Thursday, December 31, 2009

Apature PRO Coworker Remote Release

As I am working on the portraiture section of my New York Institute of Photography Course, I found mention made of using a remote release for the shutter.  The goals in doing so were two-fold.  One, to permit the maximum amount of camera stability for the sharpest possible image, and also to permit eye contact between the photographer and subject to get a more relaxed demeanor on part of the one being photographed.


I considered the Canon RS-80N3 Remote Switch for my Canon 7d, which is a hard-wired release.  Online reviews showed purchasers to be nearly unanimous in praise for this accessory, and the simple design offered very little to go wrong.  However, I also noticed a selection of third-party products that provided the same functionality with the added benefit of being wireless.  Tempted by the wireless feature, I bought the Aputure Pro Coworker Wireless Remote Shutter from fotodiox, an Amazon Marketplace partner.

The  product arrived in three days and the box contained six items.  These included:

  • the remote transmitter,
  • the receiver,
  • batteries for each,
  • a cable to connect the receiver and camera body and
  • an instruction sheet.

The receiver takes two AAA-sized batteries.  The transmitter a 12V 23A.  I was not familiar with this last battery, and at first was concerned that finding replacements might be difficult.  Further review showed that this is a common size for various remotes, and they can be found locally and online.


The receiver is connected to the camera body by a short cord with a mini-plug on one end that goes into the transmitter and a camera body specific plug on the other.  The use of this cables permits Aputure to customize the remote for different types of cameras without requiring a custom design for each product.  Neither the documentation nor the company website reveal whether alternate cords could be purchased, thereby permitting a single remote to serve for multiple types of bodies.

The receiver has a shoe connector at its base, permitting you to attach it to the flash shoe to keep things neat.  The receiver is lightweight, and no problem appeared just letting the receiver dangle at the end of the cord.  This is important for me, since my flash shoe is usually occupied with my Cybersync CST transmitter for the flash.

I installed all the batteries, attached the receiver to the body and turned it and the body on.  The transmitter has a switch with two settings, one marked with a multiple frame icon, the other with a clock icon.  With the switch in the multiframe position the transmitted worked just like the shutter release on the 7d body.  A half-press would focus and set the exposure, while a full press fired the shutter.  If you put the body into multishot drive mode and held down the remote button then the body fired as fast as it could (which on the 7d is pretty fast!)  Switching the mode to the clock icon introduced a delay in the shot of about two seconds.  This delay was managed by the receiver, not the regular 2 or 10 second delay available via the camera body.

Playing with distance, the remote seemed to fire the body from anywhere within the house that I bothered to go.  It worked at distances of up to 75 feet and that going through multiple walls.

Both receiver and transmitter have a block of four DIP switches, which allow you sixteen channels for the radio signals.  I did not bother changing them off the defaults.

One very interesting feature of the system is that the receiver has a button on it just like the one on the transmitter.  This button provides the same remote release features, so you can use it as a corded remote release (although, one with a very short cord!) if the wireless remote were to fail.  This functionality works even if the receiver is turned off or even if the batteries are  removed!

Durability cannot be assessed yet, as this just arrived in house.  But everything feels solid and professional.  I will watch how performance and reliability play out over the upcoming months and update this review accordingly.

Saturday, December 26, 2009

Check out my wife's blog too

My wife, Jennifer has started a blog of her own.  She is taking classes learning to be a writer.  I convinced her to try her hand at blogging as a method of practice.  She is off to strong start and is having fun.  Check it out at : Dragonfly Yarns

Friday, December 25, 2009

Canon 7D Lens Adjustment

I was fortunate enough recently to be able to use some bonus funds to purchase a new camera. I have been using a Canon Digital Rebel (300D) since 2005. It still works great, but the 6-megapixel image size was a bit constraining, particularly when I wanted to crop in on an image that I framed one way when taking the picture, but decided would be better framed another way in post-processing. I dickered about quite a bit, but after encouragement from my Wife I finally went for the Canon 7D, semi-pro level camera.

When the camera arrived, I played around with it. At first, I was taken aback by what appeared to be focus issues. I realized that I was getting better focus manually than with the auto-focus. Then I remembered that more recent dSLRs permit one to tune the lens to the camera. I decided that this must be the issue I was facing, so what to do about it?

RawWorkflow.com has a product called LensAlign (http://www.lensalign.com/) which is designed for just this purpose. However, it was two days before Christmas, I wanted to use the new camera for gift opening and Christmas day shots and getting the product here in time was unreasonable. What could I do and do for cheap?

The LensAlign system is pretty straight-forward. There is a broad surface with high-contrast patterns on it that give the camera the greatest opportunity to focus at its finest. Oblique to that focusing plane is a "ruler" with distances marked. The zero point is exactly on the plane and the ruler makes about a 45 degree angle to the plane. The central idea is that the camera focuses on the plane, then you observe the ruler to find at what point the depth of field begins and at what point it ends. Tune the lens such that the depth of field surrounds the zero-point and you are good!

With time short, I went totally ghetto and jury-rigged a solution. A VHS tape case with a black and white illustration became the focusing target. I pressed into service a wooden yardstick to serve as the depth-of-field measure. Indirect light from a window illuminated the contraption, and I set to work. Using the tools at one distance (about 4 feet) I calibrated each of my four lenses. Final result, very nice! Much better auto-focusing, at least as good as my manual ability.

But, I was not satisfied that this was as well done as possible. I could think of a number of potential errors in the system:
  • Was the focusing target really of high-enough contrast?
  • Were the markings on the yard-stick of high-enough precision to accurately measure the depth-of-field?
  • I had adjusted the lens so that the depth-of-field range fell with the focus plane "in-between", but I had not made sure that it was in the location that is is supposed to be.


With a bit more work, I could address each of these. I needed a new focusing target, a new depth-of-field ruler and some information.

First, the focusing target. I broke out Google Sketchup 7 and pulled together a high-contrast checkered pattern to use for focusing. Beside that I drew a ruler with 1/8-inch graduations which are scaled 1.414-times oversize to account for the 45 degree tilt of the ruler. These I printed out and using a glue stick attached to a bit of cardboard scavenged from a packing box. I attached the ruler to the focusing plane by way of a long steel pin, making sure that the zero point on the ruler lined up with the surface of the plane.

That took care of getting a good target and measuring device, now to set to focus to exactly where it needs to be. The depth of field that a lens produces is a function of the focus distance, focal length, aperture and the sensor size. It is also not symmetric about the plane of focus, but rather has a smaller portion on the camera side of the the plane of focus and a larger portion on the background side. You can calculate the depth of field easily using a number of online tools, but the one I prefer is http://www.dofmaster.com/dofjs.html. Too narrow a depth-of-field and fine tuning would be difficult. To deep and it could exceed the length of the ruler. I decided to start with my Canon 50mm f/1.4. I decided that a depth of field of 3 inches would be good, for no good reasons beyond gut feel. The calculator told me that I would need to set the target 75 inches away from the camera to get a 2.99 inch depth of field. This seemed good enough for me. The calculator also told me that there would be 1/32 inch more depth-of-field behind the plane than in front. This was too small for me to worry about, so I planned on simply centering the field.

I attached the target to a light stand, put the camera on a tripod and aligned the two stands so that the center line of the lens fell perpendicular to the face of the target. I also made sure that the camera itself was level on the tripod. After each picture, I zoomed into the result image as close as possible and evaluated the level of focus at various points on the scale. Then I would adjust the lens adjustment some amount and take another shot. Repeat until the in-focus range falls equally on either side of the scale.

I readjusted three lenses, and the end result was that the three needed almost exactly the same amount. The 50mm f/1.4 and 100mm f/2.8 Macro both needed +13, the Tokina 17-50mm f/2.8 needed +12.

Christmas morning, everything was ready and the photos were acceptably sharp.

Friday, January 23, 2009

Audiobooks of 2008

My commute is long (relatively speaking for Northern Colorado, at least) and I mitigate the mental slack time with audio books. Most of these are thanks to Overdrive (http://www.overdrive.com/products) through my local library. 2008 saw me through the following works:

Edith Wharton
Age of Innocence

Lucy Maud Montgomery
Anne of Green Gables
Anne of Avonlea
Anne of the Island
Anne's House of Dreams

Elisabeth Gaskell
Cranford
Wives and Daughters

Sarah Jewett
A Country Doctor

Geoffrey Chaucer
Canterbury Tales

P. G. Wodehouse
Carry On Jeeves

Hugh Lofting
The Story of Dr. Dolittle
The Voyages of Doctor Dolittle

Anne McCaffrey
Dragonflight
Dragonquest
Dragonsdawn
Moreta
The Renegades of Pern
The White Dragon

F. Scott Fitzgerald
Flappers and Philosophers

John Galsworthy
Forsyte Saga

Sir Walter Scott
Ivanhoe

Holly Black
Spiderwick Chronicles

Thomas Hardy
The Mayor of Casterbridge

Charlote Brontë
The Professor

It is not a substitute for real reading, and it's a lot slower than the pace I normally go through a work, but I love how the audiobooks help me fill an otherwise unproductive (but substantial) chunk of my day.