Buying things off ebay from another country…

Buying things from Ebay… Is it worth it?

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Well, it depends… A lot. Let’s just suppose for the sake of this post you already have a PayPal account, it’s been verified, so you can simply go online and order your brand new Naikan D815 chinese copy from Ebay.

1. Shipping

Here is the big factor: Shipping times and costs from Evilbay do vary. A LOT! If the item is on the same continent as you, this might speed up the process a little. But if not and if, let’s say you’re ordering from the UK an item thats curently in China, well, you’ll have to wait. Don’t get me wrong, Most likely your product will arrive in the time limit, but sometimes that time limit is really big. For example, I’ve been waiting for two M43 lens adapters from Hong Kong for about a month now… And they’re still not here. Sure, I made a 5 dollar saving from the 10 dollar price, but is it worth it?

2. Cost

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I have laying around me 3 nice Canon FD lenses that are waiting for my atention, but, without an adapter, they are useless… In this case, the savings were too small for the HUGE time wasted while waiting for them.

Ebay does accomodate some really nice offers, though. The end point is, don’t expect small, under 100 dollar items to be shipped super quick or to get incredible out of the ordinary deals, it’s usually not going to happen. I was browsing the web looking, out of curiosity, for some laptops. I found a Dell XPS 12 for about 1300-1400 dollars shipped! Great price, especially because the equivalent in my country costs more than 1500 euros… Do the conversion, and you’ll see why I’d be OK with waiting for a couple weeks to save a good amount of cash.

3. Is it a money waster?

When browsing Ebay, you must be carefull not to be atracted by small, shitty 2 dollar items. They can add up, especially with shipping, and can eat a biggish chunk of cash really quick. If used smartly, Ebay can turn into a great place for looking up deals.

4. Final thoughts…

There are some rules with Ebay as with any online shopping activity. If you follow them, you basicaly can’t get scammed… almost… First, look for sellers with good, positive feedback. Next, if anything looks dodgy even the tiniest bit, avoid it. 10 dollars in minus are not much, but you still have 10 dollars in minus. Next is don’t spend your money on useless nick nacks. I know, that teal bottle opener you saw last night was a steal for 15 dollars, but, since you already have half a douzin bottle openers, they are still 15 $ out of your pocket…

 

 

 

Why I moved my blog to WordPress and how?

Why did I move?

You might have noticed the last post I shared was on a blog called “more than snaps”. Well, here is my sort of new blog! Why did I go from blogger, though?

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1.    URL NAME

    First of all, think about the name. When I created my first blog, the name I initially wanted was, you guessed, taken. So, I ended up with “Tudorphotobeginnings.blogspot.com”? That’s a mouth full. That’s a total of 31 letters… Yeah… A bit long, right?  Plus, each time I told somebody about it I had to personally write it down on paper for them to even understand. Not good at all!

2.    BLOG DESIGN

    Look, this is just my personal opinion, but the templates on blogger are less than meh… I mean, compared to the ones wordpress offers, they look llike something I did in HTML in a notepad file in 9th grade… WordPress ones look so much more modern, sleeker and more minimalistic.

3.    BLOG HOSTING

This isn’t really a big problem, but hey… Let’s mention it. TO ME, PERSONALLY, something.wordpress.com sound better. I can’t say it sounds more professional because come on, let’s be serious… But it does sound less likely that a 6 year old would create a blog on wordpress about his transformes toys…

 

How did I migrate my blog over here?

 

Well, this is simple… Sort of… Damn, I use this expression too much! Ok, back to our topic. Switching platforms is simply a thing of downloading your blog from blogger.com and importing it in wordpress. Or is it? On the face of it, this is the way to do it, and I think the only way too. The thing is, your fonts might differ, title styles and some simple formatting differences. Nothing major, still better than having an empty blog that feels sort of like an abandoned, but brand new building. (We do have those in Romania)

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That’s that, tried to keep it short, sort of made it short-ish. Damn, that expression, “sort of”, I used it too often. It’s sort of like I …. Screw it, see you next time! 🙂

 

The Edit: Mercedes S63AMG

“The Edit” is a series I want to start on this blog after every serious shoot. For short, what I want to do with this is explain what I did after I captured the images. From Lightroom adjustments to Photoshop layers, I’ll try to expose them all.

So, these being said, let’s start!

BEFORE

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AFTER

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The settings I applied in Lightroom for the outdoor images are quite similar. In the Basic Develop module, I cranked up the contrast. Quite a bit. Since shooting RAW produces the flatest image possible, I like to “boomify” my images by adding contrast to the image. The exposure slider usually remained untouched, nailing it quite well at the time of shooting. Highlights and shadows were adjusted, well, depending on the image, but they stayed quite close to default. Another mean I used to create contrast is reduced blacks and also, one thing I do really often, I move the Whites slider quite a bit to the right.

The car I was photographing was silver. Luckily, this isn’t really a color… not magenta, not green, not red, no color. This made it really easy to create a desaturated look because I simply draged down the vibrance slider and… voila. This way I also managed to make distractions a lot less noticeable( see image below).

BEFORE

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AFTER

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Now, if I had to photograph a brightly colored car, things would have changed a little. If the car’s color was different from the background color, I would go into the advanced colors in Lightroom and desaturate the ones that don’t affect the car. If, though, we would have, let’s say a blue car with a blue building in the background, desaturating the building would desaturate the car, which we don’t want. This would require a little more work, since I’d bring it in Photoshop, create a selection of the car, reverse it, convert it into a layer mask and THEN desaturate the background. A lillte more time consuming, ah?

For the inside shots, things weren’t that different actually. The one big difference is in color, since I usually added llike +5 of vibrance max, but usually I created the boomification effect was more a thing of playing with the contrast.

 BEFORE

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AFTER

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Ok, so that’s the color and light side of the images. But there is more. We only had a busy parking lot to shoot in, and we couldn’t position the car so that there were NO other cars showing up, so I tried to find the cleanest background possible. Then, I had to let the Photoshop magic begin 🙂

For a few of my best pictures I also did some sort of doging and burning in PS. Here’s how I did it. I brought up 2 curves layers, one I added exposure through curves and on one I substracted. Than I applied layer masks on those adjustment layers and inverted them so that nothing was visible. Last I took a soft brush with a flow in between 10 and 20 % and painted over the darker parts of the image and over the highlights in order to accentuate some specific shapes and create contrast in specific areas.

BEFORE

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AFTER

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I basicaly cloned out the cars in the background and also cleaned up the sky. Damn, Photoshop can be such a handy tool! Finally, here are some more before/after pictures!

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AFTER

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BEFORE

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AFTER

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Mercedes S63 AMG Coupe. Carpornography.

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Well, I am a car lover. Actually, a BIG car lover. Actually, a vehicle lover. Actually, a lover of anything with wheels and an engine. So you’d imagine when I was given the chance to photograph a not even launched yet in Romania car, I imediately took the challenge.

We first took the car outside to shoot the exterior. I put the car against the simplest background I found in the whole parking lot. Luckily, it was cloudy outside, so the lighting was nice and even. Also, it was getting dark, so starting out with the outdoor shots made a lot of sense. After turning the lights on, shooting pictures, turning them off, shooting pictures, moving it a little, shooting pictures, turning it around, shooting pictures, puting it back as original and shooting some more pictures… You get the point, I could be standing there all day photographing the damn beauty. But, as allways, beautiful moments are interupted by weather, so, when it started raining, we put the car back inside. I finished the exterior images already, so we went inside.

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Inside we were supposed to shoot details and interiors. The car was in the delivery room, which was some good nice quality light. Problem is it wasn’t really much light… My settings were constant, ISO 800 and aperture between f1.8 and f2.8. It was pretty dark in there you know… I had a wider angle lens on my small M43 Olympus, but I used IS and even shot at 28mm equivalent at 1/4 of a second.

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After doing the exterior, I tried to get some semi-abstract images, like the one below. I know, I was stupid for not bringing a tripod, but anyone makes mistakes, even the best ones (cough cough modesty).

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Going to the interior, I had the idea to bounce the flash off the ceiling. Briliant! Except, it had a panoramic roof, so there was glass up there, no carpet sort of thingy. But, luckily, it had a cover to go over the glass! Brilliant! I could take out my flash and just… Well, the roof cover was black, so bouncing light off that was as useful as bringing a firefly to light a dark room. Not gonna happen, no matter how hard you try. OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

At first I did my wide shot, and then got on with the details. Having a dark interior, there was even less light to work with… Hurray! 😦

Still, I enjoyed the whole thing, had a lot of fun! I’ll be writing a post about my editing on theese, because a lot happened there too!

LINK TO FULL GALLERY: http://bit.ly/S63Gallery

Long time no see

It seems like I almost forgot about this blog. I sort of left it down into a deep dark hole and never touched it again. Why? I don’t know, really. But I guess the will to type on a keyboard got back to me again, so I hope I will be able to continue this blog a little more.

There have been changes in the way I shoot pictures. Not like keeping my thumb 1 cm lower on the camera body types of changes, but changes to my vision. My artistic vision, that is. When I abandoned this blog I was still into street photography. Now, not so much. Or, am I? The thing is, I’ve been focusing a lot more on the other genre I love, sports. I’ve been doing sports since I was little, and coming to photograph them was sort of a natural progresion. Even though in the last years I haven’t been focusing as much on actually doing the sports in case, I was kept in touch with this area through my other activity besides photography: Timekeeping. Actually, through timekeeping I’ve managed to be the referee or timekeeper of BIG events, like Red Bull Sea to Sky or even Red Bull Romaniacs. But I’m not talking about my life on this blog, so let’s keep moving.

I’m going to do a short rundown of the more important pictures I’ve taken, trying to follow the changes in my style or workflow as I advance.

One big change in my workflow has been learning Photoshop. Not only it opened up lots of opportunities for me to transform my images, but it also gave my imagination freedom to think of unrealistic images that I could possibly come up with. Here is my best example, a 34 layer 900 MB image inspired by sin city posters. I initially watched a tutorial on phlearn on how to do it, then, with the gear I had I did my best to get results as close as the ones explained.Sin-City-Portrait

I also wanted to add more variety to my portfolio as a sports photographer. This is why I went to photograph a local rally. It was one of the first times I felt the effort of staying hours into the rain was actually worth it. After I saw the images, those long hours and the hike to the photo spot proved well worth.

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Another thing I’ve been into is car photography. Although on a small level, I started photographing cars. First at the same local rally I was talking about, next to car events and last at a local dealership. My best car so far has been the merc s63 amg coupe… Lovely car… OK,let’s get back to the point. My family members have worked on car related jobs since I was born, so I was a native car lover already. Combining vehicles with photography was the obvious choice for me.WP_(7_of_9)

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To diversify my portfolio even more, I took pictures at some running competitions around town. At the moment of shooting I wasn’t really pleased of what I got, I wasn’t feeling the moment. When at home though, after importing the pics in lightroom, a smile on my face appeared. After editing a couple picks in Photoshop, that smile only got bigger. I realized I managed to keep an editing style throughout the set while still getting some interesting results. Sure, there are some missed moments here and there, I walked out pleased after all.

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I almost forgot, I also shot some more cycling. From the same series as Maratonul Fagetului , this time though I did the exact opposite to what I did in April. Instead on focusing on the organization, it was all about the riders this time. And here is what came out of it…OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

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So, consider this post as a sort of summer photography summary. Not too long, although I’ll try to go back to the format where after every shoot I’d stop and explain what and how I did. My way may not be the best way or even the right way, but it was the best way for name AT THAT TIME.