One day in June 2021, it popped into my head: what if I rotated my iPhone the wrong way when taking a panorama? This was the start of a fun, hit-or-miss exploration with my iPhone SE 2nd generation. The results are very dependent on the phone’s stitching algorithm, so surprises abound.
Read Morecamera technique
Trying Flash Photo of Bathroom
We can control the lighting on our near subject with just the flash and expose far away backgrounds with the exposure trio of exposure time, aperture and ISO. They are independent when the distance to the background is very far away, since the Inverse-Square law indicates that a negligible amount of flash light gets there.
Read MoreWide angle lenses: Making verticals vertical
This blog entry is about achieving straight lines in architecture photos, despite the divergent or convergent lines and barrel shaped distortion produced by a wide or super wide angle lens.
Read MoreEclipse viewing: Hand held DSRL camera
Photographing the 2017 solar eclipse: solar prominence (loops off the surface of sun) and corona., Also a “diamond ring” shot.
Read MorePartial eclipse viewing: A home made projector
I followed the suggestions in the website http://richardsont.people.cofc.edu/safe_solar_folder/ with a +2 diopter close-up filter as my first lens and a mystery -25mm (??) lens as my second one, using a shelving upright as an optics rail.
Pro: You get a nice big 2-3″ image for everyone to look at. It is fun to rearrange as the sun moves in the sky. You can photograph the projection with any kind of camera.
Con: It is kind of fuzzy. If blown up to larger sizes, you get one edge blue and the other red due to chromatic aberration. You can spend more for non-aberration lenses.
Upshot: A great interactive group activity.
“Pin hole” partial eclipse viewing using found objects
"Pin holes" can be using found from boards, fingers, Venetian blinds, trees, etc. The further away, the bigger the image.
Eclipse projection from pinholes (very faint), 3/8″ holes and fingers criss-crossed.
Eclipse projection from Venetian blinds.
Eclipse projections from ~25 ft high live and ~80 ft high dead (and needle free) Balsam pine trees in British Columbia, Canada. Man’s sandals at bottom for scale. [Anonymous]
Pro: Size of image can be much better than with shoe box camera because distance is further. Compare images from different hole sizes. Multiple holes make fun effects.
Con: You might forget to look and find them!
View partial eclipse with pin hole camera made from shoe box
A pin hole camera made from shoe box is frequently recommended as a safe way to view a partial eclipse.
Pro: Probably couldn’t hurt you if you ate it. Can get images of surrounding wispy clouds.
Con: Image is very tiny. Awkward to photograph. Thrown in a corner and ignored, so no photo.
But if you think bigger, much bigger, the concept can be pretty fun. See a following blog entry on found objects.
Photographing the partial solar eclipse using Firecrest solar filter
Partial eclipse viewing: Firecrest 18 Stop Neutral Density Solar Filter from the U.K.
Pro: Nice neutral color. Was in stock at B&H when others were out.
Con: Oh boy. I neglected to try this out on a non-eclipse day and didn’t debug a number of problems, maybe not due to the filter per se.
Cyan colored lens flare. Duh.
Hazy lens flare.
Double image— kind of like what you see if you have cataracts.
Curious: Why is the cyan lens flare image rotated 180 degrees from the main image? Why does the main image of the eclipse look like a banana? [see bottom tip of the crescent]
Upshot: The solar eclipse filter was disappointing.
Update: Photo was very overexposed. I suggest practicing ahead of time by photographing sun spots.