Climbing the World’s Tallest Building!

Time flies. Roughly ten years ago, I climbed the Burj Khalifa, the tallest structure in the world. Took a while to negotiate with the building, but they eventually took a liking to the idea, and allowed me up there with a couple of their own climbers, two really remarkable gentlemen, Mick and Johnny. The showed me the ropes, literally, and kept me safe.

As Mick said, in his wonderful English accent, “Now Joe, you’re gonna be alright in the bucket, eh, mate? Cause we don’t want anyone panicking in the bucket. Somebody panics in the bucket, we gotta take him off in a helicopter, and that’s a bad day. You’re not gonna panic in the bucket, right?” He was right to be concerned, as all personnel who are involved in dangerous jobs are when they take a civilian along. We’re tourists. They don’t completely know how the interloper will react.

When we got into the bucket, the first thing I asked Mick was to climb outside the bucket and hang off of it. He looked at me a bit sideways, and helped me get out and over the railing and into the wind. At that point he knew, I think, he wouldn’t have to call a helicopter. I had to get outside, because the hard thing to do is photograph something you’re standing on or clinging to. You have to push yourself as far away from the structure as possible.

It was fun up there. Even got lucky and snapped Johnny whilst he got an airplane warning strobe full blast in his face. Sigh, always using flash somehow.

Video by Drew Gurian

Fun going through the archive and taking a look back at videos and some pics never used. The BTS video on our YouTube channel was shot by the remarkable photographer Drew Gurian, with whom I had many adventures and wonderful memories. As I write this, that video is closing in on four million views. People like shots from high places! And…a big shout out to Mohamed Somji and Hala Salhi of Gulf Photo Plus, which a while back was a wonderful gathering place for photogs from all over the world.

More tk….

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Nikon Z 28-400mm f/4-8 VR: First Impressions

Superzooms have always been viewed with a certain amount of disdain by “serious” photographers. Fairly or unfairly, lots of photographers would immediately dismiss anything more extreme than a 24-120mm lens. But now, Nikon has released not a superzoom, but a straight hyperzoom, whose wide end starts at 28mm and ends at 400mm: the Nikon Z 28-400mm f/4-8 VR. How big is the optical compromise in a 14.3x zoom? Is this record-breaking lens just a marketing ploy to lure customers? To answer these questions, there was nothing to do but to take the Nikon Z 28-400mm f/4-8 VR out and test it for myself.
Photography Life

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Photography Life Annual Membership + 72 Hour Sale Announced!

I’m excited to announce that we’re now able to offer yearly, rather than just monthly, memberships on our Member Page! Our readers have asked about this feature for months, and it’s finally here. To kick things off, we’re also announcing a major 72-hour sale for yearly signups.
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Photography News: Nikon Camera Sales, Panasonic S5 II Pre-Burst

This has been quite a busy week for our team. Spencer put another batch of lenses through their paces in our lab, including a pair of Nikon supertelephotos that I’m very curious about. Jason is on a quest to photograph his 700th bird species, currently stuck on bird #699. As for me, I took advantage of the nice weather in the “natural laboratory” of Central Europe to test two very interesting lenses last week. One of them is a complete novelty – the Nikon Z 28-400mm f/4-8. You’ll be able to read more about it soon. For now, let’s recap this week’s news in the photography world.
Photography Life

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One Way to Take Better Light Painting Photos at Night

If you’ve ever tried light painting for Milky Way photography, you may have run into some frustrating issues. Maybe your light’s color temperature didn’t match the scene, or the shadows and highlights somehow looked artificial. Or, perhaps you got a spotlight effect that didn’t cover a wide enough area.
Photography Life

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