In Search Of Asia Travels With A D1
Larry Mulvehill, May, 2002

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© 2001, Larry Mulvehill, All Rights Reserved
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As a film-based Nikon photographer
for 40 years, I made my first foray into digital with the purchase of
a Nikon D1 before leaving for a month in southeast Asia. I was determined
to satisfy my urge to use digital exclusively on this trip in a totally
professional way and to leave my film cameras behind. So the D1 became
my constant companion, and the instruction manual was always at hand.
Leaving behind the usual overload
of film was an immediate advantage. I left for Asia with only the D1,
four flash cards of 80MB each, one card of 128MB, two batteries, a Sigma
squared-off fisheye 15mm f/2.8, and a Tamron 28-300mm zoom. At the last
minute I threw in Nikon 28mm and 85mm lenses. But I didn't need them.
The superwide, along with the telephoto was all I needed to cover most
situations. In addition, I took a laptop and ZIP drive.
The trip had been planned and
scheduled by my wife and took us by ship from Beijing to South Korea,
Nagasaki, Shanghai, Hong Kong, Vietnam, Singapore, and Thailand. The ship
served as our moving hotel, taking us during the night from port to port.
Each night, in the convenience of our cabin, I took the images off the
flash cards and, using a Qimage Pro by Digital Domain, I was able to add
additional information (location/date) to the file storing it all on ZIP
disk, and reformatting the flash cards for the next day's shooting.
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Light Quality Control
Air pollution was bad 20 years ago during my first trip to China. And
as this trip progressed I was dismayed to find air pollution very heavy
at every stop. Along with my concern for the people, it could present
a challenge photographically coupled with the overcast skies we encountered.
But using the overcast setting in White Balance helped to warm up the
picture.
A big advantage of the D1 was
the ability to switch from daylight to florescent to incandescent using
the White Balance modes to move to the proper lighting situation. The
florescent in foreign countries doesn't register the same as florescent
in the US but the preset White Balance put me right in the ballpark.
Each day in port, we were off
the ship early and on a bus, taxi, or streetcar into town. Along the way,
using the wide angle, which does not have autofocus, I could hang the
camera out the bus window at arm's length almost in the face of bicyclists
and motorcyclists, getting an unusual point of view. The fact that the
camera can shoot up to 1/1600 sec meant that the action could be frozen.
I even shot through tinted bus windows and through store windows to photograph
the scene inside.
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Night & Infrared
The stunning harborscapes in Asia are some of the prettiest in the world,
and night only enhances the magic. With the D1, I could capture Shanghai's
busy working harbor at dusk and the night panorama of Hong Kong taken
handheld with a slow shutter speed.
I couldn't resist using the
camera's infrared capabilities, especially in the Grand Palace in Bangkok.
The switch from color to infrared is accomplished with a flick to black
and white and the addition of an 87 Wratten filter. All the images were
taken at ISO 400 in the Fine mode.
The Digital Advantage
A couple of other things about shooting digital were advantageous. The
LCD monitor allowed me to show the subjects their picture and it immediately
warms them up for a second set of even better photos. And then there's
the ability to send pictures home by e-mail the same day. I took about
3000 pictures on this trip. And therein lies a huge advantage. There was
no film-devil in the back of my head saying every click you make is costing
you. I had the freedom to experiment and not worry about shooting pictures
that might be of no consequence.
Once home, a review of the
shoot showed some that could use a little fine-tuning from Photoshop.
But I've made a smooth transition to digital with the D1. So have my editors,
who are now accepting my digital for cover material.
Larry Mulvehill and his wife,
Carol, a writer, live in Sarasota Florida and travel extensively. Other
examples of his work as a professional photographer over the past 40 years
can be seen on his web site: www.larrymulvehill.com.
e-mail: fogfilter@aol.com.
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