Fog Machine and Lego

I picked up a small fog machine this weekend. I saw an example of usefulness in photography recently and just had to get one. Most likely it will help me add mood to my Lego scenes.

The setup was fairly straight forward, but required some dialing in. I have a D40 and an SB-600 flash. So in order to fire the flash off camera, I either need to use my SC-29 which is similar to Adorama Off-Camera iTTL Coiled Flash Cord (3-Ft Max) for Nikon Cameras. For this setup though, I went with my slave trigger that fires when it detects another flash firing. I was able to put this on a short tripod off to the side behind the fog machine.

I used the flash compensation on my camera’s built in flash to lower how much it fired. I brought it down to -3 and set my SB-600 to manual, 1/32. Then by adding a red gel from a Halloween strobe over the front of the flash, I was able to get a good balance of white flash on camera and red fog back lighting.

Go to flickr for the annotated setup by clicking on the photo.

Tobacco Hornworm Moth Caterpillars and Smiling Dragonflies

Went out back tonight to bring in the jalapeno pepper plant for the fall and found it mostly eaten. When I looked closer, I found this caterpillar from the hawk moth family enjoying a pepper. It devastated the most of the plant. :-(

Earlier today I spotted some red dragonflies outside. I was able to get pretty close to them, and thought they looked like they were smiling.

Be a consumer whore, the easy way!

As anyone can tell, I have an Amazon Associates store that I have connected to my blog. That way when I review something, and you, the reader, are sooo compelled that you must buy it RIGHT NOW, you can. So when I saw that Amazon was offering context ads, I thought I would give it a try.

You need to have an Amazon Associates store to begin with. If you have one, go to your familiar “Build Links” section and choose “Context Links (Beta).” You’ll be given a little javascript to add to the footer of your site. It will then spider your content and turn phrases into links all on it’s own. Pretty sweet if you want to be a lazy salesperson.

Lets give it a try. . .
Hormel Chili makes me gassy but tastes good, I guess. I’ve never really had it. I like to use Adobe Bridge on my work Mac Book Pro, I wish I could get a Mac Pro for home, part of the reason I have ads, to generate money for toys. I like Lego, right now I’m into the Lego Castle theme, I just bought a few Lego 7090 sets so I could get extra knights and skeletons. I love my Nikon D40, theres a D40x but even though it offers more mega pixels, it lacks some crucial features.

O.K. that was almost as bad as an episode of The Price is Right. I feel dirty.

Batmobile Assembly Time-Lapse

While on vacation, I finally had a chance to do a little project I had been planning for a while. A few months ago I got the UCS Lego Batmobile (Set 7784) for about a third of msrp. I had also been playing with Nikon Camera Control for a little while and had been trying to think of a cool time-lapse project. I decided to bring the set with me in the event of a day on vacation that we decided to just take it easy, and sure enough one of those came along. The result is below, though it looks like google video made the images a bit crummy.

For anyone that hasn’t done this type of thing before, it’s pretty simple, at least at this amateur hour level of quality. You’ll need some way of controlling the camera. This could be done manually, or in my case I used Nikon Camera Control Pro Software for Windows and Mac. Camera control Pro allows you to control several aspects of your camera. One of which is a time-lapse feature where you specify how frequently to take the picture, and what to do with it, including download it directly to your computer to avoid filling your memory card.

You’ll also need a tripod. I set mine up so it looked down at the table roughly at a 45 degree angle. This gave me a trapezoidal view of my building area. I marked my boundaries with masking tape, which mostly matched the color of the table. This way I knew what would be captured and what would not. Important for keeping the bottle of beer off screen as you work. ;-) Finally, when the capture process was complete, I batch resized my images (while preserving the originals) with Adobe Fireworks to a size more appropriate for DV video size (720×480) then imported the files to Adobe Premiere as an ordered sequence. Finally export your movie and thats it!

If you don’t have Premiere, you could use either Windows Movie Maker, or iMovie depending on your platform. Sorry Linux Folks, don’t know what you have available, but I bet there’s lots of it.

The process was smooth, and a great proof of concept of doing time lapse. I did find however it is a power consuming process. Over the 2-3 hour process of shooting a frame every 2 minutes I drained a mostly filled battery. Which means, to do a full day project you would need the AC adapter for your camera.

As for the build, it was fun! The Batmobile was very cool. A lot of neat details, the one thing I was upset about was the lack of steering. The front wheels drive the gears that simulate an engine, while the steering wheel raises and lowers the front armor over the turbine intakes. There were also a lot of great parts in the set. Lots of roof pieces and wedges that could be used in castles or other vehicles. For now it’s still one of the few assembled sets in my house. We’ll see how long it stays together. To have lasted this long is a feat for sure.

Hummingbird Clearwing (Hemaris thysbe)

Not too long ago, coworker and friend Dave told me about a strange ‘hummingbird’ he had seen one night. After great deliberation his family decided it must be a hummingbird moth.

Today, while mowing my untamed lawn, I had the chance to see this magnificent creature for myself. As it buzzed around just like our hummingbirds, who seem to have disappeared now, I was able to snap a few pictures (below). It’s movements and sound are just like a hummingbird. This one was a little smaller then the average Ruby Throated we had hanging around and was good fun to watch.

These are great! Show me the large images for detail!

According to hummingbirdmoth.com this little bugger was a Hummingbird clearwing (Hemaris thysbe).

From hummingbirdmoth.com

This is also a Hummingbird Clearwing (Hemaris thysbe). This was the first Sphingidae family member we ever saw. At first we were just like you – thoroughly convinced this was a baby female ruby-throated hummingbird, but we just couldn’t explain away those antennae! He mimics the hummingbird perfectly; wings just a blur, zipping here and there. He appears from June through August; feeding at our phlox at midday, always alone. He is oblivious to people, allowing us within inches; but refuses to pose for the camera very long.

Dragonfly Bow Chicka Wow, Wow.

Yeah, it’s been a while since I’ve posted. What can I say, I got a new job, got up to speed with the group in 2 weeks and presented at a week long conference for Faculty my new group puts on yearly. So as my first post back from the world of FITSI I present to you, some sweet, sweet dragonfly porn. ;-)

Enjoy.

Head over to my Flickr account if you want hi-res photos. The detail is worth it.

Double feature

Osprey with fish

Osprey with fish. Thats what I call fresh take out. Cropped for detail.

As I mentioned earlier today, I found a plethora of wildlife today. I can add to that list, a Red Tail Hawk as well. I got a chance to get a few more photos up so you folks at home can see them.



These Canada geese must have decided on Kraft Dinner eh?

I’ll admit it, I was so excited to FINALLY be getting a few close ups of these Mergansers, I totally missed that I was capturing the Blue Heron too. I saw him/her fly a few minutes after taking a series of the ducks, but didn’t see it ‘hiding’ in the frame.



“MALLARD DUCK” O.K., an inside joke involving a little Bushmills at a friends and convinced we could teach their dog to speak English if we started with one of her toys, a mallard duck. The pictures not bad either, but I have better ones from the 12th I need to get posted.


And finally, my guest of honor. I’m very excited about the Osprey above. I wish there had been more light, but having an O.K. picture is better then no picture. BUT to have found this little guy, well, kind of a porker for a fox is the highlight of my photos today. I’ve only EVER seen about 4 foxes in my 28 years on this planet. Thats a surprisingly small amount for the shear volume of time spent as a youth at Moosehead Lake in Maine.







The gallery with full-size photos can be seen where you can see the full, medium quality jpgs (god bless raw+jpg mode) is available. So that about sums up ‘Mike’s’ wildlife log for Friday the 13th. . . Oh except the male cardinal, gold finch (both in gallery), phoebe, red winged black birds, male downy or hairy woodpecker, and deer I saw today, well deer tonight on the way home from dinner. So, who wants to live in the city again?? ;-)

An April Snowday

Well, father winter went out with a big old “TAKE THAT!” This April. It’s the first time living in New Hampshire we’ve been without power for more then a few hours. Overnight ~6″ of VERY wet and heavy snow wrought havoc here in the Seacost region.

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But lo, there is always a bright side of life. [Always look on the bright side of life, tweet tweet, tweet tweet tweet tweet tweet tweet.]. Around 10 a.m. my buddy Perry, professional photographer pulled into the drive. Ran inside, and in drill sergeant fashion, ordered me to get my camera and change out of my pjs, we were “getting out there.”

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So out there we went. Out to Isinglass falls, just across from the waste management landfill in Barrington. I thought it an odd location at first until we started humping out through the woods and we hit the falls. There, I learned a few techniques for photographing in the woods on an overcast day, in the snow, and how to get some of those silky whitewater shots. There, or rather when I returned, I also learned the importance of the correct circular polarizer for your lens. Every shot taken at 18mm, has vignette. I guess it’s time to pony up for a slim filter. Wish I had realized that before I bought the ‘cheaper’ filter.

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Cold

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This marks day two of a head cold on two of the coldest days yet of the 2006-2007 “winter.” So I’ve been a bit grumpy, and popping a weird mix of Tylenol, Ibuprofen, and decongestants on a regular cycle. I think it’s at these times that the universe knows to throw folks a bone. For the last week I’ve been trying to get one decent photo of out nightly visitors. It’s been too dark, and I left my tripod in ME by accident, so no recent photos have come out well. It seems that the cold might have brought them out during the day yesterday for a little extra food. I guess I can thank my regular schedule of juice and pills for seeing these guys from the kitchen.