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Copyright

  • All the content on this site, unless otherwise indicated, is copyright © Seb Rogers 1994-2008 and all rights are reserved. You may not download, copy, store, distribute, publish or display any of the content in any form or by any means without my prior permission and, where appropriate, payment of a licensing fee. Yes, this means you! The images on this site help pay my mortgage. You wouldn't take money from my wallet, so please don't steal my pictures.

Links

March 01, 2007

Best of the web

I've added a few more links (over on the left... you'll probably have to scroll down a bit):

Dave Black Photography
Sports images are ten-a-penny these days, but Dave Black manages to combine infectious (and boundless) enthusiasm with an eye for a different angle and meticulous attention to detail. Even better, he's happy to share his techniques with the rest of us.

Strobist blog
Want to know more about the nitty gritty of using remote flash? You'll want to pay this site a visit, then. Everything you ever wanted to know about fixing and triggering as many remote flashguns as you can be bothered to fiddle around with.

Bythom.com
Thom Hogan's incisive commentary on Nikon products has become essential reading for many Nikon users, and his tests are the fairest and most accurate I've seen anywhere.

January 21, 2007

Rugged and windswept

Most mountain bikers like to think of themselves as more rugged than the average Joe in the street. Out there in the wilds of a Welsh trail centre, GPS on the bars just in case a marker is missed, we make sure we're properly tired out and thoroughly wet and muddy before coming back to a nice hot mug of tea and a slice of cake.

See? Rugged and windswept.

Compared to a life spent in front of the plasma with a sixpack, riding a bicycle in circles on muddy trails arguably is fairly rufty-tufty. But in the wider scheme of things, much of mountain biking is to elite adventure sports what hopskotch is to premier league football: kids' stuff.

Take, for example, photographer Jimmy Chin. Quietly spoken and unassuming (if his Outside online interview is anything to go by), here's a guy who joins an Everest expedition two weeks before the off, summits with his climbing partners, and then follows them down the Lhotse Face. On skis. Stopping at points along the way, of course, to record the event for posterity. His photography is stunning; the fact that most of it is captured in locations that only a tiny percentage of the world's population will ever see simply adds to the sense of drama.

Chapeau (as the French would say). Now, where did I put that bivvy-bag?

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