Trolley Service


The Steven Spielberg-directed movie, “The Terminal”, inspired me to try my hand at taking some candid shots at the Singapore Changi Airport last weekend. Indoor shooting was however much more challenging due to the dimmer lighting conditions which necessitated using higher ISO settings, slower shutter speeds and wider apertures. These all led to a compromise on noise-levels, sharpness and the ability to freeze decisive moments.

For this shot, the interesting patterns of the floor tiles together with the unusual lighting first caught my eye. Setting up my tripod to await passers-by to add a human-element to the pictures I would take, this maintenence man who was collecting used baggage trolleys pushed his load right into the camera frame. Seizing the moment, I snapped a shot only to find that sharpness was lacking due to motion blurring as a result of the slow shutter speed I was forced to use. Worse still, the picture appeared very grainy since I was forced to push the ISO setting up to 800!

All this was a pity since I liked especially the composition and setting of the shot. Not wanting to waste the shot, I decided to do some Photoshop-work on it. The result you see here is a combination a usage of the smudge-tool (to give a brushed art feel to the shot), solarisation, and application of a canvas-texture to the final picture.

In A World Of Their Own

I was looking through some old pictures that I took in the earlier part of the year and came across this photo that I took during a Hari Raya Haji prayer session held at the Yio Chu Kang Stadium in Singapore in February.

The Malay children are always interesting to watch during such prayer sessions — many entertain themselves while the adults are busy deep in prayer. Here are two of them seemingly in a world of their own while the rest of the adults are engrossed with prayer. Selective masking and processing has been performed in Photoshop to bring attention to the two children.