Art and the Zen of Design

Build complex toys and simple tools

More pictures from my Panasonic DMC-FZ18

<< Older  Dec 7, 2007  Newer >>
I'm a snapshooter.

Some photographers work only in the studio, carefully composing still lifes, or working with models. Others bring this same careful way of working to such things as nature photography and wedding photos, to name just a few.

But I just wander through life with my camera, looking for things to take pictures of. And when I find something, the camera is to my eye, finding the best composition, checking the exposure, and then, just a quick shot or two, and I move on to the next thing that catches my eye. The interesting thing is that, when I leave my house, I never know what I'll bring back home.

So the camera is an extension of my eye, always ready for the next snapshot. As a result of working this way, the more automated the camera, the better. The camera is always ready. But this doesn't mean using the out-of-the-box automated settings. Trial and error eventually lead to the best all-around settings that yield the best image while requiring as little adjustment as possible.

More about this way of working and the settings I've found yield the best results with the Panasonic DMC-FZ18 in a future article. For now, a few more pictures from this very interesting camera. All of the photographs were saved in JPEG format and then worked on in LightZone, Paint Shop Pro, and a few other programs.
A spray of autumn - by Tony Karp
A spray of autumn
Horse against the sky - by Tony Karp
One of my neighbors
Milkweed - by Tony Karp
Milkweed
Planes in a line - by Tony Karp
Sky caravan
HDR experiment by the pool - by Tony Karp
HDR experiment by the pool
Love shadows - by Tony Karp
The artist and his muse, again
Sunrise through the trees - by Tony Karp
Sunrise
Autumn leaves - by Tony Karp
Some autumn color
A magical place in the forest - by Tony Karp
A magical place in the forest
An autumn still life - by Tony Karp
An autumn still life

<< Older  Dec 7, 2007  Newer >>
Copyright 1958-2008 Tony & Marilyn Karp
Our Art Museum
Web Site Design
Systems Design
The Future
About
About Tony Karp   -  
Recent Entries
Now here's my plan
Good cookie, bad cookie
But seriously, folks...
Post-processing Mr. Squirrel
A museum of one's own
We need new words to describe what's happening
Going over to the dark side
Shooting the moon
Happy Anniversary, Hobbitt
The view from my window - DMC-FZ18
My favorite museum
A toast to the artist's muse
The DMC-FZ18, a sunset, and a glass of beer
Remembering Herbert Keppler
Shooting abstracts with the Panasonic DMC-FZ18
Fixing a Panasonic DMC-FZ18 problem
More pictures from my Panasonic DMC-FZ18
The journey of a thousand Melvins
Stairway to the stars -- Extreme post processing
DMC-FZ18 - Raw vs JPEG - The JPEG Manifesto
Chromatic aberration and the DMC-FZ18
Raw vs JPEG, the DMC-FZ18, and a mystery
Some pictures from my Kodak P880 - Part 2
Some pictures from my Panasonic DMC-FZ18
Some pictures from my Kodak P880 - Part 1
DMC-FZ18 - Don't be afraid of the dark
Shooting in "Medium" - DMC-FZ18 - The right exposure
Shooting in "Medium" and the Panasonic DMC-FZ18
In-use review -- Panasonic DMC-FZ18 - Part 2
In-use review -- Panasonic DMC-FZ18 - Part 1
Photography becomes art - Fantasy at Ida Lee
Photography becomes art - The chefs at Little Washington
My new old camera - the Kodak Easyshare P880
Photography becomes art - Variations on a theme
Doing the impossible - Part 4 - The final result
Doing the impossible - Part 3 - The solutions
Doing the impossible - Part 2 - The challenges
Doing the impossible - Part 1 - The Godfather
All the (art) news that's fit to print
The museum becomes art - #1
Photography becomes art - Making an angel
Some theories about the Sony DSC-H9
How to test a camera
Hitting the wall
Extreme post-processing - Working with infrared
Everything old is new again
Some further thoughts on the Sony DSC-H9
Farewell, my DSC-H9 - a mini review
Learning to live with the Sony DSC-H9
Possibilities
Some thoughts about cameras - The Sony DSC-H9
Blogging 2.0 - A new interface
A funny thing happened on my way to the blog
In the beginning...