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As students in school we all had days when we weren’t able to attend class. Might be that you had a contagious disease or you broke some important bones needed to support your body as you were shoved down the hall to class. Or it could be your parents were taking you out of school because they made you go on vacation (Brit: holiday). Not guilty, right? You, of course, had no control over that! Or it might be something supremely vital to your mental well being like you just got a new puppy. We all know what’s more important, don’t we? You can solve a page of math story-problems any time, but your first day with a new puppy only happens once in a lifetime.
But the pits is that when you got back to school there was Miss Schultz with that zombie glare in her eye handing you a pile of books and math homework to last you several lifetimes. Or worse still your mother collected it _before_ you went on vacation and you were expected to work at least 20 minutes each day on it interrupting your designated, mandatory vacation time. Of course, that never worked out because your parents understood that if you felt like it you could dump the whole pile into the motel swimming pool by “accident.”
For more AI-generated images with micro stories by me and other members of the Neural Narrative Collective: neural-narrative.blogspot.com/
Photo | Stable Diffusion | Photoshop
This was my plan for today, but I was foiled by the abundance of sun (the sun and I don't get along). I'll get back to the yard tomorrow. Today will be laundry and basement.
Zoe is now a teenager. Of course as her uncle I'm legally allowed to keep telling her she's only 11 but she takes it in her teenage stride of a shoulder shrug and walks off with her head bowed over her mobile phone. Still I did get from her she didn't like doing homework so told her I knew the best thing to do - a photo about boring homework. She loved the old typewriter and claimed it was almost as interesting as being on Snapchat, whatever that is.
My wife and brother-in-law were on paper-throwing duty, one on each side just out of shot. Decided to use my 50mm lens as that doesn't get the love it deserves but I had to back out of the room, along a small corridor and into our dining room to be able to frame this shot. Also had to take a door off its frame just to give me a few more inches to the left of the image.
Photo inspired by a recent Gavin Hoey video.
Strobist info: Two Godox AD200s were used. One camera right in a 60cm square softbox as the main light; the other camera left in a 30cm square gridded softbox for fill light. Both triggered wirelessly.
Martino doing his homework in the temporary studio in our countryside home during the coronavirus quarantine, in Lombardia, Italy.
(An overcast day, natural light from the window, no postproduction)
This was a leftover "green" assignment from the Saturday Collaboration Group. I only kept it because of the water droplets.
Taken with my 10+ close up filter.