Imsticking's Leica D-Lux 4 Blog

I post it here and it sticks.

Leaving Heartbreaker

L1140239_sfx_1024

Leaving Heartbreaker - 5.1mm at f/2, ISO 80, Shutter speed 1/1000 sec


L1140239_cfx_1024

Leaving Heartbreaker - 5.1mm at f/2, ISO 80, Shutter speed 1/1000 sec

Shot around the Notting Hill Gate area of London in the summer of 2010 with a Leica D-Lux 4. The Silver Efex Pro preset can be found at the end of this post.

Click here to download:
HeartbreakerK3X400TXPro7.sep (4 KB)

Filed under  //   Leica   London   Notting Hill   photography  

The world is a stage, but the play is badly cast.

L1130959_sfx_1024

Exit Music For Act 1 - 12.1mm at f/2.8, ISO 80, Shutter speed 1/320 sec

Indeed, it is. Some people don't perform their roles properly, there's bad chemistry and some just aren't cut out for acting at all. Some people feel so alive and thrive off the whole idea of it all, needing very little prompting. Some people don't like the stage that much, and others can't bear the attention from the audience, so much so they get stage fright, and forget their lines. Some are destined to be extras, never to utter a word, much less it be heard. One thing is for certain. The play continues. No matter how much we disagree with the plot, or the role we are playing, the show goes on. 

L1130943_sfx_1024

Places Everyone - 9.3mm at f2.4, ISO 80, Shutter speed 1/1600 sec

"Nothing happens until you push". The words of someone I don't know very well, but words that left me thinking nonetheless. They fit in well with something I've started asking myself lately every time I feel like bailing out of doing something. I ask myself simply "What am I going to do today? Am I going to live, or am I going to die?". Needless to say it's not a difficult question to answer. Works every time. I was thinking about how unbelievably dedicated Lance Armstrong is when I asked myself that question for the first time (about a week ago). I've been reading Dan Coyle's "Lance Armstrong: Tour De Force". Dedication, motivation, persistence, positivity. Lance is constantly changing his life and evolving. From tweaking his cycling equipment, which back in 2004 he would refer to as "The shit that will kill them" (them being his rivals – the irony of it coming from a cancer survivor), to his personal relationships and strong bonds with fellow riders. 

L1140012_sfx_1024

Don't Lose Your Head - 12.8mm at f/2.8, ISO 80, Shutter speed 1/500 sec

I truly believe that to feel as though you have achieved something you consider to be great, you can not do it without at least some suffering or discomfort. Otherwise, you're just not trying hard enough, in my view anyway. Nothing happens until you push. Good or bad. But it's important to keep pushing. Ad-lib, improvise and experiment with your fellow actors. Yeah, not that kind of experimentation. I sent a tweet to Johan Bruyneel this week after reading an interview he gave in Cycling Plus magazine. Johan was the Directeur Sportif behind most of Lance's 7 Tour de France victories. What I'm saying is I'm  taking Gandhi's approach, with a seemingly selfish twist. Be the change you want to see in yourself. It'll propagate, I know it will.

L1140196_sfx_1024

The Sequel - 12.8mm at f/2.8, ISO 80, Shutter speed 1/2000 sec

I suppose I should talk about the photographs! They were all taken in Notting Hill in the summer of 2010, with my Leica D-Lux 4. The Silver Efex Pro presets are below, and if you want, have a look at some more of my photos taken around Notting Hill

Click here to download:
NottingHillTriofordD100Pro.sep (4 KB)

Click here to download:
NottingWallfordD100Pro.sep (4 KB)

Click here to download:
BrollyCoupleD100Pro.sep (4 KB)

Click here to download:
NottingHutXP2Super400.sep (4 KB)

Filed under  //   Leica   London   Notting Hill   photography  

Leica Notting Hill Film Location

L1140094_1_sfx_1024

RAW conversion with Silver Efex Pro - f/2 at 5.1mm, ISO 80, Shutter speed 1/800 sec  

I went to Notting Hill two weekends ago to shoot a number of locations from the movie Notting Hill. The last time I'd been to Notting Hill must have been a good 10 years ago. Needless to say I don't remember which shops were where, so it very much felt like I was discovering it for the first time. 

L1140094

Leica D-Lux 4 JPEG - f/2 at 5.1mm, ISO 80, Shutter speed 1/800 sec

I've always been just slightly jealous of the quality of the black and white JPEGs the Leica D-Lux 4 produces along with the RAW files that I save with every shot. I thought that for once, I would try to replicate the black and white JPEG's by processing the RAW files with Capture One 5 PRO and Silver Efex Pro. The first image of each pair is my version processed from the RAW file, and the second, the actual JPEG the Leica D-Lux 4 produced. You'll see that they are in fact different. My version's are a little bit more contrasty and I prefer the darks a little darker.

The location in this first photograph is from one of the earliest scenes in the movie where William Thacker (Hugh Grant) accidentally bumps into Anna Scott (Julia Roberts) with is orange juice on the corner of the sidewalk.  And as you can see that boarded up corner shop is now a Coffee Republic. 

The second photograph is of the rather famous front door to William's flat. The door is no longer blue. It's actually black, and it made my day when, while looking for decent angles for a good shot, the door opened and out came some guy on the phone! I felt like the two of us were re in-acting the paparazzi scene that occurred the morning after. One big difference. I would never ever become a pap. It think it's despicable stalking people as they try to live their personal lives. I actually had to hold my breath as this guy crossed the street and walked directly towards me. I thought, "Oh God". He got about 2 meters from me, turn towards the flat, bobbed his head from side to side, and smiled at me as he continued on his way. Phew! 

L1140073_1_sfx_1024
RAW conversion with Silver Efex Pro - f/4 at 9.3mm, ISO 80, Shutter speed 1/400 sec 

L1140073

Leica D-Lux 4 JPEG - f/4 at 9.3mm, ISO 80, Shutter speed 1/400 sec

 I've included the Silver Efex Pro presets below for both of the processed RAW versions I created. If you're curious, I've processed them with Ilford PAN F Plus 50 film.   

If you'd like to go on a DIY tour of the movie's film locations, the resource I used and the best I found while doing some hunting on the web was on the site movie-locations.com. I did take photographs of four other locations in and around Notting Hill and my post those soon too. The only reason I hesitate is because they aren't the most remarkable subjects to photograph, hence not the most remarkable photographs. I know, these aren't either.

I am still using Exif Everywhere for Mac. It lives in my Dock and I just drag and drop an image onto it to get the EXIF info. It's a brilliant little application. 

Click here to download:
NottingHillRepBWF+50.sep (3 KB)

Click here to download:
ThackerPANF+50BW.sep (3 KB)

Filed under  //   Film   Leica   London   Notting Hill   monochrome   photography