
On this day last year: Basketball.
On this day last year: Basketball.
On this day last year: Blond. Yawn . . .
On this day last year: Hartsdale house.
Here’s what’s in front of the Museum Vaquero, Luis Jimenez.
On this day last year: Birch madness. I think that almost everyone who has a camera ranks birches as nearly as irresistible as dogs and babies. I have posted no fewer than 11 pictures with “birches” in the title since a started this project. None of them is much good. Repeat after me: “I won’t shoot birches. I won’t shoot birches. I won’t shoot birches . . .”
On this day one year ago: Seder.
Well here we are in front of the ugliest cell tower in the world. Some genius decided to make it look like a pine tree. Actually a sequoia with a bad haircut. A Marine whitewall job. Remember that I’m in the Northeastern US. This is deciduous land. Even a small evergreen tree looks out of place here. But this monster? Here it is in all of its glory, three frames stitched.
In a more modest vein, more from this camera and lens combination, which I like a lot:
I’ve dreamed of having a lens that permits me to shoot this church from this angle for a long time. I’ll be revisiting this.
Two frames stitched:
Finally, Basil confronts a barn:
On this day last year: Sloppy execution.
By the way things got really sloppy on this post. I’ve edited it many times. The photos were attributed to the wrong date (despite my fail-safe file naming convention that includes the capture date) and was posted out of date order several times. I’ve been busy and have been maintaining this blog tired. Sorry for any inconvenience. I promise to stop editing this post. Someday soon.
The EVF permits me to use a Leica R 280mm lens on my Leica M (by means of a simple adapter). So I spent a couple of hours shooting out my window. The view through the EVF and the 280 is poor: it’s slithery and jumpy (because of the slow refresh rate of the EVF) and too contrasty to make valid exposure judgments. The focus aid, however, works very well. Based on the viewfinder I thought that I was getting junk, but all of the images ended up being well focused, exposed and composed. The lens is indeed excellent, although the digital camera exposes some red/green chromatic aberration that was probably not evident on film – its easily corrected for in Lightroom. Here are some examples:
On this day one year ago: Good light.