Viewing the world in widescreen: My Panoramic Philosophy

•July 13, 2012 • Leave a Comment

 

West of Tucson, Arizona

West of Tucson, Arizona

CLICK PHOTOS TO ENLARGE

We don’t see the world in convenient little boxes.

Our view is wider and taller than that.

For a long time now I’ve been frustrated by what can fit in the photographic frame. It seems arbitrary and closed.

It’s a particularly futile medium for capturing the landscapes and atmospheres of the American west where I live, and the desert lands around Tucson in particular.

A pan created using Pano for iPhone at Wild Horse ranch. Notice the doubling in the mountains.

A pan created using Pano for iPhone at Wild Horse ranch. Notice the doubling in the mountains.

A few years back I started working with an app for the iPhone called Pano, which allows one to break the horizon into consecutive photographic slices and then combine them. The user interface was fairly simple and easy to use. And the results were quite good.

The problem was that in bright sunlight it was difficult to align the edges with the next frame, and even more so when the features on the horizon were less than graphically distinct. As a result one ended up with ghosting or doubled features in the pan.

And, of course, there wasn’t a lot of detail, owing to the limitations of the phone camera. It’s quite good for a phone camera, but no match for an SLR.

Patagonia, Arizona 2013

Patagonia, Arizona 2013

I recalled mention in a Photoshop tutorial of a technique where one might electronically stitch together consecutive photos to create large panoramas. I put it off for a long time, in part because I didn’t know where to look it up and partly because I imagined it was going to be complex.  But eventually curiosity got the best of me.

As it turns out, it was far easier than I thought, though it puts a powerful mathematical strain on a computer and requires a fast unit to get the job done. Those first tests from mid-June 2012  were inspiring.

Tucson-Mtn-Pan-071112-04c-crop-sw-dbaFor one, there was so much more detail, and the image size was enormous. You could just keep blowing it up and up and up and see more and more contained in the photo. If printed full size, some of these could be 3 feet x 36 feet. Pretty impressive.

For another, just the wide view of landscape and sky was so much more satisfying than the usual single-frame photo.

In this early phase I’ve just been going out and shooting with not a lot of control – just instinctively grabbing what the horizon has to offer. I haven’t used a tripod to unify the shots along a single plane. And I haven’t quite worked out the proportions of the horizon that yields best results yet. But in this phase of experimentation I am learning a great deal and seeing much greater potential than I had initially imagined.

And even as I grapple with the amorphous shapes this wild-eyed shooting is producing I’m envisioning extending the concept to different subject matter. Architecture on streets, nudes and still life art. Nudes in the landscape, or in controlled studio spaces. Even fashion or portrait photography as panoramic landscape.

Near-Sonoita-120612-02-crop1-c5-sw-dbaThe next phase, which will begin in earnest following the premiere of my El Casino Ballroom documentary in August, will be to experiment with the use of a tripod in conjunction with the technique, and the experiment with nudes and cityscapes.

There’s also a lot of research to be done on the various methods within Photoshop to stitch the frames together as well, along with the use of masks to even out the light as one moves from looking into the sun to seeing the portion of the landscape illuminated by it.

Sunset, 07/15/12

Sunset, 07/15/12

Over the next several years I will be developing these techniques in conjunction with both my commercial and art projects.

 

Sunset, January 2013

Sunset, January 2013

– Daniel Buckley, 07/12/12

New photographic directions at Daniel Buckley Arts

•July 13, 2012 • Leave a Comment

CLICK PHOTO TO ENLARGE

Daniel Buckley has embarked on a new focus in his photography – a series of panoramic photos from the desert created from individual slices stitched together with Photoshop.

In this early phase of experimentation no tripod is used to unify the flame of rotation, resulting in amorphous shapes.

But while the shapes are strange and unpredictable, the technique is capturing more of the total landscape and sky than is available with conventional photography.

Buckley began experimenting with panoramic photography a year or two back, using the iPhone 4 and an app called Pano. But in bright sunlight it was difficult to align the features, and ultimately a more detailed solution was sought.

Buckley recalled reading about a technique using photoshop to stick consecutive frames of a potential panorama together.

While working recently to create and image for a new book on Arizona politics by Jeff Biggers, Buckley began to experiment with the techniques.

At the same time he discovered some vistas west of Tucson with unobstructed views of the Tucson and Tortolita mountain ranges.

Sunset 07/15/12

Sunset 07/15/12

This early phase of panoramic photographic experimentation coincides with several other desert-inspired lines of investigation.

The time lapse video series began a few years back but has been sparked anew of late as the summer monsoon rains arrive in Southern Arizona. These spectacular rain events create dramatic evolutions of clouds, floating over the landscape and significantly altering the light, Accelerated via time lapse video, the motion virtually imperceptible becomes very clear in the sped-up footage.

Texture series

Texture series

On the still photography side, Buckley has very recently started a texture series, initially shooting soils, gravels, sidewalk and building textures of a very regular nature. Over the summer it has evolved and expanded to include more complex textures. Flowing water over the desert creates channels and eddies that deposit grains of various sizes, depending on stream velocity. Rocks and soil, as well as combinations of organic and inorganic materials are starting to find their way to Buckley’s lens.

A new direction in the panoramic series is also taking shape. Beyond the evolution to more controlled camera techniques and landscape studies, Buckley is brainstorming the notion of applying panoramic photography techniques to cityscapes and nudes.

Check back to see more of how these new directions unfold.

 

Spectacular weather video

•July 12, 2012 • Leave a Comment

Video of a sunset storm in Avra Valley 07/11/12.

The second video shows the storm clouds building earlier in the day.

For best results, click the YouTube icon, change settings for highest speed your internet provider can handle and watch the sky transform.

These time lapse videos were shot on the west side of the Tucson mountains.

 

 

Kickstarter campaign fails, onward we go

•July 8, 2012 • Leave a Comment
“Tucson’s Heart and Soul, El Casino Ballroom” documentary producer Daniel Buckley

“Tucson’s Heart and Soul, El Casino Ballroom” documentary producer Daniel Buckley

I threw the I Ching last night as I have at many points of pending change in my life.

This time it was to see if the Kickstarter campaign might make its goal, and what to do about that outcome either way.

The verbiage is always circuitous and requires a bit of interpretation, and not infrequently a dry martini. But the message seemed clear.

No, it would not. And in the end, that was the outcome.

The best course from here, the hexagons suggested, would be to accept that, and move forward with dignity.

That is what I will do, albeit hampered by limited experience with the concept of dignity.

Foolish people would say that in the end I got nothing.

Kickstarter is an “all or nothing” tool, after all, and if you don’t get to your projected financial goal by the due date, you get none of the money pledged.

But I didn’t come away with nothing.

I had 60 backers who ponied up their hard-earned dollars in a time when the economy was less than stellar just because they came to believe that a documentary on El Casino Ballroom was worth being part of.  I got a chance to talk about what I was up to on the project via updates with both backers and the general public. And I got pretty decent press from the Tucson Weekly and Zocolo Magazine about the project as well.

There was a final payoff to my backers too. They weren’t charged a dime.

This project has been blessed in too many ways so far to quibble about money. Yes, good things would have happened with that cash influx. The most important of them may well find another way of coming into being.

But for me personally I have learned so much working on this film so far, about this building so many people love, about my community, about this moment in time and about the 65 years before in which El Casino Ballroom’s dance floor lay in mute witness to celebrations, history and remembrance. I have learned about a place where people found a home, where all were welcomed, and all became family. And most remarkably of all, this fairy tale place still goes on, spinning new memories into the decades to come.

It has weathered racism, time, politics and a physical storm that literally blew half its roof off and made it close for a decade.

It reopened in 2000 at half its size and capacity but full in heart.

This past summer the storm damaged part of El Casino Ballroom was torn down. A few weeks later, girders to support a roof appeared on the ground, and soon after were hoisted into place.

It took until last week for a new roof to start to be dropped in place. On July 15, El Casino Ballroom will hold a fundraiser to help with its reconstruction. It may take a while but I have no doubt that El Casino Ballroom will be restored to its full size. This community wouldn’t let it die in the 1990s, despite tremendous obstacles.  The new roof is patient testimony that a rebirth is on the way.

I’d like to think that work on this film helped in some small way to call attention to this historic and hallowed place, and might ultimately help it return to its former glory.

One thing I can say absolutely. On August 10, KXCI Radio will hold its first show at El Casino Ballroom since just before the roof blew off 20 years back. Like the first show it held at ECB, it will be a blues review. And without question, work on this film and a partnership with KXCI on that undertaking led to that concert. I take great pride in that.

Come hell or high water, something is going to appear on the screen of the Fox Theatre on 2 p.m.  August 5. I believe that something will be a wonderful film about Tucson’s El Casino Ballroom.

Thank you for your belief and your support of this project.

And with that, I must get back to it.

If you’d like to keep up on what’s happening with the film, please check out my El Casino project blog at

http://www.danielbuckleyarts.com/category/el-casino-ballroom-documentary/

Or email me at dbtucson@gmail.com

And don’t forget to join us at the Fox for the premiere August 5 at 2 p.m.

–      Daniel Buckley, producer

“Tucson’s Heart and Soul: El Casino Ballroom”

 

 

Update #9: Tucson Freedom Summer at El Casino Ballroom

•July 7, 2012 • Leave a Comment
Supporters of Tucson's Mexican American Studies program from around the country take the stage in solidarity at El Casino Ballroom.

Supporters of Tucson’s Mexican American Studies program from around the country take the stage in solidarity at El Casino Ballroom.

Over the past year I’ve heard stories of history that happened at El Casino Ballroom, from political rallies and the birth of Tucson’s Chicano movement, to the rise of Tejano music in the city.

Tonight I felt like I was watching something historic unfold in front of my camera.

Earlier this year, Tucson Unified School District’s Mexican American studies program was dismantled by the TUSD school board under a threat from the state’s Superintendent of Public Instruction that he would withhold 10 percent of the district’s budget if the program was not shut down. The justification was another of Arizona’s recent unjust, discriminatory laws, this one forbidding the teaching of classes aimed at any particular ethnic group.

Tonight ethnic studies teachers and students from around the country came to the El Casino Ballroom to show their solidarity with the Tucson program that inspired the creation of many of their programs. Over the next week they will be holding events around town and going door to door to make the case for a program that demonstrably keeps kids in school, gives them a sense of place in our society, and propels them to college and a lifetime of critical thinking and working toward social justice.

They’re calling it Tucson Summer Freedom 2012, and patterning it after the civil rights efforts of the 1960s. The symbolism was not lost.

Most of the evening was spent dancing and celebrating, getting to know one another and letting their presence be known. On hand were Tucson’s own Mexican American studies teachers, some of whom still have jobs in the district, others of whom have been deliberately purged.

Tomorrow and in the days ahead they will be holding events and discussions around the city to call local and national awareness to the issue.

Paraphrasing one speaker, this program has not been buried. Rather it has been planted to sprout anew throughout the country

Every documentary film makers dream is to somehow intersect with a clear moment of history over the course of filming. I have heard so many stories of similar moments that transpired under El Casino’s roof. Tonight I was lucky enough to be there to see one.

And I got an extra bonus. Over the past week, while I was recovering from walking pneumonia, a new roof started to take shape over the top of girders where the old roof had blown off over 20 years ago. A special fundraiser to help restore El Casino Ballroom to its former size will take place there on July 15. And God willing, I will be there with my camera to capture that historic moment as well.

There are hours left to fund this Kickstarter project, and a long ways dollar-wise to go. But regardless of whether we make that hurdle, this film will be made. I am proud of what has been done so far, and I thank all of you who joined me in this from the bottom of my heart.

– Daniel Buckley, Producer

El Casino Update 8: Back in the Saddle

•July 6, 2012 • Leave a Comment
Jo Ann Trujillo

Jo Ann Trujillo

As the Kickstarter campaign winds down to its final hours I’m back out, camera in hand,  gathering more stories for the film.

I spent this afternoon with JoAnn Trujillo, who had her wedding reception at El Casino Ballroom 44 years ago, and who has attended many, many functions there over the years. She had wonderful things to say about ECB’s place in the community, and historical tidbits as well to share.

Tonight I’ll be back as Tucson’s Mexican American Studies program holds a fundraiser to have the program reinstated. It’s another of those moments in the history of social justice in Tucson that El Casino has played a part in. I am honored to be able to film it and include part of it in the film.

Tomorrow there’s a function for the neighborhood that I’ll also be shooting, followed by wrestling (!) on Sunday.

There’s just over 24 hours left in the Kickstarter campaign, and at this point it doesn’t look promising that we’ll reach the financial goal. But as Yogi Berra used to say, “It ain’t over ’til it’s over.” We’ll see what happens. And I remain optimistic.

Regardless of the outcome on the financial front, I can’t express enough my gratitude to all of you for supporting this effort. It has been heartwarming to see friends and people I’ve never met show such confidence in what we’re doing. El Casino Ballroom and what it represents are things worthy of documenting. And I will not be stopped in bringing this project to fruition.

On the plus side, the Kickstarter project has brought much more attention to this project, and for that I am eternally grateful. Special thanks to Herb Stratford and Mari Herreras in particular for articles they contributed to Zocolo and the Tucson Weekly, respectively.

I’ve learned a lot in doing this and will be better prepared next time. But all in all, I’m very happy with the way the community has responded.

The film will go on! Barring the unforeseen, we will premiere on August 5 as scheduled at the Fox Theatre. If it’s alright with you I’d like to list all of you as supporters of the film in the credits, regardless of whether we reach the goal or not.

Another of my goals for this project looks like it will, indeed, come to pass. On August 10 – the Friday following the Fox Theatre premiere of the film – KXCI will hold its first dance concert at El Casino Ballroom in 20 years, featuring a blues review organized by El Casino veteran Jeb Schoonover. That is immensely cool!

Thank you for all your help, and if you can think of others who might want to support this by the 7 p.m. PDT deadline July 7, please send them the link.

And if you’d like to continue getting updates on the project, please visit myblog on the topic.

Thanks again for all your help!

Daniel Buckley, Producer,

http://www.danielbuckleyarts.com/category/el-casino-ballroom-documentary/

Daniel Buckley’s “Tucson’s Heart and Soul, El Casino Ballroom” documentary film Kickstarter Project needs help!

•June 20, 2012 • Leave a Comment
“Tucson’s Heart and Soul, El Casino Ballroom” documentary producer Daniel Buckley

“Tucson’s Heart and Soul, El Casino Ballroom” documentary producer Daniel Buckley

Amigos,

 

Dan Buckley here.

We are half-way through a Kickstarter project to help support the final push to complete the El Casino Ballroom documentary, which will premiere in August. And we need your help to raise the remaining $6000.00 by July 7.

For those not familiar with Kickstarter, it’s a new way of raising support for creative projects through something called “crowd funding.” People chip in whatever amount they want, from $1 up toward the fundraising goal. If the goal is not reached in the 30 days allotted, no one is charged anything. If you contribute and it IS funded, you get one of a variety of rewards outlined in the link below. Please click the link, watch the video and see what you think.

http://www.kickstarter.com/projects/1834268733/tucsons-heart-and-soul-el-casino-ballroom

Mari Herreras of the Tucson Weekly recently wrote an article on the documentary and the Kickstarter project, linked below:

http://www.tucsonweekly.com/TheRange/archives/2012/06/15/el-casino-kickstarter-needs-your-support

The funds raised will go toward finishing the editing of the film, paying for transcription of all of the interviews involved, renting the Fox Theatre so that the premiere can be a free event AND the hiring of three young interns to participate in the film’s creation. Two of the interns will come from Tucson’s now-banned Mexican American Studies program. The third will be a high school graduate starting a journalism program at college in the fall.

There’s a whole lot of rewards offered, ranging from the DVD of this and other Cine Plaza at the Fox documentaries to opportunities to attend portions of the filming of the documentary, credit in the film and much more.

All of the raw footage and all of the transcripts from the interviews will be turned over to the Arizona Historical Society for research and inclusion in other people’s future projects.

El Casino Ballroom turns 65 this year, and has been the home to more musical and cultural celebrations than just about any landmark in the city. Become part of preserving and celebrating its history by supporting this project in any way that you can. And please forward this to other friends who may be interested.

The film is being produced in partnership with CHISPA, The Fox Tucson, KXCI Radio, and the Arizona Historical Society with additional support from the Tucson Pima Arts Council‘s PLACE Initiative Grant. This will be the fifth installment of the Cine Plaza at the Fox documentary series.

If you have any questions please feel free to contact me.

Thank you so much!

 

Daniel Buckley

Documentary maker

dbtucson@gmail.com

Update # 6: Sergio Mendoza and the Lumie awards

•June 16, 2012 • Leave a Comment

Last night the 2012 Lumie awards of the Tucson Pima Arts Council were presented at El Casino Ballroom.

I was there taping one of the nominees for the emerging arts award – Sergio Mendoza y la Orkesta.

The footage will be combined with audio engineer Jim Blackwood’s recording of the energetic set for a future video of the group. And snippets will also appear in my documentary “The Heart and Soul of Tucson: El Casino Ballroom.”

A short preview of the film was also shown at last night’s Lumie Awards before a packed house.

This piece on the project from the Tucson Weekly just in:

El Casino Kickstarter Needs Your Support

http://www.tucsonweekly.com/TheRange/archives/2012/06/15/el-casino-kickstarter-needs-your-support

Please help us get this project done at http://www.kickstarter.com/projects/1834268733/tucsons-heart-and-soul-el-casino-ballroom.

– Daniel Buckley, producer

El Casino update 5

•June 16, 2012 • Leave a Comment
Los Lobos' David Hidalgo

Los Lobos' David Hidalgo

Caught up with Los Lobos before and after its Rialto Theatre show last night and got members David Hidalgo, Louie Perez and Steve Berlin to share some of their thoughts on El Casino Ballroom with the camera. Hidalgo recalled the group’s first gig at ECB playing for a friend’s child’s baptism. They invited kids on stage to play maracas and other percussion with them. He also remembered a Christmas show where they tossed M&Ms and Snickers bars out into the crowd at El Casino.

Both Berlin and Perez shared their thoughts about El Casino’s place among the great old ballrooms of the world.

After leaving the backstage area around 1 a.m I headed home to input the footage and integrate it into a four-minute preview piece I was putting together for the Tucson Pima Arts Council’s Lumie Awards, which are being held tonight at El Casino Ballroom. I finished it a little after 7 a.m., slept for two hours, then drove down to deliver it to the TPAC office for the show tonight.

At 1 this afternoon I spent a wonderful hour on the phone with my old friend Herb Stratford. Herb, as some of you will recall, is the man who spearheaded the renovation of Tucson’s Fox Theatre and put it back into service. These days he works as a consultant around the world, bringing his expertise in that subject to theaters in need of restoration.

He also writes and has a television segment locally about Tucson’s arts scene. He was interviewing me today about the Cine Plaza project for the July/August issue of Tucson’s Zocolo Magazine.

This town is blessed to have a few excellent writers left in the journalism world, and I’m honored that he thought to do this.

About an hour later the phone rang and it was photographer David Horowitz, who photographed a ton of the old KXCI House Rockin’ concerts at El Casino in the 1980s. He’s been pouring over his images and invited me to come by and check some out before he prints them. Can’t wait to see what he’s got!

Thanks again to all of you who have contributed either monetarily or in forwarding news of this Kickstarter project to friends and relatives. We still have a long way to go, and I still need a lot of help to get there. But seeing the ways you’ve helped in this truly warms my heart. Again, mil gracias!

More soon!

Update #4: Los Lobos ahead

•June 16, 2012 • Leave a Comment

Again thanks to newcomers and prior donors for supporting this project.

I spoke today with Louie Perez of Los Lobos. The group will be performing tomorrow night at the Rialto in Tucson. But many times they played at El Casino Ballroom, the first at a friend’s child’s baptism party. I ran into them in San Jose last fall and talked with them about the documentary.

It looks like tomorrow night they’ll go before the cameras and share some of their memories of El Casino Ballroom. The following night I’ll include some of that in the short preview I’m putting together for TPAC’s Lumie Awards. You can pick up tickets for the Lumies at:

http://lumies2012.eventbrite.com/

Tonight I’ll be back at El Casino to talk with Gus Ramirez while he decorates for the Lumies. Will share more of that later on.

Thanks again and please spread the word about this. We have a long way to go, and I need al the help I can get to make this happen.

Best,

Daniel Buckley, Producer