Day 260- Growing

I took the easy way out and photographed some spider plant babies (and- it turns out- the birch tree outside. . .) in response to grow, one of this week’s themes.

I added a texture from Florabella at a very low opacity to this image.

Day 259- Vintage

We chose Winnemucca, Nevada for our last stop before going home, because my husband’s mother had been born there and my husband remembers childhood visits to the little house where his great-grandmother lived.  Grammie and her third husband, who worked for the railroad, lived in a tiny house across the street from the old Winnemucca train station.  I also remember visiting her in this house when we were newlyweds.

The old train station is gone, replaced by a small Amtrak structure, but the little house remains.  It was hard to take a decent shot of the house, because of cars parked in front, so I took a photo of the same little gate that Lonnie remembers from his childhood.  I textured this with Kim Klassen’s kkgrunge for a vintage effect.

 

I wasn’t planning to photograph the Amtrak station, but I noticed an A, created by the roofline- and remembered the challenge from a few days ago to find something that looked like a letter. In keeping with my own vintage theme, I took the photo into OnOne’s Perfect Effects (my freebie from the Kelby seminar) and had fun adding effects and textures.

Day 246- Books

I love books!  I don’t remember loving the books we read at school, but I was passionate about the books I read at home.  My mother set an example by always spending part of each day reading. I can still remember when she presented me with my first chapter book.  I was seven, and in the car on the way home from school, she presented me with a copy of The Secret in the Old Attic, number 21 in the Nancy Drew series, by Carolyn Keene.  I told my mother I couldn’t read it, but she assured me I was ready.  As we rounded Park Vista Drive onto East Eighth Street, I started the first chapter and discovered a whole new world!

Today I am responding to a Shutter Sisters daily prompt, books, which I find much more interesting than Starts with O, my daily challenge topic for today.  I chose books from five series that I loved as a child.  In addition to Nancy Drew , there was another girl detective that I grew to love even more- Judy Bolton.  Judy solved mysteries, sometimes made mistakes (she wasn’t perfect like Nancy), grew older and married Peter, who I think was a lawyer and maybe an FBI agent. I then discovered the Maida books. I don’t know many people who have read this series, but it was a wonderful story of a little girl whose millionaire father, Buffalo Westabrook, buys her a little neighborhood shop to run.  She soon makes friends with all the children in the neighborhood, who become the characters in all the books to follow. In each book, the children have a new place to live and a new enterprise, such as Maida’s Little Zoo and Maida’s Little School.  I wanted to live that life!

I am pretty sure I read almost all the books in those three series, in addition to the Happy Hollisters, the shoes series (Ballet Shoes, Theatre Shoes), the Walter Farley horse series, and the Bobbsey Twins.  I read an entire crate of the Bobbsey Twins on a road trip to Yellowstone, Glacier, and Canada when I was nine. And on that same trip, I read Little Women, probably the favorite book of my childhood. I have read that one over and over, identifying with Jo, who was a writer, which I now wanted to be as well.  I was surprised to find as I grew up that almost all girls who read that series identified with Jo.

The other favorite series of my childhood was Anne of Green Gables.  It had been my mother’s favorite as well.  In fact, she had told me some of the events of the book as stories when I was younger- her favorite part being the time Anne accidentally dyed her hair green.

In case you want to know what I’m reading now- I just finished The Woman in White by Wilkie Collins (a classic I had never heard of- I loved it!) and am engrossed in Wild by Cheryl Strayed (Oprah’s first pick for her new book club).  On my kindle waiting to be read is Broken Harbor by Tana French, and on my coffee table is the next Maisie Dobbs (my favorite adult series), Elegy for Eddie by Jacqueline Winspear. And I’m eagerly awaiting the sequel to Ken Follett’s Fall of Giants, Winter of the World, coming out September 18.  Yes, I do love books!

Day 237- Good while it lasted. . .

Just when I decided that my amazing Nik Color Efex Pro was here to stay, it unexpectedly and tragically expired last night.  What will I do without the Detail Extractor and Contrast Color Range filters? Well, since I didn’t know they existed until a few weeks ago, I will be going back to my usual practices until I decide to buy the software.  But since I’m eying a Wacom tablet right now, Nik will have to wait.

I’m going with the topic for yesterday’s challenge- letters.  I decide to photograph mailboxes and had an image in mind of mailboxes along a country road.  Since I couldn’t find any rural looking mailboxes nearby, I added a sepia effect and some texture and called it done.

With apologies to my neighbors (they don’t read my blog anyway. . .)-

Day 244- Texture Tuesday (and my love affair with black and white. . .)

Last week, my photo buddy, Carol, took a fantastically clear photo of a white feather stuck in the weeds down by the water with her amazing Nikon D800.  She didn’t post it to her blog, but I still remember it from when she was uploading her photos at my house. When I went to the same spot yesterday, the feather was still there! I took a couple quick photos, not nearly as clear as Carol’s, but, to be fair to my camera, I also didn’t take much time with it. Last night, I decided to use it for my Texture Tuesday photo.  I love Kim’s textures and learned to not be afraid of Photoshop from her clear teaching style!

So, here it is, desaturated and layered with Kim Klassen’s dream it texture.

And now on to my love affair with black and whites!

I have always loved black and white photography.  When I was in college taking photography, that was what I learned (and I wasn’t particularly good at it).  My father had a darkroom in our garage, so I have many images of my children in black and white from when they were small.  Now that there are digital cameras- and Lightroom and Photoshop- there are so many ways to process the same photo.  I often try a black and white conversion along with my regular editing- especially when the color doesn’t add much to the photo, or there are strong lines (or strong emotions)- or just because. . .

So here is the feather with a more contrasty black and white treatment (no texture this time).

My Flickr group’s theme for today is starts with R.  I got out some ribbons left over from a bridal shower I gave for my god-daughter, Andrea, a few years ago and took a few photos.  This first one is how I originally envisioned the final image- pastels with a soft focus.

But then- I just had to do a black and white, which I think I like better!

Day 227- Texture Tuesday


The theme for this Texture Tuesday over at Kim Klassen’s Cafe is Look Down.  The photo was taken looking down at the edge of my tub this morning.  It is textured with two layers of Kim’s subtlely yours, both using soft light, the second at 50% with some masking.  Two notes- I used my flash (it was just too dark at 7:00 a.m.), and I “stretched the canvas” using free transform, because I didn’t want the edge of the tub to show (and I actually knew I was going to do that when I took the photo!).

Day 220- Journey

Our son, Matt, is coming home tomorrow to celebrate his 35th birthday (a couple weeks late).  These are the shoes he wore on his first birthday.

My husband suggests I should have polished them before photographing them! There is a texture added- so they’re not quite as grungey as they look here!

Day 219- Still Life

Still in the mood for still life. . .

I am attempting to not always go way in tight for a shot, which is my tendency.  I took photos of these mums from all angles and distances- and this one is in the middle ground, not too close, not too far away.  I added some textures for a bit of a painterly look.

Day 218- Words of Life

I never knew my father’s grandfather. Rev. Andrew J. Mowatt or had even heard of him when I started researching our family history about twenty years ago.  Thomas and Elizabeth Mowatt came to Harvey, New Brunswick, Canada in 1837 from Ford, England (near the Scottish border).  My great-grandfather, Andrew was born a year later, the oldest of seven children.  He was educated in Nova Scotia (and married my great-grandmother, Louisa Jane Annand there) and served as pastor in several churches, his final one being Erskine Church in Montreal. He actually died in the pulpit as he was about to preach from the text, “When I saw Him I fell at His feet as one dead”.

When I was researching the family, I came into contact with a researcher from Harvey, New Brunswick who had already completed research on the Harvey pioneers.  She very kindly sent me this book, which is the collected sermons of my great-grandfather.

This image is edited with one of Kim Klassen’s textures, appropriately called broken book.

Day 213- All One Color

It is Texture Tuesday! I have been out of the Texture Tuesday habit for awhile, and it is so fun to see what everyone else has been up to! Go to Kim Klassen’s site to see some beautiful images using her textures!

This one also satisfies Our Daily Challenge for the topic, all one colour.

I used Kim’s textures, mixed media and just white.

Day 202- Flower Frenzy

A Trader Joe’s bouquet- hooray!

Here’s an image taken with my beloved 50mm 1.4 lens:

And another (which is my favorite for today):

I’ve been playing a bit with creating textures in Photoshop.  None of mine are good enough to stand on their own yet- so here is one of today’s flower photos textured with one of my amateurish textures paired with one of Kim Klassen’s fabulous ones.

I couldn’t resist getting out my macro lens.  Here are two versions of a macro shot- one with a black and white conversion.

Day 175- Warming up

It was dark and chilly when I got up this morning; however, the topic today was warm. After I had made myself a cup of hot tea, I decided I had found the subject of today’s photo.  When I got home tonight, I added a texture- and, well, that’s it!

Day 88- Behind closed doors

The topic today is medicine cabinet. I took 3 photos of some essential oils using my speed light and added grunge in Snapseed on the iPad for a textured effect. I then added a watermark using :::TaDa!!!::: PHOTOSHOP TOUCH- all on the iPad!!!!! The test is whether I will be able to upload to WordPress.

20120328-102704.jpg

 

Woo hoo- did it! I see the photo is smaller and doesn’t appear in the slideshow at the top- but that’s a small price to pay for the convenience of traveling with one iPad instead of 2 laptops! 🙂

Day 63- Classic

When my husband and I were planning to get married (over 40 years ago), our china pattern was probably our easiest decision. We both fell in love with a classic pattern that had recently been reissued.  The pattern was 100 years old then- and that makes it over 140 years old now. It is certainly a classic (the theme for my Flickr group today)- especially paired with my grandmother’s silver, which would be about 100 years old now.  Both images have Kim Klassen’s happy heart texture added.

Day 52- Textured Mum

I haven’t done any textured photos for awhile- and it’s Texture Tuesday over at Kim Klassen’s site! The theme is white this week, so I took yet another photo of my white mums and textured it with two layers of Kim’s Shine texture, one at 100% soft light blend mode, and another at 35% screen blend mode. Almost everything I learned about Photoshop I learned from Kim Klassen, so I love to be part of her Tuesday link-up.