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Topic: What's In Your Camera? (Read 54952 times) previous topic - next topic
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Re: What's In Your Camera?
Reply #300
"And the capital A in NinA's name means...?"

Chris, it kinda balances the four letters.  Also when we call her we add emphasis on the last A , Ninaaaa !  Her name is Sirena, Nina is her nickname.  She will respond to either name when she wants to respond.

              Karen~Liam
                98 ~ MB
                  NinA
1998 ~ MB  WanderDaze
previously a 1984 Winnebago itaska- The Road Warrior, before that several VW Buses and before that a 1965 Chrysler Convertible Newport or our 1969 Chrysler La Barron with an ice box and a couple sleeping bags

Re: What's In Your Camera?
Reply #301
"And the capital A in NinA's name means...?"

Chris, it kinda balances the four letters.  Also when we call her we add emphasis on the last A , Ninaaaa !  Her name is Sirena, Nina is her nickname.  She will respond to either name when she wants to respond.

              Karen~Liam
                98 ~ MB
                  NinA
Balance is good. 😊
Formerly: 2002 30' IB

Re: What's In Your Camera?
Reply #302
  She will respond to either name when she wants to respond.

              Karen~Liam
                98 ~ MB
                  NinA

This is an image of me 'walking' the cat.   Folks are amazed that I can 'walk' the cat.  The truth is he is walking I'm just following behind him.
personal fine art photo stuff
TF Mack | Flickr
It's all good .......
2014 Twin King


Re: What's In Your Camera?
Reply #304
Attending Fall Camp for special needs children and the wild turkeys are everywhere.
Daughter of the first Lazy Bones
Hitting the road on my own and with a friend 🚐 while reporting back to the Lazy Bones at home 🛋

2 Lazy Bones - Home


Re: What's In Your Camera?
Reply #306
Attending Fall Camp for special needs children and the wild turkeys are everywhere.


And they don't look at all nervous, in spite of the rapid approach of Thanksgiving on the calendar.  Thx for such great pix.

This is one of the great blessings I've found from our Conservation Tax in Missouri--since I didn't grow up in a family of hunters I never remember seeing wild turkeys/other wildlife when I was a kid out here in the boonies of north Missouri (other than the flat skunks/squirrels on the roads), but there have been several times in the past few years that I've noticed turkeys in corn/bean fields after harvest as I drive from here to Kansas City.

Lynne
Lynne
LDy Lulubelle, Green '05 31' TB
Lilly, the 4-Legged Alarm

Re: What's In Your Camera?
Reply #307
This is an image of me 'walking' the cat.   Folks are amazed that I can 'walk' the cat.  The truth is he is walking I'm just following behind him.

Love that your cat has you so well trained   ;) .  I remember seeing a young woman with a bunny on a leash when I was in New York years ago.

Lynne
Lynne
LDy Lulubelle, Green '05 31' TB
Lilly, the 4-Legged Alarm

Re: What's In Your Camera?
Reply #308
Oregon beach sun set.

As an aside - I don't believe any images are a reflection of reality.   I feel we humans infuse emotion into two dimensional  objects to create a personal narrative.    I'm sharing this because I have no issue with editing an image.    In fact any image we 'get' has already been 'edited' by either a manual process in a development or interpreted  by a computer program from the manufacturer of the camera. 
personal fine art photo stuff
TF Mack | Flickr
It's all good .......
2014 Twin King

Re: What's In Your Camera?
Reply #309
"Alaska...A Cold Beauty"  © Bill Benson
2005 MB

Re: What's In Your Camera?
Reply #310
Moonrise over Lake Tekapo  © Bill Benson
2005 MB

Re: What's In Your Camera?
Reply #311
After googling the lake name, I think I understand why the LD isn't in the shot.  :)
Joel
Joel & Terry Wiley
dog Zeke
2013  31 IB   Orwan   / 2011 CRV Tow'd LWEROVE

Re: What's In Your Camera?
Reply #312
Yes Joel....I rented an RV at the time... it was not an LD and certainly not the quality!
2005 MB

Re: What's In Your Camera?
Reply #313
"As an aside - I don't believe any images are a reflection of reality.   I feel we humans infuse emotion into two dimensional  objects to create a personal narrative.    I'm sharing this because I have no issue with editing an image.    In fact any image we 'get' has already been 'edited' by either a manual process in a development or interpreted  by a computer program from the manufacturer of the camera."

Hear, hear . . .

This definitely came into play the other day for me.  We were scouting a nearby area for suitability for taking Dorrie Anne (our GREY Lazy Daze RB) out into a nearby "wilderness" area.  Sadly, the roads were not suitable for the Big Girl, but we did okay in the Sportsmobile, so that will be our transport to this area - when it warms up a bit.

But the "photo" part of this story is that all the way back down Highway 82 from Sonoita, we had this small, but especially bright rainbow in the right-hand side of the windshield.  No place to pull over to get out the real cameras, so the ancient iPhone had to fill the void.

The grasses were certainly not this bright, but the inner workings of the app, ProCamera, has a plethora of "fixes", and in two shakes of a lamb's tail, I had a picture that I was ready to SAVE.

It was a very pleasing, at least to me, photograph, so, without further processing, I tossed it up on my blog.  Much to my surprise, it seemed to be fairly popular amongst my few followers.

So ya' jes ever know when something will tickle the "happy button" on others as well as yourself.  After all, a completed photograph is a rendition of how YOU saw the scene, aided and abetted by your own aesthetics, and the mechanical procedures invented by someone else entirely.

If interested . . . click below on the URL:

   Virtual hugs,

   Judie  <-- Sierra Vista, Arizona
   Adventures of Dorrie Anne | Photographing the West

   Today:  Golden Rainbow
   *********************************
 

Re: What's In Your Camera?
Reply #314
Quote
It was a very pleasing, at least to me, photograph, so, without further processing, I tossed it up on my blog
Judie, for others it's a picture or an image.  For you it is a link to a memory - so many more dimensions than 2 in the photo.
Thanks for sharing.
Joel
Joel & Terry Wiley
dog Zeke
2013  31 IB   Orwan   / 2011 CRV Tow'd LWEROVE

Re: What's In Your Camera?
Reply #315
Thanks, Joel.  You're totally right.  For me, it was the culmination of all of the snapping that went on for a couple of miles of hurtling down the highway trying to keep as much of the subject as possible away from the impediments inside a moving vehicle and the outside poles and wires, as well as finding the sweet spot where the rainbow shone down just right on the mountains.  It looked like a magical moment, and I was obsessed with capturing it.
It sang its sweet song to me, and I wanted to share it.  The fact that so many people wrote comments on the blog and on Facebook was a total surprise, and just added to the swelling in my heart.  It is just one of those "life's satisfying moments" that we all in search of.
Virtual hugs,
Judie

•~•~•~•~•~•~•~•~•~•~•~•~•

Re: What's In Your Camera?
Reply #316
Judie

I certainly enjoyed looking over your blog. Your writing is superb, the photography outstanding, and your food photography made me hungry for more....thank you.

Bill B.
2005 MB

Re: What's In Your Camera?
Reply #317
On the home front
who let the dogs out
1992 RB

 

Re: What's In Your Camera?
Reply #319
Yet another hare raising adventure?

LOL!!  Was it ever!!!  I built those hutches. My woodworking experience is limited to playing with alphabet blocks 60 years ago. Here is how my first wood purchase went, with the guy at the local family owned lumber store.

Me: I need twelve  1 x 2 x 6s and eight 1 x 3 x 6s.

Him: pulls boards from cubbys marked 1 x 2 x 6 and 1 x 3 x 6, loads them into car.

Me: Looks at boards, HEY!! These aren’t the right size!!

Him: Huh?

Me: they’re not 1 x 2 or 1 x 3, they’re all just slightly off.

Him: What?

Me: whips out tape measure to prove the 1 x 2s are all around  5/8ths x 1 and 5/8s and the 1 x 3s are all around 5/8ths  x  2 and 3/4s.

Him: Seriously?

Me: hands him the tape measure.

Him: That IS the size of 1 x 2s and 1 x 3s and 2 x 4s and everything else.

Me: Huh?

Him: that’s how lumber is sold.

Me: What?

Him: Pulls up store menu on the computer and shows me the product description.

Me: SERIOUSLY!!???? ……. But all my plan measurements are based on 1 x 2 and 1 x 3…..

Him: confused silence

Me: I’m HORRIBLE  at math especially fractions.

Him: OOHHH!!  I get it!!! What you want are “true measure” boards and unloads and puts away all those boards. Gets a couple of much bigger slabs of 6 foot pine wood, and cuts 1 x 2s and 1 x 3s out of them and loads those into the Toyota.

Me: Wants to give him a huge hug, but don’t want to embarrass him. Instead I  go home, juice a cantaloupe, cook up some bacon lettuce and tomato sandwiches, drive back to the store and drop the bag of fresh juice and sandwiches into his hand, with a huge smile and thank you.  

Him:  huge smile.

PIX;
Got that for my 26th anniversary present. Going from a manual staple gun to a pneumatic one, is like going from “dial up” to  4G.
who let the dogs out
1992 RB

Re: What's In Your Camera?
Reply #320
Quote
Got that for my 26th anniversary present. Going from a manual staple gun to a pneumatic one, is like going from "dial up" to  4G.
Right.   A new project means a reason to get a new tool!  Happy anniverary.
joel
Joel & Terry Wiley
dog Zeke
2013  31 IB   Orwan   / 2011 CRV Tow'd LWEROVE

Re: What's In Your Camera?
Reply #321

In my opinion there are two types of images.  One I call historical and one 'art'.  Historical  images we take for reference in the future when we look back we remember the personal impact.    "Art" images are a box I put all images that represent a part or slice of life that 'talks' to the images maker.    At some point we put the image into a public place ie family, friends or the public at large.    We, the takers, have no control over the response.  Every human has a life experience that is unique to that person.  That person brings very different emotions to the image. 
Example below -- both btw are black and white.  Since the world is in color both are an interpretation by me .
One -- Sun Dail Bridge
Two -- after a long 20 plus mile run I turned around a shot this image with a Kodiak Instamatic. 




personal fine art photo stuff
TF Mack | Flickr
It's all good .......
2014 Twin King

Re: What's In Your Camera?
Reply #322
"...with a Kodiak Instamatic."

Is that Kodiak benign?    ;)
Steve S.
Lazy Bones & Cedar
2004 30'IB (Island Bed)
Yesterday is History, Tomorrow is a Mystery
Live for the day!

Re: What's In Your Camera?
Reply #323
"The Mighty Oak" is a well deserved name. I am always amazed at how this living creature is able to resist gravity and support thousands of pounds of weight in its horizontal limbs for over a hundred years... © Bill Benson
2005 MB

Re: What's In Your Camera?
Reply #324
Beautiful image.

It is my understanding that a well irrigated tree has a root system that replicates its canopy. As far out as the branches reach so do the roots. This gives a healthy tree plenty of support. That’s what my tree guy told me.

A good reason not to have large trees planted too close to homes and foundations. The roots can travel under your Home disturbing foundations and plumbing. Not the best situation you can be in. Another reason to “full time” in a LD.

Kent
2015 27' RB "MissB.Haven"