Monday, December 31, 2007

Happy New Year!


But how do we KNOW that it is a new year? The Earth travels in its orbit around the sun, and there is no "bump" to let us know that we are beginning a new orbit. We know from the stars.
The sky gives us all its brightest nighttime star, Sirius, at its highest, on the meridian, at precisely midnight between December 31 and January 1. (The local meridian is an imaginary line from the north pole, to the south point on our horizon. It is directly South when we look at the sky.) This photo shows Sirius, the "dog Star" to the lower left, on the meridian at midnight, and Orion, the mighty hunter, in the upper right. Orion's belt is made up of three stars on a diagonal, and his sword consists of three more stars in an almost vertical line beneath the belt. Please click on this photo to get an enlarged image so you can see the stars more clearly. Think of it! The sky gives you a gift, its brightest at the highest, as a "sign" or "gift" to mark the start of your new year. May your year be rewarding, sparkling, and bright! And thanks to my good friend Sam for the astronomical details!

Sunday, December 30, 2007

Christmas in Massapequa


So just for fun, we decided to go out tonight and look at houses that were really "done" for Christmas. So I went to the website of the paper I work for, and could NOT find the web version of the story the paper ran on "Holiday" (I HATE that term, it's Christmas...) decorations. The print version listed a whole bunch of homes worth visiting. Since I couldn't find the list I decided we should go to Massapequa because I have photographed decorations like this, and that town had a pretty good collection. So we were not disappointed. The snapshots I took were a bit more interesting because it was raining at the time.

Saturday, December 29, 2007

George Washington Slept Here


George Washigton slept here. Or he didn't. Oh wait, he had tea here, that was it. Or he didn't. Doesn't matter. It is another House for Sale story, and the original structure was built in the 1630's and was added on to over the years several times. One of the results of all that, is this really long hallway upstairs that leads from one end of the house to the other, with bedroom doors all along the way, with wonderful light coming into the hall. I was really excited to see this, and spent some time looking from one end and then the other to find the best shot. I like this photograph because of the monochromatic color, and I like this view because of the doorknob in the foreground.

Friday, December 28, 2007

A Modern Photojournalist


This is Aleja, a modern photojournalist, who is a colleague of mine at work. I saw her the other day sitting in her car working on a story. Notice, in the center of the photo, a blue rectangle - that is the viewing screen of her SONY High Definition video camera. She has a brand new Macintosh MacBook Pro laptop on her lap with Apple's Final Cut Express video-editing software. Not seen is the Air Card connected to her laptop, so she can transmit her still photos and video files wirelessly back to the office. Wow. The modern photojournalist, indeed! Oh, and did I mention that she is a terrific photographer? One of the best!

Thursday, December 27, 2007

Silly Cat!


Silly Cat! Stuffed in behind the back of a chair, and lying on a warm radiator, but with her legs hanging off the end, out in space like this! Why would that be a comfortable way for a cat to sleep? Wait. She's a cat. I am a human. OK, I sort of get it. The duck decoy seeming to be watching it all is also silly, I think. Silly, cat, silly duck, silly photo, and silly photographer!

Wednesday, December 26, 2007

A Most Amazing Bench


I had to photograph some Christmas mantelpiece decorations at an upscale florist. To make the photo more realistic, the owner suggested we go to his home and he would arrange the decorations on the mantle there, which we did. Why am I telling you this? Because, on the way out of the house, I walked across the patio and spotted this amazing bench, made from part of a tree trunk. Isn't it amazing? It has such beautiful form, I decided to show it in black & white. The color image showed some faint color differences in the wood, and some greennish tint from some moss, which I thought was distracting. Black & white just shows the form.

Tuesday, December 25, 2007

iSight


What's going on here? It is our Christmas day in Connecticut, and this is a photo of my mom, who is 91, and my 3 sisters, and a neice and two nephews, and Kathy. But what are they looking at and why are they smiling so?

The answer is that both of our daughters are a continent away, in Los Angeles. This is the first year since they were born, that they have not been home for Christmas. So we all have iSight webcams on our Macintosh laptops, and this was our way of connecting so we could all be together on this day. I can't tell you how wonderful it was to talk to them, and to see them in real time as well. A wonderful Christmas indeed.


Monday, December 24, 2007

And Merry Christmas to All...


"What?" "An out-of-focus Christmas tree?" "Are you kidding me?" Well, actually I never photographed an out-of-focus Christmas tree before. What I WAS going to do was shoot one image in focus, and one out-of-focus, and then combine them in Photoshop. Well, what happened was that the result was not pretty. But the out-of-focus one was actually quite lovely. So I have decided to go with just this one. I wouldn't dare turn something like this in for the paper, but, hey, it's my blog. Oh, and by the way... Merry Christmas to everyone!

Sunday, December 23, 2007

The Seagull Guy


Oh man! I nearly forgot to post tonight! It's 2 AM and I have been working on printing photographic cards all night as a gift for my mom, and baking more gingerbread men (women) and I was headed to bed and just remembered I hadn't done the blog. Duh! Anyhow, you saw the children's playground the other day - the spaceship kind of thing. After I photographed that I turned around and saw this cloud of seagulls down low, and a man standing amongst them. I put a long lens on the camera and started moving toward him and the gulls. I managed to get this shot before he was finished feeding them from his hand to the birds in flight. I asked his name, because I thought it would make a nice shot for the paper, and he told me he comes here every day to feed them, and they recognize his truck and come to be fed. He also asked if I had seen any of the Ospreys that live near there, and told me that he had been responsible for putting up poles for Osprey nests out in the marsh. Oh, the paper didn't use the photo...

Saturday, December 22, 2007

The Gingerbread Men (Women)


It's that time of year! Gingerbread men for the Cookie Project! The Cookie Project? Since I was a kid, my mom would make a whole bunch of different kinds of Christmas cookies for the whole family. When she was about 85, she said it was difficult for her, because of the arthritis in her hands, to continue to make all the different kinds of cookies. So here's what we did - Kathy and I and my three sisters, and our daughters Liz and Amy, and my sister Joan's kids, Jennifer and Jonathan, and Karen's two kids, Kelsey and Chris, each took one of my mom's recipes and made enough cookies for everyone. Christmas day we do a cookie exchange. My all-time favorite is the gingerbread men, so that's the cookie that I make. Only I made my own cookie cutter, and I make gingerbread women. Makes better use of the dough! So here I am, at the one time of year I get to make gingerbread! Here is the dough rolled out, the rolling pin, the cookie cutter, and the baking sheet, on the kitchen counter, ready to go! Yummm! They are delicious!

Friday, December 21, 2007

The Spaceship Has Landed


I had to photograph a kid's playground today at Crab Meadow Beach because it is going to be rebuilt. It is at a beautiful location, as you can see. So I did the regular photographs, and then thought I would have some fun and look for the "something else" quality of the scene. I couldn't stop thinking that parts of this thing looked like a spaceship, or some kind of strange bug. So I think this is the best "otherworldly" image from the shoot.

Thursday, December 20, 2007

Getting Ready for Christmas


I was doing a story on Christmas decorations that were being made for one of the famous Gold Coast mansions on Long Island. Obviously the scale of the decorations is a whole lot different from what we need for our houses! I caught this image of a finished wreath being transported. Loved that is just a wreath and legs.

Wednesday, December 19, 2007

Nightscape


OK, I admit it - I was desperate. Too many assignments today in too short a time, so I really had to hustle, which is not bad in itself, it just didn't give me time on the assignments to look for the "other" pictures. It was when I was leaving my astronomy club meeting that I saw this, and stopped to make a shot. OK, so it's not the best photo I ever took, but I was desperate for something to post. Desperate is not a good way to run a blog...

Tuesday, December 18, 2007

Great Projects


I love industrial things. New or old, large or small, I am fascinated by great projects. Now I have a huge project nearly in my back yard. This is the reconstruction of the half-mile long Roslyn Viaduct, which was originally built in 1949, and which is being rebuilt with a new state-of-the art concrete bridge. The amazing thing is that they are doing it one lane at a time! Traffic continues to flow in 3 of the 4 lanes, with the steel and concrete for the 4th lane having already been removed. This amazing yellow structure has been gradually erected on top of two new poured concrete piers, and it is the lifting and alignment mechanism for the new modular stressed concrete pieces that will make up the spans of the new bridge. It was perfect that the water was calm and that it reflects this amazing structure.

Monday, December 17, 2007

A Most Amazing Morning


I have been doing portraits of people who were interviewed about what kind of advice they would offer to people. This is the pastor of a church, and from the moment I walked in the door, we started gently talking and listening to each other, and it went on for an hour! It is hard to remember all the subjects we talked about, but it had to do with the meaning of life and stuff like that... He feels that the best advice he can give to people is to minimize and make life more simple... put things aside, and explore and make your life lighter more purposeful and meaningful. About his work as a pastor he told me that his mentor told him: "ministry is in the interruptions." I am reminded on days like this, that this is why I love my work.

Sunday, December 16, 2007

I Didn't Have Time to Stop


I was on the way to photograph a doctor on Friday morning, and had left the house to get there on time. But then I drove by one of my favorite scenes down at the water. It was misty in the rain, with fog in the background, and there was snow everywhere. I was dying to pull over and make a photo, but with snow along the roadways, it would have taken 15 minutes to park safely, and walk to where I could shoot the photograph. It killed me, but I kept driving! So today, late, it was raining lightly, and I thought I would go back and see how the scene looked. It was not what it was the other day, but it had a different quality, which I thought was worth capturing. Does it look cold and damp and miserable out? It sure was.

Saturday, December 15, 2007

This Place Needs a Face


I have been looking back at a lot of my posts, and it feels as if they are starting to look the same. So for somthing different, here's a face. I am mindful when shooting picture stories or photo essays, that I need to vary the scale from distant shots, to medium shots to close ups, so that there will be more visual variety. So now I have done that here. This is a quick shot I did of one of the models while waiting for two other girls for a group shot. She was leaning against this column, and the light was just right, and she happened to look down, and I said "Don't move!" and I got my camera and did four frames. She is actually wearing a dark blue dress, but it hardly shows in this small image. I have intentionally kept the image dark, I love the monochromatic tone of the photograph, but most of all, I love the mood of the image.

Friday, December 14, 2007

Wall Hanging


I was doing some more photos of homes with something called "Hampton Style," although this house isn't finished yet. As I wandered around looking for photos, my "radar" went off when I spotted this. I loved how strange it was. That bundle of wires behind the chair was coming out of a box in the wall and is apparently for a home theatre system waiting to be installed. So they just hung the bundle on a nail, until the hardware arrives. I don't think the photo would have worked if the vase with the dried stalks was not there.

Thursday, December 13, 2007

Senior Citizen TV


One of the things I do is to go to various Senior Citizen housing facilities, and make photographs of the facility - maybe one shot of the outside, and another of either some residents involved in activities, or perhaps a resident in their apartment. The director of the facility brought me to this apartment, but the woman who resided there didn't want to be photographed, so I took a few photographs around the apartment, knowing they wouldn't be used. But I loved this view of the TV set. I think if I didn't tell you who lived here, you would be able to guess on your own. Maybe my TV will look like this someday...

Wednesday, December 12, 2007

Myst


This is a photograph of some of the multiple roofs of a new house for sale in the Hamptons. It is beautifully designed, and solidly constructed. You are looking at a number of roofs which are all covered in cedar shakes. The spire on the circular roof adds an element that makes the whole scene remind me of something from the fantasy computer game "Myst" of years ago. The high cumulus clouds only add to the feeling. Oh, the cost? Four million, more or less.

Tuesday, December 11, 2007

The Black Fence


I was out east today photographing some homes, and took a wrong turn and went down a this road, and as I drove along, thought something looked a bit different. It was the fence. It was black! Wow, I don't ever remember seeing a black fence before. So I pulled over and spent about 15 minutes trying to make an interesting photo. I am not sure I succeeded. I spent most of the time shooting along the fence, and it was only when I was walking back to the car that I saw this view over the fence. I liked the strange "Island" of trees in the middle of the field.

Monday, December 10, 2007

Shooting in the Fog


As I drove by a golf course this morning I caught sight of trees disappearing in the fog. I immediately stopped because fog usually offers a good chance at an interesting picture. For me, the thing that makes fog photographs most interesting is to be close to a nearby object, and then to have other objects behind, become fainter and fainter as they receded into the distance. I don't quite have that here, but there is enough of that effect to make the tree in the foreground more interesting because of the faint images in the background.

Sunday, December 9, 2007

When I Went Out...


I decided to go out drinking the other night, and when I arrived at this bar... JUST KIDDING! I have never gone out drinking! :-) I arrived at a restaurant late one afternoon to photograph the restaurant for a review for the paper, and while waiting to meet the owners, I noticed these employees sitting at the bar waiting to start work. The pattern of their legs against the front of the illuminated bar caught my eye. So that they wouldn't see me photographing them, I actually photographed the reflection in a mirror on the opposite side of the bar. I loved the pattern the legs made and I liked that because the tops of people were lost in the darkness above the bar, you are not sure what is going on at first.

Saturday, December 8, 2007

Handiwork


I wasn't sure if photography could be accurately described as "handiwork" so I looked it up. There were two definitions that seemed to apply: "The characteristic quality of a particular doer or maker," and "The product of a person's efforts and actions." And I do hold the camera in my hand... Anyhow, after I described my bridal shoot to you, I thought I would post one of the photographs I did that day. How easy it was shooting in that mansion - beautiful light, and wonderful architectural detail. Well, actually when it comes to the light, I had a 400 Watt second strobe out of sight around the corner to the left, which I set off by radio from the camera.

Friday, December 7, 2007

Fragments


There are some images that don't quite make it as a "complete" photograph. The photographer Minor White, who I was incredibly lucky to study with for 3 years while I was at RIT, referred to those images as "fragments." I think that it is really useful concept to be aware of. Sometimes when I am struggling to make a photograph after seeing something that interests me, I realize that it will never be a complete photograph, but it can be an interesting fragment. I think that this shadow of an ornate railing in an old mansion falls into this category. It's nice, and I thought it was worth taking.

Thursday, December 6, 2007

The Bridal Shoot


Wow, look at all that's going on here! It's a bridal shoot that I did in one of the great old Long Island mansions. Lovely architectural backgrounds, beautiful light from the large windows, and the models were easy on the eyes as well. But these things don't just happen - they require an entire cast, including the producer who chooses the dresses, those who get the clothing to the shoot, unpack the clothing, jewelry, and shoes, set clothes up on hangars, steam the wrinkles out, and then there are the two hair and makeup stylists and finally, the clothing stylist. Wow! Oh, and the photographer. That's me! That's a lot of people. I find the specific location in the house, and set up my electronic flash units to light the scene. Just before I get to shoot, the hair, makeup and stylists all swarm over the models to make sure everything is just so. "Clickclickclickclickclickclick..." and we are done with one shot, and on to the next.

Wednesday, December 5, 2007

The Mystery


This makes me crazy. I have labeled the photo "colonnade" but I am not sure this structure is one. I took this photo at Old Westbury Gardens, and I have two books about the gardens, and the PR Director's phone number. I can't find the books, and it is after 1:30 in the morning and it is a bit late for me to call her! I was here to photograph the gardeners making Christmas decorations for the main house, and when leaving spotted this as I drove past. It stopped me in my tracks! Isn't this just lovely? The combination of the beautiful architecture and trees in late fall has that wonderful feeling of a faded beauty which I love so well.

Tuesday, December 4, 2007

End of the Line


I was on the way home after my last assignment today, and realized that I hadn't seen anything worth shooting for the blog. I thought I would use an older photograph, and then I caught a glimplse of the sky. It was pretty spectacular with the grey overcast with breaks near the horizon, as seen through the clear cold air. The closer I got to home the better it got as the light continued to fade. I was shooting through the windshield with my Canon SD800, and when I came to these red lights with the power poles on either side, I realized I had something. I'm not sure what, of course, but the "something" I feel that I feel when I have seen a complete photograph, and not just a fragment of a photograph.

Monday, December 3, 2007

The Promise


So about two days ago I promised to stop posting photographs of the Japanese Maple. On the morning of the snow, I spent about half an hour photographing the tree, both up close and from a distance. I finally decided to post the close-up for visual variety on the page - I wanted a photo at a different scale, just to break up the sameness of the images. But I was struggling with that decision, and sent a couple of friends the photo that I was not using. They all wrote back and said "Post it!" So I am. I like the subtlety of this image. It seems more delicate, and there is more "going on" in the image (as we photographers are likely to say.) I think this is a "better" photograph than the close up. And now I will stop photographing the tree for the time being - as a result of a wind storm, most of the leaves are now gone. But what a gift this tree was to me this year.

Sunday, December 2, 2007

Our First Snowfall


I woke up this morning to find the ground covered with a thin layer of light snow that had fallen in the early hours of the morning. This is quite unusual for us to get snow while there are still leaves on the trees. The snow was light enough sit gently on the tops of the leaves. I did mention a few postings ago, how delicate the leaves were on the Japanese Maple. Aren't they beautiful seen up close?

Saturday, December 1, 2007

Early Morning on a Gray Day


One day last week I had to wake up early for an assignment. Unaccustomed as I am to rising early, I was lying in bed trying to come awake, and noticed the play of light and shadow on the bedroom curtains. I staggered out of bed, went downstairs, and returned with my Canon SD 800 point and shoot, and got back under the covers where it was warm, and then spent the next 5 minutes or so trying to find the best composition. It is amazing what kind of photographs we can find in the very familiar in our lives.

Friday, November 30, 2007

I Love This Tree!


I am sorry for boring you with yet another photograph of this tree. I have photographed it twice in the past two days, even though I posted a photo of it only several days ago! I was backing out of the driveway, and not only were the colors better today, but the angle resulted in a more cohesive design, I though. So I parked the car in the street, and got the camera, and photographed it again. This is the best view of all, and the best photo. Please click on it for a larger image and better color. If you do that I promise I will stop posting more photos of it. Well, maybe...

Thursday, November 29, 2007

The Lawyer


As frequent readers will note, I have covered a couple of press conferences lately, for people suing for wrongful death and medical malpractice. These events are held in conference rooms with fluorescent lighting, which is pretty boring as far as lighting is concerned. This room had blinds, and two of the slats were missing. At first I wondered if it would make a mess of trying to light the three people who were talking. I got the photos I needed, and then saw this and figured I would play around with the light to get something different. Not necessarily anything useful for the paper, but an interesting exercise is how to see beyond the normal way of seeing.

Wednesday, November 28, 2007

The Stove


This stove is in the backyard of the house next door. We have new neighbors, and boy, are we lucky! They are a young couple with a 2 year old. He grew up in the next town over, and she is from the Netherlands. They lived in Holland for three years, before moving to the US. He said when they were packing the container with their belongings for the move, they were going to toss out this cast iron outdoor stove, but then realized that it would fit so why not bring it. It is used for burning wood to warm up when sitting around on the patio on a cool day. I love how it looks, sitting out here amongst the leaves. I also love the grape aqrbor to the right of the photo.

Tuesday, November 27, 2007

Lawsuit


And now for something completely different... Here is the story about this photograph. A landlord was renting a home to two families. The home was actually condemned, had no heat, and the power had been turned off. The landlord allegedly bought a portable generator, and to insure that it would not be stolen, set it up in the BASEMENT of the home where it was left running! Two people died from asphyxiation. One man was a young father, who worked two jobs, and loved his wife and young child. Fortunately the mother and child were staying in another home that had heat. He stayed in the condemned home so no one would steal their belongings. He died in his sleep. This is his mom and her lawyer at a press conference announcing a lawsuit against the town and the landlord. A terribly sad story.

Monday, November 26, 2007

The Japanese Maple


I hope you will excuse my fascination with the Autumn colors in my yard - it is such a joy to see. Fall is clearly my favorite time of year. And not just for the brilliant colors - I also love to watch the fading of life all around, when bright colors turn to more subtle hues. There is joy in watching flowers and plants change from the vigor of life to the beauty of decay. This Japanese Maple tree was here when we moved in in 1971 and I have photographed it innumerable times, in all seasons. I am in love with the shape of the branches and can always find a photograph here. It is the last tree to loose its leaves, and when they fall to the ground, they are the most delicate leaves I have seen. When the ground is covered with them, it makes a lovely close-up photograph. I will just have to take that picture this year for you.

Sunday, November 25, 2007

Morning Ablaze


When we arrived back on Long Island late yesterday, I was thrilled to see that the trees had finally turned to their autumn colors. Quite a change in a week away - I thought they would never change this year. Upstate, all the trees have dropped their leaves by now. I was not prepared, however for how beautiful everything was. Not until I went out to the car this morning to go get bagels. I was stunned at the sight of all the trees backlit by the morning sun! It was a perfect day, so before I even ate breakfast, I spent about an hour photographing the trees in my yard. Having lived here for 36 years, there are certain shots that I know will always work. I tried those, and then looked for new ways of seeing things. I ended up with a whole bunch of "keepers," but chose this one for the blog because I don't remember shooting this view ever before.

Saturday, November 24, 2007

Driving Home


We headed back home from Rochester this morning. Driving through Geneva, NY we drove by Seneca Lake, one of the Finger Lakes. There is a park alongside the road, called Seneca Lake State Park. I saw some nice colors and shapes, so I stopped for about 15 minutes to see what I could make of it. This is the result. Kind of reminds me of the crooked grape vines I photographed a couple of weeks ago.

Friday, November 23, 2007

GEH


This is the George Eastman House on East Avenue in Rochester, NY. It is the world's oldest photography museum and one of the world's oldest film archives. It was the home of George Eastman, of Eastman Kodak fame, before it opened as a museum of photography in 1949. It is world-renowned for its photograph and motion picture archives. I first came here in 1960 as a Freshman at Rochester Institute of Technology, and have come back here at least once a year, every year since then. When we come to Rochester to visit family, this is first place I come to see the latest photography exhibitions, and displays of photographic equipment. I always take time to photograph the gardens and grounds as well. This time, it was long after sunset when I left, and raining as well, and I thought I should see what the building would look like at night in the rain, just for something different. I tried several different views, and this is my favorite. It was worth getting soaked in order to make this photograph. (Be sure to click on the image to see a larger photo, with *much* better color!)

Thursday, November 22, 2007

Morning and Afternoon


It is snowing on Thanksgiving in Rochester! I took the first photograph, on the left, when I got up this morning. I loved the bright green grass and the yellow maple leaves. Snow flurries started in the morning, and by afternoon, there was a coating of snow on everything. So I took the second photo later in the day. I love seeing the contrast. What a difference a day makes.

Wednesday, November 21, 2007

Fall Comes to Upstate


I am driving upstate under overcast skies, in light rain with fog and mist. I pass a red tail hawk on a telephone wire, waiting to drop on the slightest hint of movement in the field below. Most of the trees are bare by now and their black branches are in silhouette against the sky. Fall comes earlier to upstate than it does to Long Island. The weather makes this landscape melancholy, and it is beautiful. I am reminded of Robert Frost's poem "My November Guest" which includes these lines: "Not yesterday I learned to know, The love of bare November days..." I pass this unpaved road which which leads to a farm, it is wet with rain reflecting the sky where the water has gathered in tire tracks. It takes a few moments for the image to register, and I stop some distance down the highway, and back up, so that I can take this photo.

Tuesday, November 20, 2007

Ovid


I have been photographing abandoned farmhouses since I first came to upstate New York as a college freshman in the fall of 1960. There is something about these buildings that absolutely fascinates me. Perhaps it has to do with the sense that these buildings have stories to tell, about the lives that have been lived here. As I photographed this farmhouse today, I wondered what it looked like when it was brand new, and I wondered who built it, and what their life was like. There is a richness to the architectural detail in most of these buildings. But more importantly, there is a power in ruins that draws me in every time. This building is by the side of the road about a mile south of Ovid, New York, in the heart of the Finger Lakes.

Monday, November 19, 2007

O'Neil's Grave


We are on the road, headed upstate for Thanksgiving with relatives, driving at night, so there was no photography today. While looking for an image to use yesterday to illustrate the point about some photographs being easy, I came across this. It is a 4x5 Polaroid Type 55 negative that I did about five years ago on the Camino del Diablo in Arizona. I was on a photographic field trip with Mark Klett, and we spent a week in the Cabeza Prieta which is in the southwest of the state. It surounds the Barry Goldwater Bombing Range, so that made for interesting moments with F-16's doing low level navigation, flying supersonically, both day and night! Anyhow, this is a famous grave, located on the trail that led from Mexico across the desert, where temperatures reached 120 degrees in the summer. The trail led to Yuma, Arizona, and a place to cross the Colorado River, in order to get to California and the gold rush. Conditions were so brutal, many people and animals died makking the journey. There is an amazing story about this grave - maybe I will tell you some day.

Sunday, November 18, 2007

Landscape Lessons, 6


The "Easy Button." I thought that this photo would be an interesting contrast to the series of photos I did at the pond. Sometimes you walk up to a place and the scene is so dramatic that you almost just point and shoot, and end up with a dramatic photo like this! Here it is: foreground, middle ground, background, and the very graphic shapes of the foreground trees. OK, so it's not really that easy - I did spend about half an hour experimenting with various compositions, but there was no doubt that there was a great photo here, and I was going to find it. Such a different experience from hoping for a photo at the pond. End of lessons!

Saturday, November 17, 2007

Landscape Lessons, 5


So I continued walking along the edge of the pond, looking both near and far for a photo that would have something special about it. I was attracted to this scene all the way across the pond. I had pretty much given up on the foreground, middle ground, background approach for this pond. I like the compostion of this image, and the textures and colors. although it has I think it has a bit less impact because it is so two-dimensional. It is a more subtle photo, in both color and design, but after trying a number of diffrent ways of looking for a photo here I found something I am pleased with. I will have one more landscape photo to post tomorrow, but it will not be from the pond.

Friday, November 16, 2007

Landscape Lessons, 4


It is hard to remember, when you are looking for a grand landscape, that sometimes, a dramatic close up can be a powerful image. What immediately comes to mind is a magnificent black and white photograph that Harry Callahan did called "Grass, Aix en Provence" which looks like a human form. (email me and I will send it to you...) Anyhow, I decided to look for a close up and see if that change in what I was looking for would make a difference. I think it did, and here is the result. The interesting thing about a close up is that if I were doing a photo essay on the landscape of a particular area, the change in scale between far and near adds visual variety to a layout of multiple images seen next to one another. But this is not the end of the lesson... Please come back tomorrow.

Thursday, November 15, 2007

Landscape Lessons, 3


So I started walking along the edge of the pond, determined to find a photo. When these branches came into view, I liked that they added a foreground-background element to the landscape. I spent quite a bit of time trying different "crops" of this view of the pond, and this is my favorite. More interesting that the first photo, but I was hoping for something more. Stay tuned for my further adventures. And as usual, if you click on this image, you will get a larger one, with better color. Please do that. Thanks.

Wednesday, November 14, 2007

Landscape Lessons, 2


Just to the left of where I stood to take yesterday's photo of the pond, there is a cement spillway where the water leaves the pond. I decided to walk out on it to see if the change of viewpoint would result in a better photo. I had to look down to check my footing, and when I did, I spotted the reflection of these tree branches, backlit by the reflection of the sun and clouds. OK, so it's not the greatest photo I ever took, but it is more interesting than the overall view from yesterday I think. So I shot this, and continued on with my searching for a better photograph. I will show you a nice one tomorrow.