Photo: Snow party. (c)Jeremy Geiger 2008
music | portland | humor | life | essays | technology | photography
Showing posts with label photography. Show all posts
Showing posts with label photography. Show all posts

Thursday, November 29, 2007

A little bit of Paris, Montmartre just before the hail

Lately I have really been missing Paris. I don't know if it's the release of the films Ratatouille and Paris, Je T'aime, both of which we recently enjoyed, but I have been longing more than usual to return. I have never been to a city that I instantly felt so at home in, and have longed so strongly to return to. Ah, Paris.

Maybe its the weather turning here. Our visit to Paris a few years ago with our 7 month old perfect baby boy in tow was in February on a $400 roundtrip special from L.A. to Charles De Gaulle airport. February is not the most breathtaking time of year to visit Paris; it rains a lot, its bitterly cold and windy, and much of the street life has moved indoors. Even with all of that being true, we absolutely fell in love with Paris, even
under such dismal conditions. Which has got to be true love, even with a city.

Here's one of our photos of one of our favorite areas: Montmartre. We were hiking up the hill toward the Sacre Coeur and the weather took a very odd turn toward hail, which led to some interesting light.
I'm looking back through the photos for good candidates for black and white conversion (my latest photo interest), and this one seemed appropriate.

More to come.

Wednesday, November 14, 2007

Couple of Southern Oregon photos


Here are two photos from a recent trip to the Southern Oregon coast. Foggy day, great for black and white. There is a lot of loss in the resizing for this blog however; much more detail in the original. I'm working on ways of getting more out of small jpg images (72 res for the Web), so tips are welcome.

More to come.

Tuesday, November 13, 2007

Out of the darkness, into the...gloom?

Today I am finally, Finally back to normal health. I was struggling for days with a feverish stomach and intestinal infection, the details of which can remain blacked out like so many names, places, and phone numbers in a Nixon era tell-all.

Needless to say, I am severely behind on my NNWM effort. The only good thing is I've had a bunch of fever driven ideas that may turn into something of a plot, if I can pull it off without being too campy. Not a murder story. Not yet.

In the mean time, having escaped the iron grip of steel calipers twisting my most inward parts, I am posting this. In addition to everything else, I'm hoping to start a new black and white photo series on Oregon City. One of the reasons we chose Oregon City vs. any of the other surrounding areas of Portland was for its historicity. Unfortunately, Old Oregon City has seen better days. Its on the upswing, so I want to catch the "inbetween" glimpses before they are washed over with a new Pottery Barn antiquing. So, here's a start. Just a handful of photos from around the neighborhood this time of year.

The only downside? The weather is definitely turning, and although we're thoroughly enjoying the blustery, rainy days right now there is the definite sense of foreshadowing going on...Winter's approaching....


Old Bridge texture study 001

tranquille or tumultuous, its up to you

Zoo, fall

Tuesday, August 28, 2007

Metroknow Photos: Lunar Eclipse from Portland

When lunar events are visible in Portland's night sky, the rarity of those conditions in the Northwest forces you to take advantage of it. With this year's lunar eclipse coinciding with an unusually clear sky, a few photos were a must, even at 3AM.

While I love my D70 camera, I don't have a lens that does a very good job with night/really low light shots (the Quantaray 70-300 does ok on macro shots, but absolutely sucks at the 300 end), so they came out a bit grainy. I was having fun with the manual settings on the camera as well, running the gamut of EV options to try to milk as much detail as possible out of my cheap zoom lens. I tried my wide angle lens as well because the glass is better, but that was laughable. The trick is, the night sky moves surprisingly fast when you're talking photo exposure, so leaving the shutter open for too long just gives you blurry images.

Without further adieu, the photos. Note that the color was slightly less red than this in the night sky, but its what the exposure gave. No post color adjustments.

Photo taken with: Nikon D70, Quantaray 70-300 LDO Macro.


Friday, August 24, 2007

Photo: Why get up early? Jammers is why

This breakfast photo is a direct result of following a few suggestions of an excellent blog I read regularly (http://www.zenhabits.net). He did an article on ways to start getting up earlier, and the benefits.

Well, here's a photo of the benefit for me and my family - I got up and baked. And I'm pretty sure I used a few tasty trans-fats. Are there trans-fats in two sticks of butter?

Thanks to Grand Central Bakery for the jammers recipe. They are our favorite Northwest Bakery.

And by the way, if you happen to be in Oregon City, there's still one left. But hurry.

Tuesday, June 26, 2007

Seattle always feels like home, even from lovely Portland

We spent last weekend up in Seattle visiting my family there, and as usual, despite our growing love for and fascination with Portland, as former Seattleites we came away wondering (as we almost always do) whether or not in some ways we should have just taken the leap and moved back to Seattle. Now before I offend my Portland friends and readers, in fairness, we definitely haven't given Portland a chance yet, and we are very excited to do so. But whenever we visit, our heart always yearns for our old home.

Quick summary: We spent Friday working on my parents' place, getting the backyard into shape to have 21 yards of bark blown in. It was a lot of work, particularly because we were all fighting colds, but we made good progress.

Saturday, we took the day off and headed to many of our old Seattle spots.

Wallingford has got to be one of our favorite Seattle destinations. We stopped into Kids on 45th, one of our top children's second-hand (and new) stores, and April loaded up on some much needed baby clothes for Rima. Wallingford is growing again, some for better, some for worse. Ah, change. We were quite disappointed to see that Beso del Sol was closed - it had the best Latin Jazz and dance of any restaurant in Seattle that we know of. If you want to see what it really means to lead when dancing, Beso del Sol was the place to observe.

While April dug around for knickers and tiny pink outfits for our little girl, I drove around Greenlake with the kids sleeping peacefully, all the while dreaming of what it might be like to have access to such a beautiful location as Greenlake. There is such a hum of activity combined with natural beauty, all topped off with a strong sense of urban sophistication. Greenlake is hard to beat rain or shine, and at 77 degrees with blue skies and sleeping children, it is difficult to imagine any place that could match it for what it is.

Afterward, we headed off to Besalu, our absolute favorite Parisian cafe in Seattle (actually in Ballard). We have another haunt, but Besalu is the default, and will be getting a review shortly on IMissParis.blogspot.com, one of my new blogs. Sufficed to say, it never disappoints.

Next, it was off to Gasworks Park, one of our favorite landmarks in Seattle. And it was the perfect day for it. Warm and breezy, complete with seaplanes and sailboats filling the water. The skyline was crystal clear, and you felt like you could literally see for miles in every direction. Kids playing with kites, rolling down the hills, and climbing all around the old machinery made it very picturesque. In fact, I think I'm going to use one of the photos for the header image of this blog for a while. Pretty incredible. It also included a resident Junkie pronouncing that the war must end, and that we should all stop what we are about to do (which he apparently was able to divine). Ah, what would Seattle be without one or two sunbathing heroin addicts?

All in all, a really enjoyable weekend. And it has left us with a lot of questions about where we are, and where we're going. Basically, the questions are whether or not this feeling is just a romanticized view of Portland's northerly sister because of our experiences there, or whether the universe is trying to tell us something about where we belong. Hard to say at this point - but we know its too early to tell.

Daily we are increasingly getting sucked into the things that Portland has to offer, and appreciating its qualities more and more. Seattle is bigger and more diverse, but Portland is quirky and tight-knit, which is also really important in our estimation of a community. We shall see. For now, Seattle is mostly just a memory - A vision of loveliness though it sometimes is.

Tuesday, March 13, 2007

Cake on a plane, pregnancy photos, and Stella

So I will confess very openly that this is a retrofit ("retrofit" is southern Californian for expensive, time consuming addition to a thing after the thing has been shaken to pieces by a bigger thing) entry - I meant to get all of this down, but with the recent developments in our life (see the entry before this one), I haven't had a chance to get caught up. If you don't like it, our dear friend Sharon's landlord has a hat that sums it up, that goes something along the lines of not caring too terribly much, LA-style.

If you haven't already picked it up, the one thing that Portland seems to have a lot of is good beer, and in the most unusual spots. The last few weeks have been packed full with working on unpacking, starting and completing (sometimes) repairs on the house, taking a whirlwind trip to LA, and oh, I don't know, having a baby. . So why does beer matter, you might ask? It matters, because when you get a haircut and they offer you beer, or when it is 11AM and the photographer offers you beer, or when you are in the local supermarket and you find more variety than you have seen in your life, you know that something must be right in the world. Stella (hair cut), and Black Butte Porter (photo shoot), are definitely good beers to mix with taking photos and cutting hair.

I flew down to LA for a quick day at work and to see our family down there - it was great although Paul and Sharon were out of town, throwing themselves down Mexican stairways or 'burbing it in Colorado. (Actually I know it was Colorado, but how often do you get to say, "throwing themselves down Mexican stairways"?) Dinner with loved and adored ones was as it always has been - engaging, satisfying, restful, spirited, and inspiring, all in the space of a few short, short hours over a few bottles of red wine, and topped off with a wonderful cake, the remnants of which were packed into foil and stuffed into my baggage for the plane ride to the land of moss. It was an interesting sensation to fly into and out of Burbank and have a longing for the traffic, smog, and estimated 20 million people crowding the LA basin; when we were there full time we hated it. Now it seems strangely enticing. In the usual form, I had to commute from Pasadena to Santa Monica and back for my day of work, and in the process had to sit in an hour and a half of the usual afternoon traffic. As sick as this is, I actually kind of liked it. . .I know that it is of course just a sentimental desire to have things the way they were, missing my old pathways no matter how crowded or polluted, wanting that edge of a Latino subculture that speaks in code (if you've been in line at any 99-cent store and seen a gossip session in Spanish, you know what I mean) and drives the city on hydraulics hiding in lowriders, missing people of all races raising the flag of blinged-out platinum leaf blowers slung over long-sleeved tattooed arms, missing places like Koreatown that add the bite and colors of year-buried fermenting cabbage to LA's perpetual golden hue, missing jaded drivers who know how to drive without hesitation through car fires and act oblivious to the rantings of overly-aggressive homeless solicitors, missing the LA river that is literally entirely paved in concrete, and most of all, missing my adopted family, who know everything about me, and do not hold it against me.

After returning, we were scheduled to get some professional photographs taken while April is pregnant which is something that we were hoping would make up even a little bit for the turmoil of our life during this pregnancy. When she was pregnant with Jonah, we didn't have much at all, and certainly couldn't afford an extravagance like art photos. So this time we decided to try to capture the moment with all 3 of us in the photos. Campbell-Salgado Studio (http://www.oregonportraits.com/) was who we chose, and it turned out to be the best choice we could have made. Everyone there was both helpful and disarming, making us relax enough to try to capture images of us that reflect where we're at right now. They did a great job, and managed a wild 2 1/2 year-old remarkably well. The only downside is every time he would take a photo of Jonah doing something funny, I could feel my wallet getting emptier. He is an excellent photographer. It also became very clear that the art of photography is at least 50% social; they were able to create a sense of camaraderie in a matter of minutes, allowing the photos to be much more relaxed. I can't recommend them enough. Although it is a little spendy for this sort of thing, it is one of the most worthwhile expenses you can undertake as you will never get this time back. And they offered Black Butte Porter at 11AM, to which he said, "Well, its got to be noon somewhere..."

My last little mini review is for the Vital Barber Shop over in Bridgeport Village. Bridgeport Village is a new outdoor mall that is designed to look like European streets, American style (meaning they are much wider and more pedestrian than most European streets that we know). They have some higher end shops there, as well as the usual Crate and Barrel-type big box stores. They also have the largest Whole Foods I've ever seen, which is across the street from REI, which adds up to a lot of expensive convenience packed into a few acres. I needed a haircut, and after being turned away from Rudy's 3 times because they were too busy, I decided to give the Vital Barber Shop a try. Adam cut my hair, and did an amazing job. Not only that, but they provide beer while you wait, and I only waited for about 2 minutes, so I finished my beer
while under the razor. The price was reasonable (about $20 cheaper than salons in LA), and everyone there was very low key and relaxed. I'll definitely be going back.

 
Personal Blogs - BlogCatalog Blog Directory