Tag Archives: Photography

Fun With Photoshop…Round 2

Once again, I took a short break from taking photos and delved into the world of photo manipulation in Photoshop.

While going through my archives looking for a specific image a while ago (which I still can‘t locate, sadly), I came across a random photo I took from my front porch of a sunset last year.  I had a brief “What the…?” moment when I looked at the photo, then remembered that I took the image specifically to mess around with in Photoshop.  So I did.  This was the result.  I call it “Fire in the Sky”.  Enjoy!

Fire in the Sky

Until next time…

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~A.M.

When Life Hands You Lemons…

 

Make iced tea…..Wait….That’s not how the saying goes…..

 

Anyway, we all know the popular idiom and what it means.  Make the best of a bad situation or disappointment.  And recently, that’s exactly what I did.

 

Those of you that follow my blog know that I’m an avid hiker.  In fact, that’s where most of my photographs come from.  Hiking.  So, when I locate a new trail near where I live, I tend to be stoked.

 

Last week, I actually found two new trails in Lubec (home of Quoddy Head State Park).  I had driven past the road these trails were on countless times on my way to Quoddy, Bold Coast in Cutler, and Campobello island.  My mother and I tried out one of the trails last Saturday.  The Morong Cove Trail.  Aside from a few downed branches across the trail in spots and several poorly marked portions we had to navigate using my Native American wilderness intuition (long story), it was a decent trail.  I can’t say the same for the second trail.

 

On Tuesday, April 2nd, my mother and I geared up and set out to hike the six miles that make up the Horan Head trail in Lubec.  Sadly, we were disappointed.  It was obvious from the start that this trail is neglected.  There were so many trees down across the trail, not just branches, that it was difficult to traverse.  And the markings?  Even worse.  What sparse markings there were, were difficult to see.  Who uses white paint on a birch tree as a trail marker!?  Seriously!?  Anyway, about one mile into the trail, we called it quits.  When one of us has a bad gut feeling about a trail, we turn back (this is a good practice, or rule, when hiking folks.  Rule number one: NEVER hike alone.  Rule two: Be prepared for anything.  And Rule three: If something feels off or wrong, don’t continue down the trail.  Go back).

 

We were both disappointed at the condition of this trail.  It made us start thinking about forming some kind of group to volunteer to perform maintenance on trails like this.  Sadly, we have few friends, and don’t know many people with four wheelers and the ability to safely operate a chainsaw that would be willing to help us out.

 

So, to soothe the sting of this disappointment, we headed to our trusted hiking stand-by, Quoddy.  I know I talk about Quoddy all the time and my readers are probably rolling their eyes and saying to their computer screens “Talk about something else!”.  I apologize.  It’s just such a nice place, I want to publicize it so more folks can visit and enjoy its beauty as I do.

 

So disappointment turned into a decent day in spite of the biting cold (isn’t winter supposed to be over!?).  I’m wishing for better luck on the next new trail I discover.

 

Until next time…

 

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~A.M.

April 1st

It’s that time again.  The day where people run amuck, playing jokes on one another while shouting “APRIL FOOLS!” and laughing maniacally.

I’ll spare you my humorous antics.  Partially because I think April Fools is stupid, and partially because I suck at playing jokes on people.  So, you get a break!

I will, however, share something with you fine folks.  I recently got a new camera.  A Sony DSC-HX20V.  When that box arrived with the camera and the other accessories I ordered, I was like an antsy kid at the crack of dawn on Christmas morning!  I was expecting something a hair better than my faithful DSC-HX9V (which I passed on to my mother), but I was pleasantly surprised to find this little camera packed with cool features and a decent 18 mega pixels.

One of the awesome features in this camera is the painting setting.  This setting makes the picture you take look like it’s a…well…painting (obviously).

Example….

 

Quoddy Photo Painting

 

Now, I know this can be easily done in Photoshop, but it’s kind of cool to be able to apply the setting right in the field.

Until next time…

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~A.M.

What The…?

To all you photographers out there, have you ever gone back into your archives a year or two, looked at some of your photos, and wondered something like, “What the hell was I doing?” Or, “What the hell was I going for with this image?”  Yeah.  I think we all have.

It can be fun to look back at your early work.  Not only can you see your progress, but sometimes you find hidden gems!

Recently, during my search for the photo I mentioned last week, I took a little stroll down memory lane.  I uncovered a few decent images from a few years ago, but I also uncovered a few “What the hell?” images!  Images where I had no idea why I chose the subject, no idea why I composed the image the way I did, and no idea why I focused on what I focused on.  For example, this image…

Tree Bark

I sat and stared at this image for a few minutes, wondering to myself why the hell I took it in the first place.  Then, looking at a few more images like it, I remembered.  I had taken a few close up pictures of tree bark over the years with the intention of making Photoshop brushes or textures out of them.  I still have to get around to doing that.  I could use them.

Now kids, the moral of this story is really, “when in doubt, take the picture.”  You may or may not have any plans for it at the time you capture the image, and you might look back on it a year or so later and say “What the hell…?”, but take the picture anyway.  And don’t get rid of it.  You never know when it might come in handy for some other project.

Until next time…

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~A.M.

Unfortunate Occurrences

Every once in a while, in this modern age of technology, we run into problems.  A computer crashes, a file becomes corrupted, a jpeg goes missing, etc.

Sadly, I’ve experienced all of this and more, more often than I’d like.  Most recently though, I’ve suffered the misfortune of a certain jpeg going missing.  I told you folks before that I enjoy taking photographs of clouds.  Especially clouds that are shaped like something (refer back to my post “When Clouds Look Like Cool Things…).

For a while now (almost a year) I’ve been searching for an image I took of a cloud that was shaped like the Starship Enterprise from Star Trek (Yes, I‘m a geek).  Now, being a photographer, it pains me when one of my images goes missing.  Being a fan of Star Trek, I’m doubly hurt by this particular image up and disappearing on me.  I’ll continue to search, of course, but I don’t have much faith that I’ll locate it.  I think it probably got lost in the shuffle when I transferred all my images to new flash drives last year.  [-_-,]  When this kind of thing happens, it makes me paranoid.  What else has gone missing!? [0_0]

Anyway, what’s the moral of this little tale?  Well, we can’t help it when unfortunate occurrences happen.  We just have to roll with the punches.

Until next time…

[-_-]

~A.M.