

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And that's what happens when you don't use flash.

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That's what happens when you do use flash.

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And again.

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Wow. My camera shoots in color! Actually most of the shots were in color, it's just the lighting was so bad (I.e. I did not control it enough) that black and white just looked better in many of the shots. I also went around to each table taking group pictures, but I never was a fan of posed pics so I'm not posting them here. Sorry.

Henna, take two

As I promised my loyal readers (all two of you) here is the second installment of the Henna pics. DSC_9812.jpg

The background of this one was way too busy. After trying to clean it up I gave up and just cut them out (and made the background bigger because I could, the background being black and all). Looking at it now, I think I'll put in some stars and make it look a bit more real. I'll keep you (yes, you two) updated on how that is coming along.

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Um, yeah, that would be Ron. He doesn't always dress like that.

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David and his papa (in French).

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I think everyone is looking at different cameras.

And some color (yes I also carry color film):

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For the record I also have dimples. They're just slightly, umm, hidden sometimes.

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Mmmmm, Rolling Rock.

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Yes Mr. Picasso, that is a head coming out of his head.

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My #1 fan

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Carol's #1 fan

Yeah, I know I know they're completely out of order and there is absolutely no (I'm trying to think of another word for order, but I'm too lazy to go to thesaurus.com to find one) whatsoever. Tough. Live with it. Artists are not meant to be understood (that is a joke. I do not consider myself to be an artist, nor do I randomize under the cloak of depth (wow, that actually sounded pretty good)).

On another note, I went to the dentist today and my mouth hurts. It's a good thing I'm not typing with my teeth (though that is something I'd like to learn to do).

Until next time: Dasvedania, Paul Revere.

Disclaimer: I am way too tired to edit this thing, so if my spelling/grammar seem a bit off, please circle the mistakes in red and fax them back to me @ 492-882-081-438-9899910628-7719 ext. 41. Thanks.

Henna Night (that's Henna, not Chenna)

This past Sunday night I had the privilege of attending my first "Henna". It's basically the Sefardi version of a L'Chaim or Vort (engagement parties) with way cooler clothes and some fancy skin coloring ceremonies (replete with lilili'ing and all). Sharon and Oscar make a really cute couple, and I wish them all the blessings for a wonderful marriage together. Oscar is from India (hence the Henna) and drives quite the gnarly bike (stat).

I was there as the photographer, and I got the chance to use that 24-70 lens I picked up recently on craigslist (actually I picked it up at the Coffee Bean, if you care). I really am enjoying the wide angle part of it. It feels like you're smack in middle of everything (that's why most journalists spend a majority of their time with wide angles). And the longer end is good for not-so-tight portraits (examples to come soon).

What I really had a hard time with was the lighting. Inside, the ceiling was low (as in not ballroom high) and the light was from many small circular lights, which looked great in real life, but gave anyone with even a hint of a receding hairline bright white spots on their foreheads. Outside was nice, until it got dark (well is was still nice, it was just dark). I didn't want to use my flash because a. I'm not that proficient in it's use yet b. there was nothing to bounce it off of (the sky doesn't bounce light very well) c. It would have ruined the ambiance of both the event and the pictures.

As always I made the mistake of lowering the shutter speed instead of raising the ISO (I didn't want to go past 2000, I should have though), noise is better than blur (I need to make at some sort of mantra and stick it on my wall, or even better, inside my viewfinder).

Also I should have made more tome to chat up the family and get comfortable around them (more them around me), so a. I get more shots of them and b. they don't look so posed in all of the shots.

On the brighter side, I did take some wonderful pics. I discovered that converting to black and white gets rid of a lot of lighting/coloring/white balance issues, and I me'od like the combo of wide angle and black and white.

I know I mentioned this already, but I am very into (attempting to) getting pictures that capture the feeling of the event more than getting pictures of those that were there (including family). Portraits and even group pics are nice (and getting a few won't kill anyone), but in 5 or 10 years you don't want to see formal looking pics of the people there, you want to see pictures that remind you how you felt at the time, you want pictures that instead of saying "wow, I sure looked beautiful", it's "wow, I was so happy and we all had such a fun time". That's also why I'm so in love (more like, in like) with the wide angles (and now i'm ogling the 24 f1.4..., someone help me).

Whatever.

On to the pics (mostly with the 24-70 and the 50, and a few with the 105):

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Mrs. Kaplan hard at work (and Eli doing his thing)

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Meet and greet

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Carol and her beautiful step daughter

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The drink table (always an integral part)

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Eli's sister and her über cute daughter

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For some reason before the actual Henna, it seems that the couple is tomb chased to their seats by a bunch of woman carrying plates of cookies. Not the worst thing in the world.

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The cookie dance.

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Behold: the Henna.

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The happy couple.

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No, that's not the High Priest. It's Phil.

For now. Toodooloo. Too. Doo. Loo. That's how they ask children in the UK if they have to go to the bathroom.

I'll post some more pictures from the Henna tomorrow (I'm at the cow farm and it takes forever to upload pictures to flickr from my iPad out here).

First Paid Event!

_DSC1544 Pulled off my first paid gig a month or two ago. I was nervous as anything. Thank G-d the Blesofskis are one of the most chilled people I know and they made it a lot easier. Overall I did a decent job. They were very happy, however I am always looking for things I messed up with.

Im going to try to post an evaluation of myself after each gig, we'll see how that goes.

What I am happy with: 1. I got there early and scouted the scene for lighting, settings etc.

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2. I found some cool backlighting in middle and utilized it a bit.

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3. Looked for patterns, and overall snapped some great shots.

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Things that I messed up/could learn from

1. Make sure the area is clear of rubbish. (Check out that plastic string on the grass.)

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2. Use a smaller aperture when dealing with more than one person, or when dealing with a close up and the subject is facing slightly to the side (straight on, or more to side both work with large apertures, straight on because both eyes could be in focus, more to the side because it's okay if the other eye is not in focus, but when it's a bit to the side then it just looks like you missed).

_DSC2135 (if you check out the larger sizes, you could see that the dude on the right is slightly out of focus)

3. Don't shoot up at someone on a bright day, the sky will totally overexpose and spill into anything your shooting at. Not pretty unless you're going for that look. (I don't have any pics of this, they weren't worth saving.)

4. Shoot at smaller apertures when dealing with subjects moving at or away from you to allow a larger margin for error with focusing.

_DSC1491 (again, in the large version you could see the running kid is slightly out of focus)

And that's all folks.