Sunday, October 4, 2009

So, What else is happening?

In the last few years with the advancements of technology things that were once not done have become daily activities. Most people couldn't take a picture and now everybody does. That has been one of the things that digital photography has done even when Brownie instamatic cameras and others like it only started to get it done. I remember when I use to photograph weddings and be the only one with a camera and now it seems I am the only one with a backup camera and everyone else has one (two if you count the one in their phone) and is taking pictures as fast (almost) as I am. Their pictures look great too and I am often glad there are a few more around just in case mine doesn't work. Of course there is always a difference between theirs and mine only because I am usually the one setting up the shot and they are having to take it at a little different angle. However now that there are always so many different cameras around I like to sometimes step back and capture a look at "What else is happening".

Below are four pictures that I took of the family sightseeing at Cedar Breaks National Monument near Cedar City, Utah. My wife and I had decided to travel up there while we had some extra time between photographing recipients of the scouting award known as the Silver Beaver award. We had pulled off on one of the side areas and were just enjoying the view. I had photographed a couple of wild animals that we could see and of course had set my camera up on a tripod and took our own pictures. We were almost back to the car when several cars pulled up and one person hopped out and seeing my camera with the telephoto lens on figured I knew how to take pictures and asked if we could do a family group shot for them. I gladly accepted and for the next 20 minutes or so not only did pictures with their camera but also with mine and then later sent them a cd with my shots on just for the fun of it. However being a non-member of the family gave me an opportunity to just sort of stand back and watch what was happening. I didn't stop taking pictures though and the following shots show that when there are pictures being taken of the group there are also some shots that can be taken showing how the rest of the group is getting into the same shot only from behind the camera and thus that memory is soon forgotten.
So here is what the family was shooting and below is what some of the others were actually doing while it was taken. (and by the way how many cameras do you see. I see 5 people and I am pretty sure there are 5 cameras.)

And of course this one on top is what else was happening while the picture below is the memory they took home in their cameras. (Here you can see that even the younger ones of the group have a camera.)
So next time you are having family pictures and you are not taking them for the family and you can stand back and watch don't stop there but record a few of the actions that will show what else was happening. (My thanks go to the Bodily Family for a chance to help them record a few family treasures.)

Friday, September 25, 2009

Capture My Utah

I was just told about a web site the other day called www.capturemyutah.com and decided to take a look at it. It is an interesting work and they are putting together a book of photos taken in Utah by the people of Utah (or someone photographing Utah). Anyway I did a quick search of my images and choose a few that might work and then uploaded about 6 of them. If you were to choose which 2 or 3 , if any, which ones would you have used. I am interested in your feedback because over the years of doing photography I have learned one thing, "I can't out guess anyones likes or dislikes since their likes and dislikes are almost always different from mine." So I have just continued to shoot everything that gets in my way so to speak and then leave it up to the viewer to like it or not. And as another photographer always says in his blog at the end, Enjoy!

















Wednesday, September 23, 2009

Another Panorama with Photoshops help

Here is a collection of images that I took on purpose to be able to create a panoramic view of Dead Horse Point in Southern, Utah. Had I taken the proper time I would have put the camera on a tripod but then the last image shows that anyone can take images for a panorama even without a tripod. I stitched these images together with Adobe Photoshop CS4. I then tok the final image and converted it to LAB color mode and made a couple of enhancements then converted it back to and RGB jpg file. Images are in order (I hope) from my right to left as I photographed the area. I did have to add a little to the final image to fill in a couple of empty areas created in the final stitching. In the second and third images you can see the storm that was coming quickly our way. Look carefully and you can see the overlap in between the images that allows photoshop to stitch the images together.
Did you see the two people near the edge of the canyon in the above photo? They appear as a white dot in the middle right of the image.






Can you see the truck on the road in these two images that gives a little perspective to the depth of the canyon.

Tuesday, September 22, 2009

Where is the focus

A simple showing of selective focus.

Monday, September 21, 2009

I really don't know why

I like these strange insects but I have always been drawn to them since the very first time I saw one in 1973, in Midland, Texas. It was on a fence and sitting up with it's claws close together. The other night as I came home I found one on my wall and just had to have it's photograph.

Sunday, September 13, 2009

the yard sale

Our children talked us into having a yard sale and I started to wonder how much I would have to pay to get people to rake things off of my lawn. Well here is a quick run-down.
My daughter was able to sell a lot of her extra scrapbooking papers.



When our children were small we bought fishing tackle boxes to build 72 hour emergency kits filled with bandaids, food, toys and lots of little items that would help keep them happy in an extended emergency. A fisherman bought them.



This is one view of the yard before the sale and before everything was actually brought out.There were at least five families donating to this project so it wasn't all ours. If you look back against the house and knew what you were looking at you could see the bunk-beds I made for my children when they were small and used until they left home.



A good idea when we bought it years ago ended up in the attic and finally came out for the yard sale. It was sold much to my happiness since I wouldn't have to put it back in the attic. It still had most of the pieces with it and was actually only missing a couple clamps.



Then there was this small desk that I mostly refinished several years ago and was used by our youngest son until he was married. It sold too.




Then my son in law had this camp table. I really wanted it but held out for the better good, (I didn't need to fill my storage area up so soon after getting it manageable finally.



Then at the back of this picture you can see some black storage boxes that I saved when working for an integrated circuits manufacturing plant. I have used the over the years for storage of things like soap bars and light bulbs. Some of them even sold, along with a few of the baskets in the back and numerous other items on this blanket.







However this trainer for electronics still didn't sell. It was fun trying and several people asked what it was and I had fun telling them. It is just a piece of the past, as I explained in my last blog, that just doesn't seem to have a place in the future quite yet. There a still too many of us that remember the tubes of our youth.

Needless to say, but I will anyway. Thank You to my daughter and her husband that spent the entire day out there, even 3 hours past when they were scheduled to close because people were still coming. They were the only reason a lot of this sold since they are such fun people to talk to and loved to get the others to take a second look.
Great job Tia and Scott.

Monday, September 7, 2009

Fall Cleaning and Yard Sales

So we have been cleaning out the shed to prepare for a yard sale on Sep. 12, 2009. It has been an interesting journey since much of the stuff in the shed has not been seen by human eyes since the turn of the century. I even pulled from the very corner of the attic in the shed an old piece of training equipment that i used to learn electronics with at Snow College in 1975. It was a modular training system and quite the state of the art stuff in it's time but as I was graduating from electronics there were new things like transistors and Integrated Circuits (IC's) starting to appear in electronic equipment so the college was throwing out these systems to have room to bring in things they could use to teach the newer technologies to the students. So I decided to put these pictures on my blog just to give a little glimpse at what seems that not too distant past for me and yet is totally foreign to the youth in the age of PDA's, cell phones and ipods. They don't remember that a computer that could do less than their cell phone when it came to doing simple calculations in math were so big that they filled entire rooms of office buildings. I know because I toured one of them at the U of U when I was attending college.These had different modules that you attached to the main frame and then plugged in various components to make the circut work.
There were resistors, capacitors, coils and other items that could be plugged into the back of each module to change the dynamics of the circut. And on the front of each module you could plug in the vacuum tubes that performed various functions in the circut. Vacuum tubes, now there is something that nobody knows about anymore among the youth. (well maybe if they had a dad like me that just couldn't part with them quite yet and they had seen him remembering them as he cleaned out the old junk drawers.)

Oh well, I am personally glad we are past that age because they were a pain to work with and repair. Now we don't even consider it feasible to repair most electronic gear because it had been outdated before it is even broken in for good use and so we just throw it away into the growing heaps of electronic trash.Then once in a while an old piece like this even joins the heap.