Taking, and retaking, beginning and intermediate photography courses is a fun way to make sure that you find a time to get out, in my case into the yard, to keep in contact with your ‘seeing’ muscles and whatever imagination can be mustered that day. After all, it’s an *assignment*, isn’t it? Unfortunately, Real Life (remember when the internet was young and real life was called the “Meat World”?) has a persistent way of demanding regular chunks of the day which usually leaves me taking images in the hours from the very flat, unattractive, light of noon up to the possibility of the jackpot of ‘sweet’ late afternoon light, depending on the current level of suspended particles in the local atmosphere. During the seemingly interminable hours of flat, contrast-y light it can get too hot, in Summer or Fall, to stay out in the open, practicing honeybee/flower action shots, or what have you, and the heat sends me either inside for a drink or in under the cover of the podocarpus and the split-leaf maple in the courtyard, where it is quite dark and generally cool in comparison. And the breaks in the dense shade spark Ideas.
In under the canopy, in a mini-micro-climate held reasonably comfortable by the dense intergrowing branches overhead, is a great place to watch the shafts of sunlight, shifting like white spotlights across the gloom, picking out forms in that saturated-green of the protected leaves of the split-leaf maple. It was just that sort of day when I was out with my sketching mannequin (my patient, hardworking and *only* cooperative photographic model) to get an assigned shot of a portrait in a natural setting (I got a nice shot of a twenty-inch tall mannequin ‘climbing’ in the maple tree…nice except for a small leaf-hopper which hopped aboard the mannequin while I was working with the camera too far away to see it, and made itself at home where there would normally be a nose on the blank wooden face. Sigh.). After getting my class shot, I couldn’t resist the lovely greens up in the “spotlight” and waited a few minutes until the light worked its way around to this grouping of leaves, which I particularly liked, and made a few exposures of the grouping. I like to put it up on the computer as wallpaper, for a calm influence during hectic days.
May your Holidays be only mildly hectic, if hectic they be, and happy, memorable times!
Cheers,
pete
Recent Comments