
Author / dmitriybabichenko
Jen and Will are Engaged!
Extreme sports with Daniella | Frick Park


Sophie’s Bat Mitzvah

























Venue: Pittsburgh Field Club
Temple: Adat Shalom
Second Shooters: Jenny Karlsson, Kim Palmer
DJ/Entertainment: Rock The House
Geek in Training

Pam’s and Andy’s Wedding Highlights
VSCO Film Presets for Adobe Lightroom
I admit it. I am a film addict. I got my first camera in 1985 as a present for my 8th birthday and have been shooting ever since. My introduction to photography had one condition – my mom told me that I would get allowance money for film only if I learned to develop and print it on my own. I spent the next couple of years of my life begging, borrowing and, on one special occasion, stealing darkroom equipment and chemicals. By the time I was 11, I had a fully-stocked darkroom and would spend every free moment tinkering with an antique Soviet-made enlarger and inhaling toxic chemicals in a poorly-ventilated closet (which probably explains a lot about the way I turned out).
Around 2005 I made a jump to digital equipment for my commercial work – at the time I did a lot of product photography and burning through 50-60 rolls of film per shoot was just getting too cost-prohibitive.
Even though more than 90% of my work was shot with digital cameras, I never stopped shooting film. I sold my Hasselblads, but kept a few Mamiya 645 cameras, plus about 20 (that’s right, twenty) 35mm film cameras that I accumulated over the years.
For years I have tried to make my digital photographs look like film and have always failed. Commercially available Photoshop actions didn’t quite cut it – the results never looked like what I was used to with film. When I tried to tweak settings on my own, the results were abominable.
A few months ago my friend Jenny Karlsson told me about VSCO Film Lightroom Presets from the Visual Supply Company. At first I was skeptical – over the years I wasted hundreds of dollars on presents and actions that supposedly emulated film. I finally decided to give VSCO a shot. I was blown away. Being true to my geeky self, I ran a few tests. I shot a roll of medium format Fuji 400H, Ilford HP5, Kodak Portra 800 and Kodak T-Max 3200. Then I shot a bunch of digital frames, edited the raw files in Lightroom using corresponding VSCO film presets and compared the results side-by-side. Like I said before, I was blown away. I don’t want to publish a ton of test shots on my blog, but if you are a skeptic, try to tell me which of the photos below were shot with Mamiya 645 + Ilford HP5 and which ones were shot with Canon 5D Mark III and edited with VSCO film:




Heather & Christopher Wedding | Holy Trinity Serbian Orthodox Church, South Hills
I October of 2012 I had the privilege to help my good friend Katia Forero of Katia Forero Photography to photograph Heather’s and Chris’ beautiful wedding. Chris and Heather are probably the most relaxed and easy-going couple I have ever met. Their ceremony was at the Holy Trinity Serbian Orthodox Church – it was interesting to photograph a Serbian ceremony and to observe all the similarities between Serbian and Russian cultures.
During the reception Heather sang to Chris, and I gotta say – this girl has an amazing voice!
















Hacking Photography | My Presentation at January 2013 Pittsburgh PUG
Last night I gave this presentation to an amazing group of Pittsburgh photographers at the Pittsburgh Pictage User Group (PUG). I am a huge geek and found a great niche for myself and my business – combining photography with engineering and becoming a cross between a photographer and a mad scientist. I build things because I can, because it is interesting and because some of what I build is actually useful to my clients. And because in my spare time I am Batman. Don’t tell anyone:)
Skyping with Grandma












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