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Week 10/52
Theme: Stack It
2013 Ellenburg Project 52
I had a newborn scheduled for Thursday and I had lots of ideas about things I could stack with the baby. Baby on a stack of books, towels, suitcases, etc... Unfortunately, school was cancelled and therefore my shoot was also cancelled. So I guess I'll have to settle for a stack of suitcases without a baby. (Just a side note, I would never stack a baby this high, my plan was to just use the two big blue suitcases.) Thanks to my mom for giving my all her old suitcases, I love them. My husband on the other hand is less than thrilled with them, hehehe.
From 2010. Alternative Fashion Week. Alternative Fashion Week, London. 19 April 2010..
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6x4" Postcard. Images from Nancy Baumiller's Collage Play with Crowabout, except for sun which is from Suzee Que. Hand coloring on background and tree branches done with watercolor crayons on watercolor paper.
In war people die on all sides. Quite often they are young people.
Close to where I live is the German War Cemetery in Glencree. Dedicated on July 9 1961, the graveyard is located close to the Glencree Centre for Reconciliation and Peace. 134 persons are buried here including Luftwaffe & Kriegsmarine. Many are known, some are unknown. These were in 59 Graves across 15 counties of Ireland until being moved to Glencree. Most of the graves belong to flyers of the second world war and were washed up on our shores. Included also are the victims of the Arandora Star, German civilian detainees sunk by U-Boat in 1940 off Tory Island.
I first visited this cemetery less than a week ago. It is a place of great beauty and tranquility. I visited again today to take this photograph. The location has beautiful shades of green and brown but the greyscale image somehow seems very appropriate.
In war people die on all sides. It is good that we remember them.
This is photo #1 in an attempt of mine to post a photo a week (we'll see how it goes) Here is some classic B@w with some light painting
Theme Of The Week - Tears
Courtesy of the Joey Tribbiani School of Acting (only I pulled out nose hairs)
Week 9: Landscape
Project 52
Looking out over the Missouri River Bottoms from St. Stanislaus Conservation Area in Hazelwood, MO
Our holiday park, Golden Sands, was located up this lane behind the industrial estate on the left.
When people tell you about the lovely scenery in Devon, they don't mention this bit!
A close up of a competitor in Falmouth Classics. This boat is immaculate and obviously is lovingly cared for by its "family". Falmouth Classics at the beginning of Falmouth Week is the chance for owners of these precious vessels to deservedly show off their pride and joy.
hard theme this week,
but here's my take on it! :)
i've been going through a weird shoe phase
the past few weeks (hence all the shoe pictures),
so that's what inspired this one.
52 Weeks Project.
Meet Inês.We did a great photoshoot last weekend and she acecpt to participate in my 52 Week project.
It was the first time for her, but she did it great.
Stobist: One Elinchrom D-Lite 4 set to 2/6 with soft box above model. One Elinchrom D-Lite 4 set to 2/6 with soft box bellow the model. One Cromalite 160 w/s flash bare set to full power to background.
Set up here
Photoshoot video coming soon.
Although I actually made this photo during week 1, I am including it for my submission for week two because I thought it was a good example of an interesting photo made with a long shutter speed. In this case, the shutter speed was 15 seconds. I was drawn to the way the light bright shone on the girl’s face and captured her facial expressions even as her positioning changed.
The artist whose work struck me this week was Michael Wesely’s collection of flowers, Stileben. In this collection, the flowers are displayed in a vase on a clean, monochrome surface with a plain wall in the background. The extended length of the exposure (i.e., several days) allowed the artist to capture the lifecycle of the flowers, as they can be observed in both their freshly-cut and wilted stages. I will admit that prior to this class, when I thought of “long exposures,” I thought of photos made over the course of multiple seconds or even minutes – I never considered you could make a photo over several days, weeks or years! The Stileban collection stood out to me because it demonstrated how even a “still” image could capture time or, in this case, the lifecycle of a plant.
This week's theme was "light".
I was able to get out and take a photo. <3 Brian and I were taking back a movie and I asked him to pull over on the side of the road so I could snap a photo of the headlights and streetlights. It was so cold and windy; I think that the cold front has finally reached us.
This photo made me think of a song by The Postal Service called "Sleeping In". I haven't listened to them since I was in high school; it brought back so many memories. I especially recalled sitting in the cold underneath the bridge by the river with close friends listening to traffic pass over us.
It amazes me what can trigger your memories.
So, this isn't anything fancy or extremely creative...it was cold and I couldn't stand the thought of asking Brian to stand out in the cold with me longer than I already had. <3