25 May, 2014
by KIKI
Author:
KIKI
Pics of the day

 

 

I love Berlin! Berlin is a wonderful city because it is diverse, it has so many different people, art, things, everything. You can focus on whatever you love and spend all day living for it and won't be bored for a very long time.

 

I always loved this particular Berlin Mitte art on the photo, those artists never minced words, they always expressed what they don't like about the center of the city that becomes more and more expensive, more and more boring and more and more crowded with superficial people (generally speaking). But that's probably the fate of the center of every real metropolis. And to be honest, when you move out a bit you'll find areas again with more art, alternative lifestyles and creativity. Berlin stays my most favorite city in Germany, and to be honest I haven't been to a cooler city anywhere else in the world.

 

KIKI

 

ps: Thank you, Berlin, the Tempelhofer Feld stays! :-)

 

 

 

24 May, 2014
by KIKI
Author:
KIKI
Photography - What happened in May?

 

Ha, yesterday I decided to distance myself from facebook finally the way I wanted to do it last year.

 

That means I will still use it as my main news site but I will collect all the posts and articles that I find important, edit them and post them here, means there will be MUCH more content from now on on this blogsite. I will drop most of the stuff from facebook therefore, as long as it's not something really important or very personal :-) Apart from that you can meet me, call me, write me, come to my exhibitions, buy my products or follow this blogsite. You can also leave your comments below. Hope this works out. Exciting!

 

Here are the latest images and older ones I edited for multiple purposes. See you here! :-)

 

 

Happy weekend!

 

KIKI

 

 

11 May, 2014
by KIKI
Author:
KIKI
NIKOLAIKIKI Ausstellung ab 31. Mai 2014

 

 

So, gestern in 3 Wochen ist meine Ausstellungseröffnung in Berlin (English version), zu der ich Euch alle recht herzliche einlade!

 

Letzten Herbst habe ich ein Portraitprojekt in Kambodscha realisiert und damit eine Idee verwirklicht, die mir seit meinem ersten Besuch 2009 in diesem kleinen Land in Südostasien nicht mehr aus dem Kopf ging. Es geht um Schmerz, Schicksal und die Art und Weise damit umzugehen und die eigene Realität und Zukunft zu begehen. Ich habe viele Interviews geführt und Menschen gezielt getroffen oder einfach auf der Straße angesprochen, die mir ihre persönliche Geschichte und ihre Verbindung zu den Grauen der Khmer Rouge Zeit erzählt haben. Obwohl damals die eigene Regierung ca. 2 Millionen Kambodschaner abschlachten ließ, um ihre fanatischen Ideologien durchzusetzen, haben es die Hinterbliebenen, die oft offensichtliche Narben tragen, Gliedmaßen oder das Augenlicht durch Folter oder Landminen verloren haben, geschafft, diese Schmach und diesen unvorstellbaren Schmerz hinter sich zu lassen und der Zukunft und Fremden, die ihre kleines und immer noch armes Land besuchen, mit einem Lächeln zu begegnen. Dieses "Khmer Smile", so wie ich es genannt habe, hat mich damals zutiefst beeindruckt und hat mich ehrfürchtig und nachdenklich gemacht, gerade im Hinblick auf mein eigenes Schicksal und jene häufig anzutreffende Unzufriedenheit unserer hochentwickelten westlichen Welt.

 

Mit der Ausstellung erhebe ich aber wie auch sonst nicht den Zeigefinger, sie ist lediglich der Ausdruck dessen, was mir durch den Kopf geht und was mir wichtig ist, mit anderen zu teilen. Ich würde mich sehr freuen, wenn Ihr alle kommen würdet am 31. Mai in die Pappelallee 69 im Prenzlauer Berg, ab 17 Uhr, wo ich gern mit Euch anstoßen würde auf das Projekt, auf NIKOLAIKIKI und auf Kambodscha.

 

Bis hoffentlich dann!

 

KIKI

 

 

7 May, 2014
by KIKI
Author:
KIKI
Tech Tips 12/14 - What camera to buy (May 2014)?

 

Actually what I said in this article at the end of last year still applies.

 

The first thing, a good photo never comes from the camera but from the photographer. Great photographers can make amazing photos with whatever camera they have at hand, even with their cellphone.

 

Then, before buying a new camera you have to ask yourself what do you expect the new camera to do better than your old one. There are a lot of cameras for different purposes and you first need to define what you are looking for. I experience this a lot with people who ask me what camera to buy. Well, for me it’s hard to tell, because I don’t know what you want.

 

In most cases it will be a step up from the point & shoot digital camera or cellphone that everybody has. The main reason I am shooting bigger cameras is the bigger sensor that give you a shallower depth of field, allowing you to separate your main subject from the back- or foreground. With a big sensor camera you can have a sharp person for example and a blurry background. That helps making your photos stronger by emphasizing the main subject you pay want to get attention to.

 

The bigger the recording medium (sensor or film) the stronger the effect. Well, with a full-frame 35mm camera, which is really big by point &shoot standards but way smaller than medium format or even large format film, you can get very wide aperture lenses that help making the effect even stronger and let images look quite close to medium format in terms of depth of field. You will get much sharper results with medium format, though, because lenses have narrower apertures and still even less depth of field.

 

There are a lot of terms that some of you may not understand so I try to make it simpler. The bigger the sensor (DSLR, mirror-less cameras) the bigger the background-blurring capabilities of the camera that give your images an artistic look. If all you want is photos where everything is perfectly in focus even point & shoot cameras are good enough today. They still do have some limitations.

 

Point & shoot cameras, the ones you probably want to step up from, have tiny sensors with one advantage and many disadvantages. A small sensor gives a huge depth of field, means pretty much everything is always in focus. You can make great photos with those cameras you just have to be aware that you won't be able to emphasize by blurring parts of the image. In my opinion that can make you learn to take better pictures because you have to make them strong without the artistic cheating of making them just beautiful by blurring special parts in it.

 

That lets me come back to my second sentence, the camera doesn’t matter, the eye and imagination of the photographer do. Learn to make great images with your point & shoot and only reward yourself with a better camera when you reach the limit of the small camera. If your images suck with the point & shoot they won’t be any better with the bigger camera.

 

But point & shoots have some more disadvantages that might rule them out earlier. They are slow by comparison. You won't be able to focus fast moving subjects like kids or even track them. Something you can do with DSLRs or modern mirror-less alternatives. I’d still say DSLRs are my top pick when it comes to fast accurate focussing, because they use a separate autofocus sensor for that, but mirror-less cameras catch up. My Olympus OM-D is even faster than my Canon 5D Mark III which is as fast (AF-wise) as Canon’s top of the line 1D X.

 

Point & shoots also have a limited dynamic range, especially in the highlights, a reason why you often get washed out, white skies in contrasty situation, something you can recognize by that the photo comes from a point & shoot. A bigger sensor camera retains both highlights and shadows much better, with less blown highlights and less noisy shadows. To be honest, know these limitations and try to avoid difficult situations. I never had problems with dynamic range in a point & shoot. It’s the overall sharpness in the images that I don’t like. Advertising photos on the other hand are sharp all over most of the time, too. So, it’s just a matter of taste.

 

Last but not least the smaller the sensor the less light can hit it. You need good light to get noise-less photos with a point & shoot. In bad light or at night they are much worse than a big sensor camera. To be honest, I never had to dismiss a photo because it was too noisy. Film back in the days was grainy, too, so no big deal.

 

Ok, if you want to upgrade from your cellphone and just want a great little point & shoot I always recommend Canon ones. In my opinion they are the most advanced and well though-through little cameras you can get. Of course it’s always a matter of taste, too, and if you don’t like Canon for whatever reason I’m sure Nikon or Panasonic or the other ones are as good. If you don’t wanna spend much just grab one of last year models in one of the big boxes in your electronic market where they are on sale. If you want the best at the moment take Canon’s Powershot S120, it’s wonderful and although I own a couple of cameras and a very good Panasonic LX7 I’m always tempted to buy a Canon point & shoot. I had the S95 and it was gorgeous. With the great 24mm wide-angle lens now these Powershots of today are even better. Don’t bother buying a G16, it has the same small sensor, costs more and is much more bulky. You sacrifice on sensor size for having a truly pocketable camera, why buy a bulky one then?

 

You want bigger? Ok, now it gets a bit more complicated. If you just want a great camera that is versatile, fast and gives great images I would buy a DSLR. If you don’t have the money for a full-frame one with a sensor the same size as old 35mm film, which will give you the exact look depth-of-field-wise, you should buy one of the half-sized sensor (APS-C) DSLRs like a Nikon D3300 or Canon 100D. But which one? Well, to be honest they are all the same pretty much. Something to consider might be that with a DSLR you also buy the ability to choose lenses out of the particular line-up. So you might want to think about potential lenses that you can use on an upgrade model later on. But on the other hand APS-C cameras are a good bit smaller than full-frame equivalents and have their own particular lenses. I would stick to those as long as you don’t upgrade to full-frame, something you probably won’t do anyway. So why buy big, heavy full-frame lenses when you will never shoot full-frame?

 

Which brand should you buy? I’d say take Nikon or Canon because they have the widest selection of lenses and they are probably the best camera brands in the DSLR market. But if you don’t plan to upgrade to full-frame in the future and probably will shoot only with 1-3 lenses I also like Pentax cameras. I don’t like Sony but that’s personal taste. My advice, when you want to invest some money in a DSLR, go into a shop and have a look at the different brands. They all feel and look a little different and in the end you should pick the camera that you like to take in your hands and shoot with it. They are all the same in the end. They all have different models for different budgets. I would probably take a Nikon, either a D3300 or D5300. But I like the Pentax K-3, too. It has some really cool and unique features that separates them from the big brands. I also like a Canon 100D because it is just so small.

 

Now, today you also have the chance to buy a mirror-less or system camera like an Olympus OM-D that I have. The great thing about those cameras is they are much smaller than even the smallest DSLRs because they don’t have a complicated mirror box that adds bulk to the body. Instead they have an electronic viewfinder or just the rear LCD to frame and compose. They have tinier, simpler lenses that often have better image quality because they are not designed for a camera with a mirror box in the way. But those mirror-less cameras which attract especially women because of their small size are often a bit more expensive still. This might change soon but for the same money you’ll get a DSLR with much better autofocus and a viewfinder for mirror live-framing.

 

If money was no object I would probably buy an Olympus OM-D EM-5 or a similar model. The new Fuji X-T1 seems to be great, too. They are smaller than an equivalent DSLR, especially the Olympus, because it has a slightly smaller sensor and smaller lenses for the special Micro-4/3 system. I love the Olympus. It’s small, fast, gives great images and looks totally cool. Only downside, full-frame images just look even better. But as I explained above this is down to depth of field reasons and just my taste.

 

If you want full-frame by the way, the Canon 6D is quite affordable, a bit smaller than the rest and with absolutely fantastic image quality, especially noise-wise.

 

My main sites to read reviews and get tips and inspiration tech-wise are Ken Rockwell, he is the last big site that is totally independent, Ken just writes what he thinks. Imaging-resource is a really good site for in-depth reviews, and dpreview, latter being an Amazon site now and they have lost most of their quality, they are good but not amazing anymore.

 

Happy shooting!

 

If you want to support NIKOLAIKIKI and contribute to keeping all this information and content costless and without ads at all I'd recommend you having a look at my shop and especially the NIKOLAIKIKI ethical clothing collection.

 

Thanks!

 

KIKI

 

 

4 May, 2014
by KIKI
Author:
KIKI
Photography - What I just found

 

I really have to force myself to blog more, facebook makes you lazy. And that's not good, for me and for others, too. We spend too much time on facebook anyway and I think we have to at least think about being able to leave it for a while or completely. Facebook has so much junk and so many ads, why not enjoy websites that look great and don't have ads at all, not even a facebook button like mine ;-)

 

Well, here are a couple of images from 2009/2010. On a 13 month trip I shot over 40.000 photos and every now and then I go look at some of them and every time I find some I haven't seen since back then. The following ones are a random selection that I posted on facebook today but then I realized that last year I only wanted to post images on my own blog site. I need to keep doing that instead of just uploading them onto facebook, damn it ...

 

New Zealand

Japan

USA

 

Happy Sunday

 

KIKI

 

 

23 Apr, 2014
by KIKI
Author:
KIKI
Photography - What happened in March and April?

 

 This ...

 

 

That's it so far. There's still some more to come in April, will make another photo post next week when I'm in Friesland.

 

Happy Spring!

 

KIKI

 

 

14 Apr, 2014
by KIKI
Author:
KIKI
Photography - What happened recently?

 

I'm on my way to Easter holidays but there will be a big blog post coming tomorrow or on Wednesday when I'm in Switzerland. Check this shot out from the Baltic last week ...

 

 

See you soon,

 

KIKI

 

 

12 Apr, 2014
by KIKI
Author:
KIKI
NIKOLAIKIKI Spring SALE!

 

 

Hätte da ein schönes Geschenk! Nicht nur für mich, vor allem für Euch! Und für alle anderen, die an der Produktion beteiligt waren und sind. Wenn sich das Geschäft weiter so entwickelt, werde ich im Laufe des Jahres nachordern. Damit unterstützen wir nicht zuletzt die Arbeiter auf den Feldern und in den Strickereien und Färbereien in der Türkei, die nicht nur einen fabelhaften Job machen, sie werden dafür auch vernünftig bezahlt. Bei NIKOLAIKIKI ist jeder Schritt der Produktionskette zertifiziert, vom Futter für die Tiere, die den Dünger für die nicht-monokulturellen Öko-Baumwoll-Felder in der Zentraltürkei produzieren, auch das Futter selbst ist öko. Bis zum Versand, bei dem ich besondere Kartons verwende, ist alles nachhaltig, umweltfreundlich und fair. Schließlich ist aber auch die Qualität der Produkte erstklassig, insbesondere durch die Verwendung bester langfaseriger Öko-Baumwolle. Checkt das ruhig nochmal aus, auf dieser Seite habe ich alles genau beschrieben und die Produktion selbst in der Türkei mit der Kamera dokumentiert ... https://shop.nikolaikiki.com

 

KIKI

 

 

2 Apr, 2014
by KIKI
Author:
KIKI
Tech Tips 11/14 - Birnen schmecken auch

 

 

Bei mir bahnt sich was Bahnbrechendes an. Erwäge, beim nächsten Computerkauf wieder auf Windows zurückzuwechseln oder auf Linux umzusteigen, halte letzteres allerdings für äußerst unwahrscheinlich, weil es für professionelle Anwendungen wohl unpraktikabel ist.

 

ABER, Mac nervt mich mittlerweile so sehr, dass ich keine wirklichen Vorteil mehr sehe. Sämtliche Arbeitserleichterungen, die Mac früher ausgezeichnet haben, sind inzwischen für iPad 1, 2, 3 A bis Z und iPhones, die bestimmt bald auch 3D-drucken können, vernachlässigt worden. Blingbling und Kohle abziehen, wo geht, haben es ersetzt, sich vernünftig um seine Profi-Nutzer zu kümmern. Die kleine schwarze Mülltonne, für die man ab 3.000 € aufwärts bezahlt und die nicht mal ein zweites Laufwerk beherbergen kann, habe ich z.B. auch nicht mehr wirklich verstanden. Keine Frage, interessant sieht das Dingelchen aus, aber mal ganz ehrlich, welcher Profi hat darauf jemals Wert gelegt.

 

So, was mich aber wirklich richtig tüchtig nervt an den Maschinchen aus Cupertino, ist das völlige Oktroyieren der Bedienung, ohne auch nur eine einzige Sache wirklich genau so einstellen zu können, wie es einem selbst am besten gefällt. Habe mich mit meinen Windows Computern immer super verstanden, hatte nie einen Virus und irgendwie habe ich begriffen, wie er funktioniert, auch wenn das zugegeben oft extrem mühselig war. Bei Apple habe ich mich bisher immer damit abgefunden, die starre, aber geniale Bedienbarkeit zu schlucken nach dem Motto "Warum etwas verstehen wollen, was andere Spezialisten für dich übernehmen und dir dafür die bestmögliche und einfachste Bedienung liefern?". Das war auch alles schön und gut.

 

Die Rechnung beginnt nur irgendwann nicht mehr aufzugehen, wenn das eben nicht mehr das Wichtigste für diese Spezialisten ist, sondern die Frage, mit welcher mit Diamant gefrästen Kante man am besten auch noch die dämlichsten Käufer anlocken kann, die dem Irrtum erliegen, das wäre ein Beweis dafür, dass auch alles andere, viel wichtigere natürlich genauso präzise durchdacht wurde. Pustekuchen, genau diese Ressourcen wurden von Jony Ive umrekrutiert, um nur noch an dieser verdammten Diamantkante rumzudoktern.

 

So komm wa aber nicht mehr ins Geschäft. Also, Produktdesign hin oder her, Apple Sachen sehen immer noch am schönsten aus, meistens jedenfalls, ihre Bedienung lässt aber mittlerweile auch auf durchschnittlicherem User-Niveau zu wünschen übrig, vom Profi-Bereich ganz zu schweigen, die schütteln schon seit Jahren mit den Köpfen und können das alles gar nicht glauben.

 

Lange Rede, kurzer Sinn, Apple einfach mal beim Wort nehmen: "Think different". Denke, mein nächster Rechner wird mal wieder ein anderes System werden, Photoshop muss ich dann eh neu in der Cloud abonnieren. Ich war außerdem immer ein Freund von Abwechslung und am Ende isses dann auch nur ein dämlicher Computer ...

 

KIK

 

 

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