Extreme Predators of the Sabi Sands Safari - 2 Final Spaces Available
Leopard and her dinner
Rhino in the Sabi Sands
Interior of Singita Castleton
Outdoor dining on clear nights
I am an avid adventurer, conservationist, teacher, and outdoor photographer whose photography celebrates the African landscape and its rich wildlife, people, and culture. My photographic safaris allow my travelers to not only enhance their understanding of photography, lighting, and wildlife, but to develop a life-long admiration for Africa ‘s beauty and culture.
Banana Republic recently used my photographs as the cornerstone of their Urban Safari campaign, and my images were seen in all 750 stores around the globe, as well as in their billboards, catalogs and annual report. I was also the winner of the BBC Wildlife Photographer of the Year in the ‘Wild Places’ category in 2008 and a highly commended in the ‘Creative Visions of Nature’ category in 2007.
I launched Gura Gear in 2008, in an attempt to deliver lightweight camera bags to the market. I was looking for a lightweight camera bag to hold all of my photographic gear, and there was nothing desirable on the market that suited my needs. After spending 2 years with many prototypes, the Gura Gear Kiboko bag was born. More products are now available on the Gura Gear web site.
Leopard and her dinner
Rhino in the Sabi Sands
Interior of Singita Castleton
Outdoor dining on clear nights
I get asked many questions about my Adobe Photoshop Lightroom workflow, and I thought it would be a good exercise to jot the steps down, along with some random notes. This is a workflow that I use if I am out in the field and won’t be using my favorite plugins such as Nik Software’s Viveza 2 or Silver Efex Pro 2.
Library Module
Import
Optional: metadata (copyright information goes into images)
Optional: Preset development ‘recipe’
Previews: standard
Develop Module
Crop (‘R’ keyboard shortcut)
Spot Removal
You can use either Clone or Heal. Just do whatever it takes to get what you want. Use the bracket keys ( [ and ] ) to increase/decrease size of the brush. Use Command and + or – to zoom in or out, and use the space bar to enable moving around within the frame.
Lens Corrections (If Available)
I rarely, if ever, do manual lens corrections. Perhaps I just don’t have the patience. J
Camera Calibration
Optional: camera profile, other than standard. You can create your own profile(s) with X-Rite ColorChecker Passport ($99)
White Balance
This is a creative tool, not a scientific tool. Just do what looks good. 5000 is mid-day light, and any movement of the slider to the right will warm up your image and to the left will be cooler.
Exposure
This sets the overall brightness. Unlike LR3, the Exposure slider does not set the white point. Hold down the ALT key when setting the Exposure to see what will be clipped or thrown away.
Contrast
This slider sets the overall contrast of your image. You will be able to fine tune the contrast with the next 4 sliders beneath it (Highlights, Shadows, Whites, Blacks).
Highlights
Think of this slider as anything that is bright but not too close to white. You can use this slider to brighten up your brights, without affecting the color of white. See Whites below for more. This is the easiest way to create or preserve a presence in your images.
Shadows
“Poor Man’s Fill Flash’. Use this to a minimum if possible. Overuse will cause an image to lack contrast. I do prefer to use the Tone Curve to be more specific, but this is a great tool for a broad stroke type purpose.
Whites
This used to be called the Recovery slider in LR3 and before, but this time the slider affects more tones.
Blacks
This slider affects the darkest areas of the image. I use this to set my black point as an anchor to
Clarity
Don’t do it. It’s like riding a scooter. It may be fun, but you don’t want your friends to see you doing it.
Vibrance
Newer version of Saturation slider. Non-linear in nature. It will increase saturation of less saturated colors faster than the colors that are already saturated.
Saturation (if not using Vibrance)
I never use this, as it is a blunt tool that will make it easy to blow out your most vivid color in your scene.
Tone Curve
I start off by increasing Lights and decreasing Darks by opposite, but equal amounts. (ex: +10 and -10). I typically am more dramatic with the Lights and Darks and the Highlights and Shadows are closer to zero. When working with B&W images, all bets are off and I do whatever it takes to get contrast. I usually start off with a Medium Contrast curve, but sometimes do use the Linear or Strong ones. It just depends.
HSL (Hue / Saturation / Luminance)
Use the targeted adjustment tool. Click on the little circle to ‘undock’ the tool. Go to your image and click and drag up or down to affect the H / S or L values of all similar tones/colors in the image. Poor Man’s Polarizer = Increase saturation on sky and decrease Luminance on sky. Make sure you have a nice blue in the sky to begin with.
Split Toning
Used only for B&W images. I use nothing for Highlights and a range of 40-50 for Hue and Saturation of between 5 and 20 for the Shadows. This creates a nice split tone warm image, without dulling the highlights.
Sharpening
I usually only vary the Amount and Masking. To use the Mask, hold down the Option/Alt key to see what is going to be sharpened.
Noise Reduction
I only vary the Luminance slider, and rarely go beyond 15 or 20. If the image is underexposed by more than a stop, you may need to slide the Color slider to the right to eliminate stray pixels that are blue or red (easy to detect).
Post-Crop Vignetting
Use sparingly. Remember it is uniform around all edges, so it might be visible. I use something like a negative 5 to 10 for the amount, and the Feather of around 80 (less sharp gradient).
Grain
I sometimes have to add grain to a B&W image that I am printing really really big. The goal is to fill in the gaps and mask out some of the issues with a lower megapixel file.
Graduated Filter (M)
I use to darken skies. I only use Brightness, and never Exposure, as Exposure weakens the whites in clouds.
Click and drag from beginning of where you want to darken and end where you want to end. The longer the drag, the longer the gradient effect is. Hold down SHIFT key to make the gradient a 90 degree / straight line.
Adjustment Brush (K)
I use this brush for many purposes. I can:
Hold down ALT key to remove areas that you didn’t mean to brush. Use bracket keys to increase/decrease brush size.
Keyboard Shortcuts
Drinking Elephants
Near Lake Ndutu, southern Serengeti Plains, Tanzania. February 2012
Pentax 645D + 400mm f/5.6, 1/250 @ f/5.6, ISO 400
Cheetah and Her Cubs
Ngorongoro Conservation Area, Tanzania. March 2012
Pentax 645D + 400mm f/5.6, 1/100 @ f/5.6, ISO 800
Sunrise and the Lion
Masai Mara Game Reserve, Kenya. March 2012
Pentax 645D + 300mm f/4, 1/125 sec @ f/8, ISO 200
I am coming to NYC and will have a 2-hour talk on wildlife photography, creativity and post-processing on April 30 from 4-6pm. The post processing part of my talk will involve Adobe Lightroom 4 and some of the Nik Software plugins (Viveza 2, Silver Efex 2 and perhaps Color Efex 4). Be sure to register for the event in advance. Come on out and say hello if you have the time!
Cheetah on a Termite Mound
Olare Orok Conservancy, Kenya. March 2012
Pentax 645D, 300mm f/4, 1/1000 @ f/5, ISO 200
After a 3-week absence, I am back home with my family here in Houston. I had two amazing safaris, as I split my time between Tanzania and Kenya for each. The first safari in Tanzania was a published departure with 12 travelers, and the second safari in Kenya was a private safari that was not published online. I am sorting through my limited set of raw files, and I think I have some real keepers that I will be proud of. I mostly shot video on these safaris, and so I only came home with about 1,000 files from a borrowed Pentax 645D medium format camera.
There is a story in here that I need to tell about medium format digital for wildlife photography, and the short story is that the technology works perfectly for my needs. In the past year I have been seeking out a way to be able to produce bigger prints with more detail, better color and overall image quality. I have borrowed a Leica S2 system for my Antarctica trip, a Pentax 645D for these past safaris, and I will be using Phase One gear for one or more of my trips to Botswana and Namibia last on this year. I suspect I know what I will end up with in the end, but it has been a fascinating process so far.
I have the luxury of not having to shoot for anybody else but me, which means I can take a new camera system that might only yield 1 usable photograph per few days of work. That’s ok with me, because I would like to have only a handful of portfolio additions each year. Any more and it would exceed my expectations, but my expectations are quite low as it is. I would rather have a few amazing images that I can reproduce at any size that is requested than to say that a particular image can only be printed up to 16x24.
Time to get cracking on some raw files, a trip report, video footage and some sleep time in my own bed.
I am on safari for the better part of 3 weeks, and I will be running 2 separate safaris during that time. On my first safari I will be leading a group to the Ngorongoro Crater and two locations in the greater Serengeti ecosystem. After that I will head across the border to run a private safari to the Masai Mara. It’s been more than a few months since I was last in Africa (September!) and I cannot wait to get back out there.
2012 is going to be a very busy year for me, as I have 8 (yes, eight) safaris planned. A typical year for me is that I spend the early part of the year in Tanzania, and then I move down to southern Africa for the second half of the year. The reasoning has to do with rainfall and when the best months to be out on safari for each country are. So the second half of 2012 is when 6 of my safaris will happen, which is going to put some miles in my airline frequent flier account, for sure. Every now and then I wonder if I should just live in Africa full time, because the travel back and forth can be a bit of a burden. I will lose 8 to 10 days this year due to international travel alone. Oh well.
As far as my 2012 schedule goes, you will notice that most of my safaris are already booked up or only have 1 or 2 spaces left. I am in the process of planning my 2013 year, and I will have them listed on my web page in the coming month or so. I am honored to have safaris that are in high demand, and work tirelessly to exceed expectations that my travelers have of me and my services. If you are on the fence about a safari in your future, please know that my safaris do book up early, especially if you are looking for discounts for significant others. I offer 25% to 50% discounts on some of my safaris to those who wish to bring along their significant others and who are willing to share their row with him/her. These discounts are usually limited to certain Botswana safaris, due to how my cost structure works. So if you are thinking about a 2013 safari, take a look at my 2012 schedule to get an idea of what type of safari meets your luxury level and budget.