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Irawan's blog – Page 6 – Photography and travel stuff

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  • Golden hour at the Corroboree Billabong

    Golden hour at the Corroboree Billabong

    Chasing Light and Crocodiles with the Darwin Photography Walk 2012

    The Corroboree Bilabong is well-known for its amazing water wildlife scenery, including various Top End birds and crocodile species. Some tours offer this beautiful place, and when I joined the Darwin photography group, we had a chance to capture this beauty.

    It’s one of those places where the landscape shifts with the light, and every moment holds potential for the perfect shot.

    A Creative Gathering by the Water

    There’s something about photographing in a group. While photography is often a solitary hobby, doing it with others turns it into a shared experience of discovery and experimentation. We exchanged tips, admired each other’s gear, and pointed out interesting angles and movements across the water.

    As the sun began its slow descent, the billabong transformed. Golden light spilled across the water, casting long reflections of the paperbark trees and lotus lilies. Every frame became richer and more textured. Photographers call this the golden hour, which lived up to the name.

    We focused on capturing the soft ripples on the water, silhouettes of birds taking off into the sky, and those elusive crocodile snouts just breaking the surface. The challenge of shooting wildlife at dusk is part of the fun—waiting patiently, adjusting settings, and holding your breath just long enough to catch the perfect moment.

    Crocodile Encounters

    The highlight of the evening? Spotting several crocodiles slowly drifting near the boat ramp and around the reeds.

    Some in the group captured close-up shots with stunning detail. In contrast, others played with composition, framing the crocs between overhanging branches or reflecting skies. The results were as varied as the group itself.

    A Sunset to Remember

    It wasn’t just about photography—it was about connection: to place, wildlife, and others who see the world through a creative lens. I like sunsets and reflection on the water, whether on the ocean, billabongs, lake, or even on my drinks ;). And that’s why orange is my favourite colour.

  • Having Fun with Custom BOKEH 2 – 2012 (Mindil Fireworks)

    Having Fun with Custom BOKEH 2 – 2012 (Mindil Fireworks)

    In my previous post about Custom Bokeh, I mentioned about how to create custom shaped bokeh for still photography. On Thursday, I visited the opening season of Mindil Beach Markets in Darwin with fireworks and I practice the custom bokeh for that. The result was pretty entertaining and colorful, I couldnt stop myself watching them and here it is the video:

     

     

  • 6 Crusty Demon’s Style That Made Me Go WOW

    6 Crusty Demon’s Style That Made Me Go WOW

    I was at the Australian Superbike Championship 2012 this afternoon and was surprised by how little was the crowd at Hidden Valley, Darwin. Maybe it was on Sunday and I came bit late, but fortunately I had a chance to see Crusty Demons. The Superbikes themselves was OK.

    Crusty Demons performance were too short and didnt do too many acts but I got a chance to shot their styles. These are some that made me go wow and thought that these guys are 6. I shot these acts with cheap standard kit lense 55-250mm Canon:

    Crusty Demon | Thumb Up
    Thumb Up

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  • Reverse Lens Macro Photography

    Reverse Lens Macro Photography

    Doing macro photography could be very fun as you can create a photo that your eyes won’t see in everyday life or bare eyes. It requires a special lens to capture a tiny object as a close up in details. But I just learned recently that you can do a macro photography without special pricy lenses and get a way around it. One of my photographer friends mentioned to me the other week that we can do a macro photography with a reversed lens. I was not sure what he meant at that time but he said it’s literally just reversing your lens back to front.

    Not going to elaborate the science of how the reverse lens work but its pretty cool (you can see the science here: https://stephenelliot.com/2007/05/15/reverse-lens-macro-photography-tutorial/). You can just hold your lens back to front against the camera or buy a special reverse lens mount.

    So then I did an experiment on it and the result is surprised me, better than I thought. This experiment I used a standard cheap lens  kit EFS 18-55mm, I don’t have any insect or something more exciting to capture so I just took whatever I have in the office :

    This is how I did it without reverse lens mount This is how I did it without reverse lens mount

    Experiment I:

    Gargamel | Focal length 55mm maximum closest Gargamel | Normal lens at focal length 55mm maximum closest Gargamel | Same lens setting but reversed and closed up Gargamel | Same lens setting but reversed and closed up

    Experiment II:

    Watch | Normal setting 55 mm Watch | Normal setting 55mm Watch | Reversed lens Watch | Reverse Lens