Trees

I’m doing this post from my phone even though I took the photos with the DSLR and put them on my computer.  I actually went to all the trouble of emailing them to myself so I could access them from my phone…all so I could use Instaframe. I think it was faster than doing a collage in GIMP, but I’m not sure!

Now I’m updating this because on my computer I can see that the trees are really cut off! So here they are in full.

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Oh well. If you never try anything new, you’ll never learn anything new!

Post rain walk

Water droplets on flowers…SONY DSC

This is one of those times I’m glad I take RAW format as well as jpg. Usually I like the camera’s jpg version just fine, but this time the RAW one was much better. Then it was a matter of figuring out how to get those little gleaming drops of water to survive output. They kept disappearing. The droplets were mostly what I preferred about the RAW image, that and the balance of light. I finally figured out to output it without compression, and there they are, the little droplets.

Happy hump day! And for those of you in  Australia, you are over the hump and well on your way to the weekend.

If you don’t have a day job, do you still differentiate weekends? I have learned to do so, keeping the same rhythm as the working world. I still work on weekends, but I always did that. I just don’t work that much, and I do most of my socializing on weekends. I try to keep my week days as working days. But I do have to get up from my desk and move, thanks to my transformation from Move a Little, Lose a Lot. I’m going to go do one of my walks right now.

Have a great day, and don’t forget to get up from your desk and walk around. It really does make a difference.

A rain washed walk

As I have been tweeting because it’s so exciting, Northern California is getting much-needed rain. I can see the trees drinking up the rain as fast as it comes, and the storm is even behaving itself by pausing from time-to-time, allowing the ground to absorb the water. Late yesterday afternoon, we took advantage of one such break and went for a walk.

Not only was the sky beautiful, the air was redolent with the fragrances of flowers both seen and unseen. A neighbor’s rose garden was the first news of this phenomenon. As we rounded one of the last turns in our three-mile walk, the air we were breathing changed from fresh to rose-scented, filling three deep breaths before fading in our wake. Imagine a rose perfume and then remove all unpleasant aspects of perfume, the over-saturation of the scent, the other weird under-notes of the other things the fragrance is mixed with like alcohol, and so on.

Twilight had fallen, and something about the hour and the rain-washed air conspired to create a solution capable of transporting the fragrance much further than the scent would normally travel.

A block later we came upon another fragrance, fresh and green, floral but not sweet. We looked around for the source, but there was only one thing nearby that it could possibly be. My husband said, “Do daffodils have a fragrance?”

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Yes, it turns out, they do. I’m here to tell you that you need to buy daffodils when they come into your area and put a bouquet on your desk.

In fact, in the United States, there’s a great fundraising event every spring called Daffodil Days sponsored by the American Cancer Society. While you can’t order daffodils through them individually (they only do large orders for organizations to reduce costs and generate revenue for the fundraising), you can make a donation for this wonderful cause. When I had a day job, the department secretary made it happen every year, which I really appreciated. I liked to get one bouquet for myself and give one to a patient. (The American Cancer Society would deliver one on your behalf to a cancer patient in the hospital.) When my daffodils arrived I was always amazed by how much they lifted my spirits, filling me with optimism and joy at the arrival of spring.

I knew the moment we stepped outside yesterday, that I needed my camera.

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You have seen these palms before, but I was being nervy by taking another shot. I felt the sky was different. I hope you agree these were worthy of replay.

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Ditto with these bird-of-paradise flowers. They looked magnificent freshly washed. I wish I could have taken a macro, but it would have required trespassing.

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I take what I can get with the long reach of my lens.

Happy Sunday, and, for Californians, happy rainy day.

Nicci

Keukenhof Gardens with a California sky

Happy Saturday!  I hope you are having fun. I did a lot of chores this morning then I took an hour to have fun with digital art. I did my first sky replacement with this photo. I needed something with a building in it so that I didn’t have to do trees, which are way beyond me at this point. Laura Mackey talks about how she did some amazing work with replacements here. Take the time to look at that image, it is mindblowing. Anyhoodles, she used a bunch of tools I don’t have, and I’m not quite ready for all that, though I have bookmarked it for future reference. I wanted to get started with the simple sky replacement that Leanne Cole showed us. Here it is. I obliterated the trees behind the building, and you can see in the windows that the real sky was cerulean, whereas the California sky is indigo. However, though that cerulean sky was lovely in the windows, it was all washed out in the sky, so that’s why I thought it would be fun to put in an intense sky.

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Moon shots

At six o’clock this morning, I watched the moon set over the mountains. A magnificent dead tree was silhouetted against the moon. I forgot my good camera though, so I couldn’t photograph it.

However I took these photos the other night out of our back yard in the Bay Area.

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