

One of the first photos I took with the Nikon D90.

One thing about taking photos for fun is that once you’ve mastered using your camera (whether it be a point-and-shoot or a DSLR), and you know how to play around with its settings, you are in a better place to experiment and layer concepts that you’ve learned.
This is a blurred and angled photo of a speeding cab in the busy streets of Hong Kong. In my earlier posts, Red Fire Hydrant and Skew, combining both concepts resulted to this photo. The blur and the angled framing gives the viewer more reason to actively process what he initially sees to make sense of it all.
Additional item: Bumping up the saturation adds more flair as bursting the colors make the subject come alive and become your focal point.

Tilting the camera in crazy angles to capture images was one of the first things I discovered when I was learning to take photos. Anything that takes you out of the ordinary visually is always appealing to look at. So this otherwise dull alley with a street sign and green trash bins toward the back turned out not so mundane when taken at a certain degree of tilting.
This photo was taken using a LOMO LC-A camera in Little India in Singapore. RIP LOMO LC-A camera. It was my first and only film camera that I owned.

Sometimes you get results in your photos when you least expect it. In this one, my fascination with fire hydrants led to getting a photograph with more dramatic results. The blurry image of the motorcycle rider in the background added to the overall composition of what could have been a lone red fire hydrant along Pham Ngu Lao. The contrast of the blur and the sharp is what makes it visually appealing to look at.
This was taken during my trip to Ho Chi Minh City in Vietnam in 2008.

Our trip to the Singpore Zoo ended with a sudden afternoon downpour. This was taken on a bus on our way back to the city en route IKEA store in Alexandra. In the numerous times that I’ve been to the Lion City, on a typical humid day, rain falls either early mornings or late afternoons toward the evenings.