15 Oct, 2013
by KIKI
Author:
KIKI
Photography Trip - Kyrgyzstan, countryside and its people

 

On Sunday afternoon we met Mai again, my Japanese friend who works in Kyrgyzstan for two years. We got picked up by her host father Maku Abba and drove to their village Tasma near the Kazakh border. We arrived around five in the afternoon and what we experienced the following two days was just incredible and hard to put into words.

 

As the main reason for this trip is photography I did my best to capture life on the countryside as good as I could and the Kyrgyz people where just wonderful to us. A big рахмат (thank you) goes to Mai‘s family, their lovely kids and all the people who have been so welcoming. It was really one of the greatest times I ever had and I‘d love to come back at some point.

 

For now let‘s just see how it‘s going on the countryside ...

 

 

Thank you again, Kyrgyzstan, you've been wonderful! жакшы and рахмат!

 

Tomorrow morning we take the plane to Beijing with a stop in Ürümqi, so no facebook the next two weeks, but I will try to update the blog at the weekend with first impressions from China.

 

See you

 

KIKI

 

 

13 Oct, 2013
by KIKI
Author:
KIKI
Photography Trip - Karakol, animal market

 

We've been to the animal market this morning and once again, it has been amazing, have a look ...

 

 

In the early evening we will go to Tasma village, the real countryside, together with Mai, our Japanese friend. No internet the next days, probably only when we come back to Bishkek on Tuesday evening.

 

See ya

 

KIKI

 

 

12 Oct, 2013
by KIKI
Author:
KIKI
Photography Trip - Kyrgyzstan, landscape

 

Today was landscape day. The father of our host drove us to Yeti Oguz, a little village in the mountains south of Karakol. We walked into the big gorge up until we reached a plateau with few settlers and some yurts. Lighting was pretty good and became even better after we had a little rest in town and climbed up the ridge overlooking the valley and the crazy red mountains. Have a look ...

 

 

Tomorrow in the early morning we will go to the Sunday animal market. It's going to be very interesting because it is one of the biggest in Central Asia.

 

See you later

 

KIKI

 

 

 

11 Oct, 2013
by KIKI
Author:
KIKI
Photography Trip - Bishkek to Karakol

 

On Thursday we took the public bus from Bishkek to Tamchy to spend a night at lake Issyk Kul. Our hosts were a Kyrgyz family, they served us delicious food from their garden and the son played for us on kind of a Balalaika. It was a special experience, the night was pretty cold, though, and it rained heavily  ...

 

 

Today we took the public bus to Karakol, it's a cheap way to travel and you get in touch with the people, very nice. Karakol seems to be a very laid-back city and once again the people are incredible! We had a brief stroll around town, light was beautiful, took a coffee in one of the local cafés and had dinner in a very delicious Kyrgyz restaurant. I had meat, but when you have a look at how animals are bred over here it's not a big deal at all, very natural ...

 

 

Tomorrow is landscape day. We will take one of the minibuses into the mountains. Hope lighting is great :-)

 

Check back soon ...

 

KIKI

 

 

9 Oct, 2013
by KIKI
Author:
KIKI
Photography Trip - Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan

 

There's not too much to say about our first day out with the people in Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan. It seems to be a really amazing country, the pictures should speak for themselves and give a good impression of how great the people are. Stirred! ...

 

 

And then we had Japanese dinner, yeah! :-)

 

 

We're heading to lake Issyk Kul tomorrow morning, countryside, awesome ...

 

See you later

 

KIKI

 

 

 

7 Oct, 2013
by KIKI
Author:
KIKI
Photography Trip "East 13" - Week One

 

Phew, what a week. I started my photography trip „East 13“ on Monday, 30th September. It‘s going to be a two and a half month journey through Eastern Europe, Central Asia, China and Southeast Asia. A friend from London is joining me and apart from my usual every day life documentary I am planning to do a portrait project in Cambodia at the beginning of November.

 

We started in Berlin on Monday morning with the Warsawa Express and leave Moscow tomorrow morning. Have a look what happened in between, it was a lot and we met incredibly nice people on the way ...

 

On the train to Warsaw, our first stop, we shared a compartment with a Polish father and his two boys. We talked most of the time and we learned a bit about Poland ...

 

 

Our first stop was Warsaw. We spent the day with Ilona, a friend, and she introduced us to this very interesting city.

 

 

This is quite funny, a lottery window, look at the chestnuts placed there as well :-)

 

 

This Varsovian played the sticks on a chair, really cool ...

 

 

Then on Tuesday evening we took the sleeping coach to Kiev.

 

 

And at the border something really, really strange happened. The train stopped inside an industrial building and a bunch of workers appeared. They changed the wheels of our entire train to be able to proceed on Ukrainean rails. The whole thing took three hours. Weird!

 

 

In the morning we arrived in Kiev.

 

  

And then we took the train to Moscow arriving there on Saturday morning. We met a lot of nice people in the Hostel and Igor the host was just as welcoming as it can get. Moscow is massive and there's a lot of luxury, everything is pretty expensive but when you move out to the suburbs you see that most people are living a pretty basic life. Have a look at my Moscow footage ...

 

 

That's it! I wanna come back to Russia at some point. Tomorrow we're heading to Kyrgyzstan, very excited.

 

Check back soon for some more documentary ...

 

KIKI

 

 

 

13 Sep, 2013
by KIKI
Author:
KIKI
Photos - What happened in the last weeks? ...

 

... this, check it out ...

 

 

Happy weekend!

 

KIKI

 

 

 

26 Aug, 2013
by KIKI
Author:
KIKI
Photography - Quick snaps with the OM-D

 

Ha, three quick snaps from today strolling around in Mitte with friends from Switzerland. The Olympus OM-D is a great little camera and a lot of fun to shoot with. Have a look at the images first ...

 

 

The last one is the OM-D at ISO 10000 by the way ... seriously, if you want the best pro-like camera with everything you ever need, in a great looking, super small, super versatile body with heaps of great lens options, don't look any further.

 

It's in many ways better than a big DSLR with some unique features like 9 frames per second full resolution bursts or a very good electronic viewfinder that lets you check your shots immediately after capture without having to take the camera away from the eye, brilliant.

 

I will try to write a review soon ... you won't get as easy and as creamy subject isolation of course, necessary to set your images apart from digicams.

 

BUT, beside the right subject timing, lighting, framing and composition are key to a great picture in the first place, achievable even with a cellphone - it's all relative,

 

happy shooting ...

 

KIKI

 

 

7 Aug, 2013
by KIKI
Author:
KIKI
Photography - Dynamic Range

 

What does Dynamic Range mean? Dynamic range is more of a physical term, it describes the ability of a medium to record bright and dark values at the time. The human eye for example has a huge dynamic range. We can see details in scenes that contain both very bright and very dark things, for example things in a dark room inside on a bright day and at the same time see everything outside through the window in the sunlit garden with a single view.

 

In camera terms dynamic range is the ability to record those bright and dark areas with one single exposure, to record both detail in the highlights and the shadows in a contrasty scene. Imagine a dim alleyway on a sunny day. When you want the image to be bright enough to get details in the shadows with most digital cameras you will get a completely white sky, because their dynamic range is limited to something between 6 and 12 f stops.

 

What does f stops mean? F stops refer to the aperture values of the lens. On bright sunny days you would for example expose the scene with an aperture value of f/8 and an 1/800 second. One f stop brighter would be an 1/800s at f/5.6 (wider aperture) or a 1/400s at f/8. One f stop difference is double the light, double the brightness thus double the shutter speed or one aperture value higher to retain the same brightness on the medium. Brightness differences increase or decrease exponentially, two f  stops difference means four times brighter or darker the scene, four f stops means 16 times brighter or darker the scene. In real life for example things in bright sun light are sometimes 12 or 14 stops brighter than something in the shadow hidden somewhere behind a window in the same scene. Digital cameras are not able to record both values at the same time, because their dynamic range is limited.

 

What does limited mean and are there differences between different cameras? Dynamic range of a camera is limited by the highlights and shadows to be recorded. The limitation of highlights means things in a scene are too bright for the camera to be recorded, it‘s typically 3-4 f stops above middle grey. Digital cameras only display white when they can‘t record any brighter, that often means you get white skies in contrasty scenes on a sunny day, this looks very unnatural because our eyes behave so different. A work around this limited highlight range is to expose for the highlights, means you simply darken the scene to the value you find the hightlights to be well expose, to have enough detail and colour and look natural. But then you run directly into the other problem of limited shadow range.

 

Limited shadow range means things in the shadows are either too dark to be seen in the final image or they are too noisy to be acceptable. It‘s easy to brighten up scenes afterwards on the computer but brighten up detail also means brighten up noise. With big enough dark areas noise soon becomes obtrusive, so you can not brighten up scenes endlessly, noise is the limited. You have to decide what end of the dynamic range is more important to you and make a trade-off on the other end. Camera type also makes a difference. A very simple rule is the bigger the sensor the bigger the dynamic range. Digital cameras in cellphones are the tiniest so their dynamic range is the worst. White skies for example is one of the easy signs to see that a photo was taken with a cellphone. With DSLRs you get much better dynamic range quite comparable to film, which has a huge highlight range. You still don‘t get endless highlight range with DSLRs but their shadow range is much better than that of film. So you can expose for the hightlights and brighten up the shadows afterwards, something most cameras today do automatically, handy. You can even squeeze out a bit more range when shooting RAWs and post process later. With DSLRs you‘re typically able to record up to around 13 f stops with a single exposure. You may also do multiple exposures and merge images afterwards, so called HDR images. But I don‘t like those, to my eye they often look unnaturally processed, and the style of multiple frames for one scene doesn‘t fit with my understanding of capturing a moment, for some landscape shots, it‘s handy, though.

 

So finally, I show you two images that illustrate dynamic range quite well. The above is from a cellphone with burned out sky in the background, the second is from a big sensor camera, here an Olympus OM-D, that renders the sky quite nicely when pulling back highlights in post processing. Have a look ...

 

 

So, summarizing, with digital cameras you are limited in recording both very bright and very dark things in the same image. The bigger the sensor (camera), though, the more dynamic range you get, so with a DSLR you get enough range to display most of any scene‘s brightness levels. You won‘t get that with a cellphone, one big reason for me to shoot big sensors. Dynamic range is important to display natural images.

 

Happy shooting

 

KIKI

 

 

6 Aug, 2013
by KIKI
Author:
KIKI
Photography - Tips

 

Yeah! VSCO released Film Pack 04 today, a set of 117 Slide presets, something I've been waiting for since they started maybe two years ago. And it includes my favorite landscape film Fuji Velvia 50. 2013 landscape shots will rock! Looking forward to play around with it next week! This week I don't have reliable internet connection due to some travels, so my posts will be a bit delayed ...

 

Check out VSCO Slide, it's supposedly great as the three Packs before ...

 

See you later

 

KIKI

 

 

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