my recent trip to Kabul, Afghanistan.


raytoei

Senior Member
hi,

i was in Afghanistan this past week for business. On the last day, I spent some time at the local Bazaar.

The camera used was the Olympus 35SP, Film used was the T-Max 400, ei 800 + Yellow Filter, Pushed to 1600 and developed in T-Max 400 Developer.

you can view the photos here,

http://www.facebook.com/album.php?aid=266055&id=703791450&l=6a18ded563

thanks for viewing.

raytoei
 

wow!!! greats shots :) some of the bazzar are atmospheric and scenes from another world.
 

Great series! Thanks for sharing.
Really enjoy your travel photos.
 

Oh my god!

Let's switch jobs....
 

awesome:thumbsup:
 

Wow...:thumbsup:...thanks for sharing...what an adventurous place to explore and shoot...let's organize a RF.SG shooting trip...bet it will be fun
 

The series is great! Thanks for sharing...
 

thks for sharing, now i know how its like there.
 

raytoei said:
hi,

i was in Afghanistan this past week for business. On the last day, I spent some time at the local Bazaar.

The camera used was the Olympus 35SP, Film used was the T-Max 400, ei 800 + Yellow Filter, Pushed to 1600 and developed in T-Max 400 Developer.

you can view the photos here,

http://www.facebook.com/album.php?aid=266055&id=703791450&l=6a18ded563

thanks for viewing.

raytoei

Excellent series bro! You brave man!
 

hookonclassic said:
Wow...:thumbsup:...thanks for sharing...what an adventurous place to explore and shoot...let's organize a RF.SG shooting trip...bet it will be fun

Haha great thought but I don't think rf.sg can afford the liability or indemnity....knr not under our charter
 

Hahaha.. thanks for the encouragement guys.

Dan is correct, I could not find any travel insurance that would cover Afghanistan. My company security officer insisted that i remain in contact with him at all times.

Anyway, I hope to go there again in Feb/March, hopefully the security situation improves. If not, there is Bhutan left to be explored.

cheers!

raytoei
 

amazing stuff. film is so romantic.
 

nice set there! :thumbsup:

Love that photo of the boy at bazaar and the shot of the smiling boys at the butchery! Great stuff!
 

awesome.....
love the photos and the short caption..
now we know how kabul really look like... i assume you were the only tourist there?
how does the people react when they see an asian walking along the street with a camera?
 

Last edited:
Great series! Did you have the chance to visit Herat? Heard it is one of the "safer" cities to visit. Hope to go there soon. :)
 

Did you tell your wife where you were actually going for this trip?

I'm surprised you managed to get the permit from your family to travel there, even that's work related.

Bhutan is my dream destination in 2011. Hope to make the trip in Jul this year... :)
 

hi,

1. actually we asians look like a minority tribe, either the Hazarans or the Tajik tribe of the Afghans. I saw a few of the people and I said to myself "wah, you and I could be having a beer in Dempsey, if not for the fact that you have turban and a blanket wrapped over your shoulder". Needless to say, alot of the girls there are very chio also, like some Nepalese mountain tribe, but i leave that for another story.

2. My biggest fear was being kidnapped and my company not paying the random (quite el cheapo HR policy) and then the kidnappers have to cut off my ear or a finger demand respect. That was my biggest fear. I made friends with Head of the Kuchi tribe so that i can hedge my bets in case any thing happened. That was the only time I had an armed bodyguard sitting in front of me with an AK-47.

3. The Afghans are interesting people: Proud, enterprising, rugged natural born fighers, they have never been beaten before, they fought the british twice and won. Remember India history where the Mogul invaded and ruled Pakistan and India. The Afghans WERE the Moguls; Babur the ruler of india whose lineage could be traced to Genghis Khan was buried in Kabul. They have this concept of the CODE, this CODE is a tribal code of conduct. This sacred code is above family and religion, and part of the problem is that there are 16 tribes in Afghanistan trying to move from the CODE into something which is workable for everybody.

4. Camera-wise. I had a Olympus 35SP slung across my shoulder. Half the shots were in AE and half manual. The EV difference between Sunlight and shadows was about 5 to 7. In retrospect, I should not have pushed to 1600 (800 + Yellow filter), instead,I should have considered either 800 for indoors or 400 outdoors+ Yellow Filter (1 stop compensation). The camera worked very well in sub-zero condition (5 to -2).

5. For my next trip there, I would bring the XA4 as a backup, the 28mm lens works very well and I used it flawlessly in my Nepal trip in December. A lot of picture taking took place in the car while moving about with my half-body sticking out of the car, so alot of 1/500 + Infinity shooting, so perhaps autofocus isn't a good idea. Also, for the bazaar pictures, I had to depend on DOF shooting, ie. narrow aperture to capture people + background.

cheers!

raytoei
 

Nice shots.

Just avoid frequenting places where Westerners go a lot. The local rabble seem to be taking note and sending suicide bombers to bomb up those places, like the recent bombing of a supermarket.
 

very nice series... thanks for sharing! really shows the beauty of afghanistan
 

Initial thought is a war photographer posting... expecting some military AK-47 kind of shots... ;p
 

Back
Top