Friday 12 November 2010

Cloudy Aftermath #photography

After a night of gale force winds the morning after was filled with traffic jams, spurts of rain and more winds. At one point the Sun broke through the clouds and the skies above the distant horizon were calm and blue. This is what I saw. Again, all processing etc done on my iPhone.

To view more of my photography please visit my flickr page http://www.flickr.com/photos/sunny-photography/

Bye for now :) Sundeep Osahn
www.SunnyPhotography.co.uk

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Thursday 11 November 2010

Cityscape of Leeds

On this very cold Thursday morning I decided to visit a viewpoint that overlooks Leeds city centre. The weather was awful; a gets-on-both-sides-of-your-glasses type rain mixed with a brisk breeze from the Atlantic. I didn't have my 5Dmk|| with me (shame on you! And you call yourself a photographer?) but like a lot of my spur of the moment photos I use whatever camera equipment I have at the time. After all, a pic is better than no pic! Here is the original shot from my iPhone 4G...

Nothing too special I know.. But after selectively cropping the image to get the picture I was actually after (iPhones only have digital zoom so you're best off cropping later than zooming!) I then processed it to give the feeling of how I saw it: cold and dark.

Here's the completed pic (taken, cropped, processed, watermarked and upload by my iPhone).

Now what do I label this image as..? Any suggestions?

Until next time!

Sundeep Osahn
www.SunnyPhotography.co.uk

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Wednesday 10 November 2010

iPhone madness, madness I tell you!

Hi everyone,

The topic today is, you guessed it, the iPhone. Well not exactly the iphone but more the apps that are available for it to fulfil the question "what apps can I use when I'm out and about to produce reasonably decent images when I don't have my SLR, Mac Pro, Photoshop and Internet connection with me?.."

Well that a tough one... But...

Best app for HDR:
For those of you wanting to play about with HDR images I highly recommend Pro HDR; a pretty decent app that enables you to produce decent HDR images that from saved images or via the camera and allows a fair amount of tweakability. Best app for Panoramic images:
Panoramatic is a highly advance app that uses various algorithms to stitch together your images. Again, you can tweak various settings to get the kind of image you want. Post processing?
A huge favourite of mine is Mill Colour. A fav because it's free (yay!) and because it has awesome built in 'looks' as well as full control over saturation, gamma, gain and lift in all three colours of the digital rainbow (rgb).

Ok so how do I watermark my pic?
Good question.. Go and download the free app 'Impression'. Very simple and does what you need it to!

Here's something I did earlier using only the apps mentioned here.

And here's one in black and white too.

Also, this message was written on my iPhone too. Ah.. The wonders of technology!

Until next time.

Sundeep Osahn
www.SunnyPhotography.co.uk

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Sunday 16 May 2010

Cancer Research

Hello friends :) 

Its been a while since i've blogged! I've been pretty busy with lots of projects some of which you'll hear about soon-ish! So thanks for your patience.

The reason for this blog is to help my fiance and her sister raise money for Cancer Research UK. They are running the Race for Life on 20th June this year in memory of their mum, who sadly passed away after fighting breast cancer for a year. I knew her very well and she was like a mum to me, so helping out would mean a lot to me too. 

"Our mum was a sufferer from Breast Cancer (Nov 06). She had received the best care possible at this time and had gone into remission too, unfortunately all the treatments proved to be too much for her body and doctors suspected that the cancer had come back quicker than they expected, she passed away exactly a year later (Nov 07). By sponsoring us today, you'll be helping raise money to help researchers find a cure and save others suffering with cancer and prevent the loss of loved ones around the world.

So please dig deep and sponsor us today so that we can help beat Cancer today!

Events like Race for Life are vital in funding Cancer Research UK's life-saving work into preventing, diagnosing and treating cancer. By sponsoring us now you can help more people survive cancer."

So I'm asking anyone who reads this to help raise a bit of money to provide for more research, treatment and more importantly support for sufferers of cancer. 

Photo: A Sikh husband sits with his beloved wife and their 5 year old nephew. Photo taken in July 2007, four months prior to his wife succumbing to breast cancer. 

Thank you :)

Sundeep Singh Osahn

+44 (0) 7793973248


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Friday 19 March 2010

3D Photography - how do I start?

Hi everyone!

Todays topic is 3D photography. Many people are only discovering 3D photography but not many of us know exactly that 3D photography was actually first done in the mid-1800s. Many portraits of royals, important societies and buildings were shot using a 2 camera set-up and the prints were then viewed through special viewing binoculars which then gave the images their 3D effect. In hindsight it was quite ingenious actually but quite inevitable. 

A simple (THE simplest way i've found) to create a 3D image (and i've only really done one so far..) is to take a photo of your subject through your left eye then move the camera to your right eye and take the same shot. Assuming you kept everything relatively level and your focus was on the subject at hand everything will fall into place nicely.

Processing

There are 3 methods of processing each with their own difficulty level. The easiest way is to put the two images side by side. Done. Now you have to try and see the 3D image by crossing your eyes - many people find this part the hardest but i've written a sure fire way you can learn to see 3D Cross View images:

1) pick out a point on the photos which stands out - an area of contrast perhaps or a particular person. 
2) Look at the two side-by-side images but put your index finger 6 inches in front of your face in between the line of sight of your eyes and the photos. 
3) Look at your fingertip.
4) move your finger forward and backward (while keeping your focus on your fingertip!) until the two photos overlap in the background. You should slowly see the area you picked out in point 1 overlap.
5) shift your gaze to the point you picked out in step 1.
6) allow your eyes to adjust to the image and move your finger out of the scene - if you are straining too much relax and try again. And remember to keep your head and eyes level otherwise it wont work.

Once you have mastered this technique you will find that the 3D Cross-View images are far superior to almost any other 3D method as it maintains the colour and lighting of the original images and gives a perceived resolution increase due to each eye having a separate image to look at.

The second method is to use photoshop or a similar peice of software to filter out the red channel on one image and overlap it with the other image. This gives the standard '3D' look of red + cyan. It isnt ideal because a lot of colour is lost, but the image is still in 3D. (I might go over that in a tutorial at a later date - its not that difficult really)

The third method is a GIF animation where each image is shown in a flickering manor. Your brain will process this as a 3D image (and its more on the lines of how 3DTV is processed) but this can only be viewed on a computer screen whereas the other two techniques can be printed.

A Few Examples

Here is an excellent Anaglyph (red/cyan glasses) 3D image: 

This is a 3D image from 1903 shot in India, Amritsar at the Golden Temple. 

And this is my latest 3D photograph using the Cross-View technique

Sachkhand 3D Crossview

Have a go at making your own 3D photograph and send me a link! 

If you found this interesting remember to subscribe or bookmark this page. Also, please join my Facebook group and follow me on Twitter :)

Sundeep Singh Osahn

+44 (0) 7793973248

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Friday 5 March 2010

Nemo acting all cute and innocent!

All together now... "awwwwwww!!!"
yeah, sometimes she's all cute and innocent looking but that doesn't last very long! Admire her in this pose while you can!

Sundeep Osahn
www.SunnyPhotography.co.uk

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Thursday 4 March 2010

Haven't got the foggiest.. or have I?

Last week was a very foggy. It was the result of very cold weather, snow, and then slightly warmer weather. The fog was very thick especially towards the outskirts of Leeds where I live. Here's what I mean...

Photo is taken from inside my limited edition Lamborghini Xsara.. (Yes, that model does exist, except its designed to look like a W-reg Citroen Xsara)

:)

Sunny

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Tuesday 2 March 2010

Wedding Photography Prices: Why Wedding Photos Can Be Expensive

Hello everyone!

This is a question that many couples (and their parents) ask. Especially being an Asian wedding photographer I get told by many clients' parents that my price 'for the day' is too much (mostly because Mr X can do it cheaper). Well, in all honesty Mr X probably can do it cheaper and most likely the photos will look significantly cheaper too. That isnt a bad thing as long as you are ok with it. After all you do get what you pay for and the more higher up the scale you go, the better the images of your wedding.

Anyone can pick up a camera and try to take some pictures, in fact many people now are buying DSLRs and playing photographer (thats how I started!). The key difference between average Joe, Mr X and Mr Professional is the level of expertise, training, technical knowledge and equally important the quality of equipment used. My lenses, as with all the best photographers, are from the professional high end range, they cost over £1000 a peice, some are closer to £2000. The camera itself costs a considerable amount too and I don't skimp out on inferior products or equipment because its 'cheaper'. And being the gadget/technical geek that I am, I know my equipment inside out - every button and every function. That means in any given situation I instinctively know what settings to use in order to produce the type of image I have in my mind. I stay away from harsh flash-shadows and try to gently illuminate the spaces around me whilst keeping all the ambient light around. (eg, pic below). 

A term I learnt from a photojournalist friend is "all the gear, no idea" and that kind of covers it for a lot of inexperienced photographers out there. Using someone who is less experienced might result in photos that you just don't want, dont like, or photos that are just unusable. So it is very important the photographer on your day is competent and has experience covering the type of wedding you are having. 

Another aspect of photography that many people overlook is the post processing. I spend hours, days even weeks post processing images to get the very best out of them. It can be the difference between a good shot and an excellent photo. All the best photographers utilise an element of post processing and some are professionals at that in their own right. Designing an album takes time too and putting in that extra effort can provide my clients with an incredible experience when they look back at their wedding day.  

I could go on for ages but time is against me - I have some designing to do so... For an explanation as to why wedding photos can be expensive, this is an excellent article written by an excellent wedding photographer, Randolph Quan. I would be doing him an injustice by writing my own article on it, so here is the link! http://randolphquan.com/blog/wedding-photography-prices-why-wedding-photos-can-be-expensive/

**Brides to be**
My advice is to budget 10% of your total wedding cost toward photography/videography and hire a professional (separate photographer and videographer is usually better too). Follow that advice and I guarantee you will have photos that will make you smile over and over again. :)

Sundeep Osahn

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Friday 26 February 2010

Stairy Cat

Hi everyone!

Since getting the stairs carpetted Nemo has found herself a nice soft place to sleep! Lol.. I need to remember to watch my step!

Enjoy :)

Sundeep Osahn
www.SunnyPhotography.co.uk

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Monday 22 February 2010

Monkey trying to bust a nut...

....figuratively speaking that is. :p

lol. He really likes these nuts and is so very persistent in trying to bust them open. Arnold likes them too but he's very protective over them - try to move it from him and you're finger will be Guantanamo'd! 

Sunny :)
(roborobvski dwarf hamster cute fury small funny monkey eating nut)

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Monkey busting a nut...

....figuratively speaking that is. :p

lol. He really likes these nuts and is so very persistent in trying to bust them open. Arnold likes them too but he's very protective over them - try to move it from him and you're finger will be Guantanamo'd! 

Sunny :)
(roborobvski dwarf hamster cute fury small funny monkey eating nut)

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Saturday 20 February 2010

Bokeh and DOF

Hi everyone!

As a lot of you know, I really really like lovely bokeh and DOF (depth of field). But what is 'bokeh' and 'DOF'? I hear you ask. Bokeh is a japanese term for the background blur in an image - primarily the aesthetic quality of that blur. Cheap lenses have poor bokeh while more expensive lenses have very lovely bokeh. DOF is sort of related to bokeh and background blur. If you imagine holding a ruler out in front of you and you focus on the halfway point a lens that has shallow depth of field (either a fast lens with a low 'F' number' or a telephoto lens) would have the middle number in focus but the background and foreground would be out of focus. Whereas if you increased the depth of field by increasing the F number on the lens, then more of the ruler would be in focus. 

This is a recent photo of my Charanjit taken with my favourite lens, the 50mm f1.2. This 50mm has excellent bokeh and very shallow DOF, which is why it looks like it does! There is no 'photoshop blur' in this, it is all from the lens/camera.  

Until next time,

Sundeep Osahn
Asian wedding photographer based in Leeds, West Yorkshire.

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Saturday 6 February 2010

Meet Arnold the Russian

Hi everyone! 

I thought i'd introduce you to a new member of my family.. Meet Arnold. A Russian Dwarf Hamster. He's only 12 weeks old and needs to adjust to his new home but I managed to get some pics of him. He's very tiny but not as small as Roborovski Dwarf Hamsters at the same age, and he'll grow slightly bigger than them too. 

Once I've tamed him a tiny bit i'll take more close up photos for you to enjoy, but until then I'll keep you posted on how he's doing. 

Arnold (below)

Take care,

Sunny :p

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Sunday 31 January 2010

Gudge and Sunpreet - pre wedding shoot

I was looking through Gudge and Sunpreet's pre-wedding shoot photos and realised there was one I dismissed due to an overly high exposure in certain areas.. even when I dropped the exposure down (as it was captured in RAW) there was still no data in the places I wanted... However, with a bit of tinkering i've gotten a look that I really like - especially with the lens flare (i love naturally produced lens flares!)

Hope you like this shot as much as I do!

Sunny :p
http://www.sunnyphotography.co.uk

Thursday 21 January 2010

A Photographer in training

I was clearing out some of my photo library when I came across a lovely set of pics! 

This is the first person I officially trained up in using a DSLR - she can tell you exactly what settings to use in almost any given situation and has taken some amazing photos! Her natural eye for photography is brilliant - she picks up on things that anyone else (including me) might just miss.

This photo is from May 2009 during an on-location training session. Although we have already shot various events, gigs and weddings together (as a couple) pretty soon Sunny Photography will officially be a 'husband & wife' business. Yes, we're getting married! 

Everybody meet my assistant..err.. I mean Charanjit! 

Sundeep Osahn

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Wednesday 20 January 2010

Invisible Students

Hi everyone!

This is my latest piece of work; 'Invisible'.Photo taken at Leeds Metropolitan University in October (I think..). I only got round to working on it a week or so ago, and then finishing it today.
I hope you like it :)

Sunny

Twitter: @sundeeposahn
www.SunnyPhotography.co.uk

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Saturday 16 January 2010

Solar Eclipse - did anyone see it?

This flickr user did, and they made a nice montage of it too!
It was a bit too cloudy to see it over here in the UK, at least I think it was anyway.. But the best place to see it was apparently in India and the Maldives. This photo is by flickr user 'photo maldives', so i'm guessing it was taken on one of the islands there!

Hope you like it
Sunny :)

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Friday 15 January 2010

Escalators of Madrid

Anyone who has had the pleasure of visiting Madrid will have also had the pleasure of its easy-to-use metro system and its escalators. Not only do these escalators give us the illusion of getting to our destination quicker (which isnt always the case) we can often get too used to them, thus any stairs can become hard work!
Here is a collection of just 3 photos of escalators taken in Madrid during my travels in August 2008.

Enjoy :p

Sundeep Osahnhttp://www.SunnyPhotography.co.uk

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Tuesday 12 January 2010

Makeup or Fakeup? Advice for brides to be..

Hi everyone, I hope you're all well keeping warm!

As many of you know I do wedding photography as well as beauty/fashion shoots with makeup artists and other creatives. I have seen lots of photography out there, good and bad, and have come across some horrendous pieces of fakery. I mean fakery in terms of.. its a photo of a person, whom makeup has been applied to but then somebody in between the photographer and the client redoes the face completely to what they think looks natural and good. 

The Bad

Forgive me when I say that a lot of these people are not photographers or makeup artists and although they probably work hard, they are making the photographer and MUA's work look outstandingly poor. Don't get me wrong, there are some very good retouchers out there (although the vast majority of them are actually Photoshop artists in their own right! or actual photographers!) but when the bad ones do poor work it reflects extremely badly on the people behind the work. Most of the bad work is produced by people who think they can use photoshop - but they SO can't.. 

Personally I believe a professional MUA would want to stand proud of her work as would a photographer, and wouldn't let a poor retoucher retouch their work.. but it does happen - WAY too regularly to ignore!! It has become more apparent the past few weeks as I have been looking for a MUA for my fiancee for our wedding. 

Another sad thing is that these images are shown to the MUA's clients via websites and portfolios, and many of the prospective clients think these images are 100% real. (I know!) It isn't their fault though, I mean.. we live in a world where 'fake' is all we see.. so why couldn't the makeup artist make me look like that? Well, they probably can. But the images you see are simply not real. The fact of the matter is that excessive post processing of images, coupled with excessive photo manipulation leads to a 'fake' photo. It just isnt real. And (as Stone Cold would say) thats the bottom line. So don't be afraid to ask these MUAs to show you some 'real' work, not the retouched, enhanced and photoshopped-to-shit images. 

The Good

There are of course some excellent retouchers whose work is impeccable. Some of it is just clearly WOW. One, for example, is Oleg Lgorin, a photographer based in New York. His photography is simply amazing and how he retouches his images is what I class as exceptional. They are not retouched in the sense of 'fakeup', they are retouched from a photographers viewpoint - the little things that make all the difference. 

So what about the wedding day?

Having said all this, of course, most qualified MUAs can produce excellent results on brides. Just make sure you look through all their work, the good and the bad, and when it comes to your wedding day makeup dont be afraid to voice your opinion. At the same time, trust in your makeup artist - after all they are the artist, right?

A good photographer will be able to capture the bride's natural look too. Plus the photographer on your wedding day will most likely adjust, colour correct and enhance most of the images they provide you with, maybe even tidy up your closeups and portraits, but an excellent photographer will work on a good number of your wedding day pics to really enhance whats already there. Some photographers love photoshop filters and effects, others are more concerned with composing an excellent shot, at the end of the day you're going to be remembering your big day through their eyes (and their lens lol), so my advice is to choose carefully and know the style of you want to pay for. 

Sunny :p

Fakeup/photoshopped-to-shit

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Monday 11 January 2010

The Big Freeze! 2010

Ok, i thought i'd upload some photos from Roundhay Park during the day, seen as i've already uploaded some from the night (or very early morning?). The two major hills (one by the Waterloo Lake dam, and the other near the cricket pitch) were covered with keen sledgers, snowboarders and of course copious amounts of snow. I recorded at LEAST 9inches which is quite a lot for Leeds.
Anyway here are some pics.. Enjoy!

Sunny :p

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Sunday 10 January 2010

Posterous.. the beginning..

This is my very first post using Posterous! :)Just making sure all my settings are right and it updates my blog as well as my facebook.
Here's a pic to start it off from one of my 'slowmo' vids.

Sunny :p

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Tuesday 5 January 2010

Snow business like snow business!

I absolutely LOVE the snow! it completely transforms surroundings into wonderful winter wonderlands.

Roundhay Park is amazing at this time of year, with sledgers (sp?) snowboarders and generally people having fun! But during the quietness of the night it is a different scene. Animals have to survive, and the mallards, swans and other waterfowl need to make do with what they have. The photo below shows Roundhay Park Lake iced over at 2.30am (ish) with the ducks perched on the ice ready to sleep through the blizzard ahead.. It is such a beautiful scene. I have never seen anything like it in Leeds in all my life!

I hope you like it :)

Sundeep Osahn
www.SunnyPhotography.co.uk