Category Archives: iPhone Blog

iPhone Photo Gallery

 

As professional photographers who shoot a lot of stock, there isn’t a whole lot we can do with an iPhone photo. We’ll feel like we blew it if we get a great image on the iPhone but not the real camera. But, the phone is always along for the ride (literally in my case with so much time on a bike) and we love making photos with them, using the apps to play with effects and sharing via social media. Who doesn’t these days?

During our last trip to Nepal, we purposely cruised around with just a phone and some ideas. It was great fun and super liberating. More and more, whether we like it or not, how one makes images with their phone says a lot about their life, how they see it and their creativity. Before we head off on our next trip, we decided to post a gallery of our twelve favorite images from the phone and processed with iPhone Apps. We hope you’ll have a look and enjoy.

iPhone Fun Photo Gallery

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Photographing Climbing in Norway and Sicily

Climbing Photoshoots

Within 12 days of one another, we had two very different climbing photoshoots. The first was ice climbing with Kurt Astner, one of the world’s best ice climbers. This assignment had us go to Norway’s Lyngen Alps to shoot for W.L. Gore and their new Gore-Tex material, ProShell.

On a fixed rope, I hang next to Kurt and follow him as he climbs

After Norway we headed home, jumped in the car, and drove to Chamonix for a three day women’s catalog shoot for Wild Roses (Blog coming). From Chamonix we met up with good friends Christof and Evi from our hometown of Bruneck and boarded a flight for Sicily and our climbing destination, San Vito lo Capo. Both Christof and Evi are superb climbers. Best of all, inspired by the photoshoot, both were well prepared and fit to pull hard.

Photographing Ice Climbing

Shooting climbing is hard on both camera gear and the body. Shooting ice climbing compounds all of this in tortuous ways. Not only are all the usual climbing logistics present, but there are lots of sharp things around and everyone wants to keep moving because it is cold, painfully so. To fend off the cold requires bulky clothing, and this contributed to a small disaster. In an aggravated effort to keep moving, I was throwing lenses loose into my pack, ignoring the lens tubes that were supposed to be their home. The price… a broken Image Stabilizer in a 70-200 and a broken housing on a 17-40. Thankfully the loss of lenses came at the end of the shoot and not the beginning.

Ready to go with the chest mounted camera bag, key for working on a rope.

LowePro Camera Bags, with whom we recently began working closely with, is going to be receiving more of our attention as I commit to being more careful with gear. For me, dedicated camera bags have proven essential to the safety of camera equipment I must rely on.

At the end of the day everyone was happy. Janine and I felt good about a job well done. Kurt had made a first ascent of what he has called “White Chocolate”, WI6, Grade IV. And Gore happily reported that we nailed the look of harsh conditions they were after to market their new product. Success.

Last summer, after photographing Kurt Astner climbing on the Tre Cime di Lavaredo in the Italian Dolomites, we posted what became a very popular blog story. During the shoot, I wore a helmet video camera to capture what I see while shooting in these dramatic locations, I thought to do the same for this ice climbing shoot. It seems the perfect opportunity to see what it looks like to be the photographer, to get my perspective of what I am making photos of, and to watch Kurt climb. Beneath the video are a couple of stills that show the end product of what we were after.

Arriving to the ice fall Kurt had found after a two hour ski approach. 200 meters of what may be unclimbed, steep ice.

Kurt Astner on his new route White Chocolate, WI6, Grade IV

Photographing Rock Climbing

A little friendlier terrain than the ice

Less than two weeks later we were in a different world. Sicily’s seaside village of San Vito lo Capo has recently become a hotspot for sport climbing. With absolutely perfect limestone walls lining the Mediterranean coast, an ideal spring climate and superb food – San Vito lo Capo made sense for our next shoot, and an escape from a poor winter in the Alps.

Shooting rock climbing, especially sport climbing, is quite easy compared to what we faced in Norway. In Sicily the routes were never more than 35 meters long, were always safely bolted and had flip flop approaches. I could quickly get a fixed rope in place or even shoot from high boulders next to climbs.

The trick here was having the right people, people who could get on hard routes and climb them in style. Climbing images require a sense of power while at the same time looking to be in control. Christof and Evi are ideal.

The very photo being made from the above right image

Christof at the Castle of Aragon, 7b

Evi on the Cinema Paradiso Wall, 6b

Christof making things look dicey, because they are

Steep?

Camera Gear for Climbing Photoshoots

In my opinion, for all things in the photography world, less is more.

For climbing, in almost all situations, I take the following:

Canon 1d Mark IV – Quality, speed and focusing points

8GB film cards – I like 8GB because I don’t have to change them so often and run the risk of dropping one. And, they aren’t so big to potentially have every image if they do get dropped.

Canon 16-35 f2.8

Canon 15mm 2.8 – For getting the wider angle with the 1d Mark IV’s conversion

Canon 70-200 f4.0 – Optional depending on how close I know I will be to the climber

LowePro Top Loader 70

LowePro Lens Tubes

Once I am on the rope I have a small top opening pack hanging below me that serves as a bucket catch all for lens tubes (be sure to actually use lens tubes…) and anything else I may need. The chest mounted camera bag allows me to quickly stow the camera to move up and down on the rope. The less is more policy is key for staying focused on the shot and the movement of the climber, not fussing around changing lenses or fiddling with various things, also the simple need of staying mobile and light.

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The Sicilian Office

 

 

 

Also posted in Climbing, Photography | Tagged , , | 6 Comments

Silvretta Tour

Day 5 on Austria’s Silvretta Tour. This is my first ever post from a hut with wireless. How much better can Euro huts get…? Wireless does it for me.
As usual we are finding ourselves in an amazing landscape, skiing great snow, eating excellent food and meeting fun people. The days are full, breakfast at 7, skiing until about 4, then drinks at the hut before a massive meal.
This is a work trip, we are shooting a clothing catalog so amongst all this ski tour life are a lot of photos.
A few more days of hut living then we’ll be home and posting photos.

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India

Incomprehensible.
For the western tourist in India, this is the word one keeps coming back to when considering India as a player in the modern world. Incomprehensible – incredibly so.
Staggering poverty, disease, filth, toxic pollution levels, and an infrastructure bordering on the absurd – in India even the new buildings seem to be ready for the status of “ruins”.
Amongst all of this is the knowledge that the same country governing this hopeless mess is the same body preparing to send a man to the moon, producing some of the world’s great thinkers and technology, and of course possessing the ability to generate nuclear energy.
The western mind witnessing all of this is left baffled. The extremes one finds in India are the source of endless confusion for how it could all possibly function, let alone coexist.
While considering all of this amongst friends, the point was made that while these facts are true of India, the same points may be made for the US. South Central LA, Appalachia, the attitude of the southern states – the US health care system – are these issues also not incomprehensible in a modern era and country of wealth?
Traveling, while often difficult and uncomfortable, seems to be necessary for understanding something about ourselves and our world. It is not always the differences we should pay attention to when studying another culture.
Perhaps more importantly we should pay attention to things we see that first disgust us, only to later realize that due to some disguises or a blind eye, are more similar to our own world than we originally realized.

— Post From My iPhone

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In India part 1

The fact that the cobra’s head was not 20 cm from my bare calf, and flicking it’s tongue at me, and I had nowhere to go to move out of the way was not what even caught my attention. What did was that I was there, amongst it all, and it felt perfectly normal: no surprises, no big deal… Just India.

And so it is, India. Undoubtedly we see more cell phones, more cars and no less people than we did five years ago. “Chaos reigns” still holds very true.

Today Paul and Jonathan arrived, the laughter has commenced. Unfortunately I am bed ridden with a throat infection and fever due to not being used to high pollution levels. My lungs miss clean mountain air and are in protest of their new environment. Tomorrow we are all off to a new and less populated area. But first… CNN Election coverage!

— Posted From My iPhone

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Live Blog while running the Alta Via 1

Thanks to the iphone, this is our first on location Blog entry.
Together with Andreas Irsara, I am running a section of the Dolimite’s most famous trail in preparation for guiding a running tour next summer.
Andreas is a guide and owner of our partner site, www.holimites.com, and will be offering a 6 day running tour through the Dolomites in 2009. I will be guiding the trip along with Andreas.
Today is perfect, all sun, fall colors and shorts – not the usual mid October weather. The strangest thing is that just last weekend people were skiing in the Dolomites. And now, summer temperatures.

More info will be on both of our websites soon.

— Post From My iPhone

Also posted in DolomiteSport, Trail Running | Tagged , | 1 Comment