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Category Archives: Education
My Camera Obscura
As part of my scholarship studies course of a Diploma in Photojournalism from ACFJ, I had to make a pinhole camera / Camera Obscura out of a Pringles Potato wafers container. For me, making the Pringles Camera Obscura was not just about recreating the first known principle behind the design of cameras. It was also a nostalgic trip down the memory lane to school days. I had made a Camera Obscura out of a shoe box as summer school project. Back then, it was more crude in construction, but I had managed to get an inverted image of a candle on the screen.
My reaction to the inverted image then, was very much like the amazement that Camera Obscura would have brought to early scientists, artists and commoners. The world being captured in a small room or a tiny box, I think is similar to the invention of wheel in the history of photography.
On one hand, it set up a race for scientists to discover more properties of light. At the same time, it gave visual artists newer ways to document real world on canvas. I am beginning to wonder if Leonardo Da Vinci made ‘Mona Lisa’ by tracing her figure using the Camera Obscura. This is question which will continue to haunt me for a longtime to come.
It must also be noted that pinhole photography survives in the age of Lens photography. There are countless artists seriously pursuing pinhole photography.I think I will take part in the annual World Pinhole Photography day that will happen from the next year.
Here are instructions to make a simple Pringles camera Obscura
If you are wondering how my Camera Obscure looks like. Below are few photographs of it.
Also posted in Blog
Tagged acfj, ateneo, bangalore, camera obscura, davinci, experiment, Karnataka, photography, pinhole
1 Comment
A year spent behind the lens
October 12th, 2007
October 13th 2006, that’s one Friday which I’ll never forget in my life. A year later, I see that today happens to be a small milestone for me. I will be completing one year of my life as a ‘photojournalist’. Last year on that fateful Friday I bid farewell to the Corporate world and IT industry. And on the very next day I began my tryst with serious photojournalism. As the days progressed, my bank balance began to recede, my patience swung like a pendulum (my dad’s patience… don’t even ask about it!). There were nights I couldn’t sleep. On the positive side, my confidence increased slowly as time went by.
My experiments with camera taught me something new every time when I had to shell out money in getting negatives developed, scanned and printed. Oh, I forgot to tell you something! I never had a DSLR camera then(Even today I don’t really own one. My company has given a beauty for me to use). I had borrowed my friend’s(Srikar) Film SLR to practice the craft. I swapped his Canon SLR with my Fuji digital camera for few days, which finally stretched to few months. Then, for a while I got Obi’s(another friend ) Canon 350D to do some minor assignments.
Those days, I spent my time on the streets of Bangalore shooting life around it. I am grateful to the narrow lanes and alleys of Shivajinagar,Avenue road, and the timeless Russel market, and not to forget my hometown Kaup, which have let me indulge completely in the art of photography. Three hundred and sixty five days later, after shooting for NGOs, online magazines, in-flight magazines and few portraits, I have come to be part of a newspaper ( Bangalore Mirror). I have been a press photographer for last eight months.
When I look back I see that I have travelled quite a distance in a short while. Last month, I got to cover my first major Cricket assignment. I actually covered the India – Australia ODI (One Day International) match held at Bangalore:-) [Can you believe it?]. Next day , I saw my photographs in the lead sports page of our newspaper. Oh boy, what a feeling it was to be watching a cricket match(for free!) from the boundary lines, capturing the action in camera and then tirelessly editing pictures, captioning them and mailing them back to the desk on a laptop with WiFi Internet access. You had to be there to know exactly what it felt like. Next day, I got a pat on my back from many people for the pictures I had made during the match(I’ll blog them shortly). I am looking forward for more of sports assignments. How many of you gave me a chance that I’d be handling such an assignment with in a year of having started my life from scratch? To be frank, I myself had no clue that I’d reach this milestone in a short time.
Today, as I woke up early, I was wondering how would I celebrate tomorrow. But, as unpredictable a day in the life of a photojournalist can get, I had something wonderful in store for me. I had to visit Bannerghatta Biological Park‘s Wildlife Rescue and Rehabilitation Centre(WRRC) on an assignment. The story was to cover the WRRC‘s first attempt to breed a Tigres with a wild tiger to bring in its wild genes to give birth to healthy offspring. This was a successful attempt. Today, Manasa the tigress has three healthy cubs. It was a beauty to photograph the Tiger cubs. And, finally came the moment when I decided to hold one of the cubs. I picked this little one (too heavy to be called little one) and it felt like carrying a two year old kid. I never thought I’d kiss a Tiger’s forehead. But, Yippee! it was too cute for me not to do it. Here, I share one of the photographs which I clicked on this shoot along with a picture of me carrying the cub(thank Niranjan for photographing me). I love my job. I feel I have the best job in this world (apart from the Zoo keepers at WRRC who are doing some great work)
I thank everyone who has been part of this journey of mine as a photographer. I thank my family and all the old friends who have stood by me and have supported me as I went about doing what I liked the most. Many thanks to all the photographers who I’ve met along the way and who have not hesitated to share with me a lot of valuable information and experience. And finally, I thank all the people in the field of journalism, whom I got to meet at some point of the time or the other; they have made my life really exciting, either by contributing to my growth as a photojournalist or by just having been part my life. I’ve made few friends, I’ve lost few, went bankrupt for a while, faced tough times but I’ve come through. And, I dream of going the long way. I’ve made a promise to myself long back. I shall live up to it.
Good night.
(Note: If you like my work, then please do share the link to this website with others. Also, if you’d like to support me in my projects, then feel free to click the ‘flattr’ button at the bottom of the post. Flattr is a social micro-payment system. )
Also posted in Personal, Photojournalism
Tagged assignment, journal, Karnataka, photography
28 Comments
Me, my solitude and Raju’s 350D – Part 2
Its been nearly two weeks of probation period at VT. Me and Raju’s camera (canon 350 D) did get to see some amount of life in Bangalore which was previously unknown to us. From Page 1 to Page 3 we have got to see a great deal of Bangalore. Sometimes boring stories and sometimes stories which reaffirms faith in the work I have set about doing, they all seem to be part of the game.
The two days I spent about covering the Tibetan Uprising day events have enhanced my confidence a great deal. I was surrounded by photographers who were working for agencies like Reuters,AP,PTI and AFP. It felt great to know that I was trying to capture in frames the story which they were interested too. I knew the event had a worldwide significance. For the first time I was given an opportunity to compare my work with the agencies worldwide. Well, its a different issue that the equipments they had at their disposal were technically far more superior than my buddy, the canon 350D. But hey! who cares? Me and 350D accepted the challenge gracefully. It was natural that I went back home and compared my work with theirs which was updated on the agencies’ websites. And I am being frank, I was impressed with my work on the Tibetan story which was done on 350D. This was a boost for me. Someday I’ll definitely make it to one of the agencies.
But as the story goes, only one image made it to print from those 2 days:-(. Now, for the first time I got an insight into the business of newspapers. There were local issues and advertisements which needed space. Tibetan struggle somehow didn’t fit the scheme of Bangalore centric newspaper.I had to kiss this fact. I had shot some page3 kinda pictures on the same day. They made it in large numbers. Something new about professional modern day journalism I had learned.
Life goes on; So I moved on from Rakshita’s Mehendi ceremony payasam to buffets at Star hotels of Bangalore while covering events and press meets. A trip to IIMB and freezing the future corporate czars of India, listening to a Tibetan hero who one day I know shall be the leader of modern independent Tibet(if Tibet’s destiny has independence in it), meeting visionaries of Karnataka state and then attempting an undercover operation in Bangalore subways where prostitution was rampant; it surely has been a great ride so far. I have come to know my limitations as well as my buddy 350D’s. But we have to learn to live with our limitations and make the most of it. And yeah, my probation at VT has nearly come to an end and I am waiting to hear from the Resident Editor on my future here. I have a feeling that I have done well. I hope they tell me soon. I have to return Raju’s 350D and buy mine soon.
Retrospecting through the last few months, I have come to realise that I am walking with huge weight on my shoulders. No, its not Raju’s camera bag:-). The weight I am referring to is of the expectations and dreams. I have realized that I am not just in a process of trying to realize my dreams. I am in fact trying to realize a million dreams. I was not alone, there are a large number of people who were and still are caught in a life they are not really keen on leading. But they do not want to risk an adventure to change things. I decided to break free and yeah I know, my decision had shocked many people. I can hear the words “Your son needs counselling I guess” still ringing in my ears. People who could draw similarities between their lives and mine have regularly been in touch with me. They are hoping I succeed in whatever I have set about doing. They are trying to realize their dreams of breaking free and reaching the pinnacle through me. And my friend, that is a huge pressure situation here. But I seem to love it.
I know that if all shall go well,
I’ll be a legend walking with applause.
And if fate shall have its way,
I’ll still be a martyr of my own cause.
-Nishant Ratnakar
I’ll be a legend walking with applause.
And if fate shall have its way,
I’ll still be a martyr of my own cause.
-Nishant Ratnakar
(Note: If you like my work, then please do share the link to this website with others. Also, if you’d like to support me in my projects, then feel free to click the ‘flattr’ button at the bottom of the post. Flattr is a social micro-payment system. )











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