Saturday, 30 January 2016

MY SQUARE MILE

My own square mile project

The first thing I did was google 'square mile photography' and I found two interesting pieces of information.

First of all were the references to the square mile which is the City of London and I came across a photographer from Poland, Piotr Malecki, who had done a project on that (1) and also there were myriad offers of photo tours of the area. Malecki's photos were mostly of businessmen in suits. My own quiet residential neighbourhood seems a world away from this.

Secondly, perhaps the original concept of the square mile = one square on an Ordnance Survey map (kilometres these days). There is an entire site devoted to photographing every square in the UK and Ireland. This site is rather controversial because the pictures are described as being 'dull' (2) but it is argued it is an historical rather than a photographic project so that in the future people will be able to see what the landscape used to look like. A fellow native of Omagh, Kenneth Allen, has many photos on this site(3) but his photos could not be described as dull because he has had many shown on the BBC Newsline weather forecast. My uncle used to be the librarian in Omagh and helped Mr Allen out with Ordnance Survey queries.

Here are my own square mile photos – they do form a series and the common thread is my mother.

1.This is the view of Belfast from the hill we live on – I could leave mother alone for a short while so I nipped up the street. (Canon Powershot SX270 HS on auto)


2 and 3 .I had a sitter looking after mother for four hours so I went to Botanic Gardens, Belfast. (Samsung EK GC 110 on auto)



4 and 5 . Mother and I went to an Alzheimer's group in Templemore Avenue, Belfast and the photo of the roof tops was taken from the room we were in and the one of a mural was shot afterwards just outside whilst we were waiting for a taxi.(Canon Powershot SX270 HS on auto)



6 and 7 Later on the same day we were in Sainsbury's having lunch before going to the doctor's. I quite often take photos of mother in cafes to put on facebook for eg my brothers (five) and sisters(three) (Samsung EK GC 110 on auto)












REFERENCES

city of london
The seemingly inexhaustible demand for office space to accommodate all these institutions has given a number of leading architects bureaus the opportunity to augment the city's skyline with such playfully named additions as 'The Shard', 'The Gherkin', 'The Cheese grater' and 'The Pinnacle', which is currently on hold pending a redesign. Scurrying around these elegant buildings and populating the millions of square metres of office space is an army of keen and ambitious workers who like to think of themselves as living by the maxim of 'work hard, play hard'. As one developer working in The City puts it: 'The City is money, razzmatazz and party.'
Despite recent scandals, including the LIBOR (London Interbank Offered Rate) scandal where major institutions were found to be manipulating exchange rates to make money, and the general antipathy now drawn by The City following the financial crash of 2008, the 'Square Mile', as it is known to Londoners, remains the pumping heart of the UK's economy and a pillar of the global financial system. Piotr Malecki walked the streets of The City, savouring the frenetic energy and ruthless determination of this powerhouse on the Thames and its hordes of hopefuls.





(2)http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-32128087

Picture imperfect: Are these Britain's dullest photos?

By Alasdair Gill BBC News, Yorkshire
  • 11 April 2015
  • From the section England
This photo of a terraced street is unremarkable and - arguably - dull. But it is among thousands of similar efforts uploaded by hundreds of volunteers dedicated to photographing every inch of the British Isles. What drives them?
Deserted housing estates, empty fields and road signs - the mundane sights that most of us ignore but which Matthew Eyre is eager to photograph.
He is one of a hardy band who spend their free time photographing every square mile of the British Isles for the website Geograph.
"A lot of it does look dull," he admits.
"To other people it maybe seems weird - why do we take pictures of letterboxes and things like that?
Mr Eyre, who is Geograph's second busiest member having uploaded nearly 110,000 pictures, has set himself a challenge of walking every street in Portsmouth - and he is not alone in laying claim to some big numbers.
Image caption Matthew Eyre hopes his pictures will chronicle how the country changes in the coming years Image caption Lewis Clarke insists not all of the pictures are of grassy fields and empty streets
Lewis Clarke uploaded 9,982 pictures to Geograph last year.
"My mum says it's quite a sad hobby," he said. "It looks like just a collection of roads and grassy fields with sheep in them and things like that.
"But it's also a recording of our history and shows the landscape changing over time."
Mr Eyre agrees.
"There are historians for virtually everything," he says. "I think to be able to look back and say 'that's what that place was like in the 21st Century' is very important.
"The city of London, the historic buildings will be there for ever, but around them you could photograph the streets every five years and it would be different.
"Geograph is a site for dull photos but not for dull people."

Picture this

  • Geograph aims to collect, publish, organise and preserve images and information of every square kilometre of Great Britain, Ireland, and the Isle of Man
  • According to the website itself it is a geography, history and photography project. It is also a game, a community and "an excuse to get out more"
  • The game element comes from points. If you are the first to submit a Geograph for the a grid square you get a "First Geograph" point added to your profile
  • There are also second, third and fourth visitor points and "time-gap points" for users who photograph areas that have not been pictured for five years
  • Richard Webb is currently top of the Geograph leaderboard with 25,237 Geograph points from 82,754 images
What keeps bringing people like these back to Geograph is the desire to get more "squares" than anyone else. The aim is to collectively photograph every square kilometre of the British Isles.
Each user has their own personalised map showing where they've been along with all of the tantalisingly blank squares that have yet to be photographed.
Snap a picture of a never-before-photographed spot and you get Geograph points. Keep going and you might start to climb the leaderboards.
"When I've been travelling along the M5 and the M4 as a passenger I take pictures as I go along," explained Mr Clarke of his attempts to boost his numbers.
"Geograph is interesting. You hear things and you see things you otherwise wouldn't and without it I probably wouldn't go out as much as I do.
"I was out and about one day and the police searched my car because I was taking pictures in a badger cull area."
Image caption Geograph tasks its users with photographing geographical points on a map Image caption It asks its users to step off the beaten path in search of unphotographed squares
Geograph works under creative commons, which means anyone can reuse the pictures so long as they credit the photographer.
"I've had messages from Brazil and China," said Mr Clarke. "They want to use the pictures in their geography lessons and other people get in touch about local family history."
And yet a huge percentage of Geograph's photos must go unlooked at - the empty road junctions, vast expanses of grassy fields and car-filled streets.
Ian Sykes, from Hull, has seen a few of them. He is hoping to cover Yorkshire - all 12,000 sq km of it.
"I often take 500 a day and upload 100 of them," he said. "Digital cameras are great because you can take as many as you like.
Image caption The vast majority of the site's pictures focus on empty city streets Image caption Ian Sykes reckons Geograph's popularity is because Brits are "into funny things" Image caption Mr Sykes is hoping to visit every square kilometre of Yorkshire
"I think my object now is to leave something after I go, after I die. I know that's a bit morbid.
"I've done a bit in Germany and Geograph has not taken off there like it has in the UK. It must be something to do with the British outlook; we must be into funny things."
Before Mr Sykes had heard of the website, he travelled the country taking photos of Sam Smith's pubs.
Did he get them all? "I think so," he said. "That's 300 I've done. It took me two years and I was looking for somewhere to put them and that was when I found Geograph."
Kenneth Allen, from Omagh in Northern Ireland, is rapidly closing in on his 100,000th upload.
"I just started small and then it sort of got a hold of me," he said. "You start giving yourself little targets."
Image caption Like a lot of people on Geograph, Kenneth Allen got into the site through walking
Image caption He uses the site as a means of discovering new places
Mr Allen has managed to nab more than 12,000 "first points" - squares that had not been photographed before - which is more than anyone else on Geograph.
"I'm working with the OS map and trying to fill in each grid square. I just like to go out and take a flask with me and see what I can find.
"With Geograph I've discovered more of the countryside than I ever did when I was walking."
Robin Stott, a director and trustee at Geograph, argues the website's picture are not boring at all.
"Mundaneness is in the eye of the beholder. Places such as housing estates, business parks, big arable fields might seem mundane but when you explore them and dig into the history, everywhere turns out to be interesting.
"The focus is always unfashionable geography but, as we enter our second decade, Geograph is developing as a historical record as well."
Users talk of Geograph as a means to discover new places and leave memories of what our streets and towns once looked like, rather than a place to show off great pictures.
As Mr Clarke puts it: "It's not exactly a photography site, it's a history project."



Intro to tutor Katrina Whitehead from Maureen Robinson

I look after my elderly mother and I wanted to do a degree that would fit in around this. Comparatively recently(6 years ago) I took up photography and I have found it very therapeutic indeed. I considered studying GCSE Art and Design(photography) but I was worried I wasn't talented enough so I sent in a photo of Belfast to the BBC Newsline weather forecast and they showed it(since then I've had about 16 photos on that programme). In the middle of the GCSE I got a video clip ( a sunset)accepted by the BBC to be in a documentary called Britain in a Day. Next I studied for a City & Guilds level 2 award in digital image manipulation and got a distinction. After that I studied for a Btec level 3 certificate( a merit in location and studio photography and a pass in experimental). So now I have enrolled in the degree course.




There is a small seaside town on the Antrim coast called Whitehead and it is only forty minutes by train from Belfast so I go there often – here is a photo taken from the train window.


Friday, 29 January 2016

Busy,Busy!!

A couple of things have come up only today and yesterday. Today I booked tickets for Chinese New Year and Holi, the India Festival of Colours.

The Chinese New Year takes place on Sunday, 31st January and the Lion Dance is one of my favourite things to video and it will provide me with good footage for the Adobe Premiere editing course. The Festival of Colours takes place in April (they hadn't enough money to put it on last year).

The other thing which is not part of the degree is I was asked to give some talks on computers and the Internet to some Alzheimer's groups my mother and I go to because I was at one yesterday and was showing one older volunteer gentleman my tablet (Google Nexus 10) and the organisers noticed and were very impressed. So back at home I did a lot of research on the best way to hook up a computer to a TV or projector and I have decided to try a Miracast dongle for the back of the tv/projector and my tablet rather than the laptop because I like the way you type on the tablet screen and then it disappears. Also, Miracast is wireless. On the tablet I use an app called Swiftkey for typing - it learns your favourite words.


If people could pray for the happy repose of the son of a neighbour who died young.

Tuesday, 26 January 2016

Adobe Premiere editing course!!!!

I am very excited as I have managed to sign up for an Adobe Premiere editing course! It is being run by a charity called 'Digital Arts Studio' here in Belfast - this is a place I only found out about recently: an artist put an ad on freecycle for old mobile phones so I gave her 2 and she told me. 

I have already done two courses with this organisation - how to make a computer game and a course on adobe after effects. To make a computer game you don't have to code these days - if you download a free piece of software called Unity you can make a game(but you really need to be taught how to use it). I made a 3D game for a mobile phone - you had to use special glasses called 'Google Cardboard'.

I am so happy about the video editing course - about finding one local - I was seriously prepared to travel over to England if I could've found a course near my brothers or sister for a weekend that wasn't too expensive. Previously I've gone over to do an autumn photography course in Constable country and stayed with my brother nearby - it was run by the Field Studies Council - the mill owned by Constable's father (Flatford) now belongs to it. Willie Lott's cottage (the Haywain) is still there too and you can stay there during the course (it belongs to the National Trust).


My first video editing lesson I paid for privately  and I was taught windows movie maker - later on I wanted to learn adobe premiere but they specialize in final cut pro which is an Apple product(I can't afford one). I wasn't charged very much by the company(based in Portadown) as they do a lot of community work. 

I am all ready to go to do video editing - my laptop was picked for me by another one of my brothers especially and he got a good deal secondhand(manufacturer refurbished) - it is a Lenovo Y50 which is mainly intended to be a gaming laptop - the resolution  is HD - 1080p and it has a massive amount of memory. So I can't wait!

Sunday, 24 January 2016

I like editing videos and I have my own youtube channel (gingerbap40). Out of the blue my 12 year old niece who tends to be moody asked to borrow a camera and a tripod to make videos - I was so pleased. I gave her an old Kodak Easyshare camera - initially my niece thought I had sold her a bum steer as when she played back the video on the camera there was no sound so she returned the camera to me but when I put the memory card into my laptop the sound was fine - in fact the audio was superb(Kodak Easyhsares are very good quality - they are no longer made because Kodak went bust). So then I explained things to my niece and asked her would she like me to teach how to edit videos and she said yes. So now I have taught her after a few technical hiccups were solved - her card reader didn't work so I gave her another one and her cheap ordinary batteries wouldn't work in the camera but rechargeable ones do. I was so pleased with my niece I and another brother clubbed together to get her a good laptop for editing videos - this is on its way - a Toshiba Satellite.

Saturday, 23 January 2016

Exhibitions in the Ulster Museum at the moment

One of Rembrandt's self - portraits is on show - painted the year he died!! I also saw a self portrait in the art museum in New York which has an absolutely fantastic selection of paintings donated by rich benefactors and some day I am going to go back there when I can linger. There are some other Dutch masters on show in the Ulster Museum also. I couldn't spend much time close to the Rembrandt as someone wanted to give a talk on it to a party of schoolchildren and I was in the way.

Yesterday I spent about an hour in the museum cafe - they do have free wifi but I was taking no chances and I had brought along a little gadget from 3 the mobile phone company that creates my own wifi zone (there are places that nominally have free wifi but you can't access facebook or check your email). So I sorted through the photos I had just taken in Botanic Gardens and sent one to the weather forecast.

There is a photographic exhibition by Paul Seawright entitled 'things left unsaid' - images of newsrooms in America where news of the Iraq war had just been broadcast from - very few people in these pictures and a lot of empty newsdesks like the emptiness the sad news of the war creates inside.

Another great show is the best of last years GCSE and A level artwork - I go to it every year and it is always brilliant!! 
Yesterday I had  4 hours free time as a sitter was looking after my mother so I went to the Botanic Gardens and to the Ulster Museum which is in there also. Before going into the museum I used my Samsung Galaxy camera as once I had a signal I could send the photos directly to the BBC and hopefully get shown on the weather forecast - you can surf the net using this camera as well(always amazes people that does) and it has full manual controls.



It looks very expensive but it wasn't really as I waited until I was able to buy the first model half price when they launched the second model. I remember meeting a professional photographer who always takes one along on nights out.

As well as the weather forecast, I was also thinking about the square mile project for the degree course. I used auto most of the time. Here are my favourite shots.



I was especially pleased to get a decent bird in a tree picture - I only have one other good bird shot.

A considerable time yesterday evening was spent entering a weather photo competition - resizing the photos, finding hi res and original copies in case I did well. Most of the photos have been on the BBC and one was published by the Belfast Telegraph.













Wednesday, 20 January 2016

Beginning work on first project.

The first project is 12 photos of your own locality  your square mile. So yesterday evening an hour before sunset, the golden hour, out I went. It's still winter but yesterday the sky over Belfast was blue with very few clouds and I wanted to get some shots of the view from where I live. I took 24 photos with a little compact - a Canon PowerShot SX270 HS - I have the next model up too but I prefer the older one as it takes nice sharp photos and I like the fact it has less gizmos. Only one photo was really good and I admit I used Picasa's I feel lucky on it.


Tuesday, 19 January 2016

My cameras

I am familiar with entry level cameras and these were not too dear - I still use my Pentax K-30 which is very good - my only complaint about it is that the audio on videos is not of good quality. I have a reasonable collection of Pentax lenses as old film slr lenses are cheap and plentiful (Pentax kept the same mount for its digital ones). I also bought new a weather resistant lens as the K -30 is also. This was tested once by me as we were caught in a heavy downpour in a seaside resort called Bundoran in County Donegal - I had to leave it drying out in the hotel for several days before it would work again.

My Konica Minolta Maxxum 7D 

This camera is 16 years old and the main reason I am going to be using it is I have just bought secondhand my first 400 mm lens (Tokina AT X)  and this camera fits it. I intend using it for the Belfast Zoo competition ( the problem here is that the zoo might be shut as it is running at a loss). I got the lens from ebay USA and had to pay a lot of customs duty.

My Canon Eos 1D Mark II
This is my first professional camera which was listed on ebay uk -  the ad was in German which posed no problem to me(I have GCSE German Grade A). It came without a charger and I didn't know how expensive one can be - the cheapest on ebay was £50 and it was a new listing so I bought it immediately. So eventually I got it going - after making the mistake of buying a lens with the wrong mount(efs) and then I got a 50mm(ef) prime lens of Amazon.
   This was last week and here is the first shot I took.

My compact cameras







I have decided to have a go at doing an online degree in photography - I will be able to fit this in better with looking after my elderly mother. I have applied for a grant which there is a slim chance of me getting( because I had a grant in the 80's) plus a disabled grant. I just have to wait now. I have worked out I can afford it even if I don't get a grant as I can pay in installments. I can't start til I pay but I do know my first assignment which is to submit 12 photos of where I grew up or where I live now - so I think I will go to Omagh where I was born and lived til I was 9 .