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Soviet made LOMO Lubitel-166

A Lubitel-166 Universal made in the USSR in the 80’s - I bought this camera from an Amazon seller from Ukraine in 2022, it took months to get it delivered after transit delays (due to the war in Ukraine). Once I received the unit, didn’t shoot with it until now. I had put a roll of Ilford Delta 3200 in it many months ago to get my father-in-law into analog photography but he couldn’t find time to shoot. After kicking off my home film developing workflow I was hungry for exposed film to put in the tank to develop therefore, I finally took the TLR camera out.

There are no light leaks, I am particularly impressed with the sharpness of the images, especially since I was guessing focus over a somewhat broken focussing system.

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categories: film, misc
Thursday 05.04.23
Posted by Mrinabh Dutta
 

Smoky sunset in the woods

Dense forest fire smoke from Bolt Creek fire started pouring over Western Washington on September 10th, 2022 but the air quality wasn’t great for a while - possibly due to smoke traveling from other fires in the region. These photographs were taken on the 9th during an evening walk in the forest - I was not expecting to find smoke trapped in the trees and in the sky above, rendering fog-like scene especially at sunset.

1/160 sec at f/4, ISO 800

1/180 sec at f/8, ISO 3200

1/40 sec at f/6.8, ISO 3200

categories: day hikes, mediumformat, misc, pacificnorthwest, sunset
Tuesday 09.13.22
Posted by Mrinabh Dutta
 

June 2021 - Camping (Ohanapecosh CG)

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categories: misc, travel, mobile photography
Wednesday 06.09.21
Posted by Mrinabh Dutta
 

Another medium

There is no better way to appreciate an open world game design than taking a moment to just look at the environment and admire the elements of mixed realism and fantasy. (Some) modern video games allow one to take photos while playing, and Ubisoft among few takes it a step further by allowing photo share with tags to the in game map. In the past I’ve noticed Rockstar games’ Red Dead Redemption 2 allowed me to share photographs to their social platform but Ubisoft takes it a notch further with the map/location tag.

These photographs were taken by me while playing Ubisoft’s Assassins’ Creed Valhalla.

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categories: misc
Tuesday 02.23.21
Posted by Mrinabh Dutta
 

Stable mobile workflow

Let’s be honest: We live in the age where mobile photography cannot be ignored. Smart and progressive professional photographers will acknowledge anyone can take great photographs using easily accessible cameras and softwares including the ones that are found and available in a cell phone today. So what is left for professionals and artists to create, inspire and make a living out of photography today? I’ll save that debate for another day. This post is all about my basic stable and sustainable workflow for semi-serious work when using the phone cameras. Like my previous posts about workflows and peek into behind the scenes, I will use an example.

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Until a few weeks ago, my primary post processing app was Snapseed. I love it’s simplicity although I used only about 5% of all its features. The new iPhone 12 Pro Max with native RAW capabilities made me quickly switch (back) to Lightroom mobile. I am going to explain in a bit why.

Snapseed worked great for quick edits especially on jpeg files (or HEIC if you’re into it) however I found RAW editing somewhat cumbersome and not as user-friendly as Lightroom, and this was even before Apple introduced native RAW formats. Selective editing to my knowledge is possible only after initial adjustments done to the RAW image, and exported into a compressed format therefore, you loose all the benefits of shooting in RAW if you are editing portions of the image. Finally, all edits in Snapseed are destructive, i.e. you cannot go back and re-adjust an edit (although you have the option to undo actions). Lightroom mobile wins in all these limitations.

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Most (if not all) photographers are familiar with Adobe softwares, more specifically Lightroom. The UX is quite different from Snapseed however, it didn’t take time to get used to it, the learning curve wasn’t very high.

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In addition to exiting, Lightroom brings auxiliary functions such as viewing EXIF data, watermarking and bulk export - features that aren’t available in Snapseed.

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Snapseed worked great for exporting into Instagram or Facebook but would I print any of the images? I’d probably not. I have not printed many from the LR pipeline but I’ll post here once I have something shareable.

Here is the final export of the example image (exported from the LR workflow):

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categories: bts, misc, mobile photography
Sunday 01.03.21
Posted by Mrinabh Dutta
 

Timelapse motion controllers: A five year journey

Prior to 2015, most of my timelapse videos lacked lateral and panning motion in them - i.e. I shot them with the camera on a single tripod. It was only around five years ago when I seriously considered bringing in the element of motion into my video production hobby that was growing fast, gaining ground over a dying commercial photography business. Back then I anticipated some day will launch a full fledged production company but it never took off past creating portfolio content. Nevertheless I used several motion rigs from various manufacturers over time, formed strong opinions on what works and what does not, and I’d like to share my experience in this blog post.

Disclaimer: I neither represent nor sponsored by any of the manufacturers mentioned in this blog. Everything I have written in this post represents my and only my opinion.

Homebrew motion rig using Arduino and CNC parts

The first rig I ever owned was built my me. While I wouldn’t claim the design was created by me, I worked on extending a few ideas from the internet into a hybrid and potentially very different rig from what I could find others were building at that time.

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I started off simple: An Arduino based microcontroller programmed to move a single stepper motor and fire the camera with a basic shoot-move-wait-shoot subroutine. A motor belt ran across a simple aluminum rail with a pulley at the other end from the motor, with the carriage tethered to it. Mark One had no display, no buttons/input at runtime, the rig started when powered on and runs until powered off.

During field test, I found belt pulley system unreliable. The steps between carriage movement were not precise nor accurate. After filming a handful of timelapse sequences, spending much more time in post processing (stabilizing) the video, I was more than convinced to modify Mark I.

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Mark II consisted of an aluminum C-rail with a screw head attached directly to the motor shaft, a system one would typically find in 3D printers. I bought the motor and rail setup kit from OpenBuilds, and re-programmed my Arduino for it. Also, added a TFT touchscreen to solve once and for all the problem of input/output for the setup. The new slide system lacking a belt made it the most reliable and precise slide I have ever owned. The system could carry a DSLR with a heavy lens in a vertical slide effortlessly.

PROS

  • The most accurate and sturdy slider

  • Programmable and extensible

CONS

  • Not weatherproof

  • No controller app on phone

  • Bulky, not travel-friendly

  • Requires lot of time to set up and teardown

Dynamic Perception Stage Zero and Stage One

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The next ones up were two rigs from Dynamic Perception. These sliders were well-built, the controller being inside portable casing allowed me to carry the rigs in my travel outside driving distance (i.e. in air and sea travel) and since they are controlled via mobile app connected over bluetooth added convenience to operation.

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The slide however, was still bulky although there were shorter rails available and they made them modular. Bright LEDs on the motion controller made it difficult to shoot after dark without putting tape on them. The motion control phone app was primitive but connects and works like a charm.

PROS

  • Simple design

  • Strong, reliable motors

  • Wirelessly tethered control via phone or computer

CONS

  • LED lights on the controller rendering the system useless for shooting at night

  • Requires lot of time to set up and teardown

Edelkrone Slide and Tilt Modules (First generation)

Edelkrone first generation motion control rig was by far the best and the worst system I have owned. The rig looked elegant, built in black painted aluminum, with no LEDs on any of the controllers (just audio cues indicating successful connection and other alerts). The slide could move twice it’s length when set up on tripod, and yes it needed only one tripod.

Where it gained in build quality and compactness, the system was severely crippled by weak motors and overall weight, especially the pan-tilt head. The slide controller has gear system that presses on to the belt instead of the belt going around it rendering slide motion unreliable especially with the heavy pan-tilt head. 100% of the timelapse sequences I produced using this slide needed stabilization/smoothin in post.

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PROS

  • Sleek design, looks great

  • Slide travel distance twice the physical length

  • Improved (over Dynamic Perception) controller app

CONS

  • Unreliable slider, especially with heavy payload

  • Weak motors

  • Super heavy pan-tilt head

Conclusion

After going through all these sliders, I found myself going back to the Dynamic Perception Stage One system for its reliability. I have learned stepper motor is a must on slider system for timelapse shooting although, I can imagine videographers prefer noiseless or low-noise brushless motors. Looks don’t matter really, there is no one to brag about your cool motion rig when you are shooting in the middle of a desert or top of a mountain.

categories: misc
Saturday 01.02.21
Posted by Mrinabh Dutta
 

2020 AD: A year in photographs

2020 will go down in history as the most interesting (for lack of better word) year, at least for my generation who didn’t fight any major global conflict. Here’s a montage of this year in twelve photographs off my cellphone backup.

January

The year started off very dry (uncommon in the Pacific Northwest) and pleasant, I recall spending time watching and photographing beautiful sunsets over the Puget Sound. Then came the biggest snow storm of that winter around mid-January.

But the most significant memory of this January was the day I was hoping to show the future father-in-law (Dave) the ring I bought for my future wife - Emily. The plan however fell through when Emily decided to join us for the happy hour. Nevertheless we had a great evening in Stack 571 burger & whiskey bar.

No masks and no lockdown, COVID was just another old world disease we thought would not cross the Atlantic and the Pacific.

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February

Emily and I got engaged, while traveling through Europe. The winter felt unnaturally pleasant even on the other side of the Atlantic.

Still no masks on the faces although overall tourists’ presence seemed to have started to diminish. I recall reading about the new flu mutation on my phone while sitting in the hotel lounge in Copenhagen, getting ready to fly to our next destination within Europe.

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March

Last day in 2020 I was physically at work. Work from home was initiated ahead of the mask up directives. In fact, I recall CDC telling us masks were not effective in arresting the spread of the virus. Toilet paper and hand sanitizer were available at least through the first half of March.

In amidst the start of panic of lockdown, I found Animal Crossing New Horizon. Social gathering became a thing on rehabilitated remote islands run by Mr. Tom Nook and his minions. I did not know back then how many hours I’d put into this game but I will tell you now - it was worth it, every fucking hour of it.

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April

The spring after a very mild winter felt like a premature summer. But instead of going for camping we were grilling meats and BBQ in the patio. It was the beginning of a long nice warm weather streak that would spread over months.

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May

We began making long road trips looking for opportunities in photography. For a moment, I felt the global COVID crisis was a bad dream. It felt real only when you read the news, no one in my acquaintance had died of COVID yet.

June

Back to Utah after many years, shooting time-lapse and chasing storms. Restaurants were open for dine-in while most of the west coast had already shut down under new laws. The hotel we stayed in probably had less than ten other parties staying overnight, breakfast was served in to-go boxes and only alternate rooms in any given floor were open/available. The National Parks however were packed with people although they disappeared after dark.

Later on after the trip, I accidentally deleted all RAW files from the memory cards, thereby loosing all the photographs from the trip.

July

Topical temperature checker helped certain business gain confidence in allowing customers come in. In other news, NEOWISE comment appeared over the northern horizon, I was thrilled to have an excuse to drive into the mountains and distant places to photograph (my favorite) night sky.

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August

More nights in the mountains, away from people.

September

Besides being my birthday month, we got married in September, we had a very intimate wedding with a few other guests. Immediately after the wedding, we drove up to Glacier National Park, spent a few days in a small town outside the park.

October

Not the best Fall I have seen in the Northwest but was nice to see foliage amidst everything else that was happening. I feel lucky to live in a small city in the evergreen state where maple trees are in abundance.

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November

The weather continued to be nice (dry) at least through the first half of the month, enabling us travel far and wide within the state for sunsets and night sky. Unlike summer, fall weather feels a lot nicer for hikes and outdoor activities and the sunsets have more colors.

December

Few sunny days in the second winter gave us the opportunity to hike, discover new trails.

categories: travel, misc
Thursday 12.31.20
Posted by Mrinabh Dutta
 

Recursion

In approximately a year’s time we see the same season, over and over again through time.

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categories: misc, mobile photography
Saturday 12.19.20
Posted by Mrinabh Dutta
 

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