OM-4T

Haters Gonna Hate

Submitted by K Norton on Fri, 01/08/2021 - 15:02

I shoot Olympus
Got nothing in my brains
That's what people say, mm, mm
That's what people say, mm, mm

Shake it off, I shake it off
I, I, I shake it off, I shake it off
I, I, I shake it off, I shake it off
I, I, I shake it off, I shake it off (Whoo-hoo-hoo)

(Haters gonna hate, Taylor Swift - modified)

Olympus OM-4T with 35-80/2.8 zoom, MD2, and T45 flash. Photographed with the Olympus E-1 and 14-54 lens. Lit with LED panels.

OM-4T T45 35-80

Stonewall

Submitted by K Norton on Tue, 04/21/2020 - 13:16

Stonewall. An old mining building south of St. Elmo, Colorado, along the 4wd road to Hancock Lake. Olympus OM-4T with OM Lenses 24/2.8 and 50/3.5. Fujichrome Velvia. From 2009.

Images are scanned using the Nikon Coolscan V-ED and Vuescan. Processed in Lightroom.

Stonewall1

 

Stonewall2

 

Stonewall3

 

Stonewall4

 

Stonewall5

Driftwood and Edge of Forest

Driftwood and Edge of Forest. Lake Superior shoreline. Porcupine Mountains State Park, Michigan. Olympus OM-4T with Kodak T400 CN film. Zuiko 35/shift lens. Yellow filter.

Driftwood

 

K Norton Sun, 04/01/2018 - 22:13

Red Branch and Road - Two Views, Two Edits

Submitted by K Norton on Wed, 02/03/2016 - 22:28

These two photos were taken up near Copper Harbor, Michigan. I'm showing them here with an explanation.

View1

 

View2

1. First of all, these are taken with 35mm film. I used the legendary OM-4T camera loaded with Fujichrome Velvia, ISO 50 film. This gives an illustration as to a slightly different look/feel to the images that a Full-Frame digital camera may give over a crop sensor camera.

 

2. Secondly, two lenses were used. In the wide shot, it was taken with the Zuiko 35-80mm F2.8 zoom at a wider, if not the widest setting. This specific lens is in the category of "best of" that any particular brand will have produced. The vertical picture was taken with the Zuiko 300mm F4.5 lens.

 

3. The lighting changed between the two pictures. The sun was coming in and out of the clouds (the only sun we saw that entire week) and the scene changed dramatically from one picture to the next. This is an important point because in changing light, taking pictures across the various lighting can produce different results.

 

4. Editing. I did interpret the images differently. The editing for both images does include dodging and burning and different levels of adjustment in Lightroom. Had I intended for both images to be displayed together, I would have processed them to match. But each image was edited "stand-alone" with no regard for the other.

 

5. Believe it or not, the red branch at the top is the same in both pictures. The color is different because of the lighting and how it was processed.

 

6. Back to the second point, I changed perspective and shooting location. I liked the branch and wanted to work with it and moved about 200 feet between pictures.

 

7. The telephoto picture required getting dirty. The road curved, so this picture was taken from within the woods. I had to avoid patches of poison ivy and I needed to move branches out of my way. Many landscape photographers carry thread with them, but I used spare tripods to lean against branches to get them out of the line of sight.

 

8. Time. It took time to work this scene. We spent around a half-hour at this location, shooting a number of pictures. I started out wide and kept going to a longer and longer focal length. I finally ended with the 300mm lens and a long ways from where I started. In a rush, I work the scene getting my standard angles and views, but with time, I can explore the other options and expand beyond just the obvious.

Presque Isle River - Waterfalls

scan0002

Presque Isle River. Porcupine Mountains State Park, Michigan. Olympus OM-4T, Zuiko 35-80/2.8 zoom, Fujichrome Velvia 50.

K Norton Mon, 01/25/2016 - 21:11

An Olympus OM System Fireside Chat

Submitted by K Norton on Thu, 01/21/2016 - 18:49

An Olympus OM System "Fireside Chat". From the left, an OM-4T (An OM-4T is the USA version of the OM-4Ti) with Zuiko 28mm F2 lens and Motordrive 2. An OM-3Ti with Zuiko 100mm F2 lens. And an OM-4T with 50mm F1.4 lens and Motordrive 2.

Photograph was lit with a single Olympus T45 flash with Flashbender. Camera used is the Olympus E-3 with OM Zuiko 35-80 F2.8 zoom at 85mm and F2.8.

Fireside Chat

Tags

A Craftsman And His Tools

Submitted by K Norton on Mon, 01/11/2016 - 18:58

Photo of cameras

We are not supposed to get emotionally attached to a piece of equipment. "Cameras are tools" we are told. Personally, I think that's nonsense. To a craftsman, a tool is a very personal thing. Each one is selected for very precise reasons. If you are just making money with cameras, yes, they are just tools. If you are a craftsman, there is a joy in what you are doing and making money is secondary. The reward for what you do isn't money, it's the personal satisfaction of doing something that brings you personal joy.

Quincy Mining Company Stamp Mill - Hancock, MI

Submitted by K Norton on Tue, 12/22/2015 - 16:08
Stamp Mill
Stamp Mill

The Quincy Mining Company Stamp Mill is located along the Portage Canal in Hancock, Michigan. This photograph was taken from across the Canal on the Houghton side. Camera used is an Olympus OM-4T. Lens not recorded, but most likely is the Zuiko 50mm F1.4 lens. Image scanned from the Ilford Delta 400 negative (processed in Ilfotec DD-X) in the Nikon Coolscan V-ED and edited in Lightroom. The image is heavily cropped (about 50% of original full frame image).