Here There and Everywhere

Expat wanderer

Zambia Black and White

I suspect this is true of most people, and I suspect this due to the fact it is true of me and was true of the three people with whom I traveled – even if you buy a new camera months before a major trip, you spend a lot of time on the trip exploring what your camera can do. You’d think that we would spend some major time educating ourselves before we go, but life intrudes, with demands and time consuming errands, and the focus just isn’t on learning your camera and its capabilities.

For me, the truth is even worse. AdventureMan gave me the new Lumix for Christmas, and I took a few photos with it, and really used the earlier Lumix with which I am now very familiar. I could always count on it to get great shots.

There are two things I love about this camera. I used to carry a big huge Nikon everywhere – Kenya, Tanzania, Botswana, Nabimia – backpack full of lenses and cleaning supplies, having to change lenses, and often not having enough light. . . the Lumix fits in my purse, and is easily cleaned. You don’t switch lenses; it has a lot of versatility, and it takes photos in very low light. In fact, I often have two in my purse; I bought a smaller one for everyday-in-a-hurry photos. I use it when you might use your phone camera.

This time, early on, I discovered the Scenic mode: sunset. It allowed me to shoot exactly what I was seeing, those stunning colors of the African sunset (LOL, during burning season, the atmosphere is full of particulate, and that gives it those amazing colors.)

At Nsefu Camp, the oldest Robin Pope Camp, they have decorated with old black and whites, and there is a romance to some of those very old photos that intrigued me. I have a wall in my office, a wall no one else can see, and I think it would be fun to have a romantic Africa series, black and white, so I decided to use my Color Mode: Dynamic Black and White. It gave me exactly what I was looking for, and I also learned that to get that old time look, I needed NOT to use the zoom, but to take the photos in context.

The bright sun, reflecting off the tusks, the backs of the hippos, the water, palm leaves, contrasting with the deeper darks of the green bushes, trees and foliage, is what makes them pop. I took a lot of mediocre shots; I won’t bore you with them, it’s a lot like the leopard, bad things can happen, or there just isn’t enough contrast to make it a good photo.

These are the ones I am enjoying. I’ll probably choose 4 – 6 of them to have printed 🙂

This is where we had coffee/tea in Chongwe; doesn’t it look early 1900’s to you?

I love this one; I think it is a matter of perspective:

It sounds funny, but it helps to be a quilter. When you are doing a quilt, you have to have a focus, and you need contrast to make the quilt effective.

July 1, 2012 - Posted by | Adventure, Africa, Arts & Handicrafts, Experiment, Photos, Sunsets, Technical Issue, Travel

3 Comments »

  1. These are wonderful! I used to take black and white crime photos and they taught us all kinds of tricks to enhance the contrast with a conventional camera but I don’t remember ever getting such interesting results (we had to shoot 2 rolls of practice film a month so a lot of the pictures were not crime scene photos but just interesting stuff to experiment with.) Looks like the digital world has made this sharper as well.

    momcatwa's avatar Comment by momcatwa | July 2, 2012 | Reply

  2. Crime photos?! Momcat, I never knew that! Holy smokes! I think you need to be picking your camera back up as an adjunct to the art-work you do in your quilting 🙂

    I had a friend once who spent several months studying at an Ansel Adams school, and she was so excited, she talked and talked. I don’t remember any of it, except something about ZONES, and that it is the black blacks and the stabs of white that made a B&W photo interesting.

    You also are not seeing things I learned – like a baboon against a mottled lagoon floor doesn’t work. Ditto some trees. Palm trees are terrific in B&W because of the bright reflective quality of their leaves and the deep shadows. All trial and error, ummm. . . lots of error 😉

    intlxpatr's avatar Comment by intlxpatr | July 2, 2012 | Reply

  3. Some day I will tell you why I almost never take pictures…

    momcatwa's avatar Comment by momcatwa | July 2, 2012 | Reply


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