

Ok, I’m a bit late to the game with this one but I’ve only come across these colour pictures of Ireland taken in 1913. Now we can see how miserable we all looked…in colour!
The stills are part of a collection of autochrome pictures taken worldwide at the time. I find them fascinating, partially because as a child I thought the world was literally black and white up until around the fifties (yeah yeah yeah, look the logistics of the presumed changeover to colour didn’t weigh heavy on my mind at the time), but also because true colour pictures from that part of the century are rare. We are just so used to seeing the past in black and white.
more…
Here’s a a short clip of some time-lapse photography I took in Kilkenny City last night. While time-lapses are fun to watch, they usually consist of life (humans, nature, engineering) sped up to show slow progress over a quick period.
However, instead of a time-lapse showing people scurrying about the place, I wanted to show the earth itself rotating, because when everyone is done moving for the day and stationary at home in bed, the world continues to spin.
Digital cameras make it easier to do these slow-shutter lapses, so I pointed my camera at the clock tower of the Kilkenny Design Centre and then directly across the road to the entrance gate of the castle itself. Photography like this is slow, it can take an hour to get enough pictures to make 5 seconds of video and that’s why the clip is so short.
To break it down, depending on the time-lapse picture you’re capturing, it can take up to 30 seconds to get one picture (you leave the shutter open for 30 seconds to let enough light in to capture the stars). In turn, it takes 25-30 pictures to make 1 second of video.
I was lucky last night. The redesign of the area outside Kilkenny Castle means the harsh orange street lights that usually populate urban areas, and drown out our view of the stars, have been removed in favour of more subtle lighting. While that helped, the subtle lighting then shut off shortly after midnight. Whether that was for energy saving reasons (which I applaud) or whether they went on the blink (which wouldn’t surprise me!) the area was left covered by moonlight which was unusual but perfect!
http://www.vimeo.com/11271906
I like this picture of a French customs officer playing with his sniffer dog in a deserted Charles-De-Gualle airport as the ash from the Icelandic volcano, Eyjafjallajökull-göes-bööm, continues to ground flights across northern Europe.
Meanwhile, staying with northern Europe and, of course, sniffer dogs, this four legged explosives expert joined his handler recently as they took part in a NATO exercise in Norway.
Man, cats seem really useless now…
I bet you’ve been on a plane, flying over some amazing landscape, when you whipped out your cameraphone or digital camera and snapped a few shots of the amazing sight. And I bet you felt like a champ because you have this stunning, once in a lifetime, photo.
Well International Space Station resident Soichi Noguchi has spoiled it all for us. With the recent installation of a viewing deck on the station, and Noguchi signing up for a Twitter account, he’s been tweeting beautiful pictures of the earth everyday that outdo any of our cramped aeroplane efforts. Which kind of ruins the only good thing about flying to Europe with Ryanair.
There’s no pictures yet of Ireland, but next to his picture of London he says “first time that I saw the whole city without any cloud”, which kinda rules out any pictures of the auld sod I think.
Hold your mouse over the picture for details of that picture. Oh and by what I can tell from the exif data on his pictures, he’s using a Nikon D2Xs with a massive 800mm lens…gravity is for losers you know.

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