Posts Tagged ‘out and about’

Take a Hike

Monday, July 26th, 2010

Some­times a walk is all you need to see the beauty you are sur­rounded by.

Image avail­able with a RF license: Walk­ing the For­est Trail

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On the Road

Friday, April 30th, 2010

I’m not get­ting any younger but I’m sure far from feel­ing old. To cel­e­brate my birth­day this past week­end I went out and did two of my favorite things — rid­ing and shoot­ing. The orig­i­nal plan didn’t work out, then the next plan got rained on… but some­where in between it was dry — includ­ing a birth­day Sun­day of beau­ti­ful weather. It’s the ride that counts and not nec­es­sar­ily the des­ti­na­tion but on this glo­ri­ous day a small group of us went to Mt. Cheaha.

I strapped on my GF1 and took it for a test ride. You know, that lit­tle cam­era I talked about a few posts ago. I got a sim­ple har­ness I can wear out­side my rid­ing jacket so I can have easy access to the cam­era. It still requires I stop to take a photo of course but I don’t have to fid­dle with tak­ing my gloves off and fetch­ing it from the tank bag… who’s zip­per keeps get­ting stuck. Grrrr.

I had a blast shoot­ing with it. I haven’t per­fected the whole har­ness, bike, shoot thing yet but I’ll get my “work­flow” estab­lished the more I do it :)

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My Zen

Sunday, April 18th, 2010

Spring has sprung and one of my favorite things to do is in full effect. Rid­ing. I’ve been rid­ing for slightly over a year now — though it’s some­thing I’ve always wanted to do — I should have lis­tened to the lit­tle voices in my head back in col­lege. It’s an amaz­ing expe­ri­ence to be out in the ele­ments… feel­ing the wind, smelling the scents (good and bad) and hear­ing your exhaust roar — yes, mine roars :)) Even bet­ter when you are out shar­ing that excite­ment with good friends.

In my rid­ing adven­tures I’m usu­ally find­ing new roads — places I’d never drive around aim­lessly to find in my car. Yes, motor­cy­clists do that from time to time. There are many routes to dis­cover and a fun way to do it is to ride out and when you are ready to head back home… turn on your GPS and hit “go home.” You do have to be mind­ful though not to end up three states away before you are ready to hit that “go home” button.

In all of this explor­ing, whether near or far, on my bike or in the car, I’m con­stantly pulling out my iPhone to shoot things I wouldn’t nor­mally shoot. The iPhone has been and still is an incred­i­ble source of cre­ative stim­u­la­tion — call it a form of ther­apy if you’d like. The draw­back is that it’s not the quick­est draw while rid­ing. I need it to be safe but also want it to be acces­si­ble. In addi­tion, while the iPhone is an awe­some lit­tle gad­get, the qual­ity of the images are cer­tainly not stock wor­thy. As a pho­tog­ra­pher I don’t want to miss those many stock oppor­tu­ni­ties I’m rid­ing by. Yes, what a pain. LOL. Now there’s the GF1. A cam­era I would never had con­sid­ered look­ing at. Why? Well the brand for one thing. Sorry Pana­sonic but you make nose trim­mers. LOL. Ok, ok, so you also make a pretty kick ass point and shoot. Thank you for that ;) Check out the specs for your­self on DP Review. Small enough to stuff in a pocket (slightly big pocket), inter­change­able lenses, man­ual expo­sure, nice size images and the RAW for­mat… all of this gives me enough to go out and fully enjoy myself being “care­lessly cre­ative” with­out lug­ging my huge pro cam on my back and wor­ry­ing about it… AND my back. And lastly for now, because it’s a point and shoot I can take it just about any­where. Walk­ing around the city, peo­ple ignore you if you are car­ry­ing a lit­tle cam­era vs the 5D Mark II. It’s not intim­i­dat­ing to peo­ple and you can use it fairly eas­ily with­out being asked “what are you shoot­ing with that camera.”

Some shots I would not have taken otherwise:

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Old Car City

Monday, November 30th, 2009

Here’s a cool lit­tle place in Geor­gia that I hadn’t heard of until recently — Old Car City. A cou­ple of months ago I joined a group of pho­tog­ra­phers that was vis­it­ing the site. Yes I know… it took me this long to blog about it but hey, I got a lit­tle busy ;) This is not the sort of thing I usu­ally shoot so I was excited about the challenge.

part of the group

When I got there I imme­di­ately noticed the abun­dance of mos­qui­toes. Thank good­ness some­one else had the sense to bring insect repel­lent. So need­less to say, they imme­di­ately became my best friend. haha. It quickly was made known that we were to watch out for snakes and ground-level bee nests — another detail I wasn’t aware of but I guess given the con­di­tion of the cars, it’s to be expected. I did men­tion this isn’t my reg­u­lar sort of photo shoot didn’t I? The best way to avoid snakes, other than just not shoot­ing there, was to not dis­turb the cars. Mean­ing, that if a car hood was closed you don’t want to open it and shake what’s in it ;)

old car city

We spend sev­eral hours there just soak­ing in the gobs of tex­tures avail­able. They had some really cool mus­cle cars in their orig­i­nal shells includ­ing the Mus­tang my dad once owned. Here are just a few shots from the day.

mustang

stuck

aged

junkyard traffic

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Inspiration Point

Friday, July 10th, 2009

There is a build­ing in Seat­tle that I’m crazy about. I go there often and it’s fea­tured in much of my work: Seat­tle City Hall — specif­i­cally, the Red Room and adjoin­ing stair­case. Some days I sim­ply walk through the space to be reminded of why I love light, color, archi­tec­ture, and pho­tog­ra­phy. It’s my Inspi­ra­tion Point.

When Mar­i­lyn and I were in NY I started exper­i­ment­ing with zoom­ing (see pre­vi­ous blog entry Times Square’s “Spec­tac­u­lars”). And then the other day I decided to try out the tech­nique with archi­tec­ture. Of course I went to my favorite spot. The results — won­der­fully abstract — are unusual, col­or­ful, shapely, excit­ing. Each zoom result is unique. The slight­est change in posi­tion, light, man­ual zoom speed, and expo­sure can cre­ate an entirely dif­fer­ent look. Super fun to shoot.

ZoomRedRoom1(333x500)WM

ZoomRedRoom2(500x333)WM

RRstairsZoom1(333x500)WM

RRstairsZoom3(500x333)WM

RRstairsZoom2(333x500)WM

RRstairsZoom4(500x333)WM

ZoomRedRoom3(500x333)WM

RRstaircaseZoom5(500x333)WM

Images avail­able with a RF license: Flight of Color, Abstract Archi­tec­ture, Abstract Archi­tec­ture 2, Abstract Archi­tec­ture 3, Abstract Archi­tec­ture 4, Abstract Archi­tec­ture 5, Inte­rior Abstract, Abstract Archi­tec­ture 6