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Archives for December 2003

December 16, 2003

As promised, here are a few more images from my venture into the wintery landscape around my house.

Image of the Day:

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Snowladen and frozen bush reflects in the river



December 20, 2003

The Luminous Landscape has a first glimpse at the new high-end photo printer from Epson - the 4000.

It looks like a splendid piece of machinery, but the price tag of $1,795 will restrict me to salivating from the side lines. Plus, I'd have to start a saving account for the specific purpose of being able to afford the ink cartridges. While large and certainly long lasting, the price tag Epson has put on one 220ml cartridge (and remember - there's eight needed!) is clearly insane: $112.

I think I'll stick to my Epson 2200 instead. At least its ink costs are reasonable to a point where I won't have to fear that I can't pay my mortgage anymore...



December 18, 2003

Film Review: The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King

If movies are eye candy, then director Peter Jackson's trilogy stands alone as one of the most sumptious visual treats in cinematic history. And as expected, "The Return of the King" is no exception.

In an epic that has enthralled fans for the past 3 years - ever since the first teaser trailers were released onto the internet - spawned 2 (so far) Academy Award Nominations for "Best Movie", made millions of dollars in ticket sales and merchandising deals (down to the rather dumb "Duracell" battery commercials), and has ignited the economy of an entire country - New Zealand - the "Return" is indeed the crowning achievement.... Read entire review ....



December 15, 2003

I'm finally online again!

My satellite connection was down since Saturday evening, when a heavy snow storm dumped about half a foot of snow on the region. As it turned out, the snow was pretty sticky and it stuck to my satellite dish like white on rice, effectively disabling the signal.

This morning, I finally got fed up and jerry-rigged a small hand broom with duct tape to the end of two pieces of plastic ducting (my dish is about 15 feet off the ground on top of my garage roof). With that, I was able to brush off enough snow off the dish that my signal was restored again.

Funny - my satellite ISP DirecWay doesn't mention anything about snow on the dish in their user guide ...

On the Bright Side however - I'm surrounded now by a magical, frozen winter wonderland! So the 10D begged me to go out and explore. I yielded gladly.

Most of the shots are still in the post-processing stage, so more will be up on the site tomorrow, but I managed to get at least my favorite up today:

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December 12, 2003

And for today - the spell-binding disclosure of yesterday's image riddle: a lampshade! A stained glass lampshade, to be more precise. The black lines of course are the lead lines, holding the glass pieces together.

Two alert readers wrote in with the correct answer - one of them, Luke, gets an extra point for brilliant guesswork due to the fact that (in contrast to the other correct respondend, Laura) he's never actually been to my house, and hence couldn't have known about the lamp over my dining table.

Thanks for playing, folks. I'll try and come up with something again tomorrow. :-)



December 11, 2003

You know, sometimes things just catch your eye.
Everyday things.
Like the reflection in your cup of tea in the morning.

Having a digital camera to capture that moment, to deliver that immediacy to the world, is a kind of magic. Having that image be exactly what you want, have it be high-quality and in glorious crispness (or blurriness - your choice), is the miracle of the Canon 10D.

So what exactly *is* the reflection in the cup?
Tune in for the exciting revelation tomorrow. ;-)

[Reflection in a Cup]



December 10, 2003

Maybe it's just me. But I'm simply a sucker for volcanic mountains. I never get tired of looking at them. And when they're veiled in a blanket of virgin white snow, glowing like a golden torch of the gods in the evening light, they are at their most majestic - kings of all mountains.

Or maybe I'm just prejudiced - because *this* is what I see all day long from my living room window:

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Mt. Bachelor

Grandeur aside, there is delight in even the smallest of things. I have four bird feeders I keep stocked regularly, and yearround, they attract close to 45 different species of feathered friends. Out of all of them, the Pigmy Nuthatch is probably one of my most favorite. Only about 4 inches from beak to tail, this delicate and agile flyer stops by not alone, but usually in small flocks. It is fearless, smart, and filled with a vibrant energy.

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December 8, 2003

I admit it. I spent the last three days buried in my office - chained to my computer, deeply entrenched in the bowels of Photoshop, and enchanted by my new camera.

I found out about the power and flexibility of a Photoshop function called "curves".

I delighted in the never-seen-before sharpness of a 8 x 10 print from my camera. At 400 ISO, there was zero (and even my discriminate eye had to admit - really ZERO) grain. Without having to even apply a sharpening filter, I could see the fine lines of a person's facial faint wrinkles, the individual eyebrow hair - and yes, every skin blemish too. The truth can be cruel.

And yet I also faced a darker problem - the quirk that some of the images I downloaded from the 10D's memory card opened up very very dark in Photoshop. Almost indistinguishable, as a matter of fact. Yet all the while, they looked just perfect in the camera's LCD display. And most disturbingly - they were all shot under controlled studio conditions, with the exact same amount of flash, the same f-stop and shutterspeed, even the same ISO. Very, very strange ...

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December 5, 2003

Ok, I think I've tortured y'all long enough.

My trials over the Thanksgiving holiday with the new 10D turned out most satisfactory.

Cruz, my mom-in-law, had set up a makeshift studio and after the family members had sufficiently feasted on the bird and were in a fuzzy and forgiving mood, we dragged them onto the stools, to be posed tirelessly for the eternal family record.

If some people have that deer-in-the-headlights expression on their face, it's mostly due to the fact that the sharp light from the flash must have momentarily woken them from the turkey-induced haze...

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