Sunday, April 26, 2009

A walk in the dark




An Orgy of Escalators
Shanghai Times Square

Meyer-Optik Görlitz Lydith 30mm f/3.5


A colour image is impossible: lighting in the escalator atriums consist of a nasty mix of tungsten and fluorescent light. If I white balance for one, I get swathes of maroon/green for areas illuminated by the other.



Shanghai has a few elevated highways, all of which are massive infrastructure developments and enable motor vehicles to drive in the sky.



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This is the pedestrian bridge from which the previous photo was taken. Due to the pedestrian bridge's longish span, it is prone to a bit of oscillation when heavy vehicles thunder overhead. Feels like a cruise ship.

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Friday, April 24, 2009

Riot



It's a Riot

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Thursday, April 23, 2009

Seven more days, and I’ll be making my way to Hong Kong.

As always, I have the same problem deciding what to bring.


Canon 300D
Praktica MTL 5
Meyer-Optik Görlitz Lydith 30mm f/3.5
Super-Takumar 50mm f/1.4
Jupiter 9 85mm f/2.0
Super-Takumar 135mm f/3.5
Canon EFS 17-55 mm
Nikon SB-25


That should not be too burdensome.

Wednesday, April 22, 2009

Unicorns rock!

Bollocks, now I can't sleep. And to think I was hoping to sleep at 8.30 pm. So far I've only managed a 90 minute nap. Very good!

Nothing soothes the frayed psyche like Vanilla Ninja and a good set of headphones. Of course, a frothy café latte would be a good addition but that’s just wandering into the realm of fantasy. Not in China.


Figure 1. "I'm sorry, we don't have café latte. How about a unicorn instead?"


Vanilla Ninja are very popular in their native Estonia and have had a brand of both ice cream and kohuke named after them, marketed exclusively in their homeland due to their celebrity status in Estonia.
Nothing cements your celebrity status like having your own brand of ice cream. Lingerie and perfume doesn’t even come close.


I’m exaggerating- coffees do exist in China, although not widely available and at rather high prices (relative to the per capita GDP). The market for coffee is still very immature- cappuccino might turn out to be aerosol whipped cream on black coffee. Best to look at the pictures in the menu before taking the plunge. Even chains like Starbucks and Coffee Bean & Tea Leaf are not exempt from inconsistent quality.

Oh, and there are no documented sightings of unicorns in China.

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Monday, April 13, 2009

How to test/ calibrate a manual SLR camera's shutter using a digital camera

Abstract:

Before loading a newly acquired second hand camera with film, it is often a good idea to check if the shutter is working correctly. This is particularly true for well used, older cameras.

While slow shutter speeds with exposures greater than 1 second can be verified using a stopwatch, it becomes much harder to check for fast shutter speeds.

This document presents a technique to verify the accuracy of a manual camera’s shutter speed by using a digital camera as the standard shutter and the recording device.



Equipment set up:


Figure 1: Shutter calibration equipment set up.
Red: digital sensor, blue: shutters, magenta: light rays, green: lens


1. The manual SLR’s lens is removed, and the film back opened to expose the shutter from both sides.

2. The digital camera is pushed as close to the manual SLR’s shutter as reasonably safe.
Caution: Ensure that nothing touches the shutter, as interrupting its movement will risk damage.
3. Arrange a subject beyond the manual SLR for the digital camera. Ideally, this subject should be of uniform colour and not throw bright reflections. The uniform colour will make brightness comparisons much easier.
Tip: Use a lens with a long focal length on the digital camera, and set it’s aperture to a small opening (5.6 or smaller). This will minimise vignetting caused by the SLR’s frame partially blocking the view of the digital camera.

4.Open the manual SLR’s shutter (using bulb mode or a long exposure), and focus the digital camera on the subject.

5. Illuminate the subject with a bright light source, and shade the digital camera from the light source. Ensure that minimal ambient light reaches the area between the digital camera and the manual SLR.



Set up notes:

When properly set up, the only light that reaches the digital camera’s sensor will be light from the illuminated subject. For the light to reach the digital camera’s sensor, it needs to pass through two shutters – the digital camera’s and the SLR cameras.

Light from the subject will reach the digital camera’s sensor if and only if both shutters are open.



Testing procedure:

6. With the manual SLR’s shutter open (using a long exposure), meter the scene and adjust the digital camera’s aperture and ISO so that the shutter speed matches the value to be tested.

7. With the SLR’s shutter open (using a long exposure or bulb mode), take a photo of the scene using the preset ISO, aperture and shutter speeds. This is the standard image, because the exposure time is that of the correct shutter speed. The SLR’s shutter was open throughout the experiment, and the exposure occurred only during the time the digital camera’s shutter was open.

8. Set the digital camera’s shutter speed to bulb (or a long exposure), retaining the same aperture and ISO settings in the previous step. Set the manual SLR’s shutter speed to the tested speed.

9. Open the digital camera’s shutter, then release the manual SLR’s shutter. Close the digital camera’s shutter (by releasing the shutter button if in bulb mode, or allowing it to close after the preset time). This is the tested image, because the exposure time is that of the tested camera’s shutter speed. The digital camera’s shutter was open throughout the experiment, and the exposure occurred only during the time the SLR’s shutter was open.



Comparing the results:

10. Both the calibrated and the tested images are opened, and their histograms observed.

11. Brightness peaks associated with the illuminated image are identified and their locations along the histogram compared.

If both shutters have identical exposure times, the peaks of both images would lie in the same locations.



Error estimation:

In the unfortunate event that the shutter speeds do not match, and the digital camera’s shutter speed is trusted, the error of the manual SLR’s shutter can be estimated.

12. Repeat step 7 using several exposure times.

13. Compare the images from the various exposure times with the tested image obtained from step 4. Find the closest match between the tested image and one of the standard images.

14. Calculate the manual SLR’s shutter error in terms of number of stops.

15. The error estimation needs to be repeated for every shutter speed available on the manual SLR to establish the real exposure that each shutter setting will give.

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Saturday, April 11, 2009

Camera porn – Praktica MTL 5

I got a new camera!

An M42 screw mount camera from the now defunct German Democratic Republic (in general, Democratic Republics are anything but democratic).

*orgasms*
*squirts*


*grins*


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I have a bunch of screw-mount lenses for use of my DSLR, but I’ve always had this little itch for a fully mechanical screw mount camera body. There’s something particularly satisfying from turning knobs and aperture rings, cocking the shutter spring and releasing the shutter through a mechanical linkage.

Praktica cameras have a little oddity – the shutter release button protrudes from the front instead of being mounted on top of the body.



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As with a basic film camera, there are only four fundamental controls: focus, aperture, shutter speed and shutter release. The back view comes across as shockingly minimalist – there is no window to show the film canister’s markings, neither is there a slot to put notes indicating the film type you have loaded. Not to mention the comforting absence of buttons and LCDs heh.



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Now I have a new problem – my camera bag does not have enough space.

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Wednesday, April 08, 2009

Mathematics questions

If anyone hasn’t noticed, there’s a deluge of quizzes of Facebook these few weeks. I decided to add to the mess with something comparatively nasty.


1. Which of the following fields contain the square root of 2 = 1.414... ?
  • complex numbers
  • rational numbers
  • natural numbers

2. How many dots are required to represent the ternary (base-3) number 12 ?
  • * * * * * *
  • * * * * * * * * * * * *
  • * * * * *

3. The topology of the sun's surface is the same as that of a
  • doughnut
  • dice
  • hollow sphere

4. Which of the following is the multiplicative identity?
  • 1
  • 2.718...
  • 0

5. A graph which is continuous everywhere and NOT differentiable anywhere is a
  • polynomial
  • fractal
  • Calabi-Yau manifold

6. Two points along a circle's circumference are labelled A and B respectively. The shortest length between these points along the circumference is 34 cm. The circle's radius is 55 cm. What is the ratio of the circle's circumference to the circle's diameter?
  • 0.618...
  • 1.617...
  • 3.141...

7. The second time derivative of an object's position
  • is dependent on it's speed
  • is proportional to the net force exerted on the object
  • is its velocity

8. There is an unlimited supply of whole numbers. There is also an unlimited supply of rational numbers. Are there more rational numbers than whole numbers?
  • No, there are more whole numbers than rational numbers
  • No, the number of whole and rational numbers is exactly the same
  • Yes, there are more rational numbers than whole numbers



Answers below: (click and highlight to view)

1. Which of the following fields contain the square root of 2 = 1.414... ?
complex numbers


2. How many dots are required to represent the ternary (base-3) number 12 ?
* * * * *


3. The topology of the sun's surface is the same as that of a
dice


4. Which of the following is the multiplicative identity?
1


5. A graph which is continuous everywhere and NOT differentiable anywhere is a
fractal


6. Two points along a circle's circumference are labelled A and B respectively. The shortest length between these points along the circumference is 34 cm. The circle's radius is 55 cm. What is the ratio of the circle's circumference to the circle's diameter?
3.141...


7. The second time derivative of an object's position
is proportional to the net force exerted on the object


8. There is an unlimited supply of whole numbers. There is also an unlimited supply of rational numbers. Are there more rational numbers than whole numbers?
No, the number of whole and rational numbers is exactly the same


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Tuesday, April 07, 2009

Late night confessions

Nonsensical discussions at 1.30 am, edited for conciseness.

Yee Wei: Oh, confession-
I’m getting married

Lai: Serious?
Oh wait, wrong confession
No wait, tell me??!
I DON'T WANT to be the last to know

No its not marriage related
The correct one: I'm still awake because I'm playing web-based flash games
Your leg is so fun to pull
Haha

No it's not
Hmmmmpppff
If i were ever last to know... you'd get it... really

I will make sure I send your card 2 days ahead of the rest
Fair?

No... you're supposed to let me know way before, ok?
Oh like that ah...
Very well
Send it out 2 days in advance, and by courier
FedEx. You'd get the nice cardboard envelope with purple and oleng colours too

No dear, thats too late. You are suppose to tell me when you are going to propose, not up till wedding cards are printed.
How about after the proposal
So if i get a "No! *piak* " i wouldnt have to retract my invitation

Fair enuff  :)
Thanks, you are so benelovent

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Monday, April 06, 2009

Century Park, Shanghai: an attempt

I thought the Century Park would be a good place to start my search for peach blossoms.



The crowd at the ticketing counter (large parks in large cities have admission fees) was a massive turn off. If I want crowds I can simply go into Tesco and bump carts with the obnoxious self-centred shoppers there who park their carts in the middle of isles.



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So, bollocks to the park, I took a walk around the perimeter.




An Identity Crisis

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Fairy Tale Optics

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Jupiter 9 at full aperture, 85mm f/2 results in a soft, hazy image






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And I saw this boy trying to fly a kite.



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Friday, April 03, 2009

Oo, is that an uptick?


Something's finally moving up.


No we're not talking about down there.

Thursday, April 02, 2009

Dinner

I headed to Carrefour after work, intending to get mayonnaise, potatoes, lemon, potato peeler, toothpaste, lamb and some vegetables. Not that I was desperately short of food at home – there’s still minced pork, mussels and prawns in the freezer, and in the fridge, eggs, tofu and various vegetables.

However, I got distracted and also purchased a Nestum-like mix, potato crisps, strawberries, rosemary, oregano, mixed herbs, mushrooms, hot English mustard, ice cream, bacon, salmon, sharpening stone and pickles. The total damage came up to a frightful 233 RMB.

And for dinner, pan fried salmon steak and potato salad with bacon bits.


Surely not the best in the world, but remarkably satisfying. Especially the salmon – slightly charred skin on the outside, yet rare and flaky inside. If only salmon was not so pricey.

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