Archive for November, 2009

The Pink Daisy Series One and Two: AEDM Post for Nov. 10


2009
11.10

This is pushing my creativity – I’ve been forced to wrestle with Photoshop until I can do what I envision since all I have with me is photos on my Mac.  When I take pictures I know almost instantly if I am going to use them in future work.  Today I worked with three photos:

eye  two

A year ago I was in London, and the London Eye fascinated me.  I have many photos of the Eye (it’s a large ferris wheel constructed for the Millennium celebration.)  I decided to use this one in a new series I’m calling The Pink Daisy Series.  I have a travel journal from London on my blog with more photos.

wave

A couple of weeks ago I was in Pismo Beach and took lots of photos of waves.  I did a post on them, but I knew I wasn’t finished with these particular photos.

Tying these together is an image of a daisy I took in January 2008  in Redstone, Colorado.  I’ve already used in for a collage in my Altered Landscape series.  It’s right on the main page of my blog.

IMG_6409

So what have I done with the daisy, the wave, and the London Eye?

The Daisy Wheel

daisywheel-copy2

Click on image for a larger version

The Daisy Wave

wave circle

Click on image for a larger version

Art Every Day Month Chugs On with a London Tube Collage


2009
11.09

Today I got creative with my resources.  I’m at my daughter’s house in Paonia, CO, with nothing but my laptop and the photos on it.  I have a cold so there was no venturing out for photo journalism essays.  BUT – I was thinking about two of my favorite images from a trip to London last year and how I’d like to combine them, so I got on my son-in-law’s computer, imported the photos to photoshop, and did what I visualized.  I started with a train from the subway, called the Tube in London.  Some stations, like this one, are in the open air.

train

Then I took an underground escalator photo in a tube station that I absolutely love.  I mean, I really like this photo and I took it likkety-split.  My eye saw the picture, my camera is always around my neck, so voila!

IMG_7510

So the image below is my art for  November 9 of AEDM, Art Every Day Month.  Go to the website and check out all the wonderfully creative works people from all over the world are doing for the month of November.

I don’t have a name for it yet.  It has to gel in my head and churn around until the suitable name emerges.

subway

Click on above image to see full-size version.

Aspen, Colorado Patterns and Details: AEDM Nov. 8


2009
11.08


For anyone just tuning in, Ive been participating in something that Leah Pilkin Kolidas of Massachusetts has been doing for seven years.  It’s called Art Every Day Month, and it’s a challenge to produce art in some form every day for the month of November.  I jumped in head first, determined to find a way to accomplish this.  It’s challenging but rewarding to become more mindful about art, which really means becoming more mindful about the world every day and our place in it.  It’s challenging to look at a pile of junk and find the treasure, like this metal sunflower.

metal sunflower

It’s not possible, of course, to produce a really good piece of art every day, but it is possible to produce something good, and something that can be built on in the future.  After all, great works start with ideas and sketches and preliminary drawings, etc.  And then many, many disciplines can be viewed as art.  Cooking can be artful, decorating, taking a walk and observing details of the environs and writing an essay or a haikiu.

In my case, I managed a couple of posts with colleges and went to Colorado to visit my daughter.  So armed with nothing but my camera and my imagination, I am creating art for a week out of photos.  We took a drive to Aspen today, and I’m looking at details and patterns.

clouds

Leaving Paonia, there was a beautiful sky.  The patterns of the clouds are amazing – the way they divide themselves into little puffs.  I could watch the sky here all day.

stream

Where we were heading, to Aspen, the trees have already lost their leaves, but Paonia, at about 6,000 feet, still has some beautiful color.  The reflection in the water forms a pattern.

b ridge

We stopped in Redstone for the kids to play in the park.  One of them is at the end of this bridge.  I love to look at shadows and the patterns they form.  In this case, it’s easy to tell what direction the sun is coming from.  The light and dark are like mirror images.

trees

Now we’re higher, and I’m looking at the pattern of the trees and branches as they rise above the Raggeds (the mountain range).  The trees have changed – no leaves.  The sky has changed also.

snowboard roof

Now we’re in Aspen, with a blue sky.  The pattern I like here is the roof – it’s made of snowboards.  That’s creative for sure.  And I’m going to be able to use those in collage.  In most of my collages, I use my own images as the background, and my own images as the collage material.  You can see those here.  I also use vintage fruit and crate labels as collage materials, which you’ll see in the first image of the Archangel Michael.  In one of my AEDM posts I branched out into using old sheet music.

Here’s some creative furniture made of skis, which is certainly appropriate to Aspen.

ski furniture

I looked up at a ski slope into the sun, and saw this tangle of leaves and branches.

branches

These beautiful leaves are wonderful details that inspire me.  Tomorrow it’ll be a challenge to think of a photo essay subject, but I’ll manage.

leaves

Finally, a single leaf was caught up in another bush.

single leaf


Anatomy of a Small-Town High School Football Game: AEDM Day Seven


2009
11.07


Don’t forget to check out the other Art Every Day posts here.   Also, don’t forget that with the holidays approaching, art makes good gifts.  You can order any of my photos from the gallery in any size.  I print all of them on archival paper in various sizes.    If you prefer original art, view here.

Art Every Day Month Day Seven:  Anatomy of a small-town football game.  The Hotchkiss Bulldogs.  I’m sitting in the guest room at my daughter’s house in Paonia, a small town without a stop light.  That small.  Looking out the window at the western Colorado sunset.  Man, the skies here go on forever.

So, what to do for something creative?  We went to the Hotchkiss Bulldogs high school football game and I decided to do a photojournalism essay.  Here goes.

BULLDOG COUNTRY

2 bulldog country

Western Slope of Colorado has towns scattered over long distances.  Today the Bulldogs played Dolores, and the team and boosters rode for 3/1/2 hours to get here.  Last week, Dolores drove 5 hours for their away game.

welcome

Welcome to Hotchkiss High School, student body: 250.

3 playoff sign

This is the first playoff game and the town was out to support the Bulldogs!

The school may be small, but it had all the components of a high school football game.

4 walking up to field

There is a field.  The skies may be a little more dramatic and expansive than in Bakersfield.  In Bako, we like to see the air we breathe.

5 field view The field has players and cheerleaders and everything we expect.

6 smack bar

There’s a snack bar and Wilson’s Barbeque does some great pulled pork and brisket.

7 band

The school has a band, albeit a small one.  And the band has a drum line.

9 drumline

10 cheerleaders

Of course there are cheerleaders.

11 bleachers

And bleachers, because the fans have to sit somewhere.

12 pressbox

There’s a press box and an announcer on the roof.

13 live radio coverage

Even live radio coverage.

14 live radio coverage From more than one station, even.

15 scoreboard and flag

There’s a lighted scoreboard, and a flag at half mast in honor of the Ft. Hood victims.

Plus, there are stadium lights so they can play night games.

16 stadium lights

17 team

All-important, there’s a team.  Kids everywhere want to play football.

18 photographer

There’s a photographer to record all the brilliant plays of the team.

19 boosters

And – boosters!  Including my husband, center in the hat, son-in-law Steve behind him to right, daughter Karen to left in red, granddaughter Annabelle standing on the bench, and granddaughter Cooper scrunching down on the bleacher.  Jackson saw a railing that demanded to be walked.

20 more boosters

22 play begins

Play begins and Hotchkiss commands the ball.

23 play

24 bulldogs at end zone

The Bulldogs are at the end zone already…and it’s a touchdown!

26 touchdown

Actually the ball just made it to the end zone!

27 drummer

The touchdown did not seem to excite this drummer, who appeared to be asleep.

28 fans on sidelines

Fans were watching from the sidelines.

Fans were watching from the end zone.

29 end zone fans

30 extra point goodAnd the kick was good.

31 injury

The Dolores boosters are concerned.

32 concerned Dolores fans

They have a player down.

33 player still down

34 concern

The hurt player is on the home side of the field and the Dolores fans can’t get a good look at what’s going on.

35 coach running across amb called

An ambulance has been called.

36 paramedics at work

Paramedics go to work and the ambulance leaves.

37 amb leaves

38 play resumes

Play resumes.  Dolores finally has the ball.

39 play

41 pas de deux

The players perform a double pas de deux.  That’s probably not what they called it.

43 halftime show

And it’s halftime.  The cheerleaders perform.

44 halftime show

45 kids playing

Kids were playing under the bleachers, and our kids headed to the park.

51 coope swing

Other kids have fun on the practice field.

49 swings 52 kis playing

The game so far was 48-0 so there wasn’t much suspense.  We decided to leave, and to leave this blog post, I’ll give you a view of the field.  This is probably the major difference (besides the size of the band) between this particular small-town football and city football.  You can see the field and the school.  Wow.

54 view


Art Every Day Month: What to do When Traveling?


2009
11.06


Man, up at 4 which is WAY above my comfort level.  Especially since I’m used to going to bed at midnight, and you know what?  It doesn’t work to get in bed at 10 and command yourself to fall asleep.  So four short hours of shuteye and over eight hours in a plane and airports – just to get to Grand Junction!  Now it’s 6 pm but it might as well be midnight.

So my AEDM entry for today, November 6, is a few photos of my grandkids having fun with the Egg Game.  While I was in Pismo I found a cute game with plastic spoons, plastic eggs and bean bag yokes – you remember racing balancing eggs in teaspoons?  This version is much less messy.  So today’s AEDM is Kid Concentration.

abbo egg 1 Annabelle is five.  Five concentrates intensely and understands the objective of the game.

abbo egg 2

jackson egg 3 Jackson is four.  He started out slowly and concentrated hard.  He went from the living room to the kitchen, ran back to the living room, and did it again.

jackson egg two This isn’t so hard after all!

Jackson 1

Wow, Jacks realizes he can actually walk the other way too.  Now it’s time for two-year-old Cooper to enter the egg races.

cooper egg 1

No worries about concentration or doing it right.  Two is pure joy and excitement.

cooper egg 2

Well, maybe a little concentration helps.  Cooper took her shirt off in Wal-Mart by the way, and wouldn’t put it back on.

cooper egg 3

Oh well, forget concentration.  Just enjoy the shapes and colors.  As I write, they are all three still running around with spoons and eggs.  I had a hunch this would be a good purchase!

Tomorrow, when I’m alive again, we’ll do a little more about creativity and art every day month.  And for those of you wondering more about what AEDM is, check out Leah’s blog and web site.  All your questions will be answered PLUS you can join in!


Work in Progress – AEDM Nov. 5


2009
11.05

Wow.  What a daunting challenge I have taken on with Art Every Day Month!  Only my second day and I’m wondering how to handle the rest of the month, what with a trip to Colorado and Thanksgiving and visits from out-of-town relatives.

But I did have something in the works.  It’s still in the works, but I’ll post it for today’s creation anyway.  It’s a canvas with images from vintage fruit crate labels and turn-of-the-century (the last century) sheet music.

Lifw

The Rhythm of Life (working title.)  Just realized that yesterday’s was themed around music also.  I guess the sheet music is inspiring me.  I realize this is impossible to see so the words are impossible to read.  But it’ll have to do until the real thing comes along.

For the next week, be expecting photographs from Colorado.

Creative Every Day: I Tackle Still Life


2009
11.04


Thanks to my friend Julie Jordan Scott’s facebook post, I ran into this site – Creative Every Day – and I’ve put a link on the box to the left.  Liking a challenge, and of course always doing too much, I joined right in.  That meant I had to create something today – because the point of this challenge is to create something every day for the month of November.  Leah (it’s her blog and her challenge) started this seven years ago, and this year over 200 artists are participating.

The idea is to nudge your creativity and spark new ideas even if you don’t do something every single day.  But I’ve been wanting to do still lives so decided, what the heck, today is the day!

Since I can’t paint (except backgrounds) and I work with photos, I had to set up the still life and then photograph it until I was satisfied.  And I am satisfied.  It’s my first effort and it could have been worse.  So here it is, and we’ll see what tomorrow brings.
still life wo mat sepia

The sheet music was Mark’s grandmothers, the photo is his dad’s elementary school class, or maybe middle school, and the pitcher belonged to his mother.  Want to see it in color?  Get ready for bright!

still life 019

I wonder which one you all like best?  Obviously the sepia looks old, but the color has some nice contrasts and I love purple.  Feel free to leave comments and let me know.

OK – THE VERDICT IS IN

I am using neither of the above as my Still Life: Music.  I’ll put in the “official” one here:

Still Life Music


Thermal Features Anyone? Try Yellowstone National Park


2009
11.03


Some years ago, for reasons I know not, I decided I must see Old Faithful.  Of course, that meant a trip to Yellowstone National Park.  I was completely unprepared for what awaiting – and Old Faithful is the least of it.  Although it is quite astounding.

correct old faithful

This geyser is called Old Faithful because it faithfully erupts on schedule:  if an eruption lasts more than 2.5 minutes, it will erupt 91 minutes later.  If the eruption is less than 2.5 minutes, it will erupt 65 minutes later.  The eruptions can send up to 8,400 gallons of boiling hot water to a height of 185 feet.  I didn’t realize how exciting this would be until I sat, along with dozens of other people, on benches surrounding the area and saw this with my own eyes.  Wow!

The park service has a web cam set up at Old Faithful.  check it out.

Marvelous as it is, Yellowstone is a wonder of hydrothermal features.  My fellow-teacher Barbara Moorhead and I drove around the park, stopping at each trail, and were “shocked and awed” by what we saw.

West Thumb Region

lake

This is Yellowstone Lake.  I couldn’t believe it – here was a lake with thermal features within it!  The most interesting is the Fishing Hole Geyser, or Fishing Cone.

fishing hole

The geyser is so-named because early visitors would stand on the rim, catch fish in the lake, and dip the fish into the geyser to cook.  I saw a photograph in the Lodge there but can’t find it on the internet.

You know that patterns intriuge me.  Look at these great stones in the lake and the texture/pattern/colors of the water!

stones in lake

the abyss

The Abyss Pool is near the lake in the West Thumb region.  It’s a hot spring, 53 feet deep!  The next photo shows the entire pool.  Temperature – 172 degrees Fahrenheit!

lake in background

The ground around these hot springs is actually very fragile because it is a mix of algae and cyano bacteria,  heat-loving micro-organisms.  They can create dramatic orangey-brownish colors.

bacteria

This next feature is a thermal vent, also in the lake.

ys bluish hole in lake

This steaming pool is the Black Pool, which is a wonderful blue color.  It’s 132 degrees and 30 feet deep.

ys steaming pool

The Lakeshore Geyser is also by the lake, and sometimes the vent is actually covered by the lake!

bubbling spring

Finally, in this area (and I mean finally because it’s the last photo, not the last feature) are the Paint Pots, also known as mud pots.  It was totally cool watching the “mud” sputter and pop.

mudpot

dry white hole

I’m not sure of the name of this next feature.

two pools

This entire area is surrounded by a boardwalk that you can see in the distance.  So much to see in just one place.  You can get more information on the West Thumb region here.

ys springs near lake

Anyone reading this who hasn’t been to Yellowstone – well, all I can say is GO.  It’s a photographer’s paradise.  This is the smallest bit – the Grand Canyon of the Yellowstone will astound you, all the other regions with thermal features will knock your socks off, and if none of that does it, try the bison!  I had never been impressed with bison – the ungainly, strange creatures.  I am now.  They are bizarre and magnificent and all over the place.  A terrific experience awaits the visitor.


A Mini-photo Lesson: Reminders about Snapshots


2009
11.03


Today my husband and I took a drive – we have a cabin in Alta Sierra, and on the way there, at Greenhorn summit, a turn to the south will take you to Rancheria Road and Shirley Meadows.  A turn to the north will take you – where?  We didn’t know and I wanted to know.  I also wanted to see if there were any fall colors to be seen, but we had to do this before the first snow, when the road would close.

This was not a trip for great photography.  This was a snapshot trip.  The purpose of this blog – or one of the purposes – is to help people take better photographs; in other words, how can you make your snapshots more interesting?  So today I took a few snaps and put together some reminders of dos and don’ts and difficulties.

Stay alert, have your camera handy, and take photos from the car

buck rs

Look what was on the side of the road.  We pulled over quickly, I grabbed the camera (I was driving and my husband was keeping the camera in his lap) and took the photo through the windshield.  I could see this guy was headed across the street so if I wanted a photo, it had to be fast.  I see lots of deer on this road but very few bucks.

Why does the deer cross the road?

baby buck rs

To get to Baby Buck, of course.  This guy is cute!  The photo is a little dark – I could correct it on photoshop – but I couldn’t arrange lighting.  Baby Buck was there for a brief flash and I thought I did pretty well, considering.

Be wary of overused subject matter unless you have a reason for it

wierd tree rs

I hate to inject something akin to snobbery, but the photo up through the Sequoias, or up through the top of the palm tree, is so overdone that it isn’t even interesting to me if I take it.  But this tree was interesting and I had a reason to take this picture.  It’s a pine tree – but what a strange pine tree!  That was it – no lower branches at all.  There was a plaque on the tree near the bottom and if SP means sugar pine, that’s what this is.  It seemed to be a protected tree of some sort out in the middle of the Sequoia National Forest.  Even though I couldn’t get the entire tree in the frame for size, you can tell it’s a pretty tall tree.  Which brings us to…

Remember to use something to show scale or perspective

fuzzy plant rs

This photo looks fuzzy, doesn’t it?  That’s because it’s a fuzzy plant.  I think there’s a plant called Lamb’s Ear that is soft and fuzzy but if this is it, didn’t know it grew in the forest.  I took this close up to show the fuzziness but took another to show some scale.

fuzzy plant 2 rs

It’s just a baby plant, or a small plant at any rate.  You can pretty clearly see that those are pine needles around the plant, so we see that it’s a small little fuzzy plant, not a giant cabbage-sized plant.

Why does the tarantula cross the road?  I don’t know, but it must have been Tarantula Time because we saw three of four crossing the road.  We stopped, but the little buggers didn’t cross at convenient places so I had to be fast fast fast in case a car came.

tarantula small rs

So fuzzy-wuzzy here is a small sort of spider.  He doesn’t look very menacing in this photo, does he?  But a close-up gave some good detail.  If I’d skipped the long shot I could have made him the Giant Spider from Space or something.

tarantula big rs

Lighting can be a problem

Beware the forest!  Have you ever noticed how impossible it is to take good snapshots where there are dramatic contrasts of light and dark?  Look at the Lamb’s Ear photos above – bright bright bright!  Although it truly was a very pale green.

tiger flat rs
After driving for about 6 miles – a very slow, long six miles on a dirt road, sometimes washboard, sometimes with rocks and pits, we got to a place called Tiger Flat.  We decided to have lunch here.  It was beautiful!  I’m in this picture.  But the sky was so blue and the sun so bright and the shadows so dominant, that there was too much contrast to take anything representative of the area.  In this case, there wasn’t much that could have been done aside from coming back at a different time (yep, we were there early afternoon, harsh light).  I can’t really show this to anyone and expect them to say, “Wow, what a neat place.”

meadow rs

This was beautiful and you can tell.  There are some fall colors in the background.  But there is also giant glare from the sun on the lens. (My hood broke and I haven’t got another yet. I’m waiting b/c I’m getting a new camera.)  So lesson:  watch out for the contrast between shade and sun, and have a hood for your lens.  If you get a really big one it’ll look impressive and people will have lens envy.  This is only if you have a 35 mm SLR – with a point-and-shoot you don’t need a hood.

Notice details and take pictures

log rs

This log in the meadow was interesting so I took a close-up of the broken part.  I didn’t get the texture I had hoped for, but it’s digital, so it doesn’t matter.  I can delete it, tinker with it in photoshop, or maybe use it in a collage. The point is, take the picture and then if you don’t like it, delete it.

Look closely at the little things.  This thistle still has hints of the purple color it once was.

thistle rs

I use my telephoto as a macro lens sometimes by stepping back from the subject and then focusing in closely.  That’s why the background is blurred.  But isn’t this pretty?  I love the delicate hints of color.

Then the fluff intrigued me.

thistle 2 rs

thistle 3 rs

I think I’m going to print these three thistles and put them in the same frame as a triptych.  In a muted frame I think they will be delicate and eye-catching.  I’ll put the bottom one on the left because it will draw your eye into the triptych, the delicately-colored one in the center as the focus, and the other on the right to balance out the first one.

pine detail rs

Now this is cool.  This was like a spruce tree?  The really pretty Christmas trees?  Maybe they are firs.  But it sure didn’t belong here – it’s the only tree like this I’ve ever seen in the forest.  The sun was in my favor this time, because it gives the branches a snowy appearance.  They were really a delicate green.  But I like them like this and I’m keeping it.

Lastly,

Even unlikely subjects can make interesting photos

Road signs anyone?  Signs can be interesting.  And, um, unusual.  Someone added an interesting detail to this beat up, bullet-hole riddled sign.  It certainly caught our attention.

penis sign rs

It was a fun drive overall.  We found out that road came out in Sugarloaf, went down through Posey, and we could take Jack Ranch Rd. over to Glenville and back home from there.


This and That: Thinking of the Holidays, BakoArtistConnect, and New Photos


2009
11.01


eHow:  How to Give a Chanukah party and establish a holiday tradition

It’s just November 1, you say.  Why think about the holidays?  Because they are almost here!  I thought I’d share two eHow articles with you – How to Throw a Chanukah Party (which you can do even if you aren’t Jewish), and one that I awkwardly called How to Make an Instant Holiday Tradition Treasure Hunt, or something incomprehensible like that.   Have to get words in the title that eHow will accept and that are searchable.  If I called the article, How to Make Potato Boats (which is what we call them), who knows who would find it – boat builders?  People looking for science projects?

We’ve been celebrating Chanukah with Wendy Wayne and Gene Tackett for – could it be – 20 years?  There are small photos with the article but I’ll put the bigger ones here.

candles one

We all take turns lighting candles.  Karen is holding Annabelle, who is now in kindergarten!

candles two

I’m not going to be writing details here because if you’re interested in having a Chanukah party, you can read the eHow where I have everything explained in detail.   By the way, Sophie, who is lighting the candle, is in 7th grade now!

dreidle one

The kids always enjoy playing dreidle.  Big kids too.

reading one

Everyone participates in reading the short service.  This too is discussed in the article.

reading two

And it all ends with dinner and potato latkes!  Yum.  We love latkes.  Lots of latkes.

latkes

You can connect to other eHow articles on the gadget to the left.

The potato boat tradition?  All I can say is don’t even do this unless you are willing to do it year after year after year after…it’s quite popular.  And time consuming.  And fun.

Burn the Witch closes

Burn the Witch IV closed today.  It was a fabulous show and Nyoka did a terrific job curating.  I sold one piece.Carry Me Home

It’s one of my favorites but it’s going to a good home.

BAC – BacoArtistConnect

Terry Telford has a terrific blog.  I’m going to put a link on the links section to the left.  If you want to know ANYTHING about what is happening in Bakersfield, Terry has it.  There is no excuse AT ALL to say “there’s nothing to do” in Bakersfield.  We have a thriving art and restaurant scene (yes, we do) and Terry lays it all out for you.

New photos

There are new photos posted on my web site.  You can find them in the animal gallery, the people gallery, the nature gallery, and the miscellaneous gallery. Just click through – the new photos are at the end.  Oh, the flower gallery also.

Coming soon:  neat photos of Yellowstone.