Showing posts with label photography. Show all posts
Showing posts with label photography. Show all posts
Tuesday, October 28, 2014
Tuesday, July 9, 2013
Thursday, November 1, 2012
Pics & Video: Dirty Glass, Water, Fan, Rose
Monday, May 16, 2011
Swallow
From the balcony of the Zorro Hotel, Batemans Bay, NSW:
Also got this shot, which is out of focus, yes, but I think it's still pretty cool. Although I think the shadow shot is better.
Also got this shot, which is out of focus, yes, but I think it's still pretty cool. Although I think the shadow shot is better.
Saturday, May 14, 2011
Batemans Bay
Christine and I went south for a few days, saw sooty oyster catchers, manta rays right under our noses, and beach kangaroos, just to mention a few things. Got some really nice shots. One, of Christine, at Pebbly Beach in Murramurang National Park (click to make bigger, click again for bigger still):
Much more to come soon.
Much more to come soon.
Labels:
christine,
nsw,
photography,
travel
Thursday, May 5, 2011
Night at the Pool
Every beach in Sydney has a large concrete pool, fed by the ocean, bashed by the ocean, right on the edge of the ocean, where you can go for a swim without being thrown about in the surf. You go down there any time of the morning day or evening and there are old folks, young folks, kids—there'a very shallow kiddie pool. Three shots.
Wednesday, April 20, 2011
Fuzz
Southern Oregon, 2010.
(Click pics to make huge.)
It's almost time for a new camera. Our Kodak Z650, which we got for $300 or so in 2006, has gotten us some surprisingly good shots, like these (no crops, no filters, no nothing, just one color and one black and white shot of the same plant), but I cannot wait to step up a grade, or several, and take this whole photography thing much more seriously.
(Click pics to make huge.)
It's almost time for a new camera. Our Kodak Z650, which we got for $300 or so in 2006, has gotten us some surprisingly good shots, like these (no crops, no filters, no nothing, just one color and one black and white shot of the same plant), but I cannot wait to step up a grade, or several, and take this whole photography thing much more seriously.
Sunday, April 17, 2011
Cabramatta—"A Taste of Asia"—New South Wales [updtd]
Took about an hour drive due east (edit: west, not east - we were not in the Pacific Ocean) of Sydney to the city of Cabramatta (which actually feels like a suburb of Sydney). During the 1970s, during the Vietnam War, a wave of immigration from South Vietnam began to Cabramatta, and it today has a very large Vietnamese population, mixed in its own particular way with Australia's own particular way.
Anyway, I got some photographs.
First, the restaurant: Thanh Binh, 52 John St. Cabramatta. Fantastic. Recommended. Great food, nice people, laid back—crowded at lunch time. The specials: (As always, click to enlarge photos; click again for closer.)
Anyway, I got some photographs.
First, the restaurant: Thanh Binh, 52 John St. Cabramatta. Fantastic. Recommended. Great food, nice people, laid back—crowded at lunch time. The specials: (As always, click to enlarge photos; click again for closer.)
Monday, April 4, 2011
Stick Cocoon Creature, Banksia Man, and Singing Tree
Update: Fresh news: New case moth news from May 31, 2014!
**
The eagle-eyed Christine stopped us yesterday on our hike in Ku-Ring-gai National Park, saying, "Thom, look at this."
I looked at this:
**
The eagle-eyed Christine stopped us yesterday on our hike in Ku-Ring-gai National Park, saying, "Thom, look at this."
I looked at this:
It was about four inches long. It was soft: you could squeeze it, like it was an empty sac. It smelled resiny.
"It's a cocoon," Christine said. "I remember them from when I was little."
"It's a cocoon," Christine said. "I remember them from when I was little."
I've just looked it up, and I quickly found a remarkably similar photo—even down to the way those outer sticks are configured: it's the cocoon (empty, pretty sure) of the caterpillar of a case moth, possibly the Saunders' Case Moth, Metura elongatus. Oh, you have to go here, too. And holy crap, here, too. (I've just realized, this is related to the "Walking Turd" from December, but a different species, clearly.)
Good eye, Christine.
Now here's Christine and a scary Banksia Man. (Guess which ones which.)
Aren't she perty?
And a tree:
***
Christine suddenly burst out in song on the way home, singing along with a song on the radio that I'd never heard in my life.
Now here's Christine and a scary Banksia Man. (Guess which ones which.)
Aren't she perty?
And a tree:
Oh, Vienna! |
***
Christine suddenly burst out in song on the way home, singing along with a song on the radio that I'd never heard in my life.
Sunday, March 27, 2011
Then and Now: The Photography of Irina Werning
Saw this on Roger Ebert's Twitter feed: Back to the Future:
I love old photos. I admit being a nosey photographer. As soon as I step into someone else’s house, I start sniffing for them. Most of us are fascinated by their retro look but to me, it’s imagining how people would feel and look like if they were to reenact them today... A few months ago, I decided to actually do this. So, with my camera, I started inviting people to go back to their future.
Monday, March 21, 2011
Stupor Moon
One and just one shot of the March 2011 full moon that made many, many people dumber than usual, with ringing and witty commentary.
Feast your eyes on this brooding number, for which I chose a cottony, hazy quality I like to call "eight-seconds exposure and crop the holy hell out of it." (Click to en-huge-en.)
Brings to mind some of Rembrandt''s darker work, doesn't it? I mean if Rembrandt were a lot more dull than he actually was, and only painted while tremendously drunk, and after repeatedly bashing himself in the face with a hammer, it does—doesn't it? Hmm?
Feast your eyes on this brooding number, for which I chose a cottony, hazy quality I like to call "eight-seconds exposure and crop the holy hell out of it." (Click to en-huge-en.)
Brings to mind some of Rembrandt''s darker work, doesn't it? I mean if Rembrandt were a lot more dull than he actually was, and only painted while tremendously drunk, and after repeatedly bashing himself in the face with a hammer, it does—doesn't it? Hmm?
Labels:
photography,
streetnights,
stuff
Monday, March 14, 2011
Tawny Frogmouth
I came to Australia for the first time in 2006, with Christine. Walking through the suburbs of Sydney one night on that trip I heard this "ooo ooo ooo" sound:
Too dark to see, I flipped open the flash, pointed the camera at the sound, and snapped. And got what has to be the luckiest shot of my life:

It was a Tawny Frogmouth, probably about 16 inches from tip of the tail to head. They're owl-like—but they are not owls, nor are they closely related to them.
Here's a closer look:

More here. And more images of the messy-faced Frogmouth here.
• Fromouths are classified as belonging to the order Caprimulgiformes. The name means "goat-sucker," because of the mistaken belief long ago that another bird in the order, the nightjar, sucked milk from female goats.
Too dark to see, I flipped open the flash, pointed the camera at the sound, and snapped. And got what has to be the luckiest shot of my life:

It was a Tawny Frogmouth, probably about 16 inches from tip of the tail to head. They're owl-like—but they are not owls, nor are they closely related to them.
Here's a closer look:

More here. And more images of the messy-faced Frogmouth here.
• Fromouths are classified as belonging to the order Caprimulgiformes. The name means "goat-sucker," because of the mistaken belief long ago that another bird in the order, the nightjar, sucked milk from female goats.
Wednesday, January 19, 2011
Night Lake
This photo makes me want to play with flashes and water. This is a nighttime image of Narrabeen Lake (Northern Beaches, Sydeny), and that is very clear water. With the flash it appears to be dirty and milky.
And we apparently have two small moons down here.
And we apparently have two small moons down here.
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