Joel Dinda's photos with the keyword: camera

The New V2

03 Oct 2014 212
My new camera, a Nikon 1 V2. Turns out it's difficult to photograph a white camera. This is now my main camera, though I still use the D300 when I need a more capable device. Always-- always --there are tradeoffs; fortunately I can decide which I'll likely need before I leave the house. The strap's by Gordy's Camera Straps . I used a similar strap with my V1, and decided I needed another for this camera.

The New V2

03 Oct 2014 198
My new camera, a Nikon 1 V2. Turns out it's difficult to photograph a white camera. This is now my main camera, though I still use the D300 when I need a more capable device. Always-- always --there are tradeoffs; fortunately I can decide which I'll likely need before I leave the house. The strap's by Gordy's Camera Straps . I used a similar strap with my V1, and decided I needed another for this camera.

Joan, shooter

19 Jun 2012 65
Trying to get a photo of a Common Tern at Dock 3 in Saint Ignace.
28 May 2014 1 240
Taffy loves my Gordy's Camera Strap .

D300 x 300

12 Jan 2008 63
My new D300 hiding behind my dozen year old 300mm lens, all set up to shoot pictures of birds through the front window. Looks pretty impressive, I think. This is also my usual ballpark rig, though I usually hand-hold those shots.

My D300's Wrist Strap

04 May 2012 107
For comparison with the strap I just installed on my new camera, this is the wrist strap I use on the big camera.

Gordy's Wrist Strap In Use

04 May 2012 166
I've installed one of Gordy's Camera Straps on my Nikon 1 V1. This is Gordy's regular sized string strap, with his wrist pad (a separate product). The strap and the pad are in black; the string and wrap are (predictably, Joan would say) red. While Gordy recommends against buying the wrist pad with the string strap, I managed to get the thing assembled. 'Twas, I admit, painful ; he's right to discourage it. I'd considered removing the camera's strap mount and installing Gordy's lug mounted strap; that might be a better solution. And many would likely be satisfied with a pad-less strap. Nonetheless, this looks like a usable setup. Here's a photo of me using the camera. For comparison, I've also posted a photo of my big camera, and its rather-more-elaborate wrist strap.

Gordy's Wrist Strap on My Nikon 1 V1

04 May 2012 136
I've installed one of Gordy's Camera Straps on my Nikon 1 V1. This is Gordy's regular sized string strap, with his wrist pad (a separate product). The strap and the pad are in black; the string and wrap are (predictably, Joan would say) red. While Gordy recommends against buying the wrist pad with the string strap, I managed to get the thing assembled. 'Twas, I admit, painful ; he's right to discourage it. I'd considered removing the camera's strap mount and installing Gordy's lug mounted strap; that might be a better solution. And many would likely be satisfied with a pad-less strap. Nonetheless, this looks like a usable setup. Here's a view of the entire kit. The strap's not really very big; the undersized camera will mislead your eye. Oh, yes: Gordy offers so many options that he's obviously building these from scratch. I ordered this on Sunday and received it (Washington State to Michigan) this morning. Excellent service.

Nikon 1 V1

06 Apr 2012 95
Illustration for a blog entry --a second installment of V1 comments.

Nikon 1 V1

17 Mar 2012 116
Photo to illustrate a blog posting .

The May Rig

30 Apr 2013 1 88
Impressive, no? I'd known since February that my 366 Snaps photo for April 30 would feature the D300 with the 300 mm lens. By May Day the birds have arrived and the baseball season's underway; that's what this setup's for. Early in 1998 my mom wrote me a rather large check and said I should buy "something I really wanted" with part of it. "Something I really wanted" turned out to be a Nikon N90s ; a few days later I added this lens (it's an ED AF Nikkor 300mm 1:4 ) and this tripod. (Truth: I figured the N90s would be my Last Camera . Little did I know. But I've still got it, and it still works.) The 300 mm has served me well, and is my favorite--if not my best--lens. The D300's its third camera, and the lens still suits my needs. Some of you know I take lots of baseball photographs ; this is the lens I most commonly use in the ballpark. (FWIW: I usually shoot hand-held at the games; occasionally I use a monopod.) Here's the thing, though. Mounting this lens on a DSLR body makes for a massive camera. People notice it. You really can only comfortably use it in places where people don't much care that you're taking photographs. Besides, there are lots of photographs a 300 mm prime really can't take.... ========== A perhaps-relevant story: I occasionally attend railfan conventions. Perhaps 25 years ago I had a chat with another photographer (let's call him Steve, since that's his name) at a party after an afternoon spent touring a large switching and service facility. He'd just talked with someone else (we'll call him John, which I think is also true-to-life) who'd wanted to know why Steve's photographs, while framed similarly to John's, where consistently better. Steve attributed it to "expensive glass." I agree with Steve that better equipment helps, but it's not the whole story. I've proven to my satisfaction that I can take excellent pictures with a throwaway camera, and terrible pix with my expensive Nikons. Partial evidence: Compare the FujiFilm F10 count to the Nikon count in this set . The really odd thing about the conversation was that Steve knew that the only camera I was carrying that weekend was a mid-range pocket camera. It appears that I look like a Serious Photographer even with a toy camera. There's a clue or two in that story about why I changed cameras every month for 366 Snaps . Enough said. For now, anyway . ========== This photograph is an outtake from my 2012 photo-a-day project, 366 Snaps . Number of project photos taken: 29 Title of " roll :" Next Month's Rig Other photos taken on 4/30/2012: Since I had the D300 set up, I shot about a hundred pix of birds at the feeder. And, of course, the Daily Flower Census continued--39 shots with the V1.

Main Street, second hand

04 Mar 2013 1 124
When Joan asked if I had the Leap Day photo planned, I told her I had something in mind and that she'd be impressed.... That morning I tried nine shots at several locations--in the house, in the yard, and around town. Six were terrible, two were more-or-less all right, and this one was exactly what I had in mind. So today you see it again. If you look carefully you'll find The Shed at the End of Main Street in this photograph. Twice. ========== The plan, as you can see, was to frame the same shot in two cameras simultaneously. I used my original Droid to take this shot, because I wanted the Droid Bionic to be the photo subject. Jockeying two phones for a photograph is not my idea of fun, but I'm pleased with the result. As usual, Little Photo wiped out my Exif data. That is not the app's best feature. ========== This photograph is a repost from my 2012 photo-a-day project, 366 Snaps . Number of project photos taken: 9 (six older photographs, already on the old phone, share the project folder) Title of " roll :" Droid on Bionic Other photos taken on 2/29/2012: none.

Next Month's Rig