Day 40- Head Shots

What fun I had today pretending I was a real photographer with my friends, Carolyn and Vicki!  They had asked me to do some head shots for them, and it was great practice for me. We had so much fun figuring out the best light and poses!

I was meticulous about doing custom white balance today, because I really dislike doing skin by the numbers in post processing. I still had to adjust skin tones a bit, but, because the white balance was consistent in each setting, I was able to “lift and stamp” the settings in Aperture 3 (this is the same as “sync” in Lightroom)- and I’m happy with the results.

Here are two of my favorites of Carolyn. . .

 

. . . and two of my favorites of Vicki.

 

 

 

Day 38- Rainy day flowers. . .and a berry

Hurray for rainy days- the first in a LONG time!  I doubt we have had an inch, but I know we need it.  The theme for yesterday was water, so I went out with the intention of capturing some raindrops on flowers.

Raindrops on a geranium bud

I got distracted by the stamens on my azalea blossoms and ended up focusing on them rather than the water drops.

I submitted yesterday’s blackberry photo to my Flickr critique group for the topic, negative space. It was criticized for not having enough negative space, for the negative space being white, for not showing the whole berry, and for having a shallow depth of field (which was a deliberate choice I made for that image).

I went back and found this photo from yesterday which I do like, except I don’t like the shape of the berry.  I submitted this one to the group- the jury is still out. . .

Day 37- Macroberry

I’m back on track with Macro Monday. This was an easy one- the blackberry left in the bowl. The only decision beyond white balance was depth of field.  I chose a shallow DOF for this one; only the top is in focus. Oh- and another choice I made was to go with a high ISO, allowing any grain present after noise reduction to just BE.

f/4.5, 1/80, ISO 1250 85mm

Day 36- New

It’s houseplant macros today! I was trying to capture the new growth on my bamboo and ivy plants. The bamboo (first photo) is also being submitted for the challenge, six, because I was photographing a cluster of six leaves, although the shallow depth of field makes this hard to see.

Day 35- Dedication

Today’s topic is dedication.

My parents were part of the Depression and World War II generation- the greatest generation some say. My father was supposed to be too old to join up when the Unites States entered World War II, but he volunteered for service, serving in the Pacific aboard the USS Ajax, a hospital ship, as a dentist.  He remained in the Naval Reserve until he retired as a lieutenant commander.

This photo is of a tiny plank presented to him when the Ajax was decommissioned.

Day 34- Rerun

Last year I recorded our plum tree’s first blossoms, which opened on Day 39. This year we missed the first blossoms, which appeared while we were in Kansas.  We returned on Day 32, so the first blossoms opened about a week earlier this year than last. Is this a normal variation- or a response to the lack of winter weather we are experiencing?

 

Day 32- Handle With Care

Handle With Care is today’s theme.

We flew home tonight. It wasn’t too many years ago that my carry-on contained clothes, magazines, and make-up.  Now it has my laptop, kindle, camera, lenses, and all the technology items needed to support these products. I definitely need to find a better solution than the system I am currently using.

This is my rolling laptop bag, in which I have put inserts from my regular camera bag to carry an extra lens, the speedlight, and the camera wrapped in a fleece jacket (!)- in addition to the laptop, cords etc.  Yikes! After arriving at my destination, I add my camera and 35mm lens to my Lowepro bag, which I use as a purse.  Eventually, I think I will have to get a rolling camera bag that will also fit my laptop.

Day 29- Sun Setting on Manhattan (Kansas)

The rental car was duct taped back together and driven back to Kansas City without incident by my husband, accompanied by his father. We now have an even spiffier car, a Chevy Malibu, which is a newer model of the car Lonnie drove when he met me back in 1970.

Day is done. Gone the sun. And all is well on the prairie.

Day 28- Drama in the Heartland

Okay, now that I’ve got your attention- let me tell you about our day.

Our alarm went off at 3am, so that we could get to the airport for our 5:45am flight to Kansas City, MO, the first leg of our journey to visit Lonnie’s father in Manhattan, Kansas. Our flight was early, there was no turbulence descending to Denver, both flights were relatively uncrowded, there were no problems with luggage, and we landed early in Kansas City. As we got onto the shuttle to the rental car company, I remarked that everything was just smooth as silk today- perfect!

Jinx!

We switched from our reserved SUV to a Ford Fusion, because there is no snow, and plugged in the GPS as we drove out of the parking lot.  We should have taken the time to make sure it was operational, but I played with it and also loaded in directions on my iPhone and thought we were good to go.  Unfortunately, between the continued loss of power in the Garmin and operator error with the iPhone, we ended up going the wrong way out of Kansas City. After driving the half hour loop back to the correct freeway and discovering that we had the GPS plugged into the wrong slot, we got on Hwy 70 W to make the 2 hour drive to Manhattan. Whew!

After driving through Topeka, a police car sped PAST us (whew, again). We drove for another few miles and then came to a complete stop behind a long line of cars- the right lane was closed. Eventually we could see lights and emergency vehicles way far ahead at the crest of a small hill.

This was my view.

For almost an hour.

Occasionally the big truck in front of us would start to inch forward- oh happy day! Finally!  But then it turned out that a car further up the road had decided to stop waiting and drive down the embankment of weeds and up onto the freeway heading east. We saw that happen a few times- and also saw a couple fender benders between cars as they inched along.  Things were getting tense.

Finally, traffic started to move very slowly up the hill.  But as we got closer to the top, we could see that sheriff’s deputies were sending all the cars down the embankment and onto the freeway heading east.  A deputy approached our car and told us we would have to do the same, because it would be at least a two hour wait.  The big rigs pulled over and settled in. So down the embankment we drove- while we wished for the Jeep we had reserved.

Long story short, we followed the deputy’s directions and headed south and eventually north and west to rejoin Hwy 70. Although we had lost a couple hours of driving time, we were relieved that the experience was over.

We pulled into a rest stop, where I snapped a few photos while being pummeled by the wind.

Parenthetical note: Last night, while searching unsuccessfully for my Verizon modem, I found the lens cap that had been missing for several months- on my desk!  For about 15 hours, I had a lens cap on every lens, which somehow has upset the balance of the universe- so the photo below shows where today I lost a different lens cap. Order has been restored.

We resumed our drive on Hwy 70, and I started to doze.  My nap was interrupted by an increasingly loud scraping sound, which I thought was from the change in road surface as we crossed the Kansas River.

Here is where we finally pulled off just outside Manhattan, so that I could take a golden hour photo and Lonnie could check out the scraping sound.

It really was that golden!

What Lonnie discovered under the car:  the thingamabob that attaches to the underside of the bumper had become dislodged, probably when we went down the embankment. He shoved it back up and called Thrifty.  Long story short- there is no Thrifty within a few hours’ drive, so we are to take it off and bring it in with the car when we return it.

So, tonight we were chauffeured around after dark by Lonnie’s 87 year old father.

Tomorrow Lonnie is going to try to do something about the bumper with either a screw driver or duct tape.  And then he’s going to buy a new Verizon modem, because the internet connection at the hotel is from the nineties.

If you read this far, let me assure you I promise to not write this much tomorrow.

Day 27- Everyday Stuff (and breaking rules!)

Breaking a rule- here is a photo I snapped of Lonnie hard at work at the computer last night, not today.  I am trying to capture more everyday moments in practice for seeing the grandbabies at some point in the future (I am missing them so much!).  And nothing could be more everyday than my husband hard at work.  I love the lighting from the computer monitor.

Straightening up, laundry, packing for Kansas- not much time for photography today, alas! I went with the topic, repetition, and spotted the repetition of the spices while I was cleaning the kitchen counter.

Day 26- Tethered

There is always something new to learn. I do macro shots at least once a week. My current practice (until today!) was to set up my tripod and check focus first in live view mode and then run upstairs, SD card in hand, to check the image on the computer.  Today I had an Aha Moment while photographing my paper whites that bloomed yesterday- I could tether the camera to my laptop and see the photos almost instantly- DUH! It made things so much easier and will be my usual practice from now on- at least for macro shots.

 

f/16, 1/6, ISO 400, 85mm