Tag Archives: 5D Mark III

March 2014 Wallpaper

Tree and brick wall, Charleston, South Carolina
Tree and brick wall, Charleston, South Carolina

I’m going to try something a little different starting with this month’s calendar.  For the last year or so I’ve been mostly dredging up old landscape photos mixed in with a few more recent shots.  I’ve recently started to realize how much my photographic emphasis has changed over the last few years, and I find myself photographing a lot less nature and a lot more of what I call “found scenes.”  Sometimes they are scenes I find in nature, but often they are scenes I come across just walking down the street in some town I happen to be visiting.

These photos won’t necessarily be the iconic “hero shots” that I have been posting as wallpaper, but I feel like I need to be true to my own sense of what it is I happen to be seeing and shooting.  And that changes, necessarily I think, over time as I learn and grow.  Some readers may enjoy this work and others may not.  For those who like it, please say so and thanks.  For those who don’t, please feel free to let me know!

I may also add in a few abstract photos that I’ve come to enjoy.  Those also make nice wallpaper, although they may be a little different from what I’ve posted here in the past.

This particular photo was taken in Charleston, South Carolina, last winter.  For me it represents the change from winter to spring – winter from the bare branches on the trees, but spring through the green on the bricks in the background, set against a whitewashed wall that hints of color but also could be seen as representing snow.  Not in Charleston probably, but certainly in many parts of this country, even in March.

I hope everyone enjoys this little change of pace and I hope everyone has a nice March!

Signs of Spring!

Latta Plantation Nature Preserve on a warm late winter day
Latta Plantation Nature Preserve on a warm late winter day

This afternoon, Kathy & I took a break from the household duties to spend some time walking at Latta Plantation Nature Preserve, near our house in Charlotte.  It was a beautiful afternoon, temps in the high 60’s and a clear Carolina Blue sky with some puffy clouds.  On our way there we remarked how you could see just a “hint” of green in the trees, as the new growth starts poking out of the more mature branches.  If you get close you can’t see it, but from a distance you get sort of a green cast to the woods that wasn’t there just a few short days ago.  In just another week there will be buds galore, then leaves.

Latta Plantation Nature Preserve on a warm late winter day
Latta Plantation Nature Preserve on a warm late winter day

My son Kevin and I built my new computer yesterday.  It was a long time coming but I finally got “board approval” to buy the parts, and he and I spent Saturday afternoon putting it all together.  There are still a few bugs to be worked out, but for the most part I’m able to do everything on it that I need to.  The one major missing piece is that the software for my now-obsolete i1 Display isn’t supported by the new operating system, so I’m researching a new calibration device.  Right now I’m deciding between the ColorMunki Display and the X-Rite i1Display Pro.  They are virtually identical and I’m sure either one would be sufficient for my needs, but I would appreciate any feedback and experience-based advice.

Latta Plantation Nature Preserve on a warm late winter day
Latta Plantation Nature Preserve on a warm late winter day
Latta Plantation Nature Preserve on a warm late winter day
Latta Plantation Nature Preserve on a warm late winter day
Latta Plantation Nature Preserve on a warm late winter day
Latta Plantation Nature Preserve on a warm late winter day

More Snow Fun!

Casa Dills in the Snow
Casa Dills in the Snow

Well, just like that the sun is out and the snow is melting.  I saw a forecast high of 76 for next week.  I’ll believe that when I see it, but for now things are looking up.

They are going to expect me to make an appearance in the office today, so I’m going to post a few more photos just to keep the momentum going.  I shot a lot more yesterday but since I’m juggling priorities I may have to work on them over the weekend.

Enjoy this latest installment!

Random photos from walking around the neighborhood during the snow storm
Random photos from walking around the neighborhood during the snow storm
Random photos from walking around the neighborhood during the snow storm
Random photos from walking around the neighborhood during the snow storm
Random photos from walking around the neighborhood during the snow storm
Random photos from walking around the neighborhood during the snow storm
Random photos from walking around the neighborhood during the snow storm
Random photos from walking around the neighborhood during the snow storm
Random photos from walking around the neighborhood during the snow storm
Random photos from walking around the neighborhood during the snow storm
Random photos from walking around the neighborhood during the snow storm
Random photos from walking around the neighborhood during the snow storm
Random photos from walking around the neighborhood during the snow storm
Random photos from walking around the neighborhood during the snow storm
Random photos from walking around the neighborhood during the snow storm
Random photos from walking around the neighborhood during the snow storm
Random photos from walking around the neighborhood during the snow storm
Random photos from walking around the neighborhood during the snow storm
Random photos from walking around the neighborhood during the snow storm
Random photos from walking around the neighborhood during the snow storm
Random photos from walking around the neighborhood during the snow storm
Random photos from walking around the neighborhood during the snow storm
Tony, Richard and "the girls" in the snow
Tony, Richard and “the girls” in the snow
Random photos from walking around the neighborhood during the snow storm
Random photos from walking around the neighborhood during the snow storm
Random photos from walking around the neighborhood during the snow storm
Random photos from walking around the neighborhood during the snow storm
Random photos from walking around the neighborhood during the snow storm
Random photos from walking around the neighborhood during the snow storm
Amy's Ride, Snowbound
Amy’s Ride, Snowbound
Random photos from walking around the neighborhood during the snow storm
Random photos from walking around the neighborhood during the snow storm

Winter Games

Snowboarding!
Snowboarding!

We had a little snow today here in the sunny south.  I spent some time walking around in it this afternoon, and here are a few quick picks that I promised Paul. 😉  Looks like we may have another snow day tomorrow, so I may be able to get out and shoot some more.  The NWS is forecasting “Freezing Fog” tonight – that could make for an interesting morning!

Bobcat Sled
Bobcat Sled
Half Pipe
Half Pipe
Slalom
Slalom
Luge
Luge
Medal Ceremony
Medal Ceremony
Super G
Super G
Moguls
Moguls

Welcome to February!

Abandoned house along SR 264 near Englehard, North Carolina
Abandoned house along SR 264 near Englehard, North Carolina

I mentioned that we had a new house, right? 🙂

I received a number of favorable comments on a similar photo I posted last week and I thought it made for an interesting subject, so I processed another shot from that same location to share as this month’s wallpaper.  I thought about using a snow photo, but for some of us, we’re hoping that the little bit of snow we got this past week means that we’re done for the year and that we can get on to spring.  We’ll see how that works out, but that is the optimist’s view!

Well here we are, already into the second month of the year.  I know I am looking forward to finishing the moving in process at just about the time the weather warms up enough to make getting outside a bit more enjoyable.  Here in the south, February can sometimes mean an early spring or it can mean “don’t hold your breath.”  I’ve got my hopes on an early transition.  We’ll see what happens!

Wine on Tuesdays

Abandoned house along SR 264 near Englehard, North Carolina
Abandoned house along SR 264 near Englehard, North Carolina

Kathy & I have worked really hard in recent years to strike a balance between planning & preparing for the future and living a full & meaningful life in the present.  A concept that we recently came up with was the idea that we should make it a point to “Celebrate Every Day.”  It’s probably a product of age and maturity, possibly wisdom, but starting from the loss of my own parents nearly 30 years ago and continuing as recently as the loss of Kathy’s parents last year, we have made a point of evaluating our own priorities in this context.  We finally gave it a formal name just recently.

One night last week – Tuesday, in fact – we decided to have one of our more “splurgy” bottles of wine.  We often save those for what we might consider special occasions.  But in keeping with our “Celebrate Every Day” theme, we decided to open that bottle “because it was Tuesday.”  Thus was born the idea of Wine on Tuesdays.  Any other day of the week would be appropriate as well. 🙂

Abandoned house along SR 264 near Englehard, North Carolina
Abandoned house along SR 264 near Englehard, North Carolina

But, It’s On Sale!

Graveyard behind the Unitarian Church, Charleston, South Carolina
Graveyard behind the Unitarian Church, Charleston, South Carolina

This post has been rolling around in my head for some time, but Thanksgiving and all the Black Friday hoopla seems to be an appropriate time to gather these thoughts and put them out on the blog.

On our recent journey to Charleston, I remember at one point commenting about the number of car dealerships clustered around a particular interchange.  I think it was somewhere around Columbia, SC but it could be anywhere in the US big enough to have car dealerships.  As much as I love and appreciate nice cars, the automobile business has always served to me as a prime representation of marketing-driven consumption.  If I wanted to be negative I could say “greed and excess” here, but it wouldn’t serve my point.  So we’ll call it marketing-driven consumption.  Black Friday is another prime example of marketing-driven consumption to the max.

Graveyard behind the Unitarian Church, Charleston, South Carolina
Graveyard behind the Unitarian Church, Charleston, South Carolina

I specifically remember, shortly after buying a new car several years ago, someone told me “congratulations!” as if to imply that purchasing a new car was some kind of heroic achievement.  But that’s how cars have always been marketed, as symbols of success and status.  When I was growing up, each September my brother & I would start sneaking into the storage lots behind the local car dealerships to get a peek at the new models to be introduced in the fall.  Back in that day, models tended to really change between model years, rather than just another homogenized ToyHoNisOlet, because the manufacturers relied more on the cars to sell themselves. And they all had somewhat distinctive features, from styling to performance.

Today, many cars, at least those the regular folks can afford, all look pretty much alike.  So it takes marketing to make us want one over another.  And that marketing is usually aimed at making someone feel young, attractive, successful, more interesting or some attribute only accomplished by purchasing a particular product.  Because it’s been hammered into our heads for so long, whenever someone sees a friend driving a new car, there is often a tinge of envy (or worse) and at least a little bit of “must be nice.”  I usually look at it and think of what I could do with the payment.  But that’s just me.

Graveyard behind the Unitarian Church, Charleston, South Carolina
Graveyard behind the Unitarian Church, Charleston, South Carolina

Anyway, the comment that I made when I saw all of these car dealerships was that if there was some way we could be identified and ranked (because after all this is all about judging and ranking – a subject for another post) not by how fancy our car is or the neighborhood we live in, but by the size of our 401(k) our IRA or our savings account, would there be investment offices at all of these interchanges instead of car dealerships?  Would we make different decisions if they were based on mindful reasoning instead of marketing?  And how would those decisions be reflected in our personal wellbeing if they didn’t involve spending huge sums of money or committing to an endless stream of payments?

Graveyard behind the Unitarian Church, Charleston, South Carolina
Graveyard behind the Unitarian Church, Charleston, South Carolina

In that same vein, why do so many people tend to judge how serious someone is about photography based on the type of equipment they own or the subject matter that they photograph?  Have we been convinced by marketing and promotion by the camera manufacturers and retailers that the only way to take meaningful photographs is to have the latest and greatest camera and lens?  Perhaps.  But I prefer to appreciate a photographer’s work based on the quality of their photographs, and when possible the stories behind the photographs.  THAT is what photography means to me, not what brand of camera someone has, or which lens or how big their sensor is.  Or even whether they are using a digital camera or film.  But that’s hard, just like resisting the temptation brought on by advertising and marketing is hard.

Graveyard behind the Unitarian Church, Charleston, South Carolina
Graveyard behind the Unitarian Church, Charleston, South Carolina

As someone who doesn’t own a television or listen to commercial radio (I usually say that “I don’t watch TV” because saying “I don’t own a TV” makes some people uncomfortable) I’m not bombarded by all of the marketing messages that drive consumer spending.  Kathy & I just don’t buy a lot of stuff, and when we do, we buy it because we need or want it.  Being on sale isn’t generally a factor in our buying decision, although once we make a decision to purchase something we will often wait on a sale to buy it if we aren’t in a rush.  But I still find myself attracted by the “Sale” or “Limited Time Only” mentality, and sometimes have to work hard to curb that feeling I get when something looks attractive because I’m afraid that I might not be able to have it.

Graveyard behind the Unitarian Church, Charleston, South Carolina
Graveyard behind the Unitarian Church, Charleston, South Carolina

As Kathy & I prepare to move into our “downsized” new home, and after having lived for the last 6 months in a rented apartment with just our most essential belongings, we have come to realize that all of the things we have been storing since May are things that aren’t really necessary for our daily lives.  And while we did a really good job of paring down the things that we deemed “disposable” before we moved, we now think that maybe we didn’t go far enough.  Many of things we have been storing are things that we’re going to have to think really hard about, in order to decide how much of it we even need or want to keep.

Graveyard behind the Unitarian Church, Charleston, South Carolina
Graveyard behind the Unitarian Church, Charleston, South Carolina

So what does this all have to do with anything?  In the last few days, like many of us I’ve been bombarded by e-mails from every merchant I’ve ever done business with promoting their Black Friday “Doorbusters.”  I don’t know about everyone else, but I haven’t yet seen a “deal” on anything I’d actually buy.  I don’t think of camera equipment as something that is an impulse purchase.  Most people only buy a camera when they need one, after weeks or sometimes months of analysis or research.  I’ve enjoyed several recent exchanges on the blogs of some of my photo friends, discussing things like the aesthetics of a particular camera.  Talking about how a camera feels to hold versus another, the ease of use or feel of the controls.  Discussions around the mindfulness of talking photographs and cutting out the noise and chatter that distracts us from the pursuit of activities that make us happy.  Things that matter to those of us who actually use a camera to take photographs, not just collect equipment or are constantly chasing after the next great thing.  But that isn’t stuff you can buy at the mall or Best Buy.

Graveyard behind the Unitarian Church, Charleston, South Carolina
Graveyard behind the Unitarian Church, Charleston, South Carolina

Monte has demonstrated that you don’t need to necessarily buy the latest version of a camera, that the introduction of a new model can mean a good deal on the previous one.  That makes the older model a good value, because it will do exactly what he needs it to do for a fraction of the cost of when it was new, or of the cost of the new model.

Chris has spent some time comparing the relative qualities of several mirrorless compact camera models, and has formed an opinion that seems to be contrary to the popular opinion.  But if a particular camera meets your needs, then it is the right tool for you.  Whether or not something is on sale doesn’t make it a good deal if it isn’t what you want.  And I guess that is my point.

And Cedric wrote a similar post about how the ergonomics and feel of a camera means more to him than megapixels and dynamic range.  His story about an exchange with a photography professor about the “feel” of a camera was a good one.

Mindfulness is a theme I have been pursuing lately.  Decisions made in a calculated fashion, not driven by a marketing frenzy.  Just being on sale isn’t a reason to buy anything we don’t want or need.  Not buying something means you have saved the entire price, not just a percentage.  And not needing a place to store all of our accumulated junk means we have room and resources for things that do matter to us.  A purchasing decision made mindfully is a good one regardless of the price of the item being purchased.

I’m looking forward to living even more mindfully in 2014.  We’ll see how that actually plays out.  But first I’m going to have to sort through all the stuff that the movers are going to deliver in a couple of weeks!  I’ll probably decide to start planning a vacation…that’s a lot more fun than a car payment.

Graveyard behind the Unitarian Church, Charleston, South Carolina
Graveyard behind the Unitarian Church, Charleston, South Carolina

Charleston, Revisited

Brides to Be, Charleston, South Carolina
Brides to Be, Charleston, South Carolina

Kathy & I spent some time in Charleston, SC a few weekends ago.  I took a few photos, and these are a few that show my take on Charleston, although perhaps not what most tourists take photos of.  I got a few of those, too.  That will be the topic for some future posts.  For now, here are a few of my “non-typical” Charleston photos.

Line 'Em Up, Charleston, South Carolina
Line ‘Em Up, Charleston, South Carolina
For The Birds, Charleston, South Carolina
For The Birds, Charleston, South Carolina
Dart, Charleston, South Carolina
Dart, Charleston, South Carolina
Extended Absence, Charleston, South Carolina
Extended Absence, Charleston, South Carolina
Post No Bills, Charleston, South Carolina
Post No Bills, Charleston, South Carolina
Watch Where You Sit, Charleston, South Carolina
Watch Where You Sit, Charleston, South Carolina
Service Entrance, Charleston, South Carolina
Service Entrance, Charleston, South Carolina
Vinally!  Charleston, South Carolina
Vinally! Charleston, South Carolina
Pick A Bike, College of Charleston, Charleston, South Carolina
Pick A Bike, College of Charleston, Charleston, South Carolina

 

Peggy’s Cove

Peggy's Cove Lighthouse, Peggy,s Cove, Nova Scotia
Peggy’s Cove Lighthouse, Peggy,s Cove, Nova Scotia

I’m still working on Nova Scotia photos…hoping to come up with 12 that are calendar-worthy. Not that I don’t think I can find 12, I just don’t want to find the perfect one after it’s too late!

Peggy's Cove, Nova Scotia
Peggy’s Cove, Nova Scotia

Peggy’s Cove, Nova Scotia is a real tourist destination, and for good reason.  It’s a beautiful location, has a little history, it’s got a lighthouse, a bunch of boats and a quaint little harbor.  The day we were there is was relatively uncrowded and the weather was beautiful.  And even in the middle of the day, the light was fantastic.

Peggy's Cove, Nova Scotia
Peggy’s Cove, Nova Scotia

The biggest challenge for me in photographing a place like this is deciding whether I want people in my shots or not.  I like people just fine, but I don’t always want to include them in my photos of a quintessential maritime fishing village!  Sometimes I just need to be patient, and other times I just need to accept that there will be people! 🙂

Peggy's Cove, Nova Scotia
Peggy’s Cove, Nova Scotia

Another thing that works well is to photograph someplace that people are less likely to be, like the edge of a dock.  Most people don’t like to spend time in the water in places like this.

Peggy's Cove, Nova Scotia
Peggy’s Cove, Nova Scotia

And they don’t let people climb the lighthouse, inside or out. 

Peggy's Cove Lighthouse, Peggy,s Cove, Nova Scotia
Peggy’s Cove Lighthouse, Peggy,s Cove, Nova Scotia

 Nobody cares about old boats laying in a field. 

Peggy's Cove, Nova Scotia
Peggy’s Cove, Nova Scotia

 I had to wait on this one.

Peggy's Cove, Nova Scotia
Peggy’s Cove, Nova Scotia

 And another one from where the people don’t go.

Peggy's Cove, Nova Scotia
Peggy’s Cove, Nova Scotia

 

 

A Question of Style

 

Sunset at Cowee Mountains Overlook, Blue Ridge Parkway MP 430
Sunset at Cowee Mountains Overlook, Blue Ridge Parkway MP 430

Generally when I am in the process of taking a photograph, I have a basic idea what it is going to look like when I am finished processing it.  When I’m sitting at the computer working on an image, it just sort of “develops itself.”  Most of the time the direction I need to go with an becomes pretty clear to me. I open up an image in Lightroom, work on it a bit, and after a few basic tweaks it is pretty much done.  Unless I’m going to make a print, there isn’t a whole lot more I do.

This particular photograph has me a little perplexed. I processed it exactly how I expected to. It’s a little more processed than usual, but there’s quite a lot of dynamic range going on here. But for some reason, I just can’t seem to get comfortable with it.  There’s nothing really “wrong” with it, in fact a lot of people would probably wish that they had taken it themselves.  But for some reason I am struggling with it.

It’s a typical Cowee Mountains Overlook sunset.  It’s got a nice sky, detail in the foreground, and there’s a lot going on.  Too much, I think.  It is a very “busy” image, as opposed to a lot of my photographs that are a bit more simplified.  I’ve definitely processed it a lot more than I usually process an image.  Maybe that’s it, I’m not sure.

I think the thing that I keep coming back to is that it doesn’t seem like it’s mine.  It’s the sort of landscape photograph that I’ve taken for years, but I just can’t seem to connect with this one. No, I didn’t switch memory cards with someone by mistake, but it’s just such a departure from the type of photography I’ve been doing recently that I may just have to spend some time with it to figure it out.  In the mean time, it just doesn’t feel like my style, and I find that interesting.