Archives for August 2012

Photo Projects – How to Capture Urban Landscapes

With the onset of Photo Heart Fridays meme, one of the recurring new themes for this blog is to break out of my comfort zone in my photographs.

I always been quite comfortable with capturing portrait candid shots of mainly of K and family and have never been a fan of urban landscapes.

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Until this weekend.

We were at Marina vicinity on Sunday and I took this opportunity being out and about to step out my comfort zone to explore a different subject area and think a little differently about what I take.

This is what I learnt from my photo walk :

 

1. Treat your camera like a film camera

How many memory cards are enough when you are out in a new place with your kids? One and only one.

It gets really easy to shoot sloppily when you have digital cameras. I used to be snap-happy and take more photos than I need, then take a long time to go through the photos after I upload them on my computer.

Now, I imagine that I am holding a film camera and every shot that I take counts. It also helps me to think a little more about each photo before I capture it. I look through the lens, press the camera trigger, hold my breath for a couple of seconds and cross my fingers that I get a good shot.

A 8GB memory card is more than enough for any photo walk as the magic number 3 works for me. I only take 3 shots of the same subject in different angles and I get really merciless to delete the photos when I preview them on the live screen.

 

2. Foreground interest

This method gives the photo a sense of distance and perspective. The photo will look a little more three-dimensional, even thought they are only 2D.

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One of the ways to maximize the foreground is to go close and low to the ground to take the photo. I was able to capture alot more in these photos, as I was using my wide angle lens and was almost lying face down on the ground to take the next photo.

For compact cameras, go with the widest angle (which means no zoom!). Then position your camera closest to the ground, capture the scene in your LCD Live View and snap!

This focus on the foreground helps to lead the photo from the viewer’s eye, which will naturally travel down from the foreground to the background of the scene, like in this photo,

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The yellow and white lines led you to the palm trees, then blue skies and the line of clouds in the background, isn’t it?

This then brings me to the 3rd point.

 

3. Look to the sky

Clear blue skies and white cottony-looking clouds do help to improve photos, especially when the buildings or structures landscape in the background in your landscape don’t look interesting.

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You can further enhance the shapes in a dull photograph by using this option in Photoscape (it’s a free software to download if you are on Windows) known as ‘Cross Process’ to highlight the contrast and shadows. Instagram is not the only app available with great filters 😉

Makes a difference doesn’t it?

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Or if you are in a somber mood and want your photos to portray your moody artistic side, going mono with black and white always works.

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4. Spot the details

I like going close to stuff, it doesn’t have to be macro close (that’s another project altogether).  I snapped this photo of the water lily in a pond right outside the Art Science Museum at MBS, got close enough to focus only on the flowers and the lily pads and left out the people sitting around the pond from the photo.

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These days, you don’t need a DSLR to capture photos like that. If you are planning to get a new point and shoot camera soon, consider getting the Canon Powershot series, Olympus, Fuji or Panasonic Lumix cameras which have manual and macro functions. See this list of top 10 compact cameras with manual controls).

 

5. Catch the Golden Hour

There are two special times in the day known as the ‘Golden Hour’. It is the first hour before sunrise and sunset.

The golden hour before sunset in Singapore starts at 6.30pm on a typical day with fine weather. This is the time when the reds or the golds from the setting sun sometimes get reflected against the white of the clouds. No two evenings are the same.

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This other photo was taken 10 minutes before twilight. Seeing the last sliver of the light from setting sun in the horizon, creating mere silhouettes of the buildings, made hanging out at the maddening crowds at MBS, till the ‘Golden Hour’ alot more worthwhile.

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I hope by sharing this learning experience with my first photo project of capturing urban landscapes, it will motivate you to pick up your cameras to capture visually intriguing scenes of your urban landscapes.

“The camera is an instrument that teaches people how to see without a camera.” – Dorothea Lange

 

P.S – I tend to get very experimental and intuitive in this journey of improving my photography skills. One of the best way I learn is by browsing through photography sites and photography books, and the most crucial part of this self-learning journey is by taking regular photo-walks and giving myself plenty of trial and error experiences.

What do you find most challenging when capturing photographs of urban landscapes?

 

 

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Photo *Heart* Fridays – Hold Hands and Stick Together

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I think the simplest of reminders work the best sometimes.

Chanced upon these quote – it spoke to me as I was reminded that our lives (hb and mine) first crossed when we were in Kindergarten – in Lutheran Church when we were 5 years old. I discovered that when we were dating, my MIL showed me a photograph of hb in kindergarten, the very same photograph I had from kindergarten, with the both of us seated at far ends in the same class.

When we were 5, in Kindergarten 1. The same age that K is at now.

 

All I Really Need to Know I Learned in Kindergarten

Most of what I really need
To know about how to live
And what to do and how to be
I learned in kindergarten.
Wisdom was not at the top
Of the graduate school mountain,
But there in the sandpile at school.
These are the things I learned:
Share everything.
Play fair.
Don’t hit people.
Put things back where you found them.
Clean up your own mess.
Don’t take things that aren’t yours.
Say you’re sorry when you hurt somebody.
Wash your hands before you eat.
Flush.
Warm cookies and cold milk are good for you.
Live a balanced life –
Learn some and think some
And draw and paint and sing and dance
And play and work everyday some.
Take a nap every afternoon.
When you go out into the world,
Watch out for traffic,
Hold hands and stick together.
Be aware of wonder.”

~by Robert Fulghum

 

This image holds true to my heart – ‘Hold hands and Stick together’.

(Photo of my hand in hb’s taken with a Canon 550D)



 

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A little spot of Haven in Upper Bukit Timah

When I first saw the theme that Sarah created for the latest series of blog hops. I thought that it will be really interesting to read about wat the other SMBs have to say about their spots in Singapore. It took me a while to convince myself that I could write anything mildly interesting about the area I live.

The thing is where I live isn’t just ordinary. It’s just well…boring and familiar. Maybe it’s the familiarity that makes my eyes gloss over the surface of things, thinking that I have seen these things before. 

Getting into the swing of this exercise, I realized that walking around the neighborhood helped me to dig deeper into things, challenge myself to re-discover my surroundings.

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So what I really love about this area where I live? Let me list the things…

Sights

I love having nature at my doorstep and squirrels, iguanas, strange looking birds and monkeys for neighbors. Just a stone’s throw away from my home is Dairy Farm Nature Park, Bukit Batok Nature Park, Hinhede Park and Bukit Timah Nature Reserve.

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The Bukit Timah Nature Reserve retains the only substantial area of rainforest left in Singapore and has the most diverse ecological system in the world. It is a botanical collecting ground for more than a century. An eminent conservationists has even pointed out before, that the number of tree species growing in a mere hectare of the Reserve is more than the total number of tree species in all of North America!

There are so much to see and explore in these nature parks. All you need are a set of eyes that see and not just look, and God’s wonderful creations will not cease to amaze you with their intricate little details.

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Eats

I love that there are no lack of eateries to choose from. Like many residential areas in Singapore, there are many places in the vicinity where you can find local food any time of the day.

There’s Rail Mall, where there are two 24 hour cafes serving local fare, pubs serving bar food, and a supermarket, sandwich cafe, Thai fusion food, as well as a Italian restaurant.

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And Cheong Chin Nam Road opposite Beauty World Centre,

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Where you can find Chicken Rice, Korean Food, Chinese ‘Zi Char’ or simple Malay fare at a 24 Hour Prata shop which has a really extensive menu of Malay food. My favorites at the Malay Prata shop include, the height-defying ‘Prata Tissue’ and mouth watering ‘Ayam Pemyat’.

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History

– Memories at the Old Ford Factory

I love that despite all the new developments in the area, there are still that little bit of history and nostalgia retained here.

Nestled along the junction right before Hume Avenue, is a building whose history dates back to 1941. The Ford Factory’s origins started as the first vehicle assembly plant for Ford in Southeast Asia, and more notably was used as the venue for the formal surrender of Malaya by the British to the Japanese.

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The Ford Factory was rebuilt in 2004-05, and it serves as an permanent exhibition gallery of the memories and reflection of the hardships faced by the SIngaporeans who lived through the darkest years of Singapore history during the Japanese occupation.

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Right behind the Old Ford Factory building is a quiet garden known as Syonan Garden. Where you will find an assortment of “food crops” like Tapioca, sweet potato, yam, banana, coconut, pineapple and rice, crops which were grown during the Japanese Occupation.

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Nostalgia

– The Old Railway

We used to take short hikes into Dairy Farm Nature Park, wandered off the beaten track to a little bridge where we will be able to see the KTM train passed below the bridge. I can still recall the sight of the train and sound of the train driver blasting the horn, each time he caught a glimpse of people on the bridge looking down to the passing train below.

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The old Railway ceased operations in July 2011 and only 400m of the railway tracks were retained. This is part of the Upper Bukit Timah track, next to the classic cast iron bridge on the far right of Rail Mall.

Looking to the southbound side of the tracks, all that is left of the track is a long gravel track stretching for miles ahead.

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– Beauty World Centre

Way back in the 60s, Beauty World Park was a popular shopping destination in Singapore, where there were over a hundred stalls that sold fresh produce, household items, textiles and stationery. The park experienced many incidences of fire during that time and thus most of the stall-holders were relocated to the Beauty World Centre. The former Beauty World Park site is now an open field and car park.

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There is an open air food centre on the 4th floor of Beauty World Centre where you can find yummy Satay Bee Hoon, Mutton Soup, Thai Food, Handmade noodles and Xiao Long Pau.

I can’t help but ending off this post with food again, I guess the way to most Singaporeans’ hearts have to be most definitely through their stomachs :)

So u know who to find next time if you do come around Upper Bukit Timah after your nature or nostalgia walk and need a lunch/dinner partner, I will be more than happy to join you for a good meal!

 

This post is part of the series of posts hosted by Sarah of The Playful Parents. Do check out the rest of the blog posts in this series to uncover all the little gems found in various neighborhoods of Singapore.

Loving My Spot SG edition

 

The next stop on our ‘Loving My Spot’ blog train will be Regina of MummyMoo.

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Regina documents her little family as they grow as one, charting everyday mundane events to milestones that will chart the shape of their future. She is enjoying being a wife and mother, two personae that she has never thought of becoming – in the past. She takes pride in being a working class stiff trying to be a first class Mum!

Regina shares her thoughts about parenting and personal experiences as : MummyMoo

 

 

 

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