Frozen & Broken

February 9, 2009

Saturday night was one of those times that I really wish I owned a Nikon D700 due to its mind-blowing performance in low-light. I photographed a small performance of electronic music at Toronto’s Rivoli where the lighting was abysmal. I had to push my poor Nikon D200 to the Hi-1.0 setting (equivalent to ISO 3200) and shoot at f/1.8 just to squeak by. Even then, my exposure times were long but I made the best of it.

The back room of the Rivoli is small and loud; the performances bass-heavy like you can’t fathom; and the crowd reaction suitably restrained.

I sat next to an extraordinarily loud speaker to get most of the shots, so I hope the temporary hearing damage was worth it.

Check out the flickr slideshow below!

Performers: Lowfish, Naw, Sales Department

DJs: … and Solvent

Your soundtrack to this slideshow should be samples from Lowfish on iTunes.

D700 Test at Luxy Club

November 26, 2008

1/10 sec, f2.8, ISO 3200, 17mm

This past weekend I was able to put the Nikon D700 through its paces in a challenging environment: Luxy Club in Woodbridge. The event was City Gala, which featured a fashion show and live musical performances in a very, very dark club, peppered with the usual assortment of coloured spotlights, seizure-inducing strobes, and other flashing nonsense typical of clubs everywhere.

1/4 sec, f4, ISO 1600, 17mm w/flash

1/4 sec, f4, ISO 1600, 17mm w/flash

Six hundred exposures later, I can tell you the camera performed extremely well. It focused quickly and without trouble in the dim light and I was able to fire off multiple bursts with ease, which is how I captured the above shot of Ashley and her friend dancing.

1/400 sec, f1.8, ISO 3200, 85mm

1/400 sec, f1.8, ISO 3200, 85mm

Most of my shots were done at ISO 1600 and 3200, although I also tried a few at ISO 6400 and was amazed at the results. The photos looked better than my Nikon D200 produces at ISO 1600. The D700 paired with the 85mm f/1.4 basically creates light where there is none. Scenes that were exceptionally dark to my eyes came alive on the LCD screen, bringing out detail that I couldn’t even see in the dark club. Amazing!

Model above is my fabulous sister Kirsten Visima, doing what she does best.