ku / landscape / coronavirus life # 3558-60 ~ out and about

the wife / social distancing ~ (embiggenable) • iPhone

social distancing / Asgaard Farm ~ Au Sable Forks, NY (embiggenable) • iPhone

river rocks ~ Au Sable River / West Branch (embiggenable) • iPhone

blog note: SINCE I MISTAKENLY DELETED MY LAST ENTRY, I'll mention again that there is a new gallery, CORONAVIRUS LIFE, on my WORK page.

ALSO WORTH A MENTION IS THE FACT that I have made a photo book with the pictures in the CORONAVIRUS LIFE gallery. The original intention was to make the book on Shutterfly, which I did, but when I put it in my checkout cart, the discounted price for 8x8", 38 page book was over $100USD. Admittedly, the book had a number of "premium" add-ons such 6-color printing, lay-flat pages, matte cover and the deletion of the Shutterfly logo page but...at that price, I decided to wait for one of their 50% off everything sales, which, btw, come along quite frequently.

In any event, I still wanted a photo book so went to PARABO.PRESS and set up a similar book-8x8" with 38 pages and a soft cover-which priced out at $18USD. So, I ordered 2.

FYI, without actually counting, I have about 12 8x8" photo books + about 10 5x5" photo books from PARABO. Those books are all soft cover and the pages are a heavy-weight matte paper. The print quality is quite good and I especially like the matte paper look for my "snapshot" pictures.

One of these days, if enough of you out there are interested, I will do an entry in which I give away all of photo book making "secrets".

civilized ku # 3554-55 ~ just doin' it

Vermont across Lake Champlain ~ near where I live (embiggenable) • iPhone

running errands ~ Plattsburgh, NY. (embiggenable) • iPhone

ONE OF THE PHOTO BLOGS / SITES I VISIT EVERY DAY, even though on most days it features Academic Lunatic Fringe photography, is LENSCRATCH. However, every once and awhile it features that which might be labeled as straight photography. Today's featured work is one such occasion.

It is no secret that I believe that amateur snapshots might just be at the top of the heap, re: what the medium of photography and its apparatus is capable of achieving. That is, pure and honest, un-affected seeing. And, the work featured on LENSCRATCH today is a perfect example of such.

Two items in the LENSCRATCH entry caught my attention: first was the comment by the site's founder / editor, Aline Smithson, which stated:

...There is a glorious authenticity to the photographs...

That statement fairly concisely sums up my feeling about snapshots. Which is precisely the reason I could be labeled as a casual collector of snapshots.

The second item that captured my attention was a statement by the snapshot maker:

I began scanning the negatives, cleaning them up, and making archival digital prints. I was flooded with memories, but more importantly, to my surprise, I found that they show a remarkable consistency of vision as a body of work .... The images provide clues to how I looked at the world as a child. I realize there are many similarities to how I view the world today.

The reason that statement struck a chord with me is that I can write, without any doubt, that if I were to put together a random assortment of my personal "fine art" work, which included a couple prints made during the first 6 months of my picture making, no one would, if challenged to do so, be able to identify those pictures as much older examples of my work.

I believe that to be true because I see the world and picture it today in exactly the same manner I did back then (c. 1968). That is, I simply make pictures of what I see. Not, as Brook Jensen has written, of what I have been told is a good picture.

I did not pickup a camera until during my 18th year on the planet. Prior to that time I had no paricualar interest in making or viewing photographs (other than as seen in general interest magazines or other publications). I was mercifully free of any knowledge of or expections to conform to conventional picture making norms. My M.O. was, literally, have camera, see something, don't think, just point and shoot. Which is exactly how I make pictures today.

To be a bit more precise, that M.O. is baked into my seeing-and always has been-and picture making pysche. I picture by "feel". That is, I see something that picks my eye, point my picture making device and "organize" the visual elements of that something within the frame I impose on my chosen segnment of the world in a manner that just "feels" right to my eye and sensibilities.

That M.O., from picture making day one, is what earned me the position to be a full-time photographer-in the US Army without any training-within 6 months of picking up a camera. It earned me a career of making advertising / marketing pictures for Fortune 500 corporations (and others) and editorial pictures for magazines and professional publications. And, throughout my life (especially the past 20 years), making personal "fine art" pictures which have been accepted / exhibited in group gallery shows (many worldwide "competitions") and in at least 10 solo gallery exhibitions.

All of that written, here's the thing ... I am fortunate to have been "given" what seems to me to be a preternatural "gift" for "seeing". A "gift" that I can't really explain. It just is. Consequently, I can, as the NIKE slogan states, just do it.

the big secret hiding in plain sight

original RGB file ~ (embiggenable) • iPhone

grayscale file after RGB > LAB conversion ~ (embiggenable) • iPhone

TO USE A LANGE-ISM, RELATIVE TO THE, dare I say, "nonsense" being spewed out on T.O.P.* regarding the conversion of RGB color files to BW, aka Grayscale...

"He doesn't know whether to cry or wind his watch."

Mike Lange, a NHL Hall of Fame broadcaster, used that phrase when a goaltender had been so badly beaten by a goal scorer than he did not know whether to be discouraged or indifferent to the situation. Which is exactly how I feel about the bald-faced ignorance*, regarding converting color to BW in the digital domain.

I am willing to admit that I may being way to judgemental using the word "ignorance" but ....

.....Photoshop has a reasonably niffty tool-IMAGE > ADJUSTMENTS > BLACK & WHITE-for color > BW conversion. It does not require a degree in Rocket Science to use - it's a set of sliders, the use of which is immediately visible on screen. Pretty much the textbook definition of WYSWIG. I sometimes use it when I want a BW picture. And, FYI, after using it, I often do a bit of localized fine tuning with CURVES. HOWEVER .....

.....if what one wishes is 100% tonal value accurate conversion from color to BW, there is only one method I know of and it is as simple as it gets. And, it is hiding in plain sight in Photoshop under the name LAB Color - IMAGE > MODE > Lab Color.

I will not even begin to explain exactly what LAB color space is other than to write that it is very different than RGB color space. Consequently, very few digital domain picture makers have taken the steps to understand how to use it, aka: the "ignorance" I mentioned. Nevertheless, for use as a BW conversion tool, there ain't a lot to understand.

The key thing here is to know that, when a file is converted to LAB color, you end up 3 channels - L (Lightness channel), A (magenta / green channel) and B (blue / yellow channel). It is the L channel where the "magic" happens inasmuch as the Lightness channel contains only the tonal values of the image absolutely and completely independent of color values. Drag the A and B channels to the trash and you are left with an Alpha 1 channel which can then be converted to Grayscale and voila, there you have a "perfect" BW conversion from a color image file.

CAVEAT When I write "perfect", it may not be perfect for how you might want the picture to look. However, while still in LAB color space and before converting to Grayscale, you can use the CURVE tool to make adjustments to the file. There are other methods to use to get the look you want but this ain't no online workshop.

Addendum I use LAB Color space for most of my global color processing / corrections. It's the best way to do so inasmuch as, like the L channel, the A and B color channel contain only color information absolutely and completely independent of tonal information/ values. Also, as I have mentioned previously, I do all of my sharpening in LAB because when a high amount of sharpening is called for, you can apply much higher values of sharpening without getting the halo-artifact effect you would get when the same amount is applied in RGB color space.

* re: nonsense / bald-faced ignorance - hyperbole in action. I realize that, as is usually the case on T.O.P., it's just people trying to help out other people along the picture making road. Nevertheless, I do stand somewhat, but obviously not completely, dumbstruck with the fact that so few picture makers understand LAB color space as the very powerful processing tool that it is.

civilized ku # 3548-51 ~ making the best of it

napping ~ (embigggenable) • iPhone

listening ~ (embiggenable) • iPhone

social distancing ~ (embiggenable) • iPhone

olympic ski jumps ~ (embiggenable) • iPhone

THERE IS NO SUCH THING AS A "TYPICAL" Sunday afternoon during life during wartime. Although, with the wife way more busy than normal-she's an expert on labor / employment law and is now helping / advising county goverment, school districts and private enterprise navigate the emerging rules, regulations and programs during life during wartime-Sunday is a well-earned day of rest for her. This Sunday past was a gloomy and rainy day although the temperature was relatively mild.

The wife took a mid-afernoon nap while I listened to a superb digitally re-mastered version of Paul Simon's Graceland album. I purchased the re-master after learning of the recent death of Bhekizizwe Joseph Siphatimandla Mxoveni Mshengu Bigboy Shabalala, the founder of Ladysmith Black Mambazo, the group who accompanied Simon on 2 songs on the album. It was on this album I "discovered" LsBM and later went on to twice hear/see them in concert and aquire a number of their albums.

The listening session was energizing and invigorating so, after the wife arose and went out on her afternoon walk about, I decided to get in the Abarth for a soft top-open drive about my "neighborhood" in the light rain. CAVEAT FYI, when the Abarth is at speed in a light rain with the soft-top open, the aerodynamics of the vehicle prevent the rain from falling into the car. END OF CAVEAT

The buffeting fresh air together with a couple stretches of rather vigorous driving through some very twisty bits + a restful stop on a small lake made for a very relaxing drive about. It was a good day, for all concerned, to be alive (and not infected). Hope all is well with all of you out there.

civilized ku # 3535-37 + an oldie but a goodie ~ a once in a lifetime challenge

Au Sable Forks, NY ~ (embiggenable) • iPhone

(embiggenable) • iPhone

(embiggenable) • iPhone

I CONTINUE TO STRUGGLE WITH THE IDEA OF making pictures which illustrate life during wartime. I've made the mandatory tp picture as well as the empty street picture. Although, to date, I have resisted making the closed-sign-on-a-business door picture. And, unless I get in a car and drive a couple hundred miles, there are no hospitals with large tent compounds with lines of people waiting to get in so that's not a picturing possibility.

To a very significant extent, my struggle is compounded by the fact that, as is illustrated by the picture of the budding maple tree in this entry, when the wife and I sit in our upstairs porch-nearly every evening-and look out at the view, the world outside of our sanctuary looks the same as it ever was. Which makes it somewhat difficult to grasp the fact that, while our little patch of the planet is springing (a sorta pun) back to life, the reality is that the world at large is experiencing death and disruption.

That written, I believe the reason I am struggling with this is actually rather simple....during my 30+ years as a commercial picture maker, I was considered to be a picture maker who could come with creative picture solutions for clients needs. That was especially so for those magazines who gave me open-ended assignments to illustrate editorial stories, articles and magazine covers. It was left entirely up to me to decide what to do, picture making wise, and I never, not once, failed to deliver*.

So, it is making me a little bit crazy that, if a client were to come to me today and ask me to make a picture (or pictures) that illustrate what life during wartime is like, I might be stumped. Maybe I just gotta think about more.

*FYI, there was one assignment for a magazine cover to illustrate the lead article about gangs. Gangs in the manner of Crips and Bloods. So my teenage son found me an actual gang member-I didn't ask how-and proceeded to make the picture seen here. The art director loved it. The writer loved it. Everybody loved it. Except ... when cover was on the printing press, the magazine editor saw it and pulled the plug. The picture was never published and I believed I was screwed out of yet another Golden Quill Award.

gangster.jpg

civilized ku # 3531 (the new snapshot) ~ back in time (sorta)

(embiggenable) • iPhone

A REQUEST FROM JONATHAN WEBER read (in part)....

....I would love to know the Photoshop process you use for framing your iPhone photographs as "family Snapshots" complete with date.

my response: my process started with a hires scan of an existing snapshot-grandma and grandpa, mother's side-from one of my passed-down-to-me family albums. Although, any original snapshot would do. Keep in mind that there are a wide variety of vintage snapshot shapes and borders which is why I have several different master files to cover different shapes and border styles I might want to use.

After making the scan, I added 4 additional layers to the file. One was a type layer for the date. The other 3 layers (all set to Multiply) are "dirt" and "scratches" - one for the border dirt, one for scratches over the picture area and another for grain over the picture area. I put the dirt and scratches on layers so that their blending transparency can be modified according the picture being converted to a snapshot.

FYI, the original scan base layer has a shadow I added to give the final piece a bit of a dimentional look. The master file also has guides-which conform to the original image size-that I use to place and size the picture I am converting.

Once you have a master file, it's a simple matter to drag / copy and paste a picture into the master file-placed directly above the background layer-and then position and size it. TIP: I always size the edges of my picture just outside of the the guides. Then, with the Rectangular Marquee tool (0 Feather), and the guides set to SNAP or SNAP TO / Guides, I drag the tool from top corner to opposing bottom corner of the guides, select inverse and hit delete. This procedure gives the picture a sharp and repeatable edge.

After the picture has been placed and sized, I perform-on the picture layer only-some image processing to give it a somewhat vintage look. Then type in the date and drag the date layer where I want it to be (always different cuz that's how original snapshots came back from the drugstore).

None of this is rocket science. A bit of just messing around with Photoshop should get you to where you want to go.

PS I use this same procedure for pictures made with my "real" cameras, not just for iPhone pictures.

ku(ish) # 1461-64 ~ a travelogue of sorts

(embiggenable) • µ4/3

Lake Harris Lodge ~ (embibbenable) • iPhone

Lake Harris Lodge backyard / frozen Lake Harris ~ (embiggenable) • iPhone

WENT ON A SUNDAY DRIVE ON WAY TO BRUNCH WITH friends-a group of 10-in a new restaurant (in a brand new structure) across the road at the foot of the Rist Camp driveway.

Given that the place had only recently opened-after 4 years in the building-we were unsure of what to expect, customer wise. The place is not in a high volume tourist area (a massive understatement), especially not during the winter. So, we were very surprised by the fact that the place was packed ... with a non-stop flow of customer turnover.

The big surprise was the manner(s) on/in which the customers got to the place. The parking lot was full of vehicles and the backyard was full of snowmobiles. Over the course of our stay, we witnessed about 80 snowmobiles come and go. Then, there were the customers who arrived by plane. 10 planes-not all visible in picture-were parked on frozen Lake Harris. Apparently, the word has spread that Lake Harris Lodge is the place to be.

We are friends with owner and have followed his 5-6 years of perseverance and dedication to geting this place built and open. He did most of the construction on his own. People thought he was crazy to build this in this location. So, it's delightful for us to see that, after just a couple months and with an excellent chef / great menu, it appears he has created a true destination restaurant.

FYI, the place appears to be empty in the above pictures. However, that is due to the fact that I made the pictures after the place was closed.

adirondack views # 1-8 ~ a sense of where I live

Raquette River ~ (embiggenable) • iPhone

Algonquin Mt. / sunset / -10F ~ (embiggenable) • Pentax 110 SLR / Kodacolor negative film

Algonquin Mt. / sunrise/ -15F ~ (embiggenable) • Pentax 110 SLR / Kodacolor negative film

Raquette Lake ~ (embiggenable) • µ4/3

Elk Lake ~ (embiggenable) • iPhone

my hometown ~ (embiggenable) • µ4/3

the flume ~ West Branch Au Sable River (embiggenable) • µ4/3

horse farm ~ (embiggenable) • µ4/3

KINDA THOUGHT IT WAS TIME TO POST some of my landscape pictures, lest anyone think that I only make pictures of my kitchen sink.

Over the past 20 years of living in the Adirondack Park-it's actually not a park but rather a forest preserve-I have certainly made quite a number of landscape pictures of the place. However, it would be misleading to write that I have concentrated on doing so. Haphazard is more like it and the reason for that is simply that there are more than enough other picture makers who are quite devoted to making Adirondack landscape pictures. Pictures that, for the most part, I would label as "calender" quality pictures.

Nevertheless, I do live in an amazing place....

The Adirondack "Park"-6 million + acres) is larger than the state of Vermont. Approximately half of the park is state owned and, with exception of the 120 towns, villages and hamlets (120,000 residents), most of the park is protected by an Article in the NYS Constitution as Forever Wild.

Within the park there are 3,000 lakes and ponds, 30,000 miles of rivers and streams, 2,000 miles of hiking trails and hundreds of rolling hills and mountains-46 of which are over 4,000 ft (clustered in the High Peaks Region near Lake Placid). And, it's worth mentioning that Lake Placid has hosted 2 Olympic Winter Games, 1932 / 1980.

It's also with mentioning that the 1980 Olympic facilities are still in use for World Cup events, most prominently, the Bobsled / Luge / Skeleton track. A track on which I have won 2 Silver Medals in amateur Regional Luge competition.

... and I probably should get out more for the expressed purpose of making landscape pictures.

(embiggenable) • µ4/3

Although, the wife and I and occasionally Hugo (seen here at age 5 during one of his first self-propelled wilderness canoe trips), do get out onto wilderness waterways in our canoes for extended stays. After all, we do live in a giant outdoor playground.