Marbella - my favourite town along the Costa

Marbella is definitely my favourite town along the Costa del Sol, I won't repeat details about Marbella that you can find elsewhere for example on the excellent website "The Blue Colour of the Sky".  But there's nothing nicer than to get up early (well relatively early) while the kids are still in bed and head into the Old Town.  The narrow streets are clean, colourful, and lined with flowerpots or wall growing bouganvilla, with twists and turns that take you to new delights around each corner: A chapel, fortress walls, a small art gallery or museum, the indoor market where they sell fish, meat fruit and flowers, the cathedral, little shrines where they keep the statues they march in the Easter parades, shops and boutiques, some for the rich others for the locals.  It's great when you find another little tapas bar where you've never eaten before.  The trick is not to go to places that have seats and umbrellas outside specifically to attract the tourists but to look for the hidden local haunts which at first look dingy but where locals enjoy cheap and fabulous treats.

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This week Sharon, here sister and I headed in and stopped at a local cafe where we had a light breakfast.  We headed around the town in the lovely sunshine, and very bearable heat.  Sauntering up and down the narrow streets and popping into the odd shop or two.  Sharon delighting in getting a few dresses in a boutique with a great sale. "Just perfect for that wedding coming up!" at home.

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Then off to the indoor market, though by now we are a bit late and many places are closed, you need to be early for the market.  But we get some fruit and vegetables and some very sharp knives for the apartment from Jesus.  All in all a lovely morning.

That evening we head back in with the two families and this time head down along the promenade to our usual Indian Restaurant.  At night and along the promenade the contrast is stark, it's busy, bustling with people of all ages, families, couples, and groups.  Street traders, mainly from North Africa ply their trade, weary of the local police, as they pester you with their counterfeit bags, sunglasses, DVDs, watches, bracelets, scarves and other bric-a-brac.  The restaurants of many nations try to entice you in, the bars are full, the streets are teeming with people ambling along taking in the atmosphere, music is playing, neons light up the street, and everything is just a little boisterous and the police keep a watchful eye.  It seldom boils over like in Benalmadena or Fuengirola, well maybe it does later at night but I've never seen it.  None-the-less it's lively and enjoyable.  We stop at a trendy cocktail bar for Mojitos, Daiqaris, beer and soft drinks and soak up the lovely balmy night and watch the world go bye.  Another perfect but contrasting day in Marbella!

Cuba Video - updated

I eventually got around to editing my video from Cuba, though a bit rushed at the end. I have to thank Brendan for letting me use some of his footage as well, between the two us we got something half decent. You can see it here.

End of Camera Club Year

It's the end of the club year and my time to stand down as chariman from the committee.  I've enjoyed my three years and although I'll miss aspects of being involved I'll also enjoy the break.  It's also hard to keep coming up with new ideas and keeping everything fresh.  The new committee looks to be a very good one and I'm sure they'll have plenty of good new ideas, so very good luck to you all.   The break will also give me a chance to concentrate on my photography.

Last week we had our end of year competitions, and I'm pleased to have won two of the major prizes, the Audio Visual Photographer of the Year (see here) and the Monochrome Photographer of the Year (see images below).  We had some other very good and deserving winners.  Looking at the results it was good to see that the majority of the winners were Nikon owners although we would be in the minority within the club, but I'm sure there will be a fight back next year!

Here's to a good summer and back for the fight in September!

Second week: Orlando

Our second week starts with us having to check out early from the Sheraton, but we hang around for a few hours by the pool as we can't check in until 4pm in the Westgate Lakeside Resort. So the car is packed, somehow, and we enjoy the afternoon by the lovely pool and get a lunch. I think our second week will be more leisurely, enjoying the pool and the parks and less shopping. We check in and this time skip the invitation to a free breakfast I never saw anyone withdraw his offers of cheap lunches and other stuff so quick when he heard us refuse. Anyway we check out our new pad, it's bright, airy and large with a nice patio out to the pool which is just outside the door only question is it going to be very noisy.

It's Eimear's today and she decides we will head to the movies but I've covered all this.

A latish morning for the girls and I'm proved wrong straight away as they decide to go shopping again after a big brunch in Perkins. Will it ever stop, I'll just have to put up with it. We're tired of eating out so dinner in tonight!

I don't know if it's the time of year, the schools being off, the weather or the recession but the parks are not as busy as we expected. For our next visit to Universal we decide to head over late, about 2.30pm we arrive. The perceived wisdom for the parks is to arrive early to get on the good rides. But we head straight to Hogsmeade and Harry Potter ride or whatever it's called and it's only a 45 minute wait. But it is well worth it, it has to be the best ride in the park, highly recommended and a must. We do a load of the good rides in Islands of Adventure and the wait times are great, including only 10 minutes for the Hulk.

To be honest at this stage all the days get confusing and I can't remember what we did on what days and even in what weeks. In the Studios one of my favourite rides is the "Disasters", a new ride since we were here 5 years ago. There is some good stage acting by our guide, some nifty special effects with Christopher Walkin who acts as a director of this supposed new disaster movie. It's very well done and good craic. The Simpsons ride has taken over the old "Back to the Future" slot, and Men in Black is still good fun.

We have had some spectacular thunder storms in the evening and nights. It's a long time since I've seen such amazing lightning, huge bursts across the sky and then when the rain comes it is torrential and very hard to drive in.

We have another day in Seaworld to catch the Shamu show the girls have their last go on Kracken and we head to SeaWorlds new water park Aquatica where the girls passed away a good few hours on the water rides. At this stage well parked out I think 10 days in Orlando is enough and then to head to the coast for a relaxing time on the lovely beaches, reading, sunning, walking and good food and drink. In the past we've done the Gulf Coast and its great along there.

All in all a great holiday but looking forward to getting home and heading to Spain for the month of July!

First week: Orlando

It's hard to believe we are here a week already today, the time is just flying by. The flight with Aer Lingus was grand though the poor guy next to me was a bad flyer and didn't like the turbulence but he was a lovely guy to talk to and the hostesses were very nice to him. I love driving these big American cars, we got a big white Cadillac which is just lovely to drive but can it drink, 17 miles to the gallon!!! I hope US gallons are smaller than ours, must check that out! Well they are but not much 1 US gallon is about .83 imperial gallon, still doesn't make it much more economical to run.

Anyway our first week was in a timeshare in Sheraton Vistana Villages. A nice resort but our condo needed a little tlc, not too much it was still very nice and spacious for us all but I think they keep all the nice ones for owners naturally enough, and it had free wifi, very nice pools, a shop, and a decent enough restaurant. I don't know why we agree to go to their free breakfasts so they can try flog you another timeshare as another couple of hours of your holiday disappear, but I suppose it can be interesting to hear how the different schemes work especially one involving the Sheraton and all its hotel brands. It's nice to have really good accommodation but the reason to come to Orlando is the theme parks and the shopping and we have done a fair amount of this.

Seaworld is literally around the corner from us and Eimear did her first ever roller coaster the Kraken and she loved it. The great thing is that we were early enough, here in time for the National Anthem, took us a moment to work out why everyone had suddenly stopped and stood motionless!! Being early meant we walked straight on to the Kraken and then a second time. Next was Atlantis and from there on a bit of a blur as we did the other shows and rides though we've left the Shamu show for another day.

Our next park was Islands of Adventure in Universal another early start and we headed to Harry Potter land which is very good. It's laid out as a winter scene in Hogsmeade but not many rides the best one had a queue of 90 minutes that we decided to skip the rest is shops where they flog you all sorts of Harry Potter stuff, though we did buy the butter beer. We headed off to Jurassic Park where we actually did our first rides, then to toon land and here we got absolutely soaked on a flume ride and the Popeye boats. We were wet through and didn't dry for hours. The great thing here was that the queues were short I don't think we queued for more than 30 mins and we got on all the big rides. Mind you the older you get the less you like the big roller coasters like the Hulk which I did but Sharon skipped. We had a good lunch in the NBA restaurant before heading in to The Studios for an hour. We came back a second day to do the studios and started with my favourite Terminator "I'll be back!". We had another good day.

We met our friends Richie and Linda and their two kids, in Disney World's own ideal town, called Celebration. We had a great meal and headed back to their villa. Another lovely night.

Shopping was the other main activity and we did plenty of this too! Today is Eimear's birthday, now we have another teenager, so she wanted to go to the cinema after we moved to our second timeshare. We headed to Disney Down Town to catch Pirates of the Carribean. After eventually getting a parking spot we booked our cinema tickets for 9.30 and had time for a meal first. Now the meals in the US are huge you could not eat all the stuff they give you. But Disney of course is different, expensive and smaller portions, but this was just as well as we didn't realise the cinema we booked was a diner cinema. I've never seen anything like it. You have table tops in front of you and servers bring you food and drinks during the movie and not just popcorn and sweets but a full dinner, great but a pity we had eaten though I did manage some popcorn!

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Confirmation & Communion Photographs

At the weekend I eventually got the lights all set up and got time to take some photos of my daughter for her confirmation which was a few weeks ago now. We also took the opportuinity to take some photos of her cousin's Communion dress and gear and the family. Since we are off at the weekend not much chance to do anything with them except a bit of cropping and exposure adjustments. So here they are: [nggallery id=23]

Epson Signature Art Paper

I gave up using gloss paper a long time ago and have since used luster and satin papers as I much preferred the finish.  I hadn't tried any matt papers mainly because my Epson 3800 uses up so much ink in switching between the phto black and matt black I wasn't inclined to try any of them.  But for the last club competition I found some Epson Signature sample paper pack that I bought at a recent photo exhibition, but had completely forgotten about and decided to give it a go.  Sheldon had warned me that once you start using matte papers you get hooked on them, and he was right.  For a start you can clearly see the image no matter what angle you look at it, there is no reflection or play of light on the paper.  The colours look richer, deeper and really draw you into the image.  The only draw back is that the paper marks easier and can detract.  But I believe you can spray them to protect the image.  If I was hanging a picture this is the type of paper I would use, though I wonder about puttnig it behind glass as that will bring back the reflection.  I would like to try canvas next to see what that is like.

Here are a few videos from product evangelists.

Vincent Versace Discusses Epson Cold Press Natural Paper from Epson America on Vimeo.

Vincent Versace discusses Epson's Signature Worthy Cold Press Natural being by far the best cotton based textured paper he has ever printed on.

David Lynch Discusses Epson Hot Press Natural Paper from Epson America on Vimeo.

Photographer David Lynch talks about Epson's Signature Worthy Hot Press Natural - the incredible feel of the paper and the "dream" images it creates.

Matthew Jordan Smith Discusses Epson Cold Press Bright Paper from Epson America on Vimeo.

Matthew Jordan Smith talks about the amazing tones and texture of Epson's Signature Worthy Cold Press Bright paper.

Malahide Golf Club

Last week the club headed off early at 5am to take some photos of the local Golf Club, unfortunately the light wasn't great but here they are.  Some of the shots were taken with my new Olympus XZ-1, these are the versions without the ART filter applied (the versions with the art filter can be seen here).  The shots here are just photoshopped, well actually Lightroomed!!  The rest were taken with my Nikon D700 although 3 were taken with my G9 on a reccie we did.

Hope you enjoyed, leave any comments you like here :-)

My New Compact Camera: Olympus XZ-1

For some time now I've been looking for a new compact camera, something to use on travel or when going out, rather than a large DSLR and bulky lenses.  I already have the Canon G9 but I am not completely pleased with it, it's a bit too bulky and ,well I don't know exactly what, but not great.  I had a few cameras in mind: Canon G12, but too similar to G9, the Panasonic Lumix LX5, the Canon S95 and the Olympus XZ-1.  I knew I wanted a camera that handled RAW.  I looked at many reviews and finally I settled on the XZ-1 and so far I have been very pleased.  It's not shirt pocket size but not too bulky. It feels very solid and secure in your hands and not at all flimsy, and a very fast lens at 1.8 to 2.5 along the zoom which beat all the others.  The zoom range is restrictive enough at 28-112 (35mm equivalent) but equal or better than the competition mentioned above.  I haven't tried the HD video which I believe is not great but I have the Panasonic TM700 for video.  It's noisy at high ISO levels, but so far I've been very pleased with it.  It has some ART settings which are inbuilt "photoshop" filters, some of which are quite effective.  The only problems so far, the lack of a viewfinder (though you can buy an accessory viewfinder which is half the price again!), not sure about the lens cap, and when the art filters are used it does still create a RAW image of the pre filter image which is great, and a JPEG of the art filter. But you can't see both in Lightroom!

last week the club headed out to take some photos of the local golf club and unfortunately the light was not good, but I did have fun with the Dramitic Filter here are some of the shots.

Some of the other shots taken on the day at the course can be seen here.

Orlando - Florida

The girls insisted it was time to go back to Orlando. "But dad I was only 7 the last time I was there and I couldn't go on any of the rides and it's sooo long ago I can't remember".  I tried saying "well here look at the videos, that will remind you!".  They also said "We won't go back to Spain if you don't bring us", so in the end we relented and now the five of us are heading off in two weeks, Aislinn is going to Croatia with her own friends for a holiday.  We only hope that now this Icelandic Volcanic ash doesn't cause us any problems! The good thing is that friends will be there at the same time so we will meet up with them and that will make a great trip of it.  But it's all that shopping as well!  I'm sure we'll have a great time and in fact I'm looking forward now to it, the theme parks, the weather, the meals, some good craic and even a bit of shopping will be fun.

Camera Club Weekend Away

This weekend was our annual weekend away and this year we went to Roundwood House in Mountrath Co Laios, just at the base of the Slieve Bloom mountains.  We stayed in a lovely country house which has over 10 bedrooms arranged in the main house and some cottages and adjacent old cottages.  Frank and Rosemary Keenan own the house and they have been in business for more than 25 years and their goal is "together with our staff, we endeavour to create a special place where personal service comes naturally, life is taken at a more relaxed pace and good food, wine and conversation abound. Each of our ten bedrooms and three self-catering cottages have their own unique and interesting features, are filled with books and paintings and have beautiful views of the gardens." And I have to say that they achieve this admirably.  About 3 years ago their daughter Hannah and her husband Patrick have taken over the running of the business and they have kept true to the original aims of the business. The rooms are kept traditional and are very inviting and friendly, just like our hosts.   We felt more like friends of the family rather than guests in a house that provide a place to lay your head get fed and head off to your next destination.  They looked after us very well with plenty of tea, coffee and biscuits during the day and plenty of refreshments at night.  Paddy was a great host at night and even played his guitar and entertained us into the early morning with songs the best of which he wrote himself.  The meal on the Saturday night was magnificent.

It however was a camera club outing so we did head off and take a few photographs.  We ent for a walk along the Glenbarrow the source of the Barrow river and visited a couple of local towns, but the weather was not the best for taking photographs, but it was no hardship to head back to Roundwood House, where we were just as happy to have good company and a laugh by the large fireside.

Overall a great weekend and a tribute to our social secretary that arranged everything for us.

A photo of the gang taken by Noelle Brooks.

Time to get a new PC

I have had my current Dell XPS for about 4 years and I'm on my third video card through failures and it appears to be acting up again, but now my warranty has run out.  Plus my PC is just not powerful enough for proper editing of video.  It stutters aong when trying to render or scrub.  So the search is on for a powerful PC to edit video and hopefully everything else will be looked after if I go for that.  I use Adobe Premiere Pro and After Effects and the big thing in CS5 was the introduction of the Mercury Playback Engine which uses the Cuda architecture of the Nvidia cards to give smooth real time playback and rendering even with complex effects applied to many video tracks.  I've selected Dell machines for many years but I got advice to look at the HP workstations, in particular the Z series.  After looking at some sites that provide turnkey solutions it also appeared that the HP workstations, the Z400 in particular, form the key component of the system usually with the Nvidia FX3800.  When it comes to the graphic card though I am inclined to go for the newer and more highly specified Nvidia Quadro 4000 which is only a little more expensive. I am told it is really more for 3D work so I think I will get the rendering and smooth playback I'm looking for but also better productivity with After Effects.  Finally I need to decide on the harddrive.  With a good workstation with Xeon processors and enough RAM and a good graphics card the speed of the harddrive can become the bottleneck.  Most turnkey solutions appear to favour a Raid 0 set up, but I've been warned that this could be problematic. So I've now narrowed it down to either: SAS drives, an SSD drive or a 10,000 rpm SATA drive.  There's not much in price between the SAS and the SSD solution (once you take into account you have to buy a SAS controller as well), although I can probably get more space with SAS.  At the moment I'm inclined towards SSD, but I need to do a bit more research.  So hopefully very soon I'll have my new workstation. 

Cuba Video

While away in Cuba I also took my Video camera but with all that has been going on since I cam back I haven't had a chance to do anything with it.  Today I finally downloaded it to my PC and ran it through the software to let it identify the highlights.  I'll get a chance to soon to edit it properly but here's what the software threw up.

Cuba a quick view from Shay Farrelly on Vimeo.

Portugal a quick trip

We have been to Portugal a good few times but we have had a couple of bad experiences that sort of put me off and we have not been there in a long time. Once we stayed on a large resort in Praia de Rocha and I subsequently saw it on a programme called holidays from hell and I know why from experience. Another time we were there on May and it rained for the whole week it just bucketed down. But when friends with a house out there invited us and a friend for a long weekend we took them up on it. The have a lovely house in Lagos which is a lovely, lively town which holds it's original charm without being too touristy. There is plenty to do around and this time the weather was just fantastic and no strong breeze for a change. The five of us had a great time, fantastic company, never stopped laughing, good food and plenty of mojitos and the like.

Thanks Pat & Carmel for the great hospitality and also to Ger who was great company as always. Here are a few photos I toon from my iPhone.

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Cuba Photos

It's been nearly two months since we got back from Cuba, and I've been up to my eyes with renovations in the house which meant that I couldn't get near my PC and we've been away in Spain and Portugal for a few days as well, plus we had a confirmation in the house.  So now I've finally had a chance to look at my photos, and I'm pleased that I got a few good shots, you can see them here.

Follow these links, shots from Havana and shots from Trinidad to Cuba.

Cuba day 11 our last day, or so we thought!

Today we are due to fly home but we have a late flight home and are due to be picked up at 4pm so we still have time for a few more photos.  Keith, brendan and myself head off around the streets around our hotel.  We out there early in and around the small estates that live nearby.  We get some more good shots but the funniest thing is that we come across a group of elderly ladies duringt heir morning exercise.  There are a group in a small square of about 20 of them in a circle singing and doing gentle exercises.  They see us and invite us in amongst their group to take their phots while they sing Guantanamera.  They were great fun and even though they didn't speak a word of english they were very nice to us and told us their ages which all appeared to be in their 80's and 90's.  It was a great laugh not sure I got any good photos but a good laugh.

That was the end of the photos for this trip, or so we thought.  We headed off to the airport about 4.30pm for our flight at 8pm.  We were all on board for about two hours, but I knew something was wrong because after an hour of loading passengers I noticed the buses had come back again.  Right enough after two hours sitting on the plane we were unloaded. We later found out that the plane had been damaged when they rolled the stairs up to it.  The pilot said it would be the following day as they needed to get an engineer from Paris to sort the problem out.  Once off the plane and back in the terminal the fun started as we had to get our visas back, pick up our cases and we were taken to a hotel for the night.  As it happened we had to stay over for two nights.  But it did mean we were able to get back into Havana for an extra day of taking photos.

The trip was fantastic a brilliant place to go.  I'm not sure I would bother going there as a sun holiday to spend all the time at the beaches.  It's much better as a cultural holiday.  What really made it though was the company, we had such great craic, there was always a good laugh and there was no absolutely rancor.  Ramses was a great and a new friend to us all.  He looked after us so well and joined in just like one of the gang.  Any regrets, well a couple, I'm sorry I didn't get more great photos, but a holiday like this is a balance between times with friends and time taking your hobby too serious.  I'm really sorry we didn't get to hear more music and go to a few clubs to hear Jazz and Cuban music.  But it's always great to leave wanting more and a good excuse to come back.

 

Cuba Day 10

Our last full day and it's a Sunday, and it's a very easy going day. Lynn and myself take a walk along the Malecon to see if we can get any more photos. We are all really preparing ourselves for the long trip home, but Ramses has a real treat for us and in many ways turns out to be the highlight if the trip. He rings me to say that he has managed to get us a meeting with Liborio Noval in his house. We are to meet him on the corner of his street at 6pm.

Liborio is a very fit, lean and tall, and witty 77 year old who like all Cubans loves a cigar and strong coffee. He speaks little or now English and Ramses acts as our interpreter. Liboriao is also a famous photographer in Cuba in particular and worked for an advertising agency in the 50's, and during the 60's for the journal Revolucion the review INRA and the journal Granma. In the 60's he had taken photographs of Che Guevara and spoke and work with him for from 1961. From 1990 to 2001 he was the accompanying photographer of Fidel Castro during his trips. Liborio was a true gentleman and told us many fascinating stories from his life and career.  He should us portfolios of some of his work, and his house was covered with many of his brilliant images.  He was very gracious to sign copies of his book that some of us took and also to allow us to take his photograph in his house with the group.  I was very sorry I hadn't brought my camera.  We spent over two hours which just flew by but we were just so excited it was truly amazing, and something I will never forget.

Cuba day 9

The group decides to break up to do different things. A few are interested in going to the beach for the afternoon and seeing the rum museum in the morning and having a look around the port area. The others want to walk along the Malecon and some of the streets to get some photographs. I'm with the walking group and we head off early enough and we have a very interesting day.

Along the Malecon there are dotted groups of teenagers who gladly pose for us and a guy playing the trumpet. We head in a street or two off the Malecon where the house are in very poor repair but offer very good photo opportunities. In more than one case we are invited into peoples homes. We take up one invite. The insides are very small and also in bad repair. The owners are nice but we feel like we are imposing and head off again.

After a cup of coffee we head to the Rum Museum and get a sandwich nearby. After that we head in towards Plaza Vieja again. This time a barber invites us in to photograph him as he works.

Overall a good day photographing and tonight we will go to a restaurant with our friend Ramses.

Cuba day 8

After the late night before, everyone is a little late for breakfast and all but one make it. We all still have a great buzz after trinidad it's just a fantastic place particulrly for photographs.  A few of us decide to take photos around the hotel area and we get a few shots but it's not as good as the old town. Lunch in the hotel and we head again into the old town to meet Ramses and see Plaza Vieja.

This area is very close to where we went the first day but it is in complete contrast. Apparently it has taken then over 20 years to renovate it and the work is still on going. The square or plaza looks magnificent and gives a glimpse of the splendour of the city as it must have been over 50 years ago. We completely missed this area in our first few days and with the renovation works it really shows how well Havana could look.  But then I suppose we would not have gotten some of the images we are getting.  We head to the rum museum but it's closing time so don't get in. Ramses gets us into a hotel so we can get high shots from the hotel roof over the harbour area as the sun sets.

A quick change and dinner in a local restaurant which is on the 33rd floor of the building which gives a spectacular view over the whole city. We had planned to take in a jazz club but we are all so bunched we decide to head back to the hotel and bed.