Another Big Week

Another big week!

Wasp hamuli



Before this week is over we will have launched the AWP Essentials Project, I will have completed my second interview with the amazing Lester Lefkowitz, and we will have done a total of FOUR live events! Yikes!


But before I talk about the Essentials  Project let me tell you what we are going to be doing for the Livestreams this week (I’m not going to tell you what I have planned for Lester - you will have to wait and see that for yourself in a couple of weeks!).


We will kick things off tomorrow with the Macro Talk Livestream where  am going to dig quite a bit deeper into the subject that has ben on a lot of minds over the last week or two - High-speed focus stacking in the field. The reason for this discussion stems from the issues that a few of you have had while trying to replicate the tremendous results that friend of the show, Claus Giloi has been getting. A few of us have been running into issues using cameras equipped with a “progressive” shutter (which is basically every camera except the global shutter equipped Sony A9-III). Why is this? What is it about the global shutter that makes this technique possible, and why are the rest of us struggling? Drop by on Tuesday and I will tell you. Here is your link… https://youtube.com/live/gluFjbJSFbo?feature=share


We can’t have this conversation without ending up  face-to-face with a bigger question - really it is THE big question. Is my macro photograph any good? So, what makes a good photograph? Says who? And why does it matter? I have a lot to say about this and I am pretty sure there are going to be a few feathers getting ruffled before I am done. But it will be fun! Here is your link to the stream… https://youtube.com/live/95J8c6obeMI?feature=share



Did you miss the AfterStack Livestream on Saturday? No problem, AfterStack #6 is now available on YouTube - https://youtu.be/PQ6BImlS-JI



This week is a Pzoom week - so Saturday morning at 10AM all of my Patreon Supporters are invited to come by for a 2-hour face-to-face back and forth about anything and everything macro-related (in other words, I have not decided on what I want to talk about yet!). Your Pzoom invitation is over on Patreon! See today’s post!


No sooner does the Pzoom wrap up and it is off to Minnesota, or South Dakota, or maybe Manitoba (I’m not positive) to catch up with Larry for the Tangent! Our very own 3D modeling and printing discussion forum for macro photographers (the only one on the planet, I am pretty sure). Everyone is invited and here is your invitation… Allan Walls is inviting you to a scheduled Zoom meeting.

Topic: The Tangent

Time: Sep 28, 2024 12:30 PM Central Time (US and Canada)
Join Zoom Meeting

https://us02web.zoom.us/j/6916802815?pwd=TS9tZi9ZL1NXeVUvOUF4eTg5YjdlZz09&omn=84478036176

Meeting ID: 691 680 2815

Passcode: 678122



********


So, with all that out of the way, I want to tell you about t the new project I am launching this week - I think it is a big deal, but I will need our help to pull it off. Here is a summary of the project. Please look it over and, when you have, if it sounds like something you would like to get behind , please consider going over to the Walls App (www.walls-app.com) and leaving a message for Susan. If there is a particular topic that you would like to focus on, be sure to mention that as well. We will get back to everyone who responds and let you know all the details!

Galloping weevil


AWP MacroEssentials Project

Purpose

The AWP MacroEssentials Project is a viewer-centric initiative developed in response to requests from numerous viewers of the Allan Walls Photography YouTube channel for a practical, accessible, curated content guide that will help newcomers to the channel find and enjoy the content that most accurately meets their individual needs. In a nutshell, the end product will consist of a limited series of short videos that introduce the viewer to a specific category of content in a linear and progressive format that can form the basis for more advanced study or exploration. The format will be that of a video playlist consisting of, in the initial set, a dozen short videos in which Allan will introduce the viewer to a specially curated playlist of video content, including both complete videos and sections of larger videos or livestream presentations, addressing a specific topic of interest to macro photographers. In each introductory video Allan will personally and briefly summarize the key points made in the playlist videos.

People

Allan has recorded more than 800 hours of video content, most as standard YouTube videos, but also including 250 hours of Livestream recordings. Given his steady and unrelenting production schedule, it is perhaps unsurprising that he does not have the time to review all of this material by himself. It is also reasonable to surmise that he is not the best person to objectively review this content in search of the best material. But you are! To come up with the best possible selection of content that will be serve the purpose outlined above, Allan has assembled a team of volunteers who are familiar with his back catalog and motivated to be part of a project designed to serve the larger community of up and coming macro photography enthusiasts. To this end, Allan has asked two very special people, both long term supporters of the channel, to oversee the project. He is proud to introduce Susan Seaford and Amy Ferman as Co-Directors of this important project. Susan and Amy are assembling a team of volunteers, whose names will be released when the selection is complete.

Process

When the Volunteer list has been finalized, the Directors will assign to each volunteer a carefully selected area of focus. In the context of this project, an area of focus will consist of those core materials considered essential to mastery of a specific discipline within macro photography. One such area of focus might be “Focus Stacking”, and the Volunteer(s) assigned to this topic would seek out the best content from the AWP back catalog that addresses this area. The Volunteer(s) working on this area of focus would identify and rank the content blocks that they consider to be most important for a viewer trying to develop skills in that area. The Volunteer(s) may select entire videos or selections from within a larger piece of content, and may even include written content published on the AWP website or the AWP Patreon Page. The Volunteer(s), with input and guidance from the Directors, would also rank the content/content segments in a recommended viewing order. Each area of focus may contain as many content blocks as the Volunteer(s) and Director feel is appropriate, while avoiding unhelpful repetition or redundancy. The Volunteer(s) will be under no time constraints, their results being complete when they so state.

Product

The final product of this project will consist of a YouTube Playlist titled - AWP Macro Essentials (or something similar) and it will be an “on-ramp” for anyone looking to jumpstart their learning experience in macro photography. The playlist will be made up of around a dozen short videos, each addressing a key topic in macro photography. For example, the first video might be titled “AWP Macro Essentials #1 - Basic Macro Equipment” and it will be the first video in a new playlist titled “Basic Macro Equipment”. In each video Allan will briefly introduce the overall topic then talk (again, briefly) about the key points that will be covered in each of the linked videos in the playlist. The links to the videos (as well as links to other content we think is important, like articles, checklists, diagrams, or tables from Allan’s website) will be embedded in the video and listed in the program description. This way, the viewers can jump from content block to content block to find exactly what they need. In some cases the links will direct the viewer to an entire video, while others will direct them to a section of a video or livestream or some other kind of content. At least for now, these links will only be to Allan’s own content, though in the future we may add links to other materials by other teachers. This is also going to be an ongoing project with new videos being added to playlists as other, older ones are removed. Allan will continue to draw on the experience of you, the audience, to determine when a video, or section of a video, should be removed or added to a playlist. Allan will not curate these playlists without input from you - that would defeat the point of the project!

Next Step

If you would like to participate in this important project please visit the Walls App by going to www.walls-app.com and messaging Susan Seaford. Tell Susan you would like to be part of this project and be sure to tell her if there is a particular area you would like to concentrate upon. Ideally, we would have 2-3 Volunteers for each of the selected topics. The actual topics will be finalized when we see how many Volunteers step up. The Directors will make the assignments and finalize the list of topics, distributing a final directory as the project begins. Please direct any questions or suggestions to Susan or Amy, through the Walls App. Allan will give periodic updates throughout the course of the Project.

THANK YOU!!!

One Cup of Coffee...

… can totally ruin your week, if it lands in just the wrong place. More about this later.

I hope each and every one of you had a delightful weekend. It was lovely in central Illinois, but hopefully it was not the last lovely weekend of the year. Picnic on the 7th of September! I was very busy, as usual, but did take an hour  or two to go and explore the local botanical gardens, the Luthy Gardens, named most likely for a famous Peorian named “Gardens”. It was not the most expansive garden that I have spent time it, but it is beautifully kept and the layout has been planned with great care. I spoke briefly with the groundskeeper, while she was ejecting me from the premises, as it happened - but that was because it was quitting time and   yours truly was holding up the patient employee’s departure.

It was a short visit and flew by fast, and as I being escorted off city property, I was reminded of the cardinal lesson that I teach all my field macro students - you cannot do your best work without slowing down - slowing way down. Running to get to the park, arriving shortly before closing, and trying to see everything in the time I had there, these all conspired with the dozen things I had on my mind to make slowing down virtually impossible. And unfortunately, my pictures suffered as a result. Why is that, and what does a “distracted” photograph look like? Well I would show you, but that is the whole point. When I become rushed and distracted I don’t see the shots, so I can’t capture them. Simple as that.


This is not something I am conscious of most of the time, it is something I become aware of as I look through my shots from the day. Interestingly, there are usually more of them than there would have been from a successful trip. They also lack imagination. They are perfectly acceptable from a technical standpoint (or some of them are!), but they tend to be clinical, ordinary, and unimaginative. It is not unusual for me to see the shot I should have taken, when it is too late to do anything about it.



If you are new to closeup photography in the field you may be wondering what the take-home message is from this observation - should I have stayed home and found something constructive to do? Gone somewhere else to take my pictures? No - I did exactly what I needed to do - I went to the place I wanted to visit and did the best I could with the tools I had on hand. Yes - it would almost certainly have been a more fruitful trip if I could have slowly myself down, or planned to go earlier in the day, but that is not the point I want to make. Macro photography is not about the pictures. Good pictures are a welcome bonus but they are not the prize . Getting out of the house for little while on a stunning Sunday afternoon, that is the prize. This is important, because only when I am truly engaged with the macro photography process do my overdue projects, unpaid bills, and 15,000 unread emails begin to fade into the background hum of the city outside the fences of the gardens.  And as these matters are temporarily set aside, space opens up in the parts of my mind that have the capacity to see and appreciate beauty. When the everyday world around me recedes far enough to seem no longer relevant, when I am moving slowly and actively soaking up all that the day has to offer, when the last thing on my mind is getting a good photograph, that is when I can see the shots. They come to me, I don’t go to them. I just have to be ready to see them and get out of my own way while I take the picture.

I have heard people refer to this as a “state of flow”, which sounds reasonable enough. I think of to as a kind of meditation, but don’t know if this is accurate - I certainly lack the discipline to  sit in silence to contemplate my breath for more than 30 seconds. But I can be out aimlessly strolling through nature, with no concept of time, for an entire day. It there is something magical in this weird hobby of ours, it is here, in the process that it is to be found. And I hope that you do.


And what does that have to do with this week’s livestreams? Well, absolutely nothing, as it happens - it was just on my mind and I wanted to tell you about it.

So, what am I going to be talking about this week? As of midnight last night I was planning on talking to you about the most recent redesign of my macro platform, a platform that I am going to be building with you over the coming weeks. I had already done quite a lot of preparation and was looking forward to a lively conversation with lots of questions and helpful feedback, but, as things do, over the course of just a few hours all that changed. Isn’t it strange the way things change with absolutely no regard for our carefully made plans? Two things happened in quick succession and one of them needs to talked about. The first thing was that I got a call from my friend and fellow macro photographer, Lester “just call me Lester” Lefkowitz. Lester was calling to tell me his books were back in stock after a fresh print run and he was ready to meet with me for his interview. A quick look at the schedule and  it was all arranged. I will be be interviewing my second iconic macro photographer of the month on Tuesday, as in, this Tuesday, or today for some readers.


In this first interview I am going to find out a little bit about this remarkable and charming young man’s long and storied career as a professional photographer. I already know some of it, but there is much more. I think he has photographed stuff for every major brand on planet Earth, at one time or another - and just wait until you see the pictures! We will then work out through the first volume of his book and talk about what we find. We have a second interview planed for the fall - for volume 2. So, that was welcome distraction number one, the one that shouldn’t cause any change in my programming this week. Oh, and by the way, I will not be releasing the final interview until a little later - this at the perfectly reasonable request of Mr Lefkowitz. But, if you have been patiently waiting for his fantastic books to be available once more, your wait is over. If you are a resident of the US you may secure your copy of either or both volumes directly from the  author, just by dropping by this website (https://www.macrophotographer.net) and giving him some of your money. In exchange, Lester will see to it that the requested volumes are launched in your general direction. If on the other hand, you find yourself domiciled in some far flung collective lwith a name like Saint-Hippolytte-du-Forte,  Castiglioni della Pescala, Blaenau Ffestiniog, or Bad Neustadt an der Saale then you have a different set of instructions You must get your copy of the latest reprint by going to the eBay store following this link - https://www.ebay.com/itm/375430264703, but do not be alarmed if the site has not yet updated the book’s status, just try back a little later.

No sooner will I be finished talking to Lester and it will be time to fire up “Sweet Young Thang” in preparation for Livestream numero uno, Macro Talk. Now the plan was that I would use the entire program to talk about the new macro platform that is being planned, and I will spend a good chunk of our time talking about this very, but this is where the second unplanned event of Monday intervenes. In a moment of inattention, sitting at my desk, suddenly and without provocation, some combination of upper extremity neurons fired in a manner and sequence that neither the neurons, nor their owner, could claim any experience of. The result was therefore a poorly coordinated and completely unexpected flailing of the left arm at the shoulder. Troubling enough in isolation, this event coincided with a perfectly mundane occurrence taking place a little more than two feet away. There could be found the blameless left hand, authoritatively grasping a large thermally insulated vessel filled wit a mixture of freshly brewed coffee, and a sugary, cream-like concoction designed to make the coffee both delicious and extremely sticky, a fact that will soon assume great importance in this narrative.


If you don’t have at least two boxes of this stuff ready to go, do not drink coffee in the same room as you laptop. And a can of compressed air.



The hand, unprepared for the sudden departure from routine, swung laterally, totally at the mercy of the shoulder muscles. The coffee and the vessel holding it did not, and instead responded obediently to the insistent downward tug of gravity. The only thing that mercifully prevented the cup and beverage from slamming into the painted concrete floor and spilling everywhere was my perfectly positioned MacBook Pro, M1 Max computer, the most expensive piece of computing equipment I have ever owned, that  in a blizzard of irony had been completely paid for and ended its period of warrantee coverage on the same day, one week prior. And now it was soaked over every inch of it’s case ad screen with some 16 ounces of hot, sweet breakfast beverage.

LED Art












In the minutes and hours that followed, my years* of training on the rapid response “Aisle Cleanup Unit” of the local Walmart Super Center at which I was briefly employed kicked in to pull off one of the most remarkable saves in the history of computing**. I am going to take a few minutes to explain and demonstrate the methods I deployed that resulted in a fully functional and spotlessly clean Mac laptop. If you have a laptop and drink beverages anywhere near it, you need to pay attention during this part of the stream. It could pull your fat out of the fire, like it did mine. With that done I will allow a few minutes for the applause to  drop to a steady thunderous roar before forging ahead with the evening’s program.

  • It was three days. Ed. ** Demonstrably untrue. Ed.



Which is, of course,  introducing you to the  new macro platform concept that I have been working on for some time. This will also give me an opportunity to introduce a new a new and important partner to the Allan Walls Photography channel. The build I am going to be showing and describing to you is an advanced, multifunction platform capable of use in either the vertical or horizontal orientations, at low to high magnification, and using any combination of standard extreme macro optics.  Probably the most noticeable difference in the rig will be the quality of the primary structural material I will be using. I have decided to go with the highest quality materials  and hardware that I could afford something solid and durable, that can survive a sustained and punishing workload and even survive a long distance move intact. You may not have heard of this company before, but they are hugely popular with  the DIY community, recognized pros in the CNC world and is one of the most progressive groups in the field. They encourage innovation and a big part of their business is encouraging their customers to showcase the cool things that they create with the materials they source from Open Builds. You will be hearing a lot about them in the coming months. Their selection of aluminum extrusion is second to none. It is a US based company with headquarters in Florida.


Only after selecting this firm for my materials, hardware and motion components I submitted an application to their affiliate program The channel ’s application was approved and we are known an affiliate  marketing relationship with Open BuildsLike with my other affiliate partnerships, this means that if you use one of my Open Builds links to get to the store and complete a purchase of qualifying products, Open Builds will pay me a small commission for the referral. As I hope you know I am never going to recommend a product with which I do not have first hand experience. When I do recommend a product it is because it is working for me and I think it could work for you too. Sometimes I make a qualified recommendation if, for example, it might be perfect for one group of photographers, but a poor choice for another. In a case like that I will make myself perfectly clear. I could have chosen any company I wanted from a lot of aluminum vendors doing business today, and I chose this company for their selection, their service, and their philosophy. I like them and I think you will too.

Say you wanted to get a ten-pack of their excellent aluminum extrusion - it is fantastic, by the way.

All you would need to do is use my link to get to the store and they will take care of everything else. This is what the link would look like if you want to give it a try. https://openbuildspartstore.com/v-slot-linear-rail-10-pack/?ref=fdnefjhr

And before I forget - here is your link to the first livestream…

https://youtube.com/live/jlk8CSX74So?feature=share

All good projects start with a solid plan and this is no different. I have a plan and on Tuesday I will be showing you what I am planning for my new studio. In the process I will walk you through every key decision and explain why I have decided to do what I am doing. From materials to the placement of the platform, the construction methods, every decision will be covered.

Then on Thursday we will talk about all the ways our plans can go wrong and I will give you some useful tips on how to avoid disasters.

And you can find the livestream by following g this link - https://youtube.com/live/Xo8XvMHf0Oc?feature=share


We have another big day on Saturday with what promises to be a very interesting discussion in the AfterStack post-processing round-table. This week we are going to talk a little about the TK Panel, a Photoshop editing add-on developed by Tony Kuyper and very popular among more advanced Photoshop users.

There is a chance that we will have a visitor dropping by, though I have no had confirmation of that. We have invited renowned editor Dave Kelly to drop by ad tell us a little about the program that he teaches in his weekly YouTube tutorial videos. Whether Dave makes it or not, we will have plenty of first hand TK expertise on the panel ready to answer your questions and demonstrate the panel in use. Your invitation is below.

Skipper suspended



There is ,of course, no Pzoom this week, but I will be back with another, one week from Saturday.



And a quick reminder 0 the competition for this month is soon ending - get you pictures in as soon as you can! The theme is “My Tiny Universe” - making a scene or landscape out of tiny, macro-sized materials. Compositing is not allowed in this contest for August!.


That’s it - it is late and I am exhausted. Got to be sharp for sparring with Lester early tomorrow!

Have a great week

The happy galloping weevil



















Here is your link to the AfterStack  workshop - it is free and you are invited!



















Allan Walls is inviting you to a scheduled Zoom meeting.



















Topic: AfterStack with Allan & Bud

Time: Aug 24, 2024 10:00 AM Central Time (US and Canada)



















Join Zoom Meeting

https://us02web.zoom.us/j/6916802815?pwd=TS9tZi9ZL1NXeVUvOUF4eTg5YjdlZz09&omn=86180928846



















Meeting ID: 691 680 2815

Passcode: 678122