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Chasing The Tour (The Movie)

My first glimpse of the Tour de France was back in the late 80s when you could watch 30mins of highlights on ABC’s Wide World of Sports. As a kid, my buddy and I would plan our weekends around this 30mins of epic television. Thanks to VHS we would watch the same 30mins over and over again while riding our trainers. I attended the tour for the first time in 2004. Armed with nothing more than a Velo News course map, a tent, and some stinky French cheese, my college teammate and I chased the Tour for 12 days through the French countryside. We had to be there for Lance Armstrong’s record breaking 6th Tour win. I shot the photo below 1km from the finish of the final individual time trail where Lance secured his 6th TDF victory (full story here). Last year, in 2010, I took my pops along with a bunch of our riding buddies to witness the greatest sporting event the world has to offer. However, this time we stayed in a hotel and rode our bikes along many of the stages. Here is what we saw. For all my Tour images, click here.

I know I am stating the obvious, but it amazes me how much the internet is shaping the world of art and adventure. Sure, I still love the coverage Paul Sherwen and Phil Liggett, but here we are able to share little windows into the world around us. I know that everyone out there isn’t a cycling fan, but there is something satisfying about being able to introduce you all to a world I have loved for over 20 years. I know it’s no ‘Wide World of Sports’ but I hope you enjoy it nonetheless!

Help Support The Livestrong Foundation The movie opens and closes with the messages of hope, healing, loss, and inspiration that the Nike Chalkbot penned along the roads of France. Don’t worry, the chalk is biodegradable and Nike cleaned it all up after every stage. As we pedaled our bikes along these roads, you couldn’t help but read the stories of those who had lost a loved one or who are currently in the fight against cancer. After miles and miles of messages, you become painfully aware how devastating cancer is. At an early age I lost my cycling mentor to his battle with this disease. We can all take action by supporting the LiveStrong organization. They do nothing but focus on kicking cancer’s ass. So please take the next step in this battle and join the fight.

Music

Song: Nobody ‘Cept You
Written By: Bob Dylan
Performed By: 16 Horsepower (the best band Denver ever produced)

Get it on iTunes here.

Secret South - 16 Horsepower

Videographer’s Note: My movies have been evolving over the last couple of years. All my previous films have been produced solely with my Flip studio. With this movie, I used a myriad of gear. Everything from point n’ shoots duck taped to my helmet, to video enabled DSLRs. Heck, I even edited it with iMovie (a free tool that comes with all Macs). But don’t worry, it is still a lo-fi gorilla view of the Tour de France.

Capture Notes: One of my favorite scenes, the last one of Jens Voigt crushing it in super-slow-mo, was shot with this totally cool and rather inexpensive piece of gear at 240 frames per second!

Good Luck Lance!

The Calm Before The Storm

I have been meaning to get together another short video. This one is from Playa del Carmen the day before hurricane Paula arrived. The entire video was shot and edited with a small handheld Flip Mino HD. If you would like a look at my inexpensive HD production studio, you can find it here. For the email subscribers out there, you will need to visit this site to view it.

News: I would like to say hello to every 1 in 14 people in the world. LightAsMagic.com now has its rightful place on Facebook. If you would like to ‘like’ it, you can find it here. Also, if you really like what LightAsMagic.com is all about, please suggest it to your Facebook friends.

Approaching Denali – The Movie

I hope you enjoyed last week’s photo essay, Approaching Denali. As promised, here is a short movie I made from the flight. You should have seen me. My Flip was in my jacket’s chest pocket, iPhone in the right hand pocket, Sigma 15mm fish in the left hand pocket, and the D700 w/ the 17-35 on my lap. My hands were flying around and my head was on a swivel. I’m sure our pilot was worried I was going to accidentally pull the handle to the ejection seat.

I normally carry a small Flip video camera with me when we travel. It is a great little camera. If you are interested in it, feel free to read my review here:

Flip Mino HD Review

I hope you enjoy the video. I did my best to hold the camera steady in a turbulent small aircraft.

Note: If you are an email subscriber, you might have to visit the site to watch the video. If so, here is the link:

Email Subscribers Click Here…

Music By: Cary Brothers
Song: Ride
Album: Who You Are

Who Click the icon to get the album.

Cary Brothers is a great band (it is actually an individual singer song writer with a boatload of talent), and I can’t recommend him enough. If you liked ‘Ride’, I think you will like the rest of his work.

Holding The Night Together


My first evening photo crawl with a great local photo group started out in high fashion. We met at a local pub/coffee shop in Denver, got a quick route briefing, and then headed out. I began the night by making the traditional expansive images of highway lights. However, my eye began to be drawn to the details along the footbridge we were crossing. Maybe it was my heightened focus or an unconscious interest in civil engineering. Either way I found a composition that inspired me. It was a fun evening and I look forward to joining them again next month.

I took my Flip MinoHD camera with me, and made a quick video. It is in my standard directing style, but this time I added a little ‘Holiday Bop’ to it.

[flashvideo file=http://www.hossedia.com/Video/Exposed_At_Night.mp4 /]

Nikon D300
Nikkor 16-85 VR II
Gitzo Traveler

Processing:
Capture (1 image)
Adobe Raw (Temperature and fill light adjustment)
Nik ColorEFX Pro (Darken/Lighter Center)
Nik ColorEFX Pro (Tonal Contrast cut highlights/midtone contrast, boosted saturation and shadow contrast)
Photoshop (resized)
Nik Sharpener (Output for display)
LightAsMagic.com

If you are interested in the photo walk, or some great workshops you can find more information about them here:

www.illuminateworkshops.com

Tip: When working at night I have found that I primarily shoot in Manual Mode and set my shutter speed to ‘Bulb’. I will make an educated guess at the time, make the image, review (chimp), and then adjust. If you are taking a 5 sec exposure, don’t worry if you accidentally shoot for 6 sec. To overexpose a 5 sec exposure by 1 stop, you will have to shoot a 10 sec exposure. Even with a generous margin for error while working at night with long exposures, you still might want to take a stopwatch. Also, you will need a steady tripod and a cable release. The cable release is optional, but it always use it.

Exposed

This site is about sharing inspiration through stories and pictures. I hope this post doesn’t violate any self imposed rules. What the heck, I make the rules so I guess I should break them. With the addition of a Flip MinoHD to my travel kit, this site is now about sharing inspiration and stories through the occasional moving picture. The Flip is a great little device for traveling light. It lives up to the hype as one of the easiest video cameras to operate. Little did I know that the included software turns my Mac into one of the easiest production studios to operate. The Flip, and the included software, has its limitations but just like using a single prime lens you can create inspirational movies. This movie was made from a series of clips that I downloaded, ordered, and then with a click of a button fed to the ‘Magic Movie’ machine. I added some music and viola!

I apologize in advance for some shaky footage. I had never operated a scooter before, let alone drive it single handed while I filmed our ‘Road Less Traveled’ tour of Cozumel. I hope you enjoy the movie. It is a precursor to the new content I will be providing next year (it is only a week away).

Click on the ‘Play Button’ and give it a second to load.

Tip: Having never shot footage before, I quickly learned to let your subject inject motion into the scene. Panning only works if you have a hydraulic boom.