See here. Makes a lot of sense.
(this in reference to the previous post)
Thursday, July 29, 2010
Tuesday, July 27, 2010
$200M garage sale?
Just saw this linked on Ken Rockwell's site. Apparently somebody found 65 lost negatives made by Ansel Adams, arguably one of the most influential landscape photographers. He bought the boxes for $45 and apparently they are worth near $200 mills but more importantly they provide a record of Adams' artistic development (sorry for the pun) in that era. This also reminds me of a very interesting video I saw recently where you can see Adams at work in his darkroom. A lot of his images were made to shine in the darkroom from the rough (raw) negative.
EDIT: an interesting footnote is placed on this number on the excellent "online photographer" website. Apparently the veracity of the claims is not widely accepted and we are dealing with an echo chamber effect here mostly caused by the $200M number that might have been pulled out of thin air (to use a more polite term than the author of the post linked to).
EDIT: an interesting footnote is placed on this number on the excellent "online photographer" website. Apparently the veracity of the claims is not widely accepted and we are dealing with an echo chamber effect here mostly caused by the $200M number that might have been pulled out of thin air (to use a more polite term than the author of the post linked to).
Monday, July 26, 2010
A few seconds difference
These two images were taken last Saturday evening in Mayflower Gulch (click for a bigger version, return by hitting the back button). They are only 37 seconds apart. You can see that it pays to pay attention to the light in landscape photography because of the very different moods in the two images. There was only a window of good light of a few minutes that evening where the setting sun shone through between two layers of clouds.

I have some more images from this little outing that I'll post later. There are a lot of flowers in the high country this year.
I have some more images from this little outing that I'll post later. There are a lot of flowers in the high country this year.
Sunday, July 18, 2010
John
I just heard that my old friend John Snellenberg died unexpectedly while coming back from a vacation in the Czech republic. He was the drummer in the band I used to play in when I was in college in Utrecht, The Netherlands. He is pictured above in our rehearsal and recording studio built inside the old Fort de Gagel (clearly visible in the satellite image here). A fort that was part of the Dutch Waterline, built to resist invading armies and proven quite useless in WWII (the Germans just flew and parachuted over it). I haven't spoken to John in many years, but I am quite sad that he is gone. We had a great time playing with our band The Mailmen (three of the bandmembers (Gido, Paul, and John) used to work the nightshift in the Dutch postal services) at gigs and in the rehearsal room. The rehearsal room was in an old ammunitions room inside the fort which we rented from a pigeon club that owned the place. We even brought out a limited edition CD/tape recorded ourselves in the fort using 8-track equipment. Here we are perched on the side of a pillbox behind the fort:
From left to right, Jao van de Lagemaat(me), Paul van Soelen, Gido Boekschoten, John Snellenberg.
A while ago, I put a set of images on flickr.
I also made a little slideshow video with shots I had in my library of us in the fort and mixing our CD at Paul's place. It is set to the Mailmen song "Bill the Cowboy". If you maximize the video, you can access a High Def version. Sometimes this video can stutter I noticed. Try pausing it and waiting a little so some more data can be loaded ahead of time.
Rest in Peace John!
Sunday, July 4, 2010
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