Saturday, December 31, 2011
Friday, December 30, 2011
Thursday, December 29, 2011
Wednesday, December 28, 2011
Tuesday, December 27, 2011
Holiday Cheer Pt.1
Christmas dinner this year was a special treat. We usually celebrate at Samantha's parents place, but this year we did it at her brother Pete's house. He and his wife Julie had spent most of the year renovating after gutting the place because of water damage. The light fixtures over the dining room table were beautiful and were perfect for capturing the rich colors of the season.
This is the first in a series of table pictures.
Posted by Marty at 1:56 PM 0 comments
Monday, December 26, 2011
Christmas Dinner Portraits
These are a few portraits I took around the dinner table on Christmas Eve. I was happy to be able to work with the available light from the fixture over the table. The photos are of my nephew, my brother in laws wife and my mother in law.
Posted by Marty at 12:55 PM 0 comments
Sunday, December 25, 2011
The World In A Christmas Ornament
I caught this image by accident. I was just taking the picture of the bulb. I was 8 feet away from the tree and working in low light. I strolled the 55 - 250 mm all the way out and snapped the photo. In post production, after a small crop and a little bumping up of the exposure I realized that the bulb was mirrored and the room was reflected in it. That is me in the center of the bulb sitting behind the table in the corner. 1/15 sec, ƒ5.6, ISO 1600.
Posted by Marty at 12:49 PM 0 comments
Labels: christmas, reflection
Saturday, December 24, 2011
Christmas Light Bokeh
This was a real treat to shoot and to have it turn out right. My sister in law had some light fixtures hanging over her dinning room table that had these pretty pieces of crystal suspended underneath them. They were at a perfect height for me to catch the Christmas tree lights in the background. This was taken at 1/20 of a second, ƒ5.6, ISO 800 with the 55 - 250 mm lens. For some reason the 18 - 55mm lens was having trouble auto focusing this night.
Posted by Marty at 12:42 PM 0 comments
Friday, December 23, 2011
Bus Stop Graffiti
This shot is of some graffiti that was being back lit by a street lamp and some headlights. Taken at 11 PM at 1/5 of a sec, ƒ4.5, and ISO 800.
Posted by Marty at 12:37 PM 0 comments
Labels: black and white, graffiti
Tuesday, December 20, 2011
Monday, December 19, 2011
The Last Flower of the Year
This is definitely the last flower picture of the year. This brave fellow held on until almost Christmas. Now it is time for him to lay down and sleep.
Posted by Marty at 12:18 PM 0 comments
Sunday, December 18, 2011
Beaver Stump.
I saw this tree that had been felled by beavers and was drawn to it by the green paint sticking out of the reeds. I don't know if it was painted by the city to designate it for removal or if it was tagged by a kid with nothing else to do. Strange looking though.
Posted by Marty at 12:32 PM 0 comments
Saturday, December 17, 2011
Blue Bush
This image is another late afternoon shot of a Tiger Eye Sumac plant that has lost all of its leaves. More striking in silhouette.
Posted by Marty at 12:27 PM 0 comments
Labels: Tiger Eye Sumac
Thursday, December 15, 2011
Wednesday, December 14, 2011
Ice Over The Grass
This image is off ground ice after a nasty bit of freezing rain that left a sheet over all low dips and gulleys. It is just starting to melt the next day when I snapped this.
Posted by Marty at 12:22 PM 0 comments
Labels: ice
Monday, December 12, 2011
Shadows In Late Afternoon Light
These images were taken during the cookie making marathon. The afternoon sunlight coming in the patio doors and through the open vertical blinds was creating some great shadows on the dinning room wall. Good quality subjects for the shadows to play on didn't hurt. The painting is an original by my father in law's sister Helene.
Posted by Marty at 12:11 PM 0 comments
Labels: shadows
Saturday, December 10, 2011
Cookie Production Part 2
These are a few shots of Mona's end of the cookie production triangle (no one could get shots of the third leg, the shipping department, because they are all business and move way too fast to capture on film). Posting of these images got a sizable response on Facebook. The black and white image of Mona's hands kneading dough took people back to their childhood and Grandma's kitchen. At least that is what it did for me.
Apparently, the below pictured scalloped cookie cutter was lost at the end of production this year, so an internet search for a suitable replacement had began. If anyone knows of a source feel free to tell us about it in a comment.
Posted by Marty at 12:01 PM 0 comments
Labels: black and white, cookies
Friday, December 9, 2011
Cookie Production Part 1
Once a year, my mother in law goes a bit batty and cooks about 8,000 cookies in a couple of weeks. No, seriously, she make 420 - 450 tins of 35 cookies and sells them during the holidays for $20 a tin. She does the 60km Walk To End Women's Cancer with another family member each year and the target is to raise $2,000 each. So Mona gets her fundraising done early.
She usually starts the last week of November. She bakes small batches on weeknights, but on the weekend, total war breaks out in Cuchina del Mona. She never has trouble finding people to help her out and speed up the process. She makes dough and cuts the cookies while the help loads the oven with two trays at a time and starts the ten minute timer. When it dings, we have to switch the trays up for down in the oven to help with the evenness of the cooking, then run to the dinning room, take the cooling batch off the trays and stack them in rows on the table, then run back to the kitchen, wipe the trays, reload them with 70 cookies, take a small sherry glass and tap a design on the top of each cookie and have that all done before the timer finishes it's 10 minute trek. And that is the easy job compared to mixing the dough, rolling it out and cutting the cookies.
Then its back to the dinning room and start loading fully cooled cookies into the wax lined tins, placing a wax cutout on top with a thank you card, snapping them shut and stacking them in large boxes of twenty tins. When a box is full we place a call in to the shipping department (my father in law downstairs) and it is picked up for distribution. This process goes on for about two and a half to three weeks. It seems every year the orders push the output number up a little more. But hey, who doesn't love shortbread?
Posted by Marty at 11:41 AM 0 comments
Labels: cookies
Thursday, December 8, 2011
Tuesday, December 6, 2011
Baited Birds.
The first weekend in December I was over at my mother in law's place helping her bake cookies for a cancer walk fundraiser. The day before a family friend and one of her sisters had been over helping with the same task. They had gotten in the habit of opening the bags of flour, cornstarch and sugar outdoors to reduce the mess inside. Mona's sister Diane had noticed how many birds were outback, and later when they had a flubbed batch she broke up the cookies and took them out for the winged beggars.
On Sunday when I went by there must have been one hundred to one hundred twenty birds in the back yard, taking turns landing on the utility bench and feasting on the frozen flour and checking for cookie pieces. They waited all day, but to our credit, no batches of shortbread were harmed in the making of this image.
Posted by Marty at 11:29 AM 0 comments
Labels: birds, black and white
Sunday, December 4, 2011
Time Creeps On
This was another shot that I waited for. When I first spied it as a target, it was 10:30 AM and the shadow was almost nonexistent. An hour and a half later and it was almost there. I waited another eight minutes to make sure the bottom of the clock and the shadow were on the same slat of wood. I was also happy that even the hands of the clock had shadows.
Posted by Marty at 11:22 AM 0 comments
Labels: black and white, clock, shadows
Saturday, December 3, 2011
Thursday, December 1, 2011
Reed Stalk in the Water
This image of a reed stalk that had fallen down into the river took a few different vantage points before it really popped. I am very happy with the shadows and water texture. Sometimes waiting the extra 30 seconds or a minute can make a huge difference on what the lines in the water look like and is totally worth it.
Posted by Marty at 11:16 AM 0 comments