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Nick Depree

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Walking along the last preserved section of the Berlin Wall

Back to the Berlin Wall

August 20, 2014 in City, Museum, Travel

Seems I already went back on my word of 2 months ago and forgot to keep posting and catching up on photos from my last trip to Germany! Not many more left to go now, but since I'm in Europe again for the last three weeks I've taken many thousands more photos, and getting increasingly far behind in my photo publishing! Tempting to forget about these photos as a lost cause now, but well if I don't publish them, they'll never see the light of day! Maybe this batch today isn't the most exciting, but there are one or two still to come from the last trip that I'm quite proud of. Even worse, I still haven't posted about the last Horse and Rider portrait session I did with Tiffany, or the video work I've been doing with Sven for the Bokeh-Monster, or even my winter road trip and snowstorm in the deep south! One day I intend to stop procrastinating...

Remnants of the Wall

Preserved wall with Fernsehturm on the skyline

This day in Berlin, like a lot of my days in Berlin, was a day of museums and memorials. Maybe that's not what everyone else does in Berlin, but there are enough of both to keep me busy for weeks. I started with an early morning U-Bahn ride to the Gedenkstätte Berliner Mauer (Berlin Wall Memorial) at the site of the infamous Bernauer Straße crossing, where many people escaped to freedom in the early days of the wall when it looked much less imposing than it became. At the very start, they just bricked up the first floor doors and windows of every house along the street - leading to plenty of footage of people jumping down from higher stories to freedom in the West. That didn't last long.

Guard tower with roses

Wall memorial

The complete section of the wall above was preserved by rapid action of the government the day before German Unification in 1990, declaring it a historical monument while walls were being torn down all over the city. The wall itself was much more than a simple wall, as can be seen here - it was continuously developed and 'improved' over the years into quite a fortification, with tall concrete climb-proof barriers, razor wire, electrical signal fences, steel spiked floors, dog patrol lanes, sand floors to show footprints, flood lights, and tall towers with machine gunners inside. The memorial itself stretches much further down the street, including foundations of buildings torn down to fit the wall in, an earthen church where the Church of Reconciliation famously stood in no-man's land between the two sides of the wall until it was destroyed in 1985, photos and memorials of the 138+ people killed crossing the wall, and video displays of people escaping to freedom in the early days. Overall the memorial was really good, a lot more to see there than just a piece of wall left behind. Definitely recommended in Berlin.

In the Altes Museum

The Lustgarten at night. And because i needed another square photo to fit this spot.

The rest of the day was filled with museum visiting as I attempt to cross more off the list, particularly the remaining ones on the famous Museuminsel 'Museum Island'. This time I covered the Museum for Photography with it's excellent Helmut Newton galleries, and the Altes ('Old') Musuem on the island. This is housed in a very impressive Neoclassical building by the famous architect Karl Friedrich Schinkel, built 1823-1830 next to the Berliner Dom. I enjoyed the museum, but its collection is mostly of ancient sculptures, which isn't my preferred source of culture :)

 

Altes Musuem dome

 
Tags: Germany, Berlin, Museum, Travel, Fuji, X-E1, 18-55mm
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Vintage Charlotte

July 10, 2014 in Portrait, Vintage

The other weekend I had a fun shoot with Miss Charlotte Cake, who is a blogger, baker and all around vintage enthusiast. Charlotte wanted to work on her modelling portfolio, with an eye towards entering the Miss Pinup NZ competition next year. I'm still working on my portrait portfolio myself, so it was good to work with someone with plenty of ideas for wardrobe, props and poses. We've previously shot before in more casual settings, and it was nice this time to do something together with purpose and theme! 

Our original idea was for a 'vintage picnic' shoot in Auckland Domain, making particular use of the rotunda area - except being winter of course the ground was quite soggy, and the rotunda scaffolded for repairs! This wasn't entirely unexpected however, and we had chosen the spot with alternative options in mind such as the Winter Gardens. The hothouse at the gardens was a nice easy start to the shoot, with interesting and colourful backgrounds, and quite pretty light coming through the old glass. Of course the humidity wasn't great for Charlotte's meticulous hair style! I worked on this in photoshop for a few photos, but definitely something to remember for next time.

After trying a couple of poses and positions, we moved outside to the terraced pond area, and found some interesting concrete and wooden benches to use, with interesting textures in the bricks and vines. I do wonder if I'm pushing the 'brick wall portrait cliche' a bit here, but I think the style and props make it a bit different at least. We also had good fun shooting at high frame rate for some action shots of Charlotte drinking tea and spinning around - as much as tea drinking can be considered 'action', that is. I turned one of these sequences into an animated GIF (in the block above), hopefully it works for everyone viewing this. This was a fun bonus to make from the pictures, although a bit of camera movement during the sequence can make things a bit tricky! A tripod might be recommended next time..

The setting and primarily black and white colours gave quite a 'gothic vintage' feeling - not exactly what we were planning from the start, but we liked where it was going, and these pics in particular I processed to have a darker tone. I think gothic vintage is certainly something I'd like to work on again in future, and to push it further and more stylised. The more flowery and lighter pictures were given a semi-vintage tone and softness - I didn't want to push it too far into the 'cheesy' realm of fake sepia or Kodachrome colours, but hopefully it still complements the theme well. 

 
 

Charlotte has a nice write up of the shoot on her blog here, and gives a much better commentary on the styling and wardrobe that I could. As for a learning point to take away, I think I need to work on directing models more - Charlotte had good posing ideas, but I should contribute more to this - since of course the model can't see exactly what I'm seeing, so I can be proactive to make small changes and corrections, rather than noticing them when it is too late sitting at my computer! It was good fun to work with Charlotte, and hopefully we will be back again for a picnic shoot once winter and ground repairs have finished..

Tags: Portrait, Vintage, Model, Auckland, Domain, Gardens, Winter, Nikon
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Riverhead Forest Sunday

June 23, 2014 in Landscape

Nothing to do at home on a Sunday afternoon usually leads to photo expeditions with Sven (Bokeh Monster) in various locations around Auckland. We often end up walking around the city, but typically Sundays are pretty poor for people spotting for Sven's street portraits, and in this case we felt like an outdoor excursion. But with the weather looking pretty grey, we didn't want to travel too far away and waste the travel time if a storm set in, so we went the short distance to Riverhead forest to see what we could see..

We've previously explored around Woodhill forest a few times, but Riverhead was new to us, and in fact we didn't really know where we were going or how even to get in! We eventually found a gate a comfortable distance from the rifle range, and quickly left the road through an inviting hole in a hedge, and made our way over a little stream and up a hill to a pretty open area fulls of ferns and covered in pine needles.

Photographically, the light was pretty dull and uninteresting, but after complaining vociferously to each other, we eventually found a few things to shoot, and even got lucky with some brief patches of sun shining through the trees. Probably not my best work ever, but it was still fun to go 'bush walking' (a hundred metres off the road) and practice shooting things that aren't horses again!

Tags: Nikon, D700, 85mm f/1.8 G, 18-35mm f/3.5-4.5 G, Riverhead, Forest, Landscape, New Zealand, Auckland
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Watching a busker under the Alexanderplatz S-Bahn station

Back to Berlin (photos)

June 17, 2014 in City, Museum, Travel

Some time ago I was posting photos from my last trip to Berlin, but I got distracted by Christmas holidays and being a tourist in Melbourne, and then by various other types of shooting - particularly the 20,000 or so photos of horses I've taken this year! But with another work trip to Germany on the cards for August it's time to finish off the last few batches of photos from Berlin, and then a short trip to Weymouth to stay with my Dad on the way home to NZ.

One of many trips to the Memorial for the Murdered Jews of Europe

Evening train ride down to the Burgermeister

I'm struggling a little now to remember exactly what I got up to in Berlin! But being November it was  getting a little cold, and getting dark quite early, which didn't make for great touristing. I was on a mission to see all of the main museums which I missed last time, and unfortunately it was pretty much dark by museum closing time, and I didn't get a huge haul of photos this trip. I found my self several times however at the Denkmal für die ermordeten Juden Europas (Memorial to the Murdered Jews of Europe), and spent some time exploring there in relative peace and quiet without the usual hordes of school kids running around spoiling the atmosphere. First thing in the morning is definitely the right time to visit.

The I.M.Pei designed extension to the Deutches Historisches Museum

Xmas tree at the Französischer Dom

Christmas decorations were starting to come out, including a nice big tree in the Gendarmenmarkt, by the French and German cathedrals (Französischer and Deutscher Dom). The first museum I visited was the Deutsches Historisches Museum, which I had seen last trip, but left too late and had to rush through the end of it. It was really interesting though, and well worth repeating... but then again, I have always liked history museums! So far I'm only repeating things i'd already seen - but I did make a special effort to track down some new and interesting foods for dinner - allowing of course for some Curry36 currywurst for lunch first. Anyway, my first good find was Burgermeister, a burger joint built into what used to be a public lavatory below the train tracks in the Kreuzberg district. I think they really missed a marketing opportunity though by not calling it 'Toilet Burger'... that's what I called it in my head at least...

East German propaganda at the Stasi Museum

Preserved 1980's office of Stasi boss Erich Honecker

My first 'new' musuem of this visit was to the Stasi Museum, the museum of the East German secret police, based in their old headquarters - an otherwise innocuous looking office complex in East Berlin, still kept in the latest 1980's fashions - including the board rooms, director's office, and cafeteria where the secret police generals would discuss the most effective ways of spying on and persecuting their own citizens. The exhibits themselves could have used some modernisation, but overall it was very interesting, especially the miniaturised spy cameras installed into hollow tree trunks, bird houses, briefcases (of course), and the guard rooms with radio dials whited out over all the 'western' stations they weren't allowed to listen to.

Miniature camera collection at the Stasi museum

Exploring interesting alleyways near the hackesche hof

There was no light left for photographing after closing time, but I did still have fun walking around the city, re-orienting myself since the last trip, and looking for interesting places to explore, such as the dark alleys behind the Hackesche hof. And making a plan to fit in all the other museums to make the most of the remaining two days!

Empty bookshelves - memorial of Nazi bookburning on the Bebelplatz. Clearer photo than I managed last time!

Tags: Travel, Berlin, Germany, Fuji, X-E1
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Shooting Five Thousand Horses

May 30, 2014 in Equestrian

Hah well I doubt the shooting/shooting joke has legs any more... and it wasn't even five thousand separate horses... nevertheless, I shot five thousand pictures of horses the other weekend, at the Woodhill Sands 'AESI Fibre Fresh' Horse Trials. Woodhill Sands is a great location near Woodhill Forest, and I've been lucky enough to get a few jobs there lately photographing horse trials, showjumping and dressage competitions. The horse trials are particularly interesting to shoot, as the jumps start getting quite big in the higher classes, and difficult looking compared to the smaller events I've shot before. It's not Badminton-level yet, but I got to see and shoot some pretty good riders. But this is mostly about my latest challenges in photography, rather than actual horses. Which I know little about anyway.. The whole set of pictures is available on my equestrian website here.

Equestrian shooting is still new to me, but I'm (hopefully) getting more experienced and more understanding of what people are looking for in their photos. It's quite different compared to other photos I take, in that what I like is quite secondary to what the rider likes and wants to see, since I am of course trying to sell pictures to the riders! Still, I do my best to make sure that the image quality, composition and colour editing are up to my standards, and something i'm happy to have my name on. I'm trying to make some pocket-money here, but I still care about taking the best photos I can!

This gets to be a slight problem when you have over 5000 photos to edit after shooting a two-day horse trial - and this was even with me being quite conservative on the shutter in some cases so i'd still have card space left by the end of the day. Before I started shooting sports I only had 16GB of memory cards, which I quickly had to expand to 48GB just to keep up with the number of photos! Anyway, I had a lot of photos to process in a short time, since I really need to get all pics up within a few days of each event before people forget about them, or before they ride a different event the following weekend. 

Next time: A post on the 1000 things that have to be correct for a 'good' dressage picture.

I started a trial of the Photo Mechanic software for this batch of photos, which was fantastic. I hadn't used it before, so it probably didn't save me a lot of time in this first occasion due to some clumsy operation on my part, but it is great for very quickly running through photos and making my selections of what to keep and throw away. It also has very useful tools for captioning and organising, which I used to add rider names and numbers to each photo for quickly finding the right ones later. I'd seen this software recommended before by sports shooters, and I could quickly see why I needed it too :)

The final tally was about 16hrs shooting over the weekend, and 30hrs editing time from Sunday night to Wednesday night before it was all done. So not much sleep for a few days, but i got it all done, and got some good feedback from the riders and the club. And even a few sales, although I won't be quitting the day job any time soon! I've already added a battery-grip to my camera since, to both save my wrist when shooting vertically for hours with a heavy camera, and also to increase my shooting speed from 5fps to 8fps. Of course the higher speed gives me more photos to edit, not less, but hopefully a better chance of capturing the 'best' jumping position for each rider. Nothing worse for me than having one or two riders where I just plain didn't get a good shot.

After the heavy workload here, I've been considering how to make it a bit easier, and I've come to these few learning points:

  • Shoot more consistently - keep the framing consistent so I don't need to spend much time cropping later, or at least can do whole groups at a time. Individually cropping every photo was at least half of my total workload I think.
  • Fill the frame - keep the zoom in tight on the subject so hopefully I don't even need to crop most of the pictures. I'm limited here by camera and lens selection, but it may be a good investment to buy a teleconverter and get another 40% zoom on my lens. Until somebody buys me that Nikon 400mm f/2.8...
  • Keep selections small - I may shoot 30-50 pictures of each rider, but in the end only a few of them are at the 'right' position to make a 'good' horse photo! No point editing all the photos if people won't buy the 'not so good' ones anyway. Relies of course on me learning and knowing which are 'good' horse poses first!

I've already shot another event since this one, which went a lot quicker in the editing, although I only shot 3000 pictures over one day that time :) Hopefully even faster next time!

Tags: Woodhill, Equestrian, Horses, Sports, Auckland
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Muriwai Surf at Dusk

April 08, 2014 in Landscape

Just a quick image post today because I was editing some photos and found this one I really liked from a few weeks ago! I've got a long backlog of photos to post or blave about here but lacking motivation. I never even finished the photos from my last Europe trip as it got overtaken by xmas! I'll get around to it next time there's a lull in photographic activity..

Anyway, this is a quick dusk shot of Muriwai Beach, surfers still in the water before it gets dark. 

Tags: New Zealand, Beach, Muriwai, Landscape
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