| Sanjeev Dwivedi, the Photographer |
Where do I stand in photography? Well that is a bit of a touchy question. I
did not possess any camera till 2000, when I got screwed by buying a
duplicate/imitation counterfiet
Yashica camera while thinking it was an original authentic
piece. All my family laughed at
me. You could say it was almost a Holga camera.
Sanjeev Dwivedi (Picture by Jitesh Panchal) |
Nikon was offering some cool rebates on Coolpix 4500 so I bought one. Even though it is not the same as my SLR, I did learn operating the camera in manual mode pretty well I would say. Sometime between the 20mm lens and the Coolpix, I bought a tripod (Bogen 3021BN) and ballhead (484RC2) as well and learned the joy of a tripod. Yeah, believe it or not, after you start using a tripod, you seem so very limited when you do not have one handy.
Since I mostly like taking pictures of people interacting (and also
individually), I decided to get a Nikon 105/2.8D Micro lens. In one
sentence, this is an
awesome lens. Extremely sharp pictures and nice control on
depth-of-field for portraits. With this lens, my SLR kit is complete and
the next purchase has been postponed indefinitely (i.e. until I learn very
well the situations where I need to use each particular focal length). Most
probably it will be a zoom lens. I am expecting at least one year delay for
this one.
Sanjeev Dwivedi (Picture by Jitesh Panchal) |
Lot of water has flowed below the bridge and since that purchase, I bought a Nikon D70 + 18-70mm ED DX AFS (27-105mm 35mm equivalent) and a 80-200mm f/2.8ED. I had a reservations against the 18-70 because it is a digital only lens and also because it is available only as part of a kit. Since buying it however, all my doubts have been put to rest. It is a beautiful lens, much unlike the cheap-ass lenses that come with kits. It is very light, virtually silent, extremely fast in focussing and covers pretty much all the focal lengths that I would need on a general hike/excursion. The 80-200mm is a beast. It is 3lbs in weight (approx 1.5kgs) and is quite difficult to handle on a hike. Maybe I need a monopod.
Overall, I consider myself to be a novice advanced
amateur in photography. I wish I
could learn along with a more seasoned photographer. If any seasoned
photographer would like to have my company (on weekends and holidays), I would
be happy to provide it. Photo.net says
that "Photography is the recording of light rays", I have been recording the
light for a long time now. I have seen work by some other good photographers and
many of them manipulate light very well. I wish I could work with someone with some
in depth knowledge of light manipulation. Then I could probably paint with
light. I fear it involves flash photography and studios.
There are a few good sites on photography that I have benefitted from: