Freedom from Alaska!

Category: Photography Page 5 of 6

Blading

From: photoxels…

KEVIN DOWLING WINS GRAND PRIZE IN THE OLYMPUS PEN YOUR STORY CHALLENGE

Contestant’s Winning Creation Shot with the Olympus PEN E-PL1 to be Highlighted at U.S. Open National Tennis Championships

CENTER VALLEY, Pa., August 18, 2010 – Olympus announces that Kevin Dowling’s skating documentary video “Blading” is the Grand Prize Winner* of the PEN your story challenge. In May, Olympus asked the public to propose what they would do with the Olympus PEN® E-PL1 portable camera featuring digital single lens reflex (DSLR) image quality, point-and-shoot simplicity and high-definition (HD) video and $5,000 to bring their creative visions to life. Their videos demonstrate the amazing works of art that are possible with the powerfully simple PEN.

Kevin will receive an all-expense-paid trip for two to New York City to attend the Olympus-sponsored US Open National Tennis Championships. There, a sample of his video will be displayed on the giant video board in the famed Arthur Ashe Stadium before an audience of thousands.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HHD_Lsu2Tjs]Blading

kevindowling | August 02, 2010

Thank you to everyone who supported this project. It was truly a team effort and everyone should be very proud today!

Camera Scanning: It’s possible to make excellent digitizations of film and print originals using a digital camera

This should also work well for scanning art.

From: dpbestflow

Digital cameras can be used to create high quality scans of film or print originals that can offer rapid throughput at a reasonable cost, provided that a good digital camera is available. This page outlines the considerations for setting up and operating a camera scanning system.

With some special hardware, along with some proper techniques, it’s possible to make excellent digitizations of film and print originals using a digital camera. The camera’s sensor provides excellent resolution for the scan, even as compared to dedicated film scanners such as Imacon. A DSLR’s built in anti-moire filter also helps in minimizing the appearence of dust and minor scratches present on the media being scanned.

You can compare the relative quality of a file made with an Imacon film scanner and a file made with a Canon 1Ds MkII.

Entire Article Here

CHEMTRAILS — Weatherman Admits Military Spraying Chemicals In The Sky

“Now, they won’t confirm that, but I was in the Marine Corp for many years, and I’ll tell you right now, that’s what it is.”

– Kevin Lollis, News 10 KTVL, Medford, Oregon
Transcribed by Jeff Fenske

From: noonehastodietomorrow

At approx. 1 min into the video, the weather man points out “a bit of an unusual situation” and he describes “bands of very distinct cloud cover” in the region.  He reveals those bands are not rain or snow on the radar, but offers a simple explanation; its military aircraft (Oh!) “dropping chaff – small bits of aluminum, sometimes its made of plastic or even metalized paper products.”  He goes on to stay that its used for “anti-radar” and that the military is “up there practicing” and although they would not confirm that- HE knows because he was in the Marine Corps for many years, and “that’s what it is”.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9Yl0Dc9EGZE]CHEMTRAILS – Weatherman Admits Military Spraying Chemicals In The Sky

Goethe: “In art the best is good enough”

“In art,
the best is good enough.”

– Johann Wolfgang von Goethe

G. Edward Griffin Talks Candidly About Chemtrails

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rsWpSPBwA-w]G. Edward Griffin Talks Candidly About Chemtrails/SAG

Related:

[Official Trailer] G. Edward Griffin’s “What in the World are They Spraying?”

German Mainstream Media: Military Exposed Spraying Chemtrails

Slow Motion Hummingbirds 5

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y0ebGWce4FY]Slow Motion Hummingbirds 5 Canon HD+High Speed Casio EX-F1

A montage of HD and high speed footage showing these fascinating little birds from 1/4 to 1/40 actual (realtime) speed.

Cameras placed in a number of different angles give some new perspectives, and a top-down angle shows the bird lapping-up the nectar with what appears to be a forked tongue! Who knew? 🙂

Some great chases and flying scenes round out this video.

HD semi-slow-motion (1/4 realtime) video shot with a Canon HF100, Slow motion (1/10 – 1/40 realtime) lower res footage shot with a Casio EX-F1.

The soundtrack features new music “TimeWarp” from Technician.

Enjoy the show!
‘————————————— ———————
Notes about the wing movements shown:

As it turns out, the first half of this video, which was shot with a Canon HF100 HD camcorder and high-speed shutter, makes it LOOK like the wings are sometimes beating alternately, but that is in fact an effect of the CMOS scan and shutter.

The last half of this video (from 1:33 on) was filmed with a Casio EX-F1 high speed/slow motion camera, and shows the wing movement more accurately – they do indeed beat in parallel rather than alternately. 🙂

Slow motion Bee in flight (UltraSlo HD)

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2z9F6pVhR5o]Slow motion Bee in flight (UltraSlo HD)

The large bee is @ 3000 FPS and the small ones are @ 7000 FPS slow motion. GOOD NEWS NOW YOU CAN DOWNLOAD MOST OF YOUR FAVORATE ULTRASLO CLIPS ON YOUTUBE. Don’t forget we read comments, appreciate ratings, welcome subscribers, and encourage sharing of our channel. Please pass the channel to your friends and post links on sharing sites. Thank you and enjoy

Aurora Hunting DVD!

From: AuroraHunter

Go on an Aurora Hunt with Todd & Shat Salat

Todd & Shay Salat have teamed up to produce a one-of-a-kind DVD on Aurora Hunting in the Great Land known as Alaska.  Enjoy 48 minutes of pure entertainment that begins with a music video intro showcasing Todd’s pioneering work on filming the Auroras in Motion! This is followed by an aurora science segment highlighting cool, animated NASA graphics, campfire chats, and techniques on when, where and how to predict the aurora.  The final 1/2-hour is reality TV in the making as Todd & Shay journey 800 miles on an Aurora Hunting adventure from their cabin in Hatcher Pass to the top of Alaska, Prudhoe Bay/Deadhorse.  The Dalton Highway, aka the “Haul Road” is calling.  Come join the ride! Read a review from the Wrangell St. Ellias News.

See cover and buy DVD here.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rJ1KfFszOjo]Alaska Aurora Hunting DVD Trailer

Photographer Ken Duncan: Christmas in Australia — “It’s the season for forgiving”

From: Ken Duncan

An Australian Christmas is unique. We don’t hibernate indoors, and we don’t need to endure snow and freezing conditions. We celebrate with sunshine, fun, parties and BBQs out in the beautiful warm weather!

This year, I thought I would celebrate our special brand of Christmas by recording a fun Aussie Christmas carol of my own, called Christmas in Australia. Don’t worry, I’m not giving up my day job as a photographer – but you’ve got to have some fun!

I hope you enjoy this Christmas message as much as I enjoyed creating it for you – and please feel free to send this Aussie cheer to family and friends everywhere!

From all of us here at the Ken Duncan Group, we wish you a safe and happy Christmas and a prosperous New Year.

Watch Here in HD

Photographer Nancy Rotenberg: “What happened to the light we had as small children when we were filled with awe and excitement?”

I was incredibly blessed to be able to take a class with Nancy this summer!

Related post at my personal blog: Self-Portrait: “Bridge to Somewhere”

…………………….

NORTH AMERICAN NATURE PHOTOGRAPHY ASSOCIATION

PHOTOGRAPHY AND THE CREATIVE LIFE with Nancy Rotenberg
.

NancyRotenberg

.
“I hope you never lose your sense of wonder
You get your fill but always keep that hunger
And when you get the choice
to sit it out or dance
I hope you dance…I hope you dance.”

— Mark D. Sanders and Tia Sillers

“In most men,” wrote Augustin de Saint Beuve,” there is a dead poet whom the man survives.” Why does the poet die so young? Why are so many men and women limping along the trail of life, the doors to their hearts tightly bolted? What happened to the light we had as small children when we were filled with awe and excitement? Where or when did we learn that original thinking is wrong? At what point did we begin to follow the path of others’ perceptions of who we should be? How do you want to travel on the journey that is your one precious life? How do you get home to your one authentic self?

We can’t always find the answers to these questions but we can cultivate a way of living that celebrates uniqueness and we can travel deeper into our seeing. As we journey, we can develop a quality of mind that not only enriches the creative process in art, but results in a return to our true souls and to a more imaginative, richer state of being.

THE DRAGONS:

There are dragons that roam the wilderness of creative quests. If left to run amok, they can inhibit the most determined artist. The creative process transforms you, the artist, into a creative warrior – arming you to slay the dragons or at least keep them at bay.

The first step is to develop the courage to venture into the unknown, to climb into the mode of exploration – of subject and light, of assumed boundaries of photography and on paths that travel beyond personal horizons.

The dragons that plague the creative process appeal to the part of your mind that deals with product and ego. The way to combat these dragons and to discover images that grow from your heart and soul is not by searching in the drawers of your mind.

Prevailing mythology has it that creativity is a gift of some sort, but really it is a state of being – a quality of mind available to all. In a creative mind, the world is unique, has beauty, and is filled with potential. Creativity is an attitude. Creativity is like being in love – with life and with yourself. Creativity doesn’t have a simple definition, but we know that it is an ongoing process and it is about the search to discover the place where truth, beauty and fire live.

Joseph Campbell said, “If the path before you is clear, you’re probably on someone else’s.” Campbell knew that we don’t always know where we’re going or what the path will look like, but on the photographic path, the creative warrior knows photographic technique, owns great optics and good tripods, but that is not where they stop. On this path, craft is fine and necessary, but this is a search for transcending technical knowledge and is the quest for imagination and love.

[…]

DARE TO BE IDLE:

Learn to slow down and dare to be idle. We live in a culture that looks at idleness as something slovenly, lazy, and non-productive. It is only when you stop and reflect, that you can be filled and recharged. What you photograph today will be the result of yesterday’s “idling.”

[…]

To be on a creative path, we must work at ridding our thought processes of internal judges, worrying about winning camera club ribbons, or impressing editors. Photography should not be a competitive sport.

[…]

Have the courage and conviction to do whatever works for you. Do not let the appetites of those who “need” to stay in the box consume your taste for creativity.

[…]

We can’t blame the people around us who try to thwart our artistic expression. They don’t know any better. We can choose however, to trust what we know and who we are. We can move through fear and soar with the wings of our original creative selves. Eleanor Roosevelt knew this when she wrote, “Nobody can make you feel inferior without your consent.”

[…]

When viewers ask the question, “How long did it take you to get this shot?” There should be only one answer – “My whole life.” And when you get the choice to sit it out or dance, make sure that you step onto the dance floor of a creative life and enjoy your dance.
.

Entire Article Here as PDF File

Related: Emerson: The Greatest Accomplishment — “Be yourself in a world that is constantly trying to make you something else”

Nature Deficit Disorder

Richard Louv:

“There have been studies of the environment outside a house. If it’s greener. If there is even a green view from a window, kids’ stress levels go down, so do parents’ stress levels.”

“Studies have been done all over the world of what kind of images people relate to, and in all kinds of cultures, all kinds of settings, urban, rurual, etc., people are always attracted most to natural landscapes as images.”

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=972SgOmbUnM]

A growing number of children’s advocates and political leaders are worried that our culture’s disconnection from nature is harming kids. Concerns about the long-term consequences on children’s physical and emotional well-being have spawned a national movement to “leave no child inside.” QUEST explores why we need nature, and efforts to encourage children to play outdoors.

History Channel Documentary Validates Chemtrails and Weather Warfare

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n3gKa0z7rjM]

The name of the program is That’s Impossible-Weather Warfare, and it airs on July 25th on the History Channel at 4pm. So ya’ll thought we were crazy, huh?

Nikon Profits Down 64%, Sees Loss Ahead

From: canonrumors

TOKYO, May 13 (Reuters) – Japanese precision equipment and camera maker Nikon Corp (7731.T: Quote, Profile, Research, Stock Buzz) said on Wednesday annual operating profit fell 64 percent, hurt by weak sales of chip-making machines, and it forecast a tumble into the red this year. …

Shares of Nikon shed 58 percent in the year ended in March, while Canon lost close to 39 percent and Olympus Corp (7733.T: Quote, Profile, Research, Stock Buzz) lost 48 percent. (Reporting by Mayumi Negishi; Editing by Edwina Gibbs)

Read Entire Article

Images by Rodney Lough, Jr. set to “Breathe” by Superchick

I just visited Rodney Lough, Jr.’s galleries in San Fransisco and Sausalito. He also has galleries in Minneapolis and Portland.

My current favorite photo is the eighth one in this video (two photos after the Tetons image), called Canyon Song. The $4000, 24 x 40 inch version is like paradise! [pdf of article that includes this gorgeous photo!]

His backpack weighs over 100 pounds when he’s out for multiple days, as he shoots an 8 x 10 view camera, so the prints are tack-sharp even when picture window size.

So imagine what these beautiful images look like in high definition, totally sharp and in gorgeous color!

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uTR43l7uxZw]

just breathe

Rodney’s website: The Lough Road

Anchorage, Alaska: Tonight, Downtown — 3D glasses will be available for the first 100 people

From: Alaska Society of Outdoor and Nature Photographers Calendar of Events

As a general rule, ASONP meets the second Tuesday of each month, at 7:00 pm, October – May at the Anchorage Museum at Rasmuson Center, 121 West 7th Avenue, Anchorage, Alaska.

All general meetings are free and open to the general public.

  • Tuesday, March 10, 2009, 7 p.m. – ASONP member Calvin Hall, award winning Alaska photographer and author, will present his 3D images of Alaska3D Alaska” and answer questions on how he made the images into a 3D format. 3D glasses will be available for the first 100 people at the presentation.

HeartQuotes: Nature

Look deep

into nature,

and then you will understand everything

better.

– Albert Einstein

Click for Grand Canyon Version

UK: Photographers criminalized as police abuse anti-terror laws — Fury as stop-and-search powers are used to block and confiscate legal pictures

From: The Independent

The artist Reuben Powell was arrested and imprisoned for photographing an old government building

Reuben Powell is an unlikely terrorist. A white, middle-aged, middle-class artist, he has been photographing and drawing life around the capital’s Elephant & Castle for 25 years.

With a studio near the 1960s shopping centre at the heart of this area in south London, he is a familiar figure and is regularly seen snapping and sketching the people and buildings around his home – currently the site of Europe’s largest regeneration project. But to the police officers who arrested him last week his photographing of the old HMSO print works close to the local police station posed an unacceptable security risk.

“The car skidded to a halt like something out of Starsky & Hutch and this officer jumped out very dramatically and said ‘what are you doing?’ I told him I was photographing the building and he said he was going to search me under the Anti-Terrorism Act,” he recalled.

For Powell, this brush with the law resulted in five hours in a cell after police seized the lock-blade knife he uses to sharpen his pencils. His release only came after the intervention of the local MP, Simon Hughes, but not before he was handcuffed and his genetic material stored permanently on the DNA database.

But Powell’s experience is far from uncommon. Every week photographers wielding their cameras in public find themselves on the receiving end of warnings either by police, who stop them under Section 44 of the Terrorism Act 2000, or from over-eager officials who believe that photography in a public area is somehow against the law.

Read Entire Article

Photo: Aurora Borealis From Space

Link
(Click on the photo to see larger)

This clearly shows the protective cushion between the earth’s surface (us) and the glorious photon interactions.

From what I’ve been able to determine so far, it’s possible that during particularly strong solar emissions, the collisions could happen much lower.

An Incredibly Repeatable Song: “Breath In”

On occasion, I check out photographers’ sites to get ideas for what can be done with a camera.

I stumbled on this site, and what kept me from not wanting to move on was the incredible song that repeats. I looked up the lyrics, and it’s called “Breath In,” from the duo, Frou Frou, of whom Imogen Heap was the singer.

For the ultimate “Breath In” experience, I recommend John’s “Other” gallery. Visit the site; click ‘Galleries,’ then ‘Other,’ drag the edges of your browser’s window to completely fill the monitor, and leave it on for awhile. It’s definitely better in (((stereo))).

I actually enjoyed the mystery of it a bit more before I read the lyrics. It’s specifically about the anticipation of a relationship happening. But it could also be about ONE happening (the church becoming ONE with each other in Christ — John 17, finally!) — what I talk about so much at my spiritual site: OneCanHappen.

“Is this it?” (a line from the song). As the world goes down we can go up!

“Breath In” is a danceable joy to behold!

Jeff : )

Related: HeartQuotes: Play

Corporate Lying Example: Panasonic LX3 Lens Distortion Deception

From: SeriousCompacts.com

Panasonic LX3 Lens Distortion

Here’s what Panasonic has to say about the LX3 lens:

As a result of the F 2.0 lens, the DMC-LX3 produces high resolution and minimal distortion. ….

[test images]

It takes about a +15 distortion adjustment in the Photoshop lens correction tool to eliminate the barrel, and then one has to crop to ~88% in each dimension to get rid of the empty space. In 16:9 aspect, that cropping decreases the image from 8.9MP to roughly 7MP.

Panasonic has been open about the fact that they have been correcting lens distortion in camera for years now. Reviewers were impressed by the low distortion wide angle 18x zoom in the Panasonic FZ18. By leaving a bit of barrel distortion uncorrected and shipping both the LX3 and D-LUX 4 with a RAW converter that automatically applies the same correction as the in-camera processing, Panasonic has made it so that only a minority of reviewers and customers will take notice.

Read Entire Exposé

Related:

I’m uncomfortable with Panasonic…

Assembly Animation of a Canon EOS 10 & 24-85 Lens

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6-HiBDLVzYw]

Here’s a rather remarkable animation showing the assembly of an EOS 10D DSLR and a 24-85 lens. The authors are Matthew Farrell, Michelle Pang and Michael Tom of the University of California and was a final project in the Berkeley Engineering 128 Advanced Engineering Design Graphics course, Spring 2008. The software used was Pro/ENGINEER Wildfire 3.0 SolidWorks and 2005 Autodesk Viz 2008. Running time is about 10 minutes. source

Nat Geo Photographer Dewitt Jones on gratitude: I taught my students to say ‘thank you’ out loud — ‘Thank you;’ ‘Thank you;’ ‘Thank you’ … all the way down the ridge

Celebrate What’s Right With the World

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4rV3UqdAOhY]Willow Creek Arts Conference 2007 Dewitt Jones

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8xV-ZzEm2IA]Session 1 Highlights

Photo of My Prez | My Prez’s Photo of Me — Sniper Vs. Sniper

I took this photo last Saturday of my Prez, Chuck Maas, President of the Alaska Society of Outdoor and Nature Photographers (ASONP). We were shooting moose in the rut during Carl Battreall’s actually very exciting wildlife photography workshop, 9/20/08, near Flattop Mountain, Anchorage, Alaska.

© 2008 Life in the Son Photography
.

And Chuck took this of me.

© 2008 Chuck Maas
.

While I snapped this of him and his monster lens.

© 2008 Life in the Son Photography

“Sniper verses sniper,” I said.

Canon redefines the future of photography: 21.1 MP 5D Mk II offers Full HD video capture

From: dpreview.com, 17 September 2008

Pre-Photokina 2008: After a week or so of teaser ads [http://www.canon.com/moon/en/index.html] Canon has finally unveiled the successor to the venerable EOS 5D, the world’s first ‘compact’ full frame digital SLR. The EOS 5D Mark II boasts a new 21MP CMOS sensor, an expanded ISO range of 50-25,600 and a wealth of improvements and new features including full 1080p HD movie recording, live view, 3.0″ 920k dot LCD, DIGIC IV processor, increased battery capacity and sensor dust reduction. UPDATE: Body-only prices: US: $ 2,699, EU: € 2,499, UK: £ 2,299.

Read Entire Report

Goodbye-to-Our-Job? Party Photos

A co-worker and friend just posted four photos I took this summer during the “Goodbye to [our airline]” party, held at one of the Non-Revs, band members’ homes. One of these guys is actually my immediate boss.

There is a glimmer of hope that the ship that some of us have sailed on for decades won’t go down, but it doesn’t look good. Some are already bailing out.

Yikes! Ouch! If only we would have known sooner, etc….. We remember the pre, overreaction-to-9/11, good ole days for the airline business all too well. Once, in 1980, I was the only passenger on a flight.

At least most of us have learned to get along really well. It’s been a valuable experience, and many of us have been able to see much of the world.

May we always be friends no matter what happens.

Jeff Fenske : )

______________

Related: John Prine: Hello in There

Canon teasing those of us who’ve waited so long for the 5D’s successor

A shadow of the 5D’s soon-to-come replacement? Finally?

Click for 5D2 rumor updates.

Canon Walk-Around Camera Outfits Compared: EOS 5D + EF 24-105/4L vs. EOS 40D + EF-S 17-85/4-5.6

Note: the camera that so clearly wins here, the 5D, is a 3-year-old model that is hopefully to be soon updated.

The difference between the $500, cropped-sensor lens (EF-S 17-85) and the $1,000 L lens (EF 24-105) is probably the greatest factor.

If one is mainly going to do portraits or photograph art, for example, great results would probably be achieved with the 40D (or a late-model Rebel) with the $90, EF 50mm f/1.8 lens.

– jeff

From: BobAtkins.com

In this test I thought I’d compare two “walking around” outfits. By “walking around” I mean using a single lens that covers the wide to short telephoto range, preferably with Image Stabilization. It’s the sort of lens you might carry with you on the camera if you didn’t quite know what you wanted to shoot, for example while walking around a city on vacation or taking a walk along the seashore.

With the Canon EOS 5D, the obvious choice is the EF 24-105/4L IS. It covers a good range of focal lengths, it’s fairly fast at a constant f4, it’s an “L” series lens so its quality should match the EOS 5D and it has image stabilization.

For the EOS 40D, the obvious choice was the EF-S 17-85/3-5.6IS. This gives the same angular field of view coverage as a 27-136mm lens would on a full frame camera like the EOS 5D, so it doesn’t give quite such as wide field of view as the 24-105 on the 5D, but it has a longer telephoto reach. Again it’s a lens you might carry around when you weren’t quite sure what you’d be photographing but wanted to cover a fairly wide range of focal lengths.

See Entire Comparison Test

HeartQuotes: Close Attention

The moment one gives close attention
to any thing,
even a blade of grass;
it becomes a mysterious,
awesome,
indescribably magnificent
world
in itself.

– Henry Miller

Click for the Lighthouse Version

Lack of Sunspots Causing a Global Cooling Phase

From: The Daily Galaxy

Dark spots, some as large as 50,000 miles in diameter, typically move across the surface of the sun, contracting and expanding as they go. These strange and powerful phenomena are known as sunspots, but now they are all gone. Not even solar physicists know why it’s happening and what this odd solar silence might be indicating for our future.

Although periods of inactivity are normal for the sun, this current period has gone on much longer than usual and scientists are starting to worry—at least a little bit. Recently 100 scientists from Europe, Asia, Latin America, Africa and North America gathered to discuss the issue at an international solar conference at Montana State University. Today’s sun is as inactive as it was two years ago, and solar physicists don’t have a clue as to why. …

Dana Longcope, a solar physicist at MSU, said the sun usually operates on an 11-year cycle with maximum activity occurring in the middle of the cycle. The last cycle reached its peak in 2001 and is believed to be just ending now, Longcope said. The next cycle is just beginning and is expected to reach its peak sometime around 2012. But so far nothing is happening. …

In the past, they [solar physicists] observed that the sun once went 50 years without producing sunspots. That period coincided with a little ice age on Earth that lasted from 1650 to 1700. Coincidence? Some scientists say it was, but many worry that it wasn’t.

Geophysicist Phil Chapman, the first Australian to become an astronaut with NASA, said pictures from the US Solar and Heliospheric Observatory also show that there are currently no spots on the sun. He also noted that the world cooled quickly between January last year and January this year, by about 0.7C.

Read Entire Article

Related: Global Cooling Due to Decreased Sunspot Activity?

Ken Duncan (Photographer): “WHEN WE SEE THE BEAUTY of CREATION it’ll just GIVE US a bit of PEACE in our very busy lives” | “The HARDEST PART about photography…”

Watch Ken’s Video Message

_______________________________

“I love getting out there and finding these places,
because I love to bring them back to all you people
out there.

And hopefully,
when we see the beauty of creation,
it’ll just give us a bit of peace in our very busy lives.”

_______________________________

“This time,
I’m going to show you photos with my little camera….

Normally,
I show you photos with my big cameras,
and you probably all think:
‘Well, that’s easy for you
because you’ve got this big camera.’

But look, why I’m showing you photos with this
is because you can take great photos with anything.”

The hardest part, really, about photography
is getting out of bed and getting on with the job

and actually doing it.

Because often we think, awe,
I won’t get out of bed because, awe,
it’s not going to really happen because
we just love our bed or our comfort.

So if you want to get great photos,
be prepared to get out there and get into it.”

Transcribed by Jeff Fenske

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