Thursday, July 5, 2018

Fireworks, sorta, well maybe . . .

Its not that i don't like watching fireworks - rather they all seem sorta the same after a while. Obviously they are not the same and are mostly different in color and patterns — mostly.

So when they are going off i usually don't bother going outdoors to see them. And because this is a tourist town and Biltmore is here, there are often fireworks throughout the summer. Yesterday when the fireworks for the 4th of July began to go off, i didn't give it much thought. At some point S asked me to step out and look, that they were really beautiful ... so i did, step out.

And they were, beautiful; so i picked up my new Sony and began to shoot and ... what, it wouldn't work, wouldn't focus, nothing. So i ran upstairs to my bird lens and camera, which was already set up and began to shoot thru the screen on the upstairs window.

And lo, i loved the results:






Don't really look like traditional fireworks, eh? And watching thru the screen they didn't look anything like that either ... only with the camera photographing thru the screen did they turn out like this ... i like 'em better then the traditional ones.

Enjoy —

Sunday, June 24, 2018

Poke Weed

A few days ago i was trimming around the fence and cut down some very tall weeks. I saw that they had small blooms and some had opened into small flowers. I decided to keep two of the tall weeds and then cut a few of the blooms, with stems, and brought them into the macro photography area. They seemed to be an interesting way for me to learn more about stacking macro images. Here are some of those results:
leaves, stem and small blooms; the top ones
not open yet and the bottoms ones fully open.




I think this is the first series i've felt that i actually was able to do what i was trying to do which is give a sense of the whole plant (the stem-branch) down to its smallest component.  

There is still more to go as the pistil can be photographed separately and the green pillow-stool is pretty amazing.

Stay tuned, more to follow.



Sunday, June 17, 2018

Some birds

Flicker - looks like he has leggings


House Wren (Sparrow?)
Bathing


Mourning Dove
Bathing

Join me - its cool and refreshing






Around The House (ATH)

I want to see if i can post a series, over time, of photographs around the house — indoors and outdoors.

Orange Day Lily
I have been cutting 'about to bloom, you can see a couple in the photograph, and putting them indoors to open and occasionally they don't open and just fall off. This one opened wonderfully.

Pink Oxalis - doesn't bloom very often but has beautiful beet-pink tiny flowers.

The top Pink Oxalis was photographed in the afternoon sun; the leaf above was photographed only with general lightening of the room.


Yumm-

Rhododendron





Wednesday, June 13, 2018

Rainbow

In the same yard as below, this showed up a couple weeks ago:

If it looks a little dark, that's cause it was. We are in the rain/thunderstorm period - this afternoon there is a 60% chance of another thunderstorm; i love 'em!

The photograph above i did move a couple of items out of the picture as i like the wide open space of the image: there was a small evergreen tree in the foreground and the neighbors (on the right) raised garden jutting into the photograph. I like it this way.

Ornamental Japanese Chestnut

This is the second year this tree in our backyard as bloomed and it is one of the most beautiful trees i've seen when its blooming. It also has a strong aroma, pungent, musky and very invading as some aromas can be. I can sometimes smell it a block away if i'm downwind. If you are not familiar with the aroma, then i'm guessing it just an unpleasant smell.



Sunday, May 27, 2018

Mushrooms forest

Four days ago i picked up a stick — a small piece of wood, from the ground and when i looked closer at it i saw there were many very small mushrooms; a forest of mushrooms actually.


They are super small, maybe half the size of a grain of rice. It is the first time i've seen one of the ways that mushrooms spread their spoors - the outer cover splits and the hundreds of seeds spill out to be carried away on the wind.

To give a sense of their size, i put a penny beside the wood and took a photo of both the penny and wood:


Yes, that is really how small they are; about the size of the lettering on a penny.

I wanted to see if i could take some photos there were down in the middle of the forest —




I haven't done any cropping, these are all full frame. I think they are tight enough that i can crop tightly around one or two of the mushrooms which would give a good idea of how they are growing attached to the wood.

Currently i am storing the mushrooms in the refrigerator which seems to preserve them well so i can have another go at photographing them tomorrow.

  A week ago we drove to Bryson City where the Great Smoky Mountain Rail Road is located.  I heard about this mountain train ride some years...