Sunday, May 31, 2009

Testing the Nikkor 200-400mm

Yesterday, at grocery shopping, took my Nikkor along for a shootout. The day was overcast, and drizzling, so not the best times to shoot a long zoom with F4 maximum aperture. However, with VR, it was a different proposition altogether. Here's the evidence.


The first shot was taken at 1/50sec, ISO 400at F4 at 400mm. I had to wait till the lady paused at some expression to get reasonably sharp shots.


This one was shot at 1/80sec, ISO400 F4 at 360mm. Without VR, these shots would have not been possible. Colour and contrast seems to be superb.

Nikkor galore!

Here's my latest line-up of Nikkor tele-photo collection. From left, the AFS 300mm F4.0, the AFS 70-200mm F2.8 VR, the AFS 200mm F2.0 VR (with TC-14E attached) and the latest AFS 200-400mm F4.0 VR.



I waited patiently for a week from ordering for delivery. It finally arrived at home on Friday while I was at work.
It was securely packed, double boxed by manufacturer.
From the inner box, the lens was packed in a Nikon carry bag, like a backpack.
Here's Chloe holding the lens on her lap. She seems to be quite contented with the lens or perhaps assured by the 5-year Nikon USA warranty.

Saturday, May 30, 2009

Aux Amis De Vins

Friday was dinner with Y at French Aux Amis De Vins in Ginza. We caught up with the last few years of our lives. She had quite interesting chapters in hers, perhaps enough to write a book on. Interestingly, it includes a brief marriage (it did not last the honeymoon)...

She is still her usual self. Or at least the self that I did know.

Y certainly had her own mind and is at odds with the mainstream Japanese way of life, at least with her family. At least the herd's thinking or somewhat myopic views of "my way is the right way, therefore its good for you". Is this not the way of mainstream society in any culture?

The evening was helped along by a pretty smooth and spicy 2001 St. Joseph Cotes du Rhone, principally of the Syrah (Shiraz) variety.. St. Joseph is located north of the Rhone valley and Syrah the main variety planted.

Seiji's dream!

This is my friend Seiji. He has a dream. He used to work as a bartender in Roppongi. Trained as a baker in Germany, I wondered what he was doing as a bartender. So we had a chat over a bottle of wine. Appears that he had a dream. That was in February. Recently he contacted me to inform me he had quit his job and now works as a sales rep for a Swiss bakery in Chiba. They supply to hotels, retail, restaurants. One small step closer to his dream of running his own bakery. Eventually, this step may be the biggest he ever made. Good luck Seiji san.

Tuesday, May 12, 2009

BKK

Off for meeting in BKK again..

Long absence

Last night (earlier) caught up with someone who's been out of my life for over 10 years. Y came back to Japan from the USA for good, and has set up home at Toyosu, not far from Ginza. Had sushi for dinner and a chat. Nothing seems to have changed much, only time has passed. Well at least not what we remember of each other....

Sometimes unexpected things can happen in life, especially when you least expect it. I could have carried on living in Tokyo or Japan for the next 10 years and not have an inkling of this person is around or living in the same city. Such is life.

Aux Bacchanales Takanawa


Mother's day at Aux Bacchanale near home. Took some candid shots of the patrons and passerbys with the Nikkor 200mm. A cross dresser came up to me and asked "what lens is that?" in Japanese. Nearly gave me a fright as "he" was quite big but dressed up as a she, with make up and lace stockings.

This shot reminds me of Joni Mitchell from Both Sides Now album cover. The cigarette smoke gives it a nice effect.

Have you tried playing ball with friends? Here's what it looks like.

Saturday, May 9, 2009

TY Harbor Brewery

Saturday lunch with the family at TY Harbor Brewery at Tennozu Isle, Shinagawa. Its just by the Shinagawa Futo Harbor, not far from where we live. Brought my New Carl Zeiss 50/1.4 and Nikkor 200/2 to test out.


Photo above of a passing cruiser was taken with the Nikon 200mm F2 VR wide open at F2. Sharp and just beautiful colours! This is the sharpest lens I have ever shot with. Another shot below is focused on the condiments on a table where the waiters put their wares from where we sat.




Lunch was Ceasar's Salad, Hawaian Pizza and Daisen Jidori chicken. Here's the main course taken with the Carl Zeiss 50mm. Its a manual focus lens but the D300 has focus confirmation indication with this lens.

The next shot of Chloe was also with the Zeiss, natural and rich colours, just beautiful!

Thursday, May 7, 2009

Singapore

Last one week was Golden Week holidays in Japan and I spent it in sunny Singapore. It was an eventful week for me.Singapore is busy and pleasant for a visitor as usual, and I even went to the touristic Merlion site to take some evening pics.




As I had not brought a tripod along, I was fortunate to have the trusty Olympus E-3 with built in image stabiliser. I shot all these evening scenery shots handheld ! The Olympus is famous for its blue hues from its old Zuiko days, and the digital range SLRs have maintained this tradition. Coupled with the Leica, the colours are rich and saturated.



The above shot was taken with the 50-200mm SWD lens. The image quality is very good for a compact zoom that is very portable at only just below 1kg.



The above was shot with Leica's 14-50mm at a very slow shutter speed, impossible without the Image Stabilizer in the E-3 body. The colour is again rich and saturated. I shot it next to a Canon user who was using a tripod and a prime lens without image stabilizer. He must have been laughing at me quietly.


On this trip, I also met up with old friends from Raffles Hall for a birding outing. It started with heavy rain in the morning but fortunately the birding in the "wild" had plenty of man made shelter from the wilderness. The wild was of course, as wild as manicured Singapore, the Mandai Orchid Gardens.


These two buddies above, both of whom are accomplished lawyers, have a knack for photography. BL, (right) shoots mainly birds (the feathered kind), and on the left, Roger, shoots anything that captures his eyes. The third guy, Ruey, being the most serious photographer amongst us, was obviously not in the pic as he was busy taking pictures whilst we were having intellectual "discourse" on lenses and cameras.
These buddies were helping me decide on a telephoto lense, and had brought along their precious lenses and cameras for me to try. Roger even rented a Nikon 200mm F2. I am grateful to have such an opportunity, and friends like them who would share they knowledge and experience with me.


This Stork-Billed Kingfisher shot was taken with BL's E-3 with the 300mm F2.8 lens. An expensive lense but you can see why from the photo. Image is sharp and colours are saturated and rich. This kingfisher is the largest found in Singapore. They are rarely found in urban areas and hunt crabs, insects, frog, mice, lizards, birds and bird eggs. They are territorial and will chase away other larger birds like eagles and storks.

This is a Sunbird shot with the same 300mm lens. The lens is super sharp. The Sunbird belongs to the nectariniidae family, or nectar feeding birds. Although they are not related to hummingbirds, theya re similar in theor iridescent colours and feeding habits. They are found throughout Asia and make great photo subjects. Being small in size (9-22cm), long telephoto lenses are essential.


No outing is complete in Singapore without some snacks, so we had cream puffs, pizzas, drinks...The shot below was taken with BL's Leica 25mm F1.4, really wonderful colours and contrast. All in all, a wonderful and memorable experience birding with friends. Arigatou gozaimashita !