First Shot of 2013

Happy New Year, folks!   Yes, it’s me, your friendly photographer from Maine, back for another year of photographic awesomeness (and hopefully some humor to boot).  I’m going to try and keep up the same pattern as last year and turn out a new blog post every Monday morning.  That’s my resolution for the year, or one of them at least.

That being said, I figured I would share my first photograph of the year with you ladies and gents.  This was taken from my kitchen window on January 1st at six AM while I was waiting for my cats to finish their breakfast.  It was a nice way to commemorate not only the first sunrise of 2013 but the fact that the world didn’t end on 12/21/12!!  Huzzah!!!

First Sunrise of 2013

I wish you all luck in keeping any resolutions you made!

Until next time…

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~A.M.

Wishing You A Happy New Year

It’s that time again, folks.  The last day of the year.  Time to bid a fond farewell to 2012 and welcome 2013.  And if you’re going out tonight to celebrate and ring in the new year, it would be wise to avoid the alcohol.  But, if you absolutely feel that you must party like a stupid drunken rock star, please, please, please be smart enough to choose a designated driver.  I can’t share my awesomeness with you folks if you and those around you don’t make it home in one piece.

 

With that said, I wish everyone a happy and healthy New Year.  May each of you keep all your resolutions and attain all your goals!

 

Until next time…

 

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~A.M.

Season’s Greetings

A small but awesome perk of being an artist and photographer is the infinite creative possibility when it comes to cards.  Business cards, post cards, greeting cards, and especially around this time of year, Christmas cards.

Every year, I design and print my own Christmas cards with my photography.  I suppose I could use those online services where you upload a photo and pay them to print the cards for you, but that would take a lot of the fun out of it for me, and for those that have come to enjoy my cards.

This year, I dug into my photographic archives for the image I used as I didn’t have any current “Christmas-y” or winter photographs (we had an extremely mild winter with very little snow last year).  But, after some searching, I was successful.

Since I’m unable to send a card to all of you who follow my blog, I’ll make due by offering you a digital version in this week’s blog.  Huzzah!

Icicle on a Pine

“Christmas is a time for
Peace, Love, and Joy.

May your holiday be all you hope for!

~ A. May”

 

Until next time….

Merry Christmas, folks!  Have a safe and happy holiday!

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~A.M.

Farewell, Festival Of Lights

A friend brought it to my attention that yesterday was the last day of Hanukah, also known as the Festival of Lights (to those of you who celebrate it, Happy Hanukah).

This got me thinking about light in general.  Sunlight, moonlight, artificial light, candlelight.  Our lives revolve around light in some form.  Our crops need sunlight to grow.  We need sunlight to stay healthy.  We need light to see.  Etc.  And all this thinking about light, it’s sources and uses, got me thinking in terms of photography.

As most of you know, most of my photography is centered around nature and wildlife.  Many people wonder, what’s the best type of light for this type of photography.  And the answer is simple.

Overcast light.  That is, the light that you get on a cloudy day.  I’m not talking about the dark, dreary, clouds of doom bearing down on you, waiting to rain on your personal parade, type cloudy days.  More the gentle, bright cloudy days.

Why is this the best type of light for this type of photography?  That answer is also simple.  Because the light on an overcast day is muted and even.

Picture this, you’re walking through the forest on a nice sunny day and you see a vista you’d like to photograph.  You take up your camera and snap off a frame.  Then, in review, you realize that the image is too bright and higher in contrast than you’d like.  The bright sun caused what we call “hot spots” and some of the shadows are so dark they swallow detail.

Quoddy Coastal Trail (Bright)

Now, replace that bright sun with the muted light of an overcast day.  You take a picture of that same vista and are pleased to find that the lighting is even.  The highlights aren’t burnt out and the shadows have detail.

Quoddy Coastal Trail

The moral of this story, kids, is….Don’t be afraid of those overcast days.  Don’t wake up and say “Aw, it’s cloudy.  I guess I won’t take any pictures today.”  No!  Get out there and make use of that good light!

Until next time…

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~A.M.

Finding Tolkien In Nature…

 

*WARNING*  This post contains serious geek content.  [^_^]

I’m a massive fan of Tolkien’s Lord of the Rings and The Hobbit.  I’m a massive fan of Peter Jackson’s film adaptation of LOTR and I’m sure, when I get the chance to see The Hobbit, I’ll be a massive fan of that as well.

As such a huge Tolkien fan, and a huge fan of the fantasy genre of books and film in general, I find myself often imagining that I’m wandering through different worlds when I’m out hiking.  That may sound kind of juvenile, but I like to think of it more as my creative mind running free.

Let me give you an example.  Last month, I went hiking at one of my favorite places, Quoddy Head State Park.  I’m sure many of you who follow my little ramblings have heard of this place and my affection for it.  Well, on this most recent visit, while I was watching a squirrel run up and down a tree in what I think was an attempt to intimidate me, I noticed a little knoll in the moss at the base of some trees nearby.  The first thing that popped into my head when I saw this little knoll and the shape of it, was…Hobbit house!!!

Hobbit House!

I’m pretty sure most people would look at this and just see a little bump in the moss, but not my fantastical brain!  I can see all the little Hobbits plodding along, heading home for second breakfast, elevensies, and afternoon tea!

Keep your eyes, and your minds open, folks.  And let your imagination run wild as often as you can!

Until next time…

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~A.M.