Photog stuff

Photography, travels and the rants that comes with them.

I migrated the old posts here to a new location dedicated to my photography work updates, but I'll keep using this one for my random thoughts on photography and travel.

    Monday morning commute

    In the latest video of Framelines (https://youtu.be/Sd41x2vp0fM), Josh Edgoose goes on a small tangent from the main topic: lenses should use the full-frame equivalent focal length, not the real focal length.

    Why should the full-frame equivalent be the base reference? I understand the conventions and all that, but feels weird to put a focal that’s not the actual focal length, and, more important, it gives the sense that full-frame somehow is the “right one”, and the others orbit around it, which for me isn’t the case (all sensor sizes have their place, from tiny smartphone sensors to large format).

    If it’s to get an universal measurement, then I’d rather jump head first to thinking in lenses in terms of field of view angle, and not focal length, something I’d loved lens makers displayed more prominently.

    …aaaaaand one more trip around the sun…

    Selfie

    Not leaving home today!

    Rain drops running in a window

    Manhã pelas ruas de Almada, atrás de algumas das fotos da exposição organizada pela Narrativa a comemorar os 50 anos de elevação à cidade.

    50-anos-50-retratos2.odoo.com/sobre

    E hoje houve mais um pouco de Rebecca Gaal, depois do Exodus Aveiro Fest no fim de semana hoje foi na Narrativa.

    Kinda bummed, but not really surprised, that Instagram is phasing out Guides. It was a neat and different way to showcase work, that sadly never took off. Maybe because the Force is strong in the Scroll of Doom.

    On fear and travel.

    It’s funny how often the questions towards a traveler are kind of projection of the doubts and fears of a non traveler: “Where you scared?”, “Was it dangerous?”, “Don’t you think you can have an accident?”, “What if?”, etc.

    This is neither good or bad, or it might be, depending on who’s asking. But there are much interesting answers when the question is realigned to things that were actually found, more than the things that could have happened.

    The kickoff message of this year’s #exodusaveirofest. It’s going to be a good weekend!

    Travel to a far away place is cool and all that, but these photos won’t cull themselves…

    Returning home also means going back to one of my favorite walkaround setups, and one that I rarely travel with: X-E3 + 27mm

    Returning home also means returning to #commute photos

    I’m becoming a grumpy old person, and still kind of getting back to the everyday routine after returning from Nepal, so take this with a huge pinch of salt. But I’m getting so tired of most of the travel content being created nowadays, we somehow lost the joy of curiosity and discovery.

    When did the travel stuff switched from the displaying the best of a place to “hey, look what I am doing now!”?

    Why do most of the travel content creators now put themselves between the reader and the place they’re at?

    Why do so many of them kind of play around with the readers lack of knowledge of that place to not be entirely honest about it, so it conveys the narrative they’re building?

    I think I know the answers to all these questions, I guess this evolution to a more lifestyle driven way to do things never really caught on me. But again, I’m just a grumpy old guy…

    This is a scaffold of the ongoing repairs from the damages of 2015 earthquake… Arriving home from Nepal, with the news that another one has struck, is both heartbreaking and a brutal reminder of how that beautiful country is vulnerable to nature…

    A kinda long stopover in Dubai starts now…

    Amazing the “addition” of nepalis for videocalls, now I understand why they have really big data plans!

    Don’t like to give gear lessons to anyone, each is free to choose what works for them, but having a large photographer group in the narrow cities of Bhaktapur, each with bulky, full frame, vertical grip DLSRs along huge telephoto lenses and big backpacks might be a bit too much.

    Time to say goodbye to this view and move closer to Kathmandu!

    View of the Nepali mountains from hotel

    Não querendo generalizar, mas se há turista que literalmente se borrifa no resto são grupos de franceses, seja para locais ou outros turistas. Parece que estão numa pequena bolha francesa…

    The bliss of the first good hot shower in a week, one with a really good flow of warm water running on your back, is something you can’t really explain. Specially when you weren’t counting on it for today… 😊😊

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