WARREN CONNECTICUT – We had a major blizzard today – not an uncommon occurrence in these parts at this time of year. Both images taken with my Leica Monochrom and1955 replica 28mm lens.
Day 2,707 of one photograph every day for the rest of my life.
On this day two years ago (day 1,977): Another storm If you need proof that March isn’t spring in New England, here’s another blizzard from two years ago.
WARREN CONNECTICUT – This was a working inside kind of day – hanging pictures and cleaning out closets. I took a break from household drudgery to do a series of test images to assess the quality of the out of focus portions of the image (the quality of so-caled “bokeh”) for every 50mm lens that I own: a 1945 f1.5 Carl Zeiss Jena Sonnar, a 1962 Leica f2.0 “rigid” Summicron, a modern Leica Summicron, a Summicron Asp. and an f.95 Leica Noctilux.
There was no clear winner but the rigid Summicron, Summicton Asp and Zeiss Sonnar excel, and the Noctilux has a very special character. In this context what I mean by “excel” is smooth transitions from the in focus and out of focus portions of the image, and a creamy quality in the latter. Images below are from the modern Summicron Asp. at f2.0 and the Noctilux at f.95.
Day 2,704 of one photograph every day for the rest of my life.
WARREN CONNECTICUT – Shooting with my DJI Mavic Pro drone again – today in brilliant late afternoon winter sunlight after a few inches of snow freshened up the landscape. this is three frames stitched, which helps overcome the drone’s limited 12 meg file size. The third image is from earlier in the day during the snowfall.
Day 2,703 of one photograph every day for the rest of my life.
On this day three years ago (day 1,607): WTC II One of my favorite images from 2014. Despite the March 10 date it was bitter cold – 2 or degrees F. I wanted for half an hour for a pedestrian walking toward me – i don’t like to shoot people’s backs – but gave up after a half hour and shot the pedestrian walking the wrong way because the cold was driving me off of the street.