Wednesday, February 17, 2010

Why The Long Face?

Long Face

Today I had a great time. I probably took 75 pictures. There were at least 20 that I would love to post but this is the shot that made the cut. I played around with this horse for about 20 minutes. He didn't really want his photo taken and would turn away every time I pointed the phone his way. I finally was able to take this formal portrait. ;)
I have to plug Vignette yet again. The developer seems to update this app almost every day. It constantly gets better and better. I'm now to the point that I want a full-scale camera that shoots with the same effects. I'm just having so much fun!

See more of my work at www.jonwoodbury.com

Tuesday, February 16, 2010

Gripping

Gripping
Not much to say, really. We were at Costco and I thought the tire treads looked cool.
Shot with Vignette.

See more of my work at www.jonwoodbury.com

Monday, February 15, 2010

After the Rain

Cilantro

Lori made chicken tikka masala for some dinner guests tonight so my job was to pick up the cilantro. I performed my duties well and the food was awesome! I love the supermarket near our house because they play thunder sounds before the automatic sprinklers wet down the veggies. I just get a kick out of it. This image was directly after the faux rain storm.

This photo actually demonstrates a very useful camera tip. All cameras have a minimal focus distance and they simply can't focus closer than this distance. (Do you have a computer full of fuzzy, washed out faces? You're probably shooting inside this range.) It's determined by many factors but unless the manufacturer builds in a macro option, that distance is typically about 16 inches.  So how do you shoot things that are nearer to the camera than this? Zoom. The minimal distance is usually constant with a lens so you can zoom in and make it feel closer but still be able to focus sharply. The other advantage of zooming when using a flash is that the flash will meter better with a little distance to work with so you'll get better exposures and fewer of those washed-out faces.
With an optical zoom you won't see any degradation of the image. With a digital zoom, such as that found on my camera phone (the lens doesn't physically move) the "zoom" happens when the camera simply crops out the center of the image so it looks closer. This yields a smaller final image so you need to be okay with fewer pixels. In this case, even though the camera in the Cliq is 5 mp, this image is zoomed 4 times so the final image is only 640x480--or about 1/3 of a megapixel. It's basically the exact same thing as shooting it at full size and cropping out the center on your computer. I wouldn't ever use a digital zoom in a situation where I had a choice but with the nature of this project it was the perfect way to get a macro-type image.

The image name is an hommage to Nelson, the short-lived music phenomenon from the early 90's. Man, I loved that song.

See more of my work at www.jonwoodbury.com

Sunday, February 14, 2010

Happy Valentines Day!

Vday

The back of my Snoopy Valentines tie.


See more of my work at www.jonwoodbury.com

V Day

Dancing

We had a great day! First was the 100th birthday party for my grandma. Good clean fun.
Then we had good Indian food with good company at the Himalayan. (Good Tikka Masala but average Lamb Saag.)
After that a some waltzing and swinging with a dash of cha-cha at the Murray Art Center. I love that place. I've been going there to dance for 15 years and Lori and I had our wedding dinner there as well...you'd be surprised, I'm actually quite lithe for a chubby fellow. The image here is of Maddy and Courtney Parsons. They're some of our fun friends who went dancing as well. We had a great time and man, can that Courtney gyrate!
All in all a very nice day.



See more of my work at www.jonwoodbury.com

LinkWithin

Related Posts with Thumbnails