So… the NEX-7 can shoot panoramic. You know… that doesn’t mean that you can only use a pano feature for places like the Grand Canyon? Here is a panoramic shot of the burners in my home’s hot water heat boiler. I had to remove the Burnham’s flame-out shield in order to get this shot. DO NOT TRY THAT AT HOME!
This shot shows us why it is so important to have your boiler or gas forced air furnace checked and cleaned regularly by an HVAC professional. See the blue flame? This is the hottest flame. See the orange flame? Not as hot as blue. The orange flame tells us there are particulates that need to be “cleaned” from the burner pipes. See… the gas we burn in our appliances is not pure. The particulates from the gas build up and can clog the burners. This causes the yellow or orange flames which is not as hot as the blue thus making the boiler less efficient. Regular cleaning can cure this issue and help extend the life of this $5,000+ boiler system.
Clean Your Clothes Dryer Vent Lately?!?!?! You set your clocks back or forward, you may replace your smoke detector batteries, you might even toggle your circuit breakers in the main panel once a year!!… but when was the last time you cleaned the lint entirely out of the vent tubing from the clothes dryer all the way to the outside? Dryer vent lint is extremely combustible and if clogged in the system can cause a fire in the dryer. For those of you with fancy laundry set-ups more is at stake for you. I once witnessed a home inspection where the 2nd floor laundry dryer vented up through the walls, the attic and ultimately out the roof. The vent tubing became detached in the attic and for years the dryer lint was exhausting into the attic and wall cavities. Read more →
For those out there scared of old homes take a look at this. “What the heck am I looking at, Steve?” you say. Well this home was built in 1899! We are situated on the outside north side of the house with 3 layers of siding removed… the original clapboard, a layer of asphalt siding (c.1940) and the current vinyl siding. This view reveals the actual sill plate (solid horizontal wood plank that sits on the top of the foundation aka “mud sill”.) a 2×6 run of wood. And we are talking a real 2inch by 6inch. Today’s “2×6” actually measures 1.5”x5.5”. The condition of this sill is amazing after more than 100 years! Moisture is detected but no rot whatsoever! Put the siding back and re-grade the dirt keeping moisture away from the house and we are good. Now see the vertical members that go up from the sill? These most likely run as one solid continuous piece of wood (stud) all the way the 2 stories of the house! Cool, huh?!?! Read more →
I have been using digital photography for real estate for the past 14 years… ever since I started with my first firm, Gagliardo Realty in River Forest. Back then… my Nikon Coolpix was something from the future and most agents didn’t even know what the heck that thing was! We didn’t have professionals go and shoot the house’s photos and most firms were still letting the multiple listing service take the photos for the then newly online listing service. You remember those photographs right?!?! The drive-by house photo where the kid in the car sticks out his huge digital camera… slows down to about 5mph and shoots?!?! Awesome. In those days the agent taking their own digital photography of their listings was really “stepping out of the box”.
Today, most firms have professionals take their house photos before going live with the listing. I do as well. But in order to continue to differentiate myself from all the rest I need to step out of the box again. One of those steps is diving into HDR photography or High Dynamic Range imaging. Check out HowToGeek.com for a more thorough explanation but let me give you as simple an explanation here. OK?
The digital sensor in our digital cameras is the thingy that captures whatever it is you are taking a picture of. Our eyes see all the detail of what we are looking at and we are often so amazed at what we see that we must get that photograph! But then we go and look at the picture and go… “Eh… it’s OK.” The photo may not always turn out how you remember you saw it. That is because the sensor thingy is limited in its range of capture. The sensor needs to find the happy medium between the deep detailed shadows and the bright white features of the subject we are shooting. This is what practically all of our cameras are doing… finding the happy medium. This is called Low Dynamic Range imaging… normal.
HDR imaging, in a number of different formats, strives to capture the entire range of exposures into one brilliant photograph. The most common way we can do this is to take a number of photographs of the exact same subject and position using different exposures each time and “merge” them together using special software. The taking of the images will almost always require a tripod. Some fancy cameras, such as my Sony NEX-7, even have in camera HDR ability. The camera itself fires off 3-4 times the same shot and using its own on-board software merges the photos together to bring all the details together in one photograph. Cool, huh?
I can tell you it is not as easy at is seems. The merging of these exposures can create some pretty wild effects more reminiscent of having a bad day in the 60’s rather than producing a fine photograph of a $1.6mil house in River Forest. Take a look at the “Hallway” shot and you see what I mean.
But with some further processing and using Adobe’s Photoshop to get rid of the dust spots on my sensor (so need to get that thing cleaned) I then came up with this warm shot of the same hallway in a vintage condo in Oak Park.
Now, HDR photography real does produce some amazing stuff. This photo below is a compilation or “merging” of a number of different exposures I took of a storm moving out over the Pacific off the shore of a beach in Playa Blanca, Panama. Not only did the merging capture the lights and darks but in processing I noticed the range of blue and grey from the water to sky was incredible.
So how does HDR photography help us sell a house? Well, many of the professional real estate photography companies use HDR imaging when shooting high end or “luxury” properties. Some of these photographers use full-frame digital cameras (very high-end equipment) to take tens of photos of the same room from the same position at different exposure levels. Then, complicated imaging software creates a photo of the room that is so vivid and detailed it almost looks like you could touch the features in the photo. I am just now getting to the point where I can get the results I want from an HDR merging. Below is one of my most successful photos to date. The first shot is just the house how it looks when we take a “normal” digital photograph.
Now take a look at what HDR can do for that same shot. Here, I let the NEX-7 do its own thing with the on-board HDR feature. But then I took another under-exposed shot to get at even deeper darks and shadows. Then I used a Lightroom add-on software to “merge” the two together. A little more post processing to get rid of the car in the driveway and there you go… not a bad shot.
But what about you? Do you really need fancy cameras and HDR imaging software to achieve these same photos? What can you do with the digital camera you already have? German auto maker, Bayerische Motoren Werke AG (BMW to you and me), estimates that the average owner of one if its fine automobiles will only ever experience 60%-70% of the car’s full performance potential. Meaning, when you think you are pushing your BMW M5 hard into the apex of the highway off-ramp clover leaf you actually… are not. The car has the ability to be pushed even further and will still stick to the road like the Formula 1 or LeMans series racer where all that technology came from in the first place. Your digital camera is most likely the same. Do you know what it can really do? Have you gone online and really poured over the manual to see all its features and capabilities? You might be surprised at what it can really do.
I want to start off by immediately stating that every entry… every post you SEE or read on this blog I want you to feel like it was worth even the quickest of glances… even the shortest of visits. Sure… this is MY creative outlet. Yes… I sell homes full-time in the Oak Park/River Forest area of Illinois. I have many passions but this blog is about the photography. I strive to make sure you exit from each post having learned something or at the least you say to yourself, “That shot was cool.”
Some basic info to know about this blog in no particular order…
- I sell homes so 75% of the blog’s content will have to do with homes. And I sell OLD homes because that is what we have here… mostly.
- Many of the posts will have to do with the crazy stuff I find in older homes! You wouldn’t believe what I see… Both beautiful and scary.
- Many times I will post on topics that have nothing to do with homes! I may post a photo that displays some other passion of mine like road cycling or automobile racing or…
- Many times I will pop a photo up here with no verbiage just because I think you followers would enjoy seeing it and maybe it needs no words.
- Unless otherwise stated all photos are mine taken by me.
- Unless otherwise stated all photos are taken using a Sony NEX-7 and an assortment of Sony E-mount lenses and possibly an old Nikkor lens or two affixed to the NEX using a Fotodiox adapter ring. The NEX is a mirrorless compact camera system.
- I use Adobe’s Lightroom software to keep track of my photos and I like to use the same for minor editing. Occasionally I will need to use Adobe’s Photoshop to remove an imperfection or car in the driveway.
So I encourage you to subscribe… follow… and here we go!