Kamfari Motorcycle Enduro

Kamfari 40th Anniversary Highlights © HighRPM and Australian Trailrider

Kamfari - Darwin, Australia

Kamfari is amongst the most gruelling motorcycle endurance events on this planet. The Kamfari is run annually in the tropical north of Australia just outside the Northern Territory's capital city, Darwin during the last months of the monsoon season.

Racers come from around Australia and overseas to compete in this extreme event that ultimately tests the mettle of the riders who not only have to compete against each other, but also have to endure the steamy tropical conditions and unpredictable elements.

Assistance is not allowed by rule from anyone except maybe other riders.  The notion of pit crews is non-existent as riders need to be able to carry everything they need for themselves and their bikes to survive. The HighRPM team sent a crew to film the exclusive DVD for Universal Magazines celebrating the official 40th year of this great race, here is the shortened highlights video from that footage.

Kamfari 2011 Highlights presented by Auki Henry & Heather Banham

Auki Henry Photography - Mel Bridge

Auki ™ & Auki Henry Photography © 2011

Mel Bridge
Mel Bridge © Auki Henry 2012

Model: Mel Bridge
Photographer: Auki Henry
Location: Darwin, NT, Australia
Date: Sat 21 January 2012

Description: An early Australia Day teaser with one of my favourite people!  We took a couple of Australian themed shots the day before this, ready for release on January 26th.

I had Mel around the next day to do some personal shots as well so we thought we might try something a little different to send around to remind people Australia Day was just around the corner!

Camera: Canon 7D
Lens: Canon 24-70mm f/2.8L USM

Kamfari 40 Years On

Kamfari 40th Anniversary Highlights. Presented by Auki Henry and Heather Banham.

 The Kamfari 40 years of racing in Australia

Northern Territory's famous Kamfari is perhaps one of the most physically gruelling motorcycle endurance events in the world. The  great race is run annually in the challenging tropical north of Australia just outside the Northern Territory's capital city, Darwin.

Competitors come from around the country and overseas to compete in this ultimate test of rider skill and mettle where they not only duke it out with the treacherous course and each other, but also have to endure the steamy monsoon build-up and unpredictable elements.

Assistance is not allowed from anyone except other riders, pit crews are non-existant and riders must carry everything they need for themselves and their bikes to survive. The HighRPM team filmed an exclusive DVD for Universal Magazines celebrating the official 40th year of this great race, here is the shortened highlights video from that footage.

 The Kamfari 2011 Highlights © HighRPM and Australian Trailrider

Kamfari 40 Years On

Kamfari 40th Anniversary Highlights. Presented by Auki Henry and Heather Banham.

 The Kamfari 40 years of racing in Australia

Northern Territory's famous Kamfari is perhaps one of the most physically gruelling motorcycle endurance events in the world. The  great race is run annually in the challenging tropical north of Australia just outside the Northern Territory's capital city, Darwin.

Competitors come from around the country and overseas to compete in this ultimate test of rider skill and mettle where they not only duke it out with the treacherous course and each other, but also have to endure the steamy monsoon build-up and unpredictable elements.

Assistance is not allowed from anyone except other riders, pit crews are non-existant and riders must carry everything they need for themselves and their bikes to survive. The HighRPM team filmed an exclusive DVD for Universal Magazines celebrating the official 40th year of this great race, here is the shortened highlights video from that footage.

 The Kamfari 2011 Highlights © HighRPM and Australian Trailrider

Nightcliff Sunset Showers

Purchase: Nightcliff Sunset Showers

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Photographer: Auki Henry
Location: Darwin, NT, Australia
Date: Sat 7 January 2012
Camera: Canon 7D
Lens: Canon 24-70mm f/2.8L USM

Description:
Typically the monsoon season in northern Australia brings the opportunity to capture dramatic lightning and cloud photos, sunsets and sunrises are also at their best during these months.

This is a four shot freehand panorama taken on the coast road around the Nightcliff area, a suburb of Darwin.  A huge cloud formation dropping light showers out at sea is backlit by the setting sun.

Darwin Sunset - New Years Eve 2011

Darwin Sunset - Auki ™ & Auki Henry Photography © 2011

Final Darwin Sunset New Years Eve 2011

Photographer: Auki Henry
Location: Darwin, NT, Australia
Date: Sat 31 December 2011

Description: New year's eve 2011 and I thought I might go for a drive to try to get the very last sunset for the year in Darwin, Australia.

There were a few places with a nice view, I just thought a Darwin City silhouette reflected in the marina might look good.

Camera: Canon 7D
Lens: Canon 24-70mm f/2.8L USM

Food Photography - A Simple DIY Lesson

photography food

The final shot. Read the article for how easy
it was to actually set up.

With the holiday season bringing me some spare time recently I have found myself interested in browsing photography portfolios in genres that I do not usually have time to indulge in, one in particular being food.

It's almost a perfect fit for me when I think about it really, I mean I love food, I love looking at food (and eating it obviously), I love watching it being made, prepared and presented so why not give it a shot?

As with anything to do with video or photography, there are techniques that have been tried, tested and are known to work. Google is a great place to start reading up about some of these techniques so that is exactly what I did.

I am a great believer in not just following 'the rules' blindly though, they may help you technically, they may help you save some time but in the end if all you are doing is following a set of pre made 'rules' someone else came up with then you are not learning much about your own photography and creativity.

If I took anything in particular away from my reading to experiment with, it was just a few very basic but relatively important things that help to give a food picture that 'look' that you come to expect in a nice bright brochure or a cookbook, and this is probably all you need to give it a try for yourself.

  • Don't use front lighting or a flash like in portrait photography, this tends to wash out the texture and detail of the food.  With food, texture is good.
  • Use side lighting to highlight your subject and give it depth in your composition.
  • Rear lighting works well, natural light (eg. the Sun) works well too although you may not always be in a position to use it.
  • If you have them, small mirrors can be used to reflect the main light back onto particular parts of your scene to help parts of it stand out and reduce too much shadow.
  • Make sure any food that is going to be in focus is fresh and looks good!
  • Arrange the composition for the particular lens you are using, take a test shot and re-arrange as many times as needed, the arrangement on the table will probably not look right for a dinner setting but it should look right to your focal length.

A Simple Food Photo Setup
The above photo was taken using just a couple of very basic techniques, below is a quick run down of how I set up the photo.  This is just my way of doing it, there are a ton of techniques out there and half the fun is finding what works best for you and just taking photos!  Hopefully you might find something here to help you with your own experimentation though.

THE HIGH TECH STUDIO ( AKA the breakfast table )

No tricks or expensive equipment to see here, this is our old breakfast table, as long as it's flat and can hold the weight of whatever you are taking a picture of then you're already half way there.
I suppose even the floor would do, but lets go for something that will give me a bit more room to move around with the camera. The set doesn't look much like the final photo yet though so read on . . .


DRESSING THE SET

When I had the shot idea in my head I wanted something high key and on a nice heavy white table cloth like the ones you get at fancy hotels.  I don't have anything like that but I did have an old muslin backdrop that I used to use for shoots. White sheets could have done the same job if you aren't lucky enough to have one of those heavy expensive tablecloths.  The backdrop stand has been set up so I can drape part of the muslin over to give me a nice white 'wall' to the scene.


MAKE IT NEAT

Muslin backdrops crease REALLY easily and are a bit of a pain in the proverbial to keep straight.  When they are just being used as an out of focus backdrop for portraiture this isn't much of an issue, especially if you can wash it out with strobes, but we're going for close up here, and at least part of our 'table cloth' will be in focus where the main food subject is sitting. A steaming iron was definitely my friend for this.


FINISHING THE BASIC SET

That's the presentation surfaces of the set complete now.  Anything likely to be in focus has been meticulously ironed out and is super flat, or as flat as I could make it anyway. You may notice the backdrop hanging over the stand is not ironed however,  the reason being that with the focal length and aperture I plan on using it will be a big blur anyway.  On a lazy Sunday afternoon shoot like this I am not likely to want to do more ironing than is absolutely necessary.

SET UP YOUR BASE LIGHTING

I do not have a window that gets good directional light from the sun anywhere in my place unfortunately so I have opted to use a couple of continuous lights for my light sources.  The softbox on the left is my main light for the scene. This part of the setup I prefer to do with all other light sources off as I find it easier to see where shadows will fall and how much of the area that will be in view is lit.  Remember rear lighting is good for food photography.


ARRANGING THE PROPS

Placing the props is the stage where you really start getting a feel for how your photo might look, surprisingly this actually takes the most time out of the whole process (for me anyway).  A professional food photographer will probably have a dedicated food stylist for this part . . . did I mention I am not a professional food photographer?  So no stylist for me! This pic is a good example of watching the fall of shadows from your main light.


ANOTHER PERSPECTIVE

This is just to demonstrate the tip I mentioned earlier about arranging the food for the lens you will be using.  From this side angle the food is arranged almost all the way down the length of the table, you wouldn't set a table like this for your friends, they'd probably think you'd hit the champagne early, but for the angle we are taking the photo from and the focal length (in this case 100mm) it works. You should test and adjust many times till it looks right to you.

READY TO TAKE THE SHOT

Here's the final setup ready to be photographed.  Main light is the continuous softbox on the left, on the right side is another continuous light slightly higher up and not angled directly at the food, it is mostly there for ambient light but also gives any shiny surfaces another highlight for extra dimension.  I also have a Vivitar flash through a grid setup (and a slight bit of diffuse material) just to give a bounce off the backdrop and brighten it up a bit.


As you can see none of this was particularly hard to set up and it used just very basic techniques, the biggest cost is taking the time to set it all up.  Why not give it a try yourself, practice makes perfect and you will have heaps of fun in the process, not to mention the pleasure of eating your props when you finish (if you use real edible food product that is).

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