Flickr off!

Despite what they said when they bought out flickr, looks like the new owners are going to limit what you can do with a free account. Bottom line is you only get to keep and show your 1000 most recent photos on the service. I have well over 7000 snaps on there some dating back to 2005 when I first signed up for an account. Either way, it accounts for a mere 1.4% of the 1 terabyte of storage they allowed free users to use up until now. I’m not paying them for storage, I already spend money on cloud storage and if they cannot make ads pay, tough.

Thankfully, now you can download all of your data and all of your photos. Mine amounts to several gigabytes and 15 or so zip files. All safely on my PC now.

Next step is to find a way to “run” my old Flickr galleries from these zip files once I’ve uploaded them to my web server. I will update once I’ve found the tools to do that. In the meantime, I recommend that you also download all your Flickr data, especially if you haven’t got the originals of all the photos and videos you’ve uploaded over the years.

Cloudy night of autumnal moths

We have recently had some clear, cold, and damp nights and some rainy nights recently. The scientific moth trap has been running, but with very few lepidoptera making an appearance. I have been observing one or two specimens only each morning. That said, four species new to me in a couple of weeks and all added to my butterflies and moths gallery. However, the evening of 25th October 2018 was cloudy and thus a little warmer and while I cannot say that the trap was heaving this morning, there had been a few interesting species in the dark and one or two more present by morning.

Feathered Thorn (Colotois pennaria)
White Point (Mythimna albipuncta)
Green Brindled Crescent (Allophyes oxyacanthae)
Common Marbled Carpet (Dysstroma truncata), dark form
Common Marbled Carpet (Dysstroma truncata), light form
Feathered Thorn (Colotois pennaria)

There were two very different colourations of Common Marbled Carpet (Dysstroma truncata), Green Brindled Crescent (Allophyes oxyacanthae), two differently sized White Point (Mythimna albipuncta), and a rather interesting autumnal flyer, a male Feathered Thorn (Colotois pennaria). Also, not pictured, November agg (Epirrita dilutata), not seen any of the underwings recently, but there was a Lesser Yellow Underwing (Noctua comes), and finally, a Turnip (Agrotis segetum).

In that bottom photo of the Feathered Thorn I had to clone out all the yellow and white dog hairs that were on the carpet to allow the moth to stand out in the photo!

Panorama to Planet

I just applied the Polar Coordinates distortion technique (discussed in this month’s Practical Photography magazine) to a panorama I took during the summer in the Isles of Scilly. Basically, you rotate a neatly stitched panorama through 180 degrees, then stretch it to make it square and apply “distort: polar coordinates”. A little bit of cloning to fill the corners with sky and then more cloning to “fix” the join. I added a solar flare to make it more planetary.

This was the original photo (scaled down for the blog post)

Heidelberg Thingstaette

The Heiligenberg is a wooded hill overlooking the town of Heidelberg in Baden-Württemberg, Germany. It rises to around 440 metres and has been the site of several historical buildings: a Celtic hilltop fortification, a Roman sacred precinct, several mediaeval monasteries, modern lookout towers and a Thingstätte, built by the Nazis in the 1930s. The latter is a rather chilling place, despite a hot, sunny day with lots of tourists and dogwalkers.

During the Third Reich, the Heidelberg Thingstätte open-air theatre was constructed in 1934/5 on the ridge between the Heiligenberg and the Michaelsberg as part of the Thingspiel movement. It is one of four hundred such venues planned, but only forty built. Today, it is once more in use as a venue for open-air events.

 

Airy discs and keeping it sharp

In optics (and thence photography, microscopy, and telescopy), the Airy disc is the optimally focused spot of light that a perfect lens with a circular aperture can make. It is the diffraction limit. It’s named after George Biddell Airy who wrote a detailed description although astronomer John Herschel had described the phenomenon when observing a bright star through his telescope.

Rubinar-1000 plus 2x K-1 telekonv Airy disk 1The Airy disk is a bright spot of light surrounded by concentric diffraction rings, all together they are referred to as an Airy pattern. The wavelength of the light and aperture size of the lens is critical to the size of the resulting pattern.

Airy disk D65

The old pinhole camera is at the diffraction limit, almost a point-like circular aperture. Due to this diffraction effect, the smallest point to which light can be focused with lens (or mirror) is the size of the Airy disk. Of course, lenses are not perfect and apertures are rarely circular, in a lens for an SLR and other types of camera they are usually made up of an array of six overlapping fins, (sometimes more, sometimes less. More means more circular and so better, and TV and cinematic film cameras often have 8 fins and so produce octagonal, rather than hexagonal bokeh. 8-finned cameras seem to have a much-improved image quality over more those with a more conventional 6-finned aperture.

Anyway, if Airy discs, light’s wavelength, and the lens aperture conspire to produce a diffraction limit, then it is pixel size in your camera’s sensor that “sees” this limit. It’s possible to calculate the diffraction limit. So, if your lens can be set to an aperture of f/2 (that’s the biggest aperture), the diffraction limit for green light with that aperture is about 2.7 micrometres. Dave Haynie discusses this in more detail here.

Now, f/2 is a low f-stop for most lenses. The Sigma 150-600mm with which I have photographed birds recently using my Canon 6D, can be set to f/5 when it’s at 150mm focal length, but only as low as f/6.3 at 600mm. That’s the biggest apertures it can manage. A larger aperture means more light in and exposure balanced against shutter speed and ISO number. My 90mm Tamron macro lens with which I have been photographing moths, has its biggest aperture at f/2.3.

Larger aperture means a smaller depth of field. The parts of the image that are closer or further away than the point at which you have focused the camera will be out of focus with a larger aperture (smaller f-stop). If you want a larger depth of field, then you need a smaller aperture, which means less light and critically from the perspective of sharpness, you begin to approach the diffraction limit. This occurs because of the Airy disc effect and how that coincides with the pixels on your camera’s sensor. To get a sharp image, you need the Airy Disc to be smaller than a pixel, realistically smaller than 2-3 pixels, explains Haynie. If you make the aperture bigger the Airy disc becomes bigger and so each perfect point of light will inevitably traverse a larger number of pixels, which is not what you want. Rather, you want each pinpoint of light from the object you are photographing to impinge on a single pixel.

This is where balance and compromise must come into play. A smaller aperture gives a larger depth of field, which is more important when doing close-up macro photography of small objects such as moths. So, you push the f-stop to a higher number to get a greater depth of field. Now, with small aperture, you are approaching that Airy problem. If you have a point-and-shoot camera, the sensor is only a few millimetres across, a two-thirds sensor (common on consumer-level dSLRs) is a lot bigger, although still smaller than the full-frame (35mm) sensor of professional dSLRs, and of course even that is a whole lot smaller than a medium-format digital back. (All of this feeds into why the highest quality photography, even in terms of film cameras) is often most associated with medium and large format.

Okay. So smaller aperture means a larger depth of field, but that means a bigger Airy disc, which means you need larger pixels (and the same number) to overcome the diffraction limit and get a sharper, better quality image.

Haynie has a Canon 60D, which he says has 4.3 micrometre pixels size. The Airy problem doesn’t arise at f/2.0, which such a camera. However, the pixels in older Smart Phone cameras are a lot smaller, perhaps 1 micrometre on a tiny sensor chip in order to cram as many as the market demands on such a small area. This means sharpness can be very limiting in older phones and many modern ones too. HTC and Apple have actually increased the size of the pixels on their sensors rather than increasing the megapixel count to overcome the Airy problem to some effect. Megapixel count always was marketing BS, anyway, because of all of the above and many other factors. Cheaper cameras (point and shot and/or phone) don’t have an aperture control or if they do it’s f/2 to a minimum aperture size of about f/4. You won’t be able to push it to f/8 or anywhere useful for depth of field. The size of the sensor and the pixels crammed in always mean passing the Airy border.

For that Canon 60D, stopping down to f/8 approaches the boundary as the Airy disc is about 10.7 micrometres at this aperture, stop to f/11 and it is 14.3 micrometres which is definitely larger than the width of 3 pixels on this camera. Contrast this with my Canon 6D, which has a full-frame (35mm) sensor. The pixels are a little over 6.5 micrometres and so I will be safe from Airy up to f/11. Take it to f/16 and it crosses the boundary. I reckon f/8 or f/9.5 would be the sweet spot for my moth macro setup. Assuming there’s sufficient light to keep the ISO low to avoid noise and the shutter speed short enough to avoid camera shake. I could use a tripod and remote shutter release with mirror lockup but that’s quite cumbersome when chasing small moving targets like moths. I do have the option of using Tamron’s onboard image stabilisation, which is worth two stops of shutter speed, so I can keep shutter long enough to let sufficient light in to avoid high ISO without introducing too much camera shake.

Your mileage will vary depending on what camera you are using. The Cambridge in Colour site has a more detailed explanation of Airy discs and a table to help you work out the optimal f-stop for your camera model. When you fill the form in it also simulates an Airy Pattern on your sensor, so you can see whether you’re at the limit with your camera for a given f-stop. f/8 is often considered a sweet spot, balancing reasonably large depth of field with minimal aberration due to Airy disc effect. The diagram below generated on the Cambridge site shows why this is the case.

Photographic refurbishment

I’ve spent far too long today hacking up my Imaging Storm website to make it more usable in terms of its photo galleries. Totally changed the way they function to make them better on desktop and mobile. By the way, if Sciencebase is my “Science, Snaps, and Songs” site, then Imaging Storm is definitely the “Snaps, Songs, and Science” site. There isn’t really a Songs, Snaps, and Science permutation yet, nor even a “Songs, Science, and Snaps” option. You have to just visit my BandCamp for the music.

Anyway, I’ve split the bird galleries into obvious categories: Perching birds, Seabirds, Waders & Waterfowl, Birds of prey, and Misc. I’ve also added a specific gallery for moths and butterflies for which the number of photos of different species I have is growing fast this week as regular readers may have noticed. I’ve also teased apart the wildlife gallery into mammals, non-mammalian vertebrates, and other invertebrates.

Be really nice if you could pay a visit to this sibling site of Sciencebase! Thanks.

https://imagingstorm.co.uk

Gulls jus’ wanna have pun

Gulls just want to have fun, A gull that can’t say no, Only gulls allowed, The it gull…

A real gull’s gull, Funny gull, Party gull, A daddy’s gull, One of the gulls, Good gull, Cover gull, Gull Friday, The gull next door, Couldn’t happen to a nicer gull…

Little gull’s room, That’s my gull, Working gull, Poor little rich gull, Big gull’s blouse, Call gull, Atta gull, What’s a gull supposed to do?, Guys and gulls…

A slip of a gull, Big gull pants, Old gull, Gull problems, Gull’s time of the month…

Poster gull, Page-three gull, Blue-eyed gull, Glamour gull, Same as the next gull…

Gulls’ night in, What are little gulls made of? Any other gull, Night out with the gulls…

More gulls and other birds and more in my Isles of Scilly gallery on Flickr. There are also my more serious blog posts about IOS with photos.

Isles of Scilly – Birds, beer, and boats

I started a blog post about the Isles of Scilly (#IOS) while we were island hopping there in July 2018, I was originally going to call it “Cornwall on Steroids”. My muso mate Graham gave us some pointers on IOS and he calls it Cornwall Plus. I was going to half-inch his idea but misremembered it under the influence of turning tides and Tribute.

However, my phone’s autocorrect was quite enthusiastic and fixed my draft title to “Corneal Streisand”. So, here we are a roundup of the various posts I’ve written since we got home with a few of my snaps (the full public gallery is on Flickr and a select few on Instagram).

Birds on the Isles of Scilly – Does what it says on the label.

The Seventh Seal – short post and photos about the grey seals we saw on the Eastern Isles IOS.

The piratical bird called Bonxie – Spotted a Great Skua on a pelagic trip on the Sapphire out of Hugh Town, St Mary’s, IOS.

St Martin’s Daymark – The daytime “lighthouse” with no light on St Martin’s Island, IOS, visible from mainland Cornwall and originally erected in 1683.

Manks Puffins – The reason the scientific name for the Manx Shearwater is Puffinus puffinus and not the Puffin, which is Fratercula arctica.

Gulls just want to have pun – Hmmm…gull puns…

The Seventh Seal

…actually, it was probably the 27th seal. We saw quite a few on a boat trip from Hugh Town on St Mary’s to the eastern isles of Scilly aboard Sea King skippered by Fraser Hicks. There were lots of adults and pups of the large species known as the grey, or Atlantic, seal (Alichoerus grypus, meaning “hooked-nosed sea pig”). Of course, seals are more closely related to otters and bears than pigs although their resemblance to dogs, and cats even, is often commented on. It’s evolutionary convergence, I believe, although otters and bears, cats, dogs and seals all share a common ancestor if you follow the branches of the family tree back far enough.

There are two sub-species of grey seal, A. g. atlantica (found on both sides of The Atlantic Ocean) and A. g. grypus (found in the Baltic Sea). However, the genetics suggests that the eastern and western Atlantic populations are distinct and have been for at least one million years, and so might also be seen as separate subspecies. The western Atlantic grey seals (or should that be gray seals?) are much bigger than members of the eastern population:

Western: Males grow up to 400 kg, females 250 kg.
Eastern: Males max out at ~310 kg and females ~190 kg.

They’re fascinating creatures and very photogenic. But, it’s with some sadness that among my photos from the trip is one of a seal pup with what looks like some nylon webbing from a crab pot entangled around its neck (see photo below). It looks as if the webbing has cut through the skin and blubber although there is no obvious bleeding, so presumably, the animal has been encumbered with this flotsam for quite some time. It is difficult to know whether it will survive into adulthood. We were in a boat with no possibility of getting close to the rocks to disentangle the animal. There were snorkellers in the water, but whether or not they could safely get to the animal is a moot point too.