Thursday, October 7, 2010
Cutting the autumn grass
Cutting the lawn in the 1800's was a far different endeavor than what it is, today - although the people did have a ride-on mower. It involved a more hands-on approach and the odd bout of stubbornness, plus you needed to be careful where you stepped=)
You don't see this to often at the Farm, so I took advantage and recorded lots of files. Fill-flash from the SB-600 helped in some cases.
Friday, September 10, 2010
Back to school
Now that the summer is pretty much over, there are no school groups coming to the Farm for awhile. The workers were doing their usual toiling but few were there to watch. As always. I got some nice captures. I plan to go back in a couple weeks, the autumn leaves should be doing their thing by then.....
Thursday, June 24, 2010
Refitting the new wagon wheel
It was quite an event, as Darren had to heat up a steel rim and place it around the new wagon wheel. Normally, this is not a public event such as it was, yesterday, with numerous school children around. The weather was ideal, a bit cool and breezy. Lots on hand to see the event, it took about 40 minutes to heat the rim to temperature. It all went off without a hitch and it was a perfect photo opp.
Ross Farm visits always work out very well.
D40, AF-S 12-24mm, and SB-800 flash.
School is out!
I went out to the Farm, yesterday, it's been awhile and the light was almost perfect. These were files from simple meandering, the subject material comes easily. School was over for just about all the children, so they were quite boisterous and quite happy to be here, how productive can a child be this time of year in a classroom? The two lenses that seemed to be on my D40 were the 12-24mm and 70-300mm.
Monday, May 24, 2010
Sheep shearing
Saturday, May 22, 2010
Shoeing an ox
There are still many people in the area who own a set of oxen, thus the need for a skilled blacksmith (such as Carmen) to change their shoes. In the 1800's, the only way to do so was to place the beast in a large saddle and strap him in to remove the worn-out shoes and install new ones. Sometimes, the whole assembly rocks as the ox thrashes around, who would be happy having a small nail poked into their foot?
It makes for some interesting images. I had to use the D40 @ ISO 800 since I could not bounce nor did I want direct flash. The 12-24mm was the right lens for the job.
Thursday, May 6, 2010
School groups at the Farm
I was lucky enough to stumble on a couple of school groups visiting the Farm, yesterday. It was my birthday, so I was away from the usual rat race and wanted to explore what was going on at my favorite photo venue.
The Tamron 17-50mm f/2.8 is a wonderful little lens - it's fast and sharp, I have no idea why the camera maker's 17-55mm f/2.8's are so darn huge - plus the Tamron is half the cost of the Nikon equivalent. The built-in AF motor is a bit chattery but that's no big deal most of the time.
The beauty of using the humble SB-600 with the 17-50 is that I can use wider apertures for better flash range, as opposed to f/8 or so with the 16-85mm VR. It's a great mid-priced flash for the money, fill-flash exposures are perfect.
I can't say enough about how useful 1/500th second flash sync is, too bad there wasn't an ISO 100 option on the D40.
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