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DAFOS Photo World

Why??

To catalogue my thoughts and experiences on things photographic and related topics, aiming to promote open-minded creativity and respect that hopefully contribute in some way to general peace and well-living.

Heyzel

General Posted on Tue, March 21, 2017 00:23:00

The “Heyzel” is a wonderful piece of Brussel’s nostalgia. Built for the “Word Fair” in 1958, the building complex still houses a lot of trade fairs and the like. I’ve been there often, as a visitor and to do photo jobs, and it never ceases to impress. It is part of a park that includes various tourist attractions, including the world-famous (in Belgium at least) “Atomium” (can’t sell photos of that – it’s copyrighted!). A sunny Sunday afternoon visiting the “Photo Days” trade show also gave the opportunity to re-capture some of this site’s sights…



Oh I do like to be beside the sea-side…

Pictures Posted on Sun, August 21, 2016 23:42:13

… as the old song goes. it’s true, I do. The Belgian coast is highly commercialised, comprised almost entirely of promenade and apartments overlooking the north-west facing beaches, but I find it a lovely escape from the city once in a while. Beach huts are an ubiquitous feature of many holiday resorts, and they always (go on, admit it) ask to have their photo taken. Putting them next to some other items reminiscent of a sea-side visit is also fun (well, I think so…)…



Herb garden…

Pictures Posted on Sat, July 23, 2016 17:03:10

Not posted much lately… The usual excuse – too much work. So, a holiday break gives some time to be lazy (mostly) or do other things (some of the time). Like go for walks around and see things around town.

In Brussels, the “Botanique” (Kruidtuin, or “herb garden” in Dutch) is a renowned and revered centre for cultural activities. It’s concert-hall hosts pop/rock concerts (it’s the French-speaking community’s colleague of the Dutch-speaking one, paradoxically called “Ancien Belgique”. Did I mention that such playful paradoxes are one of the reasons I love Brussels?). It also has a gallery often used for photo exhibitions. Top-class ones too! Went to see Alex Webb’s “The Suffering of Light” exhibition there recently. And of course couldn’t resist photographing the lovely building, it’s gardens and view over part of the city.

I used to work in that blue, oval-cylindrically shaped building that modestly calls itself “Covent Garden”. The pointy one in the background – third tallest building in Belgium, apparently – was once a financial temple, owned by a now defunct bank but renamed after the financial crisis in 2012 to reflect the name of the square it’s on – “Rogier Tower”. And I’ll be organising quite a big event in that hotel on the left fairly soon, too…

And of course there’s the gardens of the lovely old conservatory building itself…

Love this city, despite all its faults…



Back to life…

General Posted on Sun, May 08, 2016 14:14:15

It was nice to see Brussels coming back to life yesterday. Lovely sunny day, nice walk in the shady park at the Brussels “Iris Festival” – food truck food event and electro music outside the palace (hope Philippe didn’t have to work…).



Portraits in the style of…

Pictures Posted on Sat, May 07, 2016 16:05:00

Here are some more portraits. I get to take pictures of people in the office, for our web site and other things, and from time to time it’s nice to get into some of them and make something a little out of the ordinary. These two ladies were kind enough to allow me to show the results to the world…



Saturday, choresday

General Posted on Sat, May 07, 2016 14:36:43

What fantastic weather today! But yes, chores to do and I’m up for the ironing. Which is cool, ‘cos I can take it outside to do in the sun (which is actually hot, but you know what I mean). Strip down and get a vitamin-D recharge into the bargain.

Not that I like ironing. I don’t mind it though. Quite therapeutic, actually. Gives you time to think. Mull over those important little things that really matter in everyday life. Not the big scary issues we read about have to think about the rest of the time. The important things. Of everyday life.

Like, why is it completely impossible to stop my deodorant staining my shirts? I mean, look at ’em! And I use the very best brand, too! The adverts told me so!

What has this got to do with photography? Just think of me raising my elbows to turn the camera for that winning portrait shot (all right – don’t then). What would people think?? Honestly!

(“Camera Ninja” a photo of me by Kevin Johnson)



Hypergeek – Floating Points…

Things Digital Posted on Sat, May 07, 2016 12:25:57

Just wondering. Do image processors like Capture One or Lightroom etc… use floating point for their internal maths?

I got to asking this when I was having trouble making a nice print of this portrait. Pushing contrast and graded filters to the end stops seems to make the image quite sensitive to digital rounding errors. Printing it using the standard (8-bit) printer driver resulted in awful banding in the greys. Luckily my Canon printer comes with an “XPS” driver that supports 16-bit images, and this made a nice clean print from a 16-bit TIFF.

Would such quantisation errors maybe cause problems during processing, too? Would this explain a few weird things we see from time to time? (Like a green ring around the sun that I could NEVER get rid of? Threw that one away in disgust…). Would floating-point arithmetic help?


(Bert De Colvenaer – Executive Director of ECSEL Joint Undertaking. Image (c) me).



Love this place

Pictures Posted on Sat, May 07, 2016 12:04:00

In 2015, the Viewfinders club organised an exhibition at the “Halles Saint-Géry” / “Sint Gorikshallen” in down-town Brussels. As kind of “chief organiser” I came up with the theme – “Brussels – A Love Story”: an opportunity to show that our members – Belgians, ex-pats and immigrants alike – know something more than the average about this city we call our home.

March to April 2016, we re-ran this exhibition, with some additional images, at the “Gasthuisberg” hospital in near-by Leuven. Gasthuisberg is huge – we hear numbers of between 10.000 and 20.000 people there – making it bigger than some towns in the area! Our display there – some 58 photographs printed using the beautiful “Chromaluxe” process – seems to have been well appreciated! One of my pictures – below – was donated to the hospital when we took down the exhibition at the end of April.


I called this picture “Villo Nouveau”. It was taken while on a bike ride around Brussels using one of the rent-able city-bikes – the one in the picture. It’s parked outside the “Hotel Solvay” on the Avenue Louise / Louizalaan, which is not only a UNESCO World Heritage monument, it’s also a wonderful example of art-nouveau architecture – like the stylised iris flower that is the emblem of Brussels.

Little did we know when we designed this exhibition that our beautiful city would soon be in such need of a great deal of total loving care… I hope our exhibition – a love story in quite a pure sense – can help in some way.

Though the physical exhibition is now finished, you can still see the images on the “virtual exhibition” web-site at http://www.dafos.be/HSG2015-LEUVEN2016/index.html .



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