Bibina Foods


Bibina Foods is currently running a combined editorial and advertising campaign with intouch magazine.

The magazine is very popular in the areas around Bibina’s Warners Bay food warehouse, withe its demographic fitting in well with Bibina’s – traditional media still has a place in promotion and intouch fitted Bibina’s needs.

 

intouch magazine creative – December/January issue

Our Christmas advertising was planned around the stock ordered months beforehand. I photographed the stock, sourced a recipe, wrote the copy and provided direction to the magazine on the graphic design of the advertising.

The resulting media looks great and Bibina sold out of many of the items quickly.

Bibina advertising December 2018

Trying Adobe’s Portfolio


Please check out my new portfolio.

With the scaling-back of Cycle Torque, I’m looking for additional work – and I’m trying out Adobe’s Portfolio online service to display some of my work.

It started out as a simpler way to produce a good-looking portfolio than learning how to do it here (wordpress.com) or with a self-hosted WordPress site (such as cycletorque.com.au, which I built).

It’s still very much a work in progress, and I’m not convinced it’s for me (I’m thinking of dumping the Adobe Creative Suite, which it’s a part of, because the monthly fees don’t fit into what I’m doing so much these days and really, I don’t like Adobe Lightroom much anyway).

Screen Shot 2018-01-16 at 4.58.57 pm

Steampunk HQ, Oamaru, NZ


I really love art galleries, but people who take junk and turn it into a story steps it up for me. Add in Victorian-era machinery – steam trains, copper pipes, goggles and the clothing of the era combined with science fiction and you get Steampunk.

Oamaru, a coastal town south of Christchurch, is home to Steampunk HQ. The old waterworks has been transformed, with a Zeppelin above the gate, a steam train ready to launch into the sky out from and the inside crowded with robots, creatures from outer space, mishmash technology, surprising lights and sounds.

The backyard has all sorts of Steampunk machinery – bikes, trains, cranes and lots more.

It’s an amazing place to photograph, with high ISO and odd lighting inside, extreme contrast from dark subjects and a while building outside and some cramped spaces to make life difficult, but you’re almost guaranteed to get some memorable images.

Oamau pier & Penguins


We rented a flat via Air B&B for our one night in Oamaru, a pretty town on the NZ East Coast which happens to be the presumably self-proclaimed ‘Steampunk Capital of the World’.

I love Steampunk, the delightful mixture of Victorian technology with sci-fi, creating ray guns covered in brass tubes, astronauts wearing flying googles and steam trains powered by gas cylinders.

But that’s tomorrow, we arrived after Steampunk HQ was closed, so we ended up enjoying a very long twilight on the old industrial pier, waiting for the Blue Penguins to emerge from the ocean to climb into their little houses built be the locals.

They showed up after dark, which was a challenge to shoot…

Christchurch’s renewal


After the earthquakes of 2010 and 2011 – the latter being the big one – Christchurch’s residents started the big clean up, but they left some interesting remnants of the disaster.

Their inventiveness came to the fore too, when many merchants and food sellers needed a place to trade in the devastated city, and the Re:Start project was created, a temporary shopping centre built from shipping containers.

Street art, blue skies and sculpture made for an interesting day being a travelling photographer.

Christchurch Sunset


The rain was coming down before dusk, the boring grey skies of the afternoon loading upon us as so often is the case in the Land of the Long White cloud.

But the rainfall broke up the clouds in time for a spectacular sunset, which i’ve captured here with the Olympus OM-D E-M5 mark II and the 7-14, 12-40 and 40-15mm f/2.8 PRO lenses.

The last two frames are crops from long exposures made after sunset.If you’d like more details on how I captured these images, leave a comment below.

Christchurch – Holiday


Christchurch, the lovely city on the coast of New Zealand’s South Island, was devastated by an earthquake in 2011 and much of the CBD still lies in ruins.

While I was aware of the loss of life, extensive and major damage to the city when it happened, until I got here and saw the extent of the repairs, hastily-propped up buildings and damaged structures being demolished over 5 years after the event… really, I admit I had no concept of what it must have really been like here during the quake and in its aftermath.

All of the shots of the CBD here were shot on the Olympus OM-D E-M5 mark II with the 7-14mm f/2.8 PRO lens.

tram-demolition
A Christchurch tram – similar in style to San Francisco’s, but they aren’t cablecars – taking tourists on a tour of the city and the destruction.
tram-crane
Around the other side of the block construction is moving forward as Christchurch is being rebuilt. Despite shooting this at 1/400th of a second it’s still not needle sharp, which is disappointing. But it’s pretty close.
building-old-car-mono
This building survived the quake and I was attracted to the old car out the front. It had to be shot in monochrome and the lines at the top really draw the eye in. Shot in mono on in camera and tweaked in Lightroom.
chess
Locals playing chess in the town square. By swivelling the screen on the E-M5II I could get an overhead shot.
untitled-69
The camera almost at ground level, focussed on the foreground chess piece.