Category Archives: Diversions

The stuff that didn’t fit elsewhere.

I made a little silhouetto of a duck

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The second 52Frames assignment was Silhouette. I had an idea of what I wanted to do, but I wasn’t sure exactly how to achieve it so I took a couple of Pete’s action figures outside to play around with the camera and try to figure out what I was doing. The Yoda picture above the post title turned out wildly out of focus, but I liked it anyway. He’s so mighty and dignified for such a little guy.

The first picture I took was of my old standby model, Marsha T. Cat. She was sitting in the window and the light was coming in just-so. It was an opportunistic moment that wasn’t quite what I wanted it to be. Later, at the playground, the swingset seemed like a good place to nab a silhouette photo. The large tree and the power lines made the background a little too busy, though.

After goofing around for a few days with no guidance, I decided to do some technique research. I found a few good, helpful articles on capturing silhouettes:

  • Photography.tutsplus.com’s “Simple Steps for Shooting Amazing Silhouettes” shares some good example photos along with relevant details about their camera settings.
  • I love the colors and sharpness in Kristen Duke’s work at “How to Shoot a Great Silhouette.”
  • Digital Photography School has some helpful tips about going manual or auto at “How to Photograph Silhouettes in 8 Easy Steps.”
  • Even with those tips, though, I couldn’t get the contrast as sharp as I wanted it to be. The “extra credit” option for this week was to do the picture using only artificial light, and it occurred to me when Pete was playing “Disney Infinity” that I might be able to use the light from the TV to capture his silhouette. Alas, he is very wiggly and our TV is on the small side and so that plan didn’t work out so well. It did, however, lead me to the idea to use light from my laptop.

    I’ve seen lots of beautiful, sunset-backed silhouette pictures, and they made me want something bright and colorful as backdrop. I looked through some of Paul Gauguin’s Tahiti paintings and eventually picked “Les Montagnes Tahitiennes.” I posed one of Pete’s “Infinity” characters in front of it — it should be pretty clear which one it was — and viola! “L’Art de Canard et ‘Les Montagnes’ ” was born.

    52Frames week 2: Silhouette. "L’Art de Canard avec ’Les Montagnes’ "
    52Frames week 2: Silhouette.
    “L’Art de Canard avec ‘Les Montagnes’ “

    My eldest nephew got a new camera for Christmas, and he’s going to be taking a photography class this semester. He isn’t officially participating in the 52Frames challenge, but he’s going to try out a couple of the assignments along the way. Here’s his take on the silhouette:

    IMG_0009

    A new picture for a new project in the new year

    Projects I Have Started
  • The Photo-a-Day Project.
  • The presidential biographies project.
  • The 52 Dates project.
  • The terribly tardy bakers challenge.
  • The 100 books project.
    Projects Still In Progress
  • The presidential-bio one.
  • Projects I Have Completed
  • I could let that 0% success rate get me down. Instead, I’m just going to start another new project!

    I haven’t been using my camera all that much recently, and I’ve been looking for something to push me to change that. I’d also like to shake the weird, shy feeling that I get sometimes when I use my “real” camera rather than my phone’s camera. I’m hopeful that 52Frames will help on both fronts.

    52Frames is a community of experienced and aspiring photographers, all working from a new theme each week. I think there’s constructive criticism and feedback involved, which is always a little scary.

    The first week’s assignment was to take a self-portrait. We had a fire pit in the back yard on New Year’s Eve, and I liked the light and the shadows that were coming off of it. I tried to take a picture of myself there, but I hadn’t set up a tripod and my arms weren’t quite long enough to capture what I wanted with the lens I was using. I could’ve switched to my other lens — I have an 18-55mm and a 55mm, and I was using the 55 — but I was sick and didn’t feel like moving a whole lot. So I took one of the pictures that didn’t work so well and smashed it up with a picture of some Christmas lights I’d taken the same evening. And here’s the result:

    52.1: Self-portrait
    52.1: Self-portrait

    One of my goals for the future is not to rely too heavily on Photoshop. I went with this composite, though, because I tend to try to hide or fade into the background and I thought this reflected that impulse pretty well.

    I’m planning to share each week’s photo with you here, so feel free to goad me about it if I stop. Are you embarking on any new projects for 2015?

    I pretty much liked “The Book of Life”

    Deborah Harkness' "The Book of Life"I read Deborah Harkness’ “A Discovery of Witches” way back in 2011, for the BlogHer book club. It was a pretty weird book about vampires, witches, demons (spelled “daemons,” which irrationally annoyed me) and historical documents, and I loved it.

    I was excited when I learned that it was the first book in a planned trilogy, so I read the follow-up, “Shadow of Night,” as soon as it came out. I picked the final book, “The Book of Life,” up this week when I spotted it on the shelf at the library. “The Book of Life” came out in July, which is indicative of how much I enjoyed the second book. (Spoiler: Not very much.)

    “The Book of Life” was a very slow-starter, but the action picked up about halfway through. Once it finally took off, I enjoyed it enough to delay making dinner and then stay up far, far too late reading it. And then today I let the kids have extra computer time so I could finish.

    “The Book of Life” is a pretty weird book about vampires, witches, demons (still spelled “daemons,” which still irrationally annoys me and also there weren’t enough of them in this book), historical documents and genetics, and I mostly liked it. It was a satisfying conclusion to the trilogy, but but I found the romantic/obsessive bits wandering a little far into “Twilight” territory for my liking.