©Image, Steve (Wirefox)
Name:
Dave Humphries
Location: Windsor, Berkshire, UK
Website: Newest:
http://www.pbase.com/dhumphries and
older:
http://picasaweb.google.com/dhumphries1
CiC: Thanks very much for taking the time to talk to us today.
I'm surprised I got away with it for so long; I must be
really boring
(Ed - Not at all. We've got to spread the really exciting ones across the series)
Perhaps we can start by you telling us something about your general back-ground. What about your work history – anything interesting?
A long time ago, in a faraway galaxy, I left school a smidge over 16 and started an electronic engineering apprenticeship with the national telephone company (now BT - British Telecom).
I stayed there 7 years, but they locked me in a telephone exchange (after being mobile), so I left for pastures new, which was the BBC on TV Outside Broadcasts. Did 8 years travelling the country making TV programmes, then moved into electronic maintenance when I had a young family growing up.
Over the years, that has migrated into office based data management and web/intranet work, which I still enjoy - I have been lucky.
And what about your family life?
3 kids; my eldest has just taken her accountancy exams (good luck), my son, sadly for him becoming as nerdy as I was, is at Uni and there's one more daughter who has just discovered boys
and passed her driving test
(Ed - Many readers here will understand and sympathise)
If you were staying in tonight, what would you choose as one of your favourite books and/or films to keep you entertained, and what you be having as a favourite meal?
I have quite a few books, virtually none of which are fiction, although I have been known to enjoy a biography. Most are reference books on either web design or photography/pp.
'Evening in' viewing would therefore be a film; sci-fi or action. Meal in; salt and pepper french stick and Tikka Masala - and yes, I dunk
OK, photography is a given, but what about other hobbies or personal interests?
Listening to music (my iTunes download totals are embarrassing) and watching TV.
Editor's Pick 1
Let's get on to photography - how long have you been a photographer, and what got you interested in the first place?
Ooh, must be since I was about 6, my parents encouraged it starting from a box brownie, through various 120 roll film and 126 instamatic cameras. School, and just after, saw my sister and I join a camera club for a year or two. A darkroom was built in our attic, for colour printing with one of those new fangled dichroic colour filter enlargers. Over time this gave way to Ektachrome or (satisfying the 'need for speed') Fuji 400 colour transparency shooting. Then a long break with nothing more than family snaps with Nikon EM on print film.
We got a family P&S in 2005 and that just got me wanting more control, so a bridge camera with full manual and RAW followed in 2007 and finally a D5000 in May 2009 to get access to less DoF, wider dynamic range, etc.
There's actually a fair bit of photography, well PP, that can be done here at CiC - honing my skills on other people's pictures - I also learn something when I help someone out.
What type of photography are you interested in, and why?
Anything I think I can do a good job of.
Any particular photographic influences?
I'm not really one to routinely read books or go to exhibitions, so most of my influence is from other CiC members (for example Kaskais for the sunset silhouette below). Occasionally someone will say 'have a look at these' and I do, but that's about as far as I go to see other's work. Perhaps another exception is if I want to improve a particular aspect of my photography, I might 'research the market' to see the standard I should be aiming for, I remember doing that for my
cycling series back in 2009.
What do you hope to achieve through your photography - or what have you achieved already?
Get me out more, possibly fill time and give me an interest when retirement, or similar, comes along - but for the moment, work is "an enjoyable challenge" which I hope will continue to pay the bills for a few years yet.
What do you think of CiC? Any way it could be improved? Where should it go from here, in your opinion?
Keep CiC a friendly, fun and educational place for people to come and ask questions and learn and while that's the case, I'll continue to spend far too long here 'moderating' and helping people (except we're all so nice here that even the moderating is 99% just helping people 'with knobs on').
I have to ask this…. What photographic gear do you own, and what software do you use for editing?
Fujica ST-801 (unused for 30 years), Nikon EM, Fuji Finepix S6500 - first serious digicam after a Nikon point and shoot, bought in 2007.
Nikon D5000 bought May 2009, with Nikon glass; 18-200mm, 70-300mm, 50mm f/1.4 and 105mm f/2.8 Macro, plus an assortment of s/h Nikon AI mount lenses which really don't work that well on a D5000. santa brought a macro focus rail gizmo and some reflectors, so I must use them in 2011.
Editor's Pick 2
It’s a tough one to answer, but how would you rate your photographic skills and ability?
Lazy to average, maybe a bit above
if I try hard, but you don't see me winning any comps, so that probably says it all about the reality
What will the digital camera be like in 2020? And will you still own one?
Thought controlled would be handy, and 3D. I can see a lot of places where the technology will make it even easier for the less skilled to 'get lucky' - e.g. continuous record (ahead of clicking the shutter button), so even if you were late starting shooting a sequence, you could just roll back to before you hit the button and the exposures would all be there - great for action/wildlife and it's only what's on some of the profesional video making/recording kit today anyway.
Are you in a position to help or encourage others in their photography?
Well, I moderate here, which is a pretty big deal timewise, but something I do because I enjoy helping others and seeing their skill develop, literally before my very eyes - you'll have to excuse the awful puns
Another tough one for you…do you consider photography to be art?
Absolutely! Painters have 'artistic licence' right? Everyone knows what it means, well photographers have licences for; dodging, burning, cloning, history brushing, etc.
It is how they use these tools that makes the result art.
Of course, I really shouldn't overlook the taking side of the equation, where the skillful use of; shutter speed, aperture, choice of focal length for angle of view and fine positioning for perspective.
How do you feel about having your own shot taken?
Well, I never was an oil painting, and now I have middle age spread, so it isn't something I enjoy.
What single piece of advice do you think is most useful to someone starting out with photography?
Concentrate on one genre of photography and get good at it - it does wonders for your confidence.
The old saying 'Jack of all trades, master of none' definitely applies to the early days of anyone's photographic endeavours - so don't spread yourself too thin and be mediocre at everything.
Of course, this is really just another way to encourage the 'practice, practice, practice' mantra.
Can we see two of your shots that mean something special to you, and could you explain why.
Shot while on holiday in Tenerife in July 2009, the birds display was awesome, I attended 3 times over 2 days
Unparalleled opportunities for bird in flight shots, some at very close range! I shot so many, there are still lots I have not PP'd - it was the first real test for the DSLR being a couple of months after I got it.
My other wildlife favourite subjects are insects; as close as I can get, either with a Macro lens, or as here, with the 70-300mm. I developed a technique for slowly getting closer, this took about half an hour and it was good to get the feeling that my behaviour observation and instinct for exploiting it paying off to get some good shots.
Finally, can you give us one interesting/weird/silly thing about you that we probably don’t know?
People often say I'm 'weird', or 'silly', less commonly 'interesting' though, hmmmm! - that wasn't an answer was it?
OK; (and I
hate name droppers) I once met the Queen and when she asked me a question, I mis-understood it and gave a rubbish answer, so she probably also thought I was silly.
That's all we have time for Dave, but thank you for taking the time to talk to CiC.
My pleasure.
Click here to find the full list of interviews conducted in this 'In conversation with ...' series.