Stuck in Customs – Page 427 – Trey Ratcliff's Travel Photography blog with daily inspiration to motivate you!

Stuck In Customs

My daily travel blog to inspire and get you motivated!

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The Internal Weather System

Beijing Taxi Video

Here’s a video from when I was in Beijing… trying to get to my hotel… the more I showed him the map, the more confused he got..

Daily Photo – The Internal Weather System

This is another view inside the cavernous symphony hall in Beijing. The place is so enormous that you can see the beginnings of little clouds inside when the lights move a certain way. I actually think only part of it is related to the size – the other part is related to the awful pollution all around Beijing. There is so much particulate in the air, and it fills up inside big places like this. When the distance is obscured by cloud-matter, it makes everything feel more epic and grand (albeit dirty!).

The Internal Weather System

Photo Information

  • Date Taken2010-10-01 04:28:39
  • CameraNIKON D3X
  • Camera MakeNikon
  • Exposure Time3
  • Aperture6.7
  • ISO200
  • Focal Length14.0 mm
  • FlashNo Flash
  • Exposure ProgramAperture-priority AE
  • Exposure Bias+2

Photo Mystery – Ye Olde Blacksmithy

Photography eBooks over at Flatbooks.com

Here’s a list of some of our most interesting and best selling eBooks over at Flatbooks.com!

Daily Photo – Ye Olde Blacksmithy

Okay THIS is a tough one, I hope. Who can figure out where this insane place is located?

I saw it from the street… a lot of glinting metal… and I had a feeling it would be pretty awesome inside… I was right!

Ye Olde Blacksmithy

Photo Information

  • Date Taken2010-09-22 04:39:04
  • CameraNIKON D3X
  • Camera MakeNikon
  • Exposure Time0.7
  • Aperture16
  • ISO250
  • Focal Length14.0 mm
  • FlashNo Flash
  • Exposure ProgramAperture-priority AE
  • Exposure Bias+1

Evening on the Beach in Virgin Gorda

Textures Tutorial

We broke apart the Textures Tutorial so that people could JUST get the hi-res textures. That was a common request, so we recently made that available for you.

Daily Photo – Evening on the Beach in Virgin Gorda

This is the beach that was just a short walk from Toad Hall, the place we stayed during our fun trip down to the islands. The sand was so soft and powdery, and the water was like a warm bath. I guess that’s why this area got the name “The Baths” although I am not sure.

Do you like this painting effect? I think I like it sometimes… depends on my mood.

Evening on the Beach in Virgin Gorda

Photo Information

  • Date Taken2012-05-07 19:30:27
  • CameraNIKON D800
  • Camera MakeNikon
  • Exposure Time1/500
  • Aperture5.6
  • ISO200
  • Focal Length14.0 mm
  • FlashOff, Did not fire
  • Exposure ProgramAperture-priority AE
  • Exposure Bias

A fun internet contest to win $250 from Adorama!

$250 Contest from Adorama – a Preset Partay

For the month of November we are running a photo contest to see all of the creative ways you use Trey’s Lightroom Presets. The winner will receive a $250 gift certificate from Adorama!

To enter, simply post your photo to Google+, Facebook, Twitter, or Pinterest and add the tag #TreysLightroomPresets along with the name of the preset you used to the photo’s description. You can post as many photos as you want during the month of November. On December 1, 2012 we’ll pick a random winner from the entries. Good luck and have fun!

Check out some of the latest #TreysLightroomPresets entries here.

Below are a few of my favorite photos that I processed with the presets!

Lonely Tree in WanakaThis is one of three tree photos I will publish over the coming weeks. You may remember a previous one where the bottom of the trunk was on fire… that one DID have a bit of Photoshop… We’ll also go over that one in the class.- Trey RatcliffClick here to read the entire post at the Stuck in Customs blog.

HDR Photo

HDR Photo

HDR Photo

HDR Photo

More from the New Zealand Car Trip

The Car Trip

A few days ago, I posted a grouping of three photos from the car trip, so here are three more for you! Also, maybe you saw some of these in the new video that launched yesterday… so here they are a bit bigger and whatnot! 🙂

On the drive from Te Anau to Milford Sound, you cross a perfect little stream called Monkey Creek. This spot is worth at least a few hours of exploration!

The Car Trip A few days ago, I posted a grouping of three photos from the car trip, so here are three more for you! Also, maybe you saw some of these in the new video that launched yesterday… so here they are a bit bigger and whatnot!On the drive from Te Anau to Milford Sound, you cross a perfect little stream called Monkey Creek. This spot is worth at least a few hours of exploration!- Trey RatcliffClick here to read the rest of this post at the Stuck in Customs blog.

 

I woke up early in the morning to visit the sound to see what was happening. Everything seemed in slow motion while the fog slowly wafted across the water…

 

Daily Photo – Sailing on Lake Wakatipu

The car trip started here in Queenstown on Lake Wakatipu. It was a perfect spring day, and there was a lone sailboat down on the lake. Everything is on such a big scale here, maybe you can get a sense of the overall size of the lake from the tiny sailboat on there… it looks like a toy!

Sailing on Lake Wakatipu

Photo Information

  • Date Taken2012-10-27 23:09:29
  • CameraNEX-7
  • Camera MakeSony
  • Exposure Time1/1000
  • Aperture5.6
  • ISO100
  • Focal Length45.0 mm
  • FlashOff, Did not fire
  • Exposure ProgramAperture-priority AE
  • Exposure Bias-0.3

Moving to New Zealand

Why Did I Move to New Zealand?

There’s a long story to it all… but I think you can see a lot of the reasons in the video below.

By the way, if you are looking to buy a house here and need a recommendation, contact me via [email protected] and the team will get you to me. I can make an excellent recommendation for you!

This video was made with Animoto!

I used a cool online thing called Animoto to make this video. I also wrote up a full Animoto Review here on the site.

You can also use the Animoto Coupon Code of “STUCKINCUSTOMS” to get 2 months free with a pro account… thanks for the team there for providing that for us!

New Video – Turning to Peace in New Zealand

It’s a hi-rez video… I recommend listening with earphones or good speakers too – enjoy 🙂

Inside the Conciergerie

Ben Willmore’s Amazing Book


Ben is a great teacher, and I highly recommend his eBook, The Fine Art of Painting with Light, over at Flatbooks.com! Here are the bullet points we have listed out over there:

  • Over 90 pages of lightpainting info
  • 28 real world examples
  • Easy-to-understand how-to guide
  • Tips on flashlights & other tools
  • Guide to image processing
  • Photoshop compositing walk-through

Daily Photo – Inside the Conciergerie

The French know how to build a beautiful prison! On the downside, it held up to 1,200 prisoners at a time, which sounds more like a French subway.

They don’t like you using tripods in here. I asked if the punishment was to just leave me in the prison while I take the photos. And then, when I stopped using the tripod, they would let me out of prison. This seemed like a pretty good compromise to me, but they did not find it amusing.

Inside the Conciergerie

Photo Information

  • Date Taken2010-09-17 00:00:00
  • CameraNIKON D3X
  • Camera Make
  • Exposure Time1/10
  • Aperture4.8
  • ISO800
  • Focal Length14.0 mm
  • Flash
  • Exposure Program
  • Exposure Bias

San Francisco in the Fog

Thanks Thomas Hawk!

I found this spot in Stuck on Earth thanks to Thomas Hawk’s Top 50 Secret Spots in San Francisco. More are getting added all the time, and especially more soon with the upcoming release of Stuck on Earth 3.0!

Daily Photo – San Francisco in the Fog

SF would not be the same without the fog, would it? It’s part of the city, like the wind in Chicago. But the wind in Chicago kinda sucks, so I guess that is a bad analogy. Maybe a better one is it’s like the water in Venice or the neon in Vegas.

I took this photo from the top of Twin Peaks with a 28-300mm lens. I think it’s probably the best spot to take this photo because of the black background behind the bridge. If you shoot it from the other side, then you get the city behind it. Of course, that can be cool too – it’s just a different sort of shot.

San Francisco in the Fog

Photo Information

  • Date Taken2012-04-20 06:33:07
  • CameraNIKON D800
  • Camera MakeNikon
  • Exposure Time15
  • Aperture5.6
  • ISO200
  • Focal Length300.0 mm
  • FlashOff, Did not fire
  • Exposure ProgramAperture-priority AE
  • Exposure Bias+2

Bad Experience with Nikon Professional Services

D800 Review

Back when I had it, I wrote my Nikon D800 Review that you might enjoy.

Update – Feb 2013

I wrote this blog entry below back in October of 2012. Oh it seems so long ago… the pain has run deep and true, like a river of regret through my soul.

But, since then, I’ve recently had an encounter with NPS Australia that has made everything wonderful again. NPS Australia is really really good. I still don’t have anything else positive to say about the other regions, but NPS Australia has gone above and beyond my expectations. Big thumbs up my Aussie neighbors!

Not a great story

So, I’ll start this out by saying that everything may very well be my fault. I’m not one of these angry-customer-types that rants and raves and demands he is right. But I think you’ll also find this story to be a little confusing or upsetting.

I joined NPS (Nikon Professional Services) a few years ago. It’s easy to join — you just have to be signed up by an existing member. I didn’t really know what NPS did, but I figured it would be handy in case anything ever went wrong with my equipment. Over the years, I’ve bought a lot of stuff and Nikon has never given me anything; I’ve bought a D90, D2X, D3X, D3S, D800, and countless lenses. They sent me a little black NPS card and said I should always carry it around with me, which was kind of a strange request. Anyway, this isn’t really about the silly little card or their draconian-card-carrying-policies, just setting the stage that I’m a member and everything.

I’ve had three negative experiences and zero positive experiences with NPS. I’ll go through them here.

1) Refusal to repair my Nikon 28-300mm lens – The lens fell with the camera recently and is a little bit messed up. I think it’s a minor repair. As far as I can tell, it’s just a little sticky when I zoom in and out. So, not a big deal. We sent this to be repaired by Nikon in the USA. However, they refused to repair it because they say it is “grey market”. I bought it from a retail outlet here in New Zealand in Christchurch (Photo Warehouse – the main pro photographer supply chain in the country). It cost about $1,600 instead of the $1,000 off Adorama. I’m so confused by this policy!

I went to the grey market page at Nikon and they say that it’s probably grey market because it went through an importer and is sold at a local store. Well, yes! I mean, isn’t this how millions of people buy camera gear around the world? I assume the lens is made in the same place as all the other Nikon lenses. And why do they call it a “Grey Market”? That kind of has the indication that something nefarious or underhanded is going on. It’s not. I just drove to a local legitimate camera store, and bought a lens!

The Nikon website also ridiculously says, “If the deal was just too good to be true, it probably was. One of the first indicators that a piece of Nikon merchandise might be Gray Market is if the price is considerably less than most other resellers.” Well, no! Pretty much everything in New Zealand costs a lot more, so it was hardly “too good to be true”… goodness gracious….

Even the return process has been a cluster. Now, I’m grateful to the team here at Stuck in Customs – we have about a dozen people who do various important things in different capacities. My COO, Curtis Simmons, has been having to deal a lot with NPS since I hoisted this upon his lap. I got an email from Nikon about returning the lens, which I forwarded to Curtis. He replied to me with this: “So in order to get the lens back NPS said that I have to refuse the repair estimate for a repair they refuse to do!”

We’ll just call this a clusterwtf.

2) Refusal to fix my D800 – When I was in Australia, the winds of Sydney harbor blew over my tripod and camera. It hit the ground, but didn’t seem too bad. I kept using it for another few weeks, and even took that photo below of the bed in downtown Dallas with it I noticed the focus was a little bit off. Not much… just a little bit. So I sent that in too so they could have a look. Apparently, they saw the outside of the body was damaged, which is no big surprise. The refusal letter we got said, “We found evidence of damage to the main casing.” They said it cannot be repaired! I find this hard to believe, since the camera is like 98% working well! I don’t get it… Naturally, I was more than willing and happy to pay for the actual repair.

Again, maybe I am wrong (tell me if I am…feel free to give me a gut check), but I really feel like they’re not even trying. And can’t NPS do something like get me another camera or something? I mean, after all, what good is Nikon Professional Services… can’t they help a brotha out? Jeez… this has all just been a tremendous waste of time.

3) Early ordering for the D800 – This happened many months ago, but I’m adding it here as item #3 of General Dissatisfaction. I was quite excited to get a letter from NPS that I could early-order a new D800. I thought, oh wow, finally some sort of clear “bonus” for being a member of this secret group. I guess maybe they know that I’ve been carrying around this black card all these years. Anyway, I went ahead and went through the process to get an “early order”.

The process was ridiculous. It required me finding a local retailer and making the purchase. There was a lot of faxing (remember faxing from the early 90’s, dad?) that went back and forth to ensure there was an order placed. Everything went according to plan, but I didn’t end up getting the D800 until many other people were buying them in regular stores! For example, my friend Lester Lefton just waltzed into a store to buy his a week before I even got mine! Hey, that’s a great program there NPS… not only did it take up hours of my time, but it was slower than just walking into a Best Buy!

Photos from my old D800

Well, sweet memories of the camera below… I’ll still put the camera and lens on my shelf… I will stare at them through narrowed eyes of bitterness…

Inception: New York I took these photos in New York City before going to LA to prepare for Burning Man. I found this spot below in midtown during a walk from Bryant Park over to the Facebook HQ in NYC. If you check my Facebook page, you’ll see some photos that Luke shot of me while I was taking this shot. It’s the one when I was awkwardly up under my camera shooting almost straight up in the air! You know that position…- Trey RatcliffClick here to read the rest of this post at the Stuck in Customs blog.

NPS NIkon Professional Services

Fast Action in New York City Speaking of PhotoWalks, I took this photo right after the photowalk in New York City a few weeks ago! I emerged from Grand Central Station and was about to walk across the street when I saw this scene. That guy was still as a statue, checking his phone while the world went on around him. - Trey RatcliffClick here to read the rest of this post at the Stuck in Customs blog.

Sleeping in Downtown Dallas What do you think is happening in this photo? It’s full of secrets, like Laura Palmer…We had a tiny, unannounced PhotoWalk in Dallas last week. Hello to those of you that came!- Trey RatcliffClick here to read the rest of this post at the Stuck in Customs blog.

The Mysterious Rock of Wonder The day in Death Valley was about 115 F (46 C). It wasn’t a dry heat either… there has been a lot of humidity here and there is flash lightning in the day and night. This location here took a lot of time, effort, and 4×4 to find. I took five gallons of water, a map, and some warnings from the place that rented the jeep that this area was inaccessible because of recent road wash-outs from rivers. Well, they were right! So getting the 4×4 over and through the washed out rivers took many more hours than expected. I only suffered one minor injury when my head slammed into the rollbar during a clumsy maneuver. But after I finally found this place I’ve always wanted to visit, it was late afternoon with plenty of time to hike around before night fell.I look forward to your theories (from the boring to the surreal) of what makes these rocks move across the playa on their own!- Trey RatcliffClick here to read the entire post over at the Stuck in Customs blog.

Magical Fog in San Francisco over the Golden Gate BridgeI recently drove across the bridge and up this little mountain road to try to find this shot. I started driving up a road I knew well, but it was closed. Closed! So I parked, got out my tripod, and hiked about a mile up this hill to get to this spot. It was a very cool night, but there was some strange inversion happening. Almost anywhere I stood on the side of the hill was a stead hotel-room 72-degrees. And there was zero wind. It was a perfect night, and just when I arrived, the fog really started pouring over the bridge, so I set up for this shot...- Trey RatcliffClick here to read the rest of this post at the Stuck in Customs blog.

Windows in Paris – The Saint Chapelle

Paris PhotoWalk Approaches!

I look forward to meeting you all at the PhotoWalk in Paris soon! See all the Event Details here. That event is also a great place to share your photos afterwards.

Photomatix Light

We still get new people coming to the website all the time! Many people ask how I get this kind of light in the photos. It’s all thanks to HDR processing. If you use a Mac to edit your photos, you can pick up my Aurora HDR Pro to help get this effect. I worked with Macphun for over a year to build the ultimate HDR software! Check out the full free HDR Tutorial here on the site and have fun! It’s easy…and you’ll have a great time trying it out!

Daily Photo – Windows in Paris – The Saint Chapelle

I wish I could find a good wide-angle lens like this Nikon 14-24 for my Sony NEX-7. I think one is coming out in a month or so… and I’m thinking of trying out the Olympus 7-14mm (Adorama link). The NEX-7 has served me as a good camera while my D800 is getting repaired!

(Edit, I’ve changed my mind and decided to wait on this new lens from Sony)

Windows in Paris – The Saint Chapelle

Photo Information

  • Date Taken2011-07-21 06:28:39
  • CameraNIKON D3X
  • Camera MakeNikon
  • Exposure Time0.7
  • Aperture4
  • ISO250
  • Focal Length14.0 mm
  • FlashNo Flash
  • Exposure ProgramAperture-priority AE
  • Exposure Bias+3