Gomi-Yama: Climbing a Haikyo of the special kind…

December 29, 2009 by Juergen Specht · Leave a Comment 

Sometimes you can find a dirty little environmental secret right in public. This is Gomi-Yama (Japanese as in: Gomi=Trash and Yama=Mountain), an abandoned garbage mountain towering over Yokohama.

Idyllic placed right next to a school and a children’s playground, this trash deposit place in Hodogaya near Yokohama accumulated a lot of trash until it reached a peak of about 150 meter.

Gomi-Yama: An abandoned mountain of trash in Yokohama, Japan

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Sad times for Japanese husbands…

December 29, 2009 by Juergen Specht · Leave a Comment 

Yesterday in TV they showed the suggestions of the Google search box for the term “Husband“. The most popular one was “Husband: want him dead!”. Today I tried this myself, but Google got already their act together and changed their suggestion list…they can however not change that it was already in the news. But this definitely is not a Google problem, as this Yahoo Japan screenshot shows…

Husband: want him dead!

Japan’s popular search result for the term “Husband”: Want him dead!

Uh, oh…since I am also a husband in Japan, I start to worry! (;_;)

Another Haikyo: Gulliver’s Final Resting Place

December 23, 2009 by Juergen Specht · 4 Comments 

One of the most interesting Haikyo (=abandoned places or ruins in Japanese) was the entertainment park “Gulliver’s Kingdom”. I was lucky enough to spend a day in the abandoned park before it got demolished and replaced with a golf course.

Impressions from the Gullivers Kingdom Haikyo near Mt. Fuji

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That’s why I love LINUX!

December 21, 2009 by Juergen Specht · Leave a Comment 

The uptime of this very server is 1003 days!

The uptime of this very server is 1003 days!

This very LINUX based server has currently an uptime – the time between reboots – of one thousand and three days…quite impressive for such a busy server, serving my web sites day in and day out. And there is absolutely no need to actually reboot. Try this with a Windows based server! :)

The making of “Car Crush”

December 21, 2009 by Juergen Specht · Leave a Comment 

Today my newest series was published, I called it “Car Crush“.

The making of Car Crush

The making of Car Crush – Photo by Ako Specht

The idea can be best described as bizarre and I leave the interpretation of this series to my visitors, but as usual my latest shooting is always my favorite – until it gets replaced with my next one.

I’ve had the idea since a long time and also found the perfect location for it … a remote tunnel in the mountains, with permanently water dripping from the ceiling, even if its not raining. In preparation to the conditions, I wrapped all my 39 flashes used for this shooting in plastic wrap and they all survived. The ground was extremely muddy and we had temperatures close to zero degrees. My brave and lovely model stayed in the warm car, while me and my assistant stomped through the mud in the cold. I love how this series turned out and even my aging car looks gorgeous!

Too bad it’s getting very cold now and I really cannot make more of these kind of shootings outdoors, so its time to go back to the studio.

The second death of the dinosaurs

December 20, 2009 by Juergen Specht · Leave a Comment 

The Kyouryu Park (Dinosaur Park) in Kisarazu, Chiba Prefecture in Japan, was one of the projects which relied on the short living Dinosaur trend and the expected visitors coming from Tokyo using the Tokyo Bay Aqua-Line, a tunnel/bridge combination crossing Tokyo Bay. However, using the Aqua-Line used to be very expensive, so it never caught on and lots of businesses on the Chiba side never saw an increase of visitors and had to shut down their operations.

These photos are taken at the day of the closure of the Dinosaur Park, but fortunately they could sell most of the Dinosaurs to companies, individuals and the Teine Olympia amusement park in Sapporo, Hokkaido.

The second death of the dinosaurs

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When the term “Tear Sheet” gets an entire new meaning…

December 18, 2009 by Juergen Specht · Leave a Comment 

The term “Tear Sheet” usually refers to published copies of your work, often literally clipped out of magazines or newspapers as a reference and evidence that your work has been published and are similar in this regard to reprints of articles.

My latest tear sheet about Girls Ground Wrestling published in a Japanese tabloid with the translated title “Weekly True Stories” however made me aware of an entire new meaning of “tear sheets”.

The Tear Sheet

The “Tear Sheet” in the magazine “Weekly True Stories”

I think this was the first time that I published in a Japanese tabloid and I am not that familiar with the content of these magazines, but this specific one seems to have only one general topic: to enhance the size of a certain male appendix temporarily through visual clues or permanently through offered magic spells and potions in their advertisements.

But even more interesting is the fact that you actually cut (or tear?) some of the pages apart to see the entire content to ward off the people who read these magazines for free in convenient stores and make them actually buy the magazine.

Luckily my photos appeared in the not-tear-apart section of this particular magazine ;)

A hairy little secret

December 16, 2009 by Juergen Specht · Leave a Comment 

Whenever I take a taxi in Tokyo, I browse through the little advertisement flyers they have to offer…they are always somewhat special. This one I kept, its just too good to throw away.

A hairy little secret

The text on top says “Medical Laser Hair Removal” and the prices in green show how much it costs to remove hair from the individual body parts, while the violet speech bubbles compare it to the prices of “expensive underwear” (40,000yen), an “expensive watch” (630,000yen) and an “expensive handbag” (110,000yen).

I wonder if I just learned something?

D1scussion’s 10th anniversary!

December 10, 2009 by Juergen Specht · Leave a Comment 

D1scussion's 10th anniversary

Today exactly 10 years ago I founded D1scussion, a mailing list for photographers using Nikon Digital SLR Cameras.

10 years! Amazing! I remember it vividly, in 1999 I moved to Japan armed with a Nikon F5 and a F100 and a couple of lenses, than I saw the just released Nikon D1 in a shop for a whopping 700,000yen. While interested, I thought that I will never spend that much money on a camera alone. But after a couple more visits to the camera store, I just bit the bullet and bought one. Since I just sold one of my Internet projects, the money was not really the problem, but I realized fast that this new camera has quite a learning curve…it just didn’t behave at all as it should.

After some initial excitement, frustration set in and I looked for other people having experience with this camera. I joined several Nikon mailing lists, but whenever I mentioned that I owned a D1, people mocked me and rejected this camera more like an expensive toy. It became even more frustrating, so I took matters in my own hands and created a mailing list called D1scussion – a wordplay out of D1 and Discussion – dedicated to this new camera. After announcing it in several analog forums, the first members poured in. It was not my first mailing list, in fact back in 1996 I started a public mailing list service named KBX in Germany, which soon was used by more than 1/4 of all German Internet users.

D1scussion became an instant hit, in January 2000 already more than 200 photographers became members and even several Nikon employees joined. It became the de-facto support address for all digital pioneers and the discussions really helped everybody to get the most out of the camera. After a short while I learned that the part which frustrated me (mainly the totally unreliable flash behavior) was not my fault at all, but Nikon’s. D1scussion members came the the rescue and the group found a way to work around the problem. Nikon soon answered with a better flash, but it took a few more flash and camera generations to fix this problem completely. Another initial grief was the choice of the NTSC color space as the internal camera color space and back in 1999/2000 there was not much public knowledge of color management. The forum members were just amazing and even while practically all professional photographers were in some kind of competition with each other, everybody shared freely their knowledge, making us all better photographers.

Lots has happened in the last 10 years. D1scussion moved several times to new servers, cameras and software made an incredible jump forward in usability and quality and digital workflows are way better understood than back then, still there is demand for a knowledgeable group helping out when the need arises.

D1scussion now must be one of the best behaved Internet forums out there, I cannot remember when we had the last internal flame war or a troll annoying everybody, they simply don’t exist in this forum. Its also amazing how long people stay subscribed to D1scussion, in average longer than 5 years.

I must admit, having founded and maintained D1scussion for that long makes me a little proud. ;)

A photo of an analog photo shooting taken with my Nikon D1 10 years ago...

A photo of an analog photo shooting taken with my Nikon D1 10 years ago…

Ribido – A messy performance

December 9, 2009 by Juergen Specht · 4 Comments 

I like Butoh performances. They are often not only intense for the actors, but also for the audience.

For this performance the Butoh group “Ribido” (which is probably a lost-in-translation version of Libido) and action painter Hiroyoshi Takeda teamed up and delivered a stunning (and messy) performance.

Without further ado, I let the pictures speak for themselves.

Ribido Butoh Performance

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