Written Inc's theme this week is "past its prime."
I've chosen a lovely old truck on Antelope Island, which is in the middle of the Great Salt Lake.
Showing posts with label Photos. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Photos. Show all posts
Monday, March 5, 2012
Monday, February 27, 2012
Photo Non-Contest #185 -- Grayish
We haven't actually had winter here in Salt Lake this year, so things have not been anywhere near as gray as usual. I had to turn to cemetery pics for a gray mood and some gray stone.
Have a look at Written Inc. to see more grayish entries.
Have a look at Written Inc. to see more grayish entries.
Monday, February 20, 2012
Photo Non-Contest #184 -- Curves
Written Inc has declared this "curves" week, so I chose a shot of Scara Brae, a 5000-year-old village with curved walls. It's rather Suessian, don't you think?
Monday, February 13, 2012
Photo Non-Contest #183 -- Pairs
The theme at Written Inc this week is "pairs." And I actually found a shot I liked!
Here we have a pair of rotting posts off a pier in Oregon, taken from above on a modern dock.
Here we have a pair of rotting posts off a pier in Oregon, taken from above on a modern dock.
Monday, January 30, 2012
Photo Non-Contest #181 -- Screens
This was a tough one. Written Inc has suggested techy screens, but I couldn't think of a single interesting thing to do with a snapshot of a computer or TV screen -- or even my iPod. I guess I could've shot a photo of a photo on my iPod....... Uh, maybe later in the week.
But then I remembered screens on the crypts that Max and I visited the last time we went to the cemetery together, and I thought of this shot of light hitting a tomb through the heavily screened ventilation window in the crypt:
It's odd, but it's kind of pretty. And it sort of fits the theme.
But then I remembered screens on the crypts that Max and I visited the last time we went to the cemetery together, and I thought of this shot of light hitting a tomb through the heavily screened ventilation window in the crypt:
It's odd, but it's kind of pretty. And it sort of fits the theme.
Monday, January 23, 2012
Photo Non-Contest #180 -- Movement
The best I can do this week is to use a take off on Written Inc's bird in flight for these theme.
Here are some snow geese flying over Delta, Utah in late winter.
They don't look like much unless you enlarge the picture by clicking on it. Just trust me that they were truly spectacular in real life. :)
Here are some snow geese flying over Delta, Utah in late winter.
They don't look like much unless you enlarge the picture by clicking on it. Just trust me that they were truly spectacular in real life. :)
Monday, January 16, 2012
Photo Non-Contest #179-- Glow
Written Inc's theme this week suits me better than the last few have. Or at least I think I found a decent pic this time, anyway!
Here 'tis:
Here 'tis:
It's the early stages of sunset tinging some autumn leaves near my home.
Friday, January 13, 2012
Photo Non-Contest #178 -- After Dark
I own a point-and-shoot only. For this week's theme, this is the best I could do: snow falling last winter.
Monday, December 26, 2011
Photo Non-Contest #177- Favorites
So this week, Written Inc. has requested our favorite photos we've taken this year. This would have to be mine:
This was taken early last summer at Old Deseret Village, a living history museum in Salt Lake. It's a row of replica handcarts used every year in the 24th of July Pioneer Day parade.
Personally, I've always thought it was stupid that Utah chronically glamorizes the handcarts, as they were the stupidest thing every dreamed up for crossing the Plains, and many, many lives were lost because of their encouraged use (my ancestors came in covered wagons, thank you very much). But that doesn't stop me from thinking these make a pretty cool snapshot.
This was taken early last summer at Old Deseret Village, a living history museum in Salt Lake. It's a row of replica handcarts used every year in the 24th of July Pioneer Day parade.
Personally, I've always thought it was stupid that Utah chronically glamorizes the handcarts, as they were the stupidest thing every dreamed up for crossing the Plains, and many, many lives were lost because of their encouraged use (my ancestors came in covered wagons, thank you very much). But that doesn't stop me from thinking these make a pretty cool snapshot.
Monday, December 12, 2011
Photo Non-Contest #175 -- The One
"One is the loneliest number that you'll ever do......"
This is my lonely rock at Oswald State Park in Oregon for Written Inc's weekly theme.
This is my lonely rock at Oswald State Park in Oregon for Written Inc's weekly theme.
Monday, November 21, 2011
Photo Non-Contest #172 -- Muted
Click on Written Inc to see this week's photo theme.
I've used most of my really good overcast sky photos before, but here's a new one wherein the tree's autumn leaves have their colors muted by the covering of snow. (This was taken last year in an early storm.)
I've used most of my really good overcast sky photos before, but here's a new one wherein the tree's autumn leaves have their colors muted by the covering of snow. (This was taken last year in an early storm.)
If you click on the pic to enlarge it, you can see the interesting patterns of the twigs beneath the snow. That's my favorite part of the picture.
Monday, November 14, 2011
Photo Non-Contest #171 -- Classic
Written Inc's theme this week is "classic."
I was trying to think of something that did not involve cars or books, and I ran across this photo.
Yeah, it's waxed paper, and it's so old it doesn't have a bar code on it anywhere.
Last summer my nephews were over for a picnic, and I opened a drawer to get out some plastic wrap for leftover food and found this instead. It seems Mom had just found it on a shelf in the storeroom, left over from when we cleaned out Grandma's house after she passed away -- in 1976. No doubt, Grandma had had it on the shelf awhile, too, as you never know when you're going to need waxed paper, and it doesn't exactly spoil. Yup, my family's like that. (I have a squeeze bottle of Bactine spray for cuts and scrapes marked 39¢ from a pharmacy that's been out of business for nearly 4 decades. I used it some of the spray on an insect bite just a few weeks ago. Worked great.)
I was trying to think of something that did not involve cars or books, and I ran across this photo.
Yeah, it's waxed paper, and it's so old it doesn't have a bar code on it anywhere.
Last summer my nephews were over for a picnic, and I opened a drawer to get out some plastic wrap for leftover food and found this instead. It seems Mom had just found it on a shelf in the storeroom, left over from when we cleaned out Grandma's house after she passed away -- in 1976. No doubt, Grandma had had it on the shelf awhile, too, as you never know when you're going to need waxed paper, and it doesn't exactly spoil. Yup, my family's like that. (I have a squeeze bottle of Bactine spray for cuts and scrapes marked 39¢ from a pharmacy that's been out of business for nearly 4 decades. I used it some of the spray on an insect bite just a few weeks ago. Worked great.)
Monday, October 31, 2011
Photo Non-Contest #169 -- Brick and Mortar
Okay, it's sandstone, not brick. But it's functioning like brick. And there is mortar in there.
I took this a few weeks ago because I liked the color of the sandstone against the sky (no color altering took place here).
Written Inc's theme this week is brick and mortar. This is the closest I have for that.
I took this a few weeks ago because I liked the color of the sandstone against the sky (no color altering took place here).
Written Inc's theme this week is brick and mortar. This is the closest I have for that.
Monday, October 17, 2011
Photo Non-Contest #167 -- Edible
Last week's post got quite a few comments on a photo of an old spinning wheel in a living history museum of a farm in Orkney (north of Scotland).
This week, Written Inc's theme is "edible," but I've posted so many of my food photos before that I didn't think I could find anything original to use. Then I remembered the Orkney photos.
The light was so unreal that day, and the subject material so different from anything I usually take. So let me now share with you a couple of photos of farm food in the prep stages -- at least from an Orcadian farm of a century ago.
Fish drying by the fire (oh yes, they were real fish, dripping oil all over the stone hearth and smelling to high heaven).
I love this photo; it's almost surreal.
And here's a chicken pecking at the flour made with a quernstone.
There you go. The stuff's edible (even the chicken), and here's hoping it'll be a different take on the theme than what most people do.
Remember to click on the pics to see them full-sized.
This week, Written Inc's theme is "edible," but I've posted so many of my food photos before that I didn't think I could find anything original to use. Then I remembered the Orkney photos.
The light was so unreal that day, and the subject material so different from anything I usually take. So let me now share with you a couple of photos of farm food in the prep stages -- at least from an Orcadian farm of a century ago.
Fish drying by the fire (oh yes, they were real fish, dripping oil all over the stone hearth and smelling to high heaven).
I love this photo; it's almost surreal.
And here's a chicken pecking at the flour made with a quernstone.
There you go. The stuff's edible (even the chicken), and here's hoping it'll be a different take on the theme than what most people do.
Remember to click on the pics to see them full-sized.
Monday, October 10, 2011
Photo Non-Contest #166 -- Triangular
Check out Written Inc's theme for this week: triangles.
I apparently prefer round shapes -- because that's mostly what I found in my photos. However, I did find a few triangles.
Here are some snow triangles in a chainlink fence:
And here's one I don't think I've posted before -- a spinning wheel in a living history museum in Orkney. (The triangles are made by the spokes.)
And finally, one I have posted before -- Max and I are looking at our shadows in a river outside of Moab, Utah. The bridge had some nice triangles in the railings.
I apparently prefer round shapes -- because that's mostly what I found in my photos. However, I did find a few triangles.
Here are some snow triangles in a chainlink fence:
And here's one I don't think I've posted before -- a spinning wheel in a living history museum in Orkney. (The triangles are made by the spokes.)
And finally, one I have posted before -- Max and I are looking at our shadows in a river outside of Moab, Utah. The bridge had some nice triangles in the railings.
Monday, October 3, 2011
Photo Non-Contest #165 -- Welcome, Autumn
Written Inc's theme this week is one I think I anticipated when I took a break from grading papers over the weekend and went with Mom and Dad up a local canyon to see the leaves. (Unfortunately, half of Salt Lake City also went, and it was crowded as all get out and not very relaxing at all. Still, I got a few good shots.)
Sometimes I get tired of being reminded by people that the fall colors are "much prettier back East." Okay, I'm willing to give in that the climate on the east coast is probably more conducive to variety in leaf colors than is our desert. But it's hard for me to believe that "back East" is always prettier than the contrast we get with aspen and pine against rugged granite mountains. Try some of these looks on for size:
Here's Silver Lake at Brighton Ski Resort (and about a million people around it):
(We're at the top of the resort here.)
And here's a shot from Moose Meadow Lane on the way up. (Yeah, that's Dad taking a photo at the near the parking lot there.)
And here's one that's a bit blurry because I took it out of the window of a moving vehicle, but I love the contrast anyway.
(Again, the mountains don't look high here because we're nearly at the summit.)
Remember to click on the photos to see them full-sized.
Happy autumn.
Sometimes I get tired of being reminded by people that the fall colors are "much prettier back East." Okay, I'm willing to give in that the climate on the east coast is probably more conducive to variety in leaf colors than is our desert. But it's hard for me to believe that "back East" is always prettier than the contrast we get with aspen and pine against rugged granite mountains. Try some of these looks on for size:
Here's Silver Lake at Brighton Ski Resort (and about a million people around it):
(We're at the top of the resort here.)
And here's a shot from Moose Meadow Lane on the way up. (Yeah, that's Dad taking a photo at the near the parking lot there.)
And here's one that's a bit blurry because I took it out of the window of a moving vehicle, but I love the contrast anyway.
(Again, the mountains don't look high here because we're nearly at the summit.)
Remember to click on the photos to see them full-sized.
Happy autumn.
Monday, September 26, 2011
Photo Non-Contest #164 -- It's In The Details
Written Inc's theme for the week is about details. Most of my new photos aren't really about details, but I did snap this one the last time I visited Max's house.
It's part of his front door. (Max has plenty of spiffy antiques in his house.)
Remember to click on it to see it full-sized.
It's part of his front door. (Max has plenty of spiffy antiques in his house.)
Remember to click on it to see it full-sized.
Monday, September 19, 2011
Photo Non-Contest #163 -- Eat Your Veggies
Fortunately, I like to photograph food -- because veggies are Written Inc's theme for this week.
Here we go with a veggie tray made by Dad:
And here are some grilled veggies: fajitas at a great little Mexican restaurant in Moab, Utah:
And a hotter-than-Hades jalapeƱo burger at Old Desert Village in Salt Lake City, Utah:
Yeah, there were about 4 really hot peppers under that chees and salsa.
And here's where I start cheating a little. These are some funky flavors of potato crisps I bought in Cambridge, England. We certainly don't have these flavors in the US.
And this is Keenan, my friend's baby, eating his veggies. Or at least a popcorn/rice cake, anyway. (Hey, a child will count popcorn as a veggie.)
And my favorite veggie photo:
Yeah, click and enlarge the photo. You'll see that those are naked baby carrot jockeys riding around that cake. If you're a fan of cakewrecks.com, you'll understand immediately. I snapped this shot at a booksigning a year ago.
Here we go with a veggie tray made by Dad:
And here are some grilled veggies: fajitas at a great little Mexican restaurant in Moab, Utah:
And a hotter-than-Hades jalapeƱo burger at Old Desert Village in Salt Lake City, Utah:
Yeah, there were about 4 really hot peppers under that chees and salsa.
And here's where I start cheating a little. These are some funky flavors of potato crisps I bought in Cambridge, England. We certainly don't have these flavors in the US.
And this is Keenan, my friend's baby, eating his veggies. Or at least a popcorn/rice cake, anyway. (Hey, a child will count popcorn as a veggie.)
And my favorite veggie photo:
Yeah, click and enlarge the photo. You'll see that those are naked baby carrot jockeys riding around that cake. If you're a fan of cakewrecks.com, you'll understand immediately. I snapped this shot at a booksigning a year ago.
Monday, September 12, 2011
Photo Non-Contest #162 -- Playing With Light.
Carmi's theme this week is "Playing With Light," which is a bit tough for someone like me who only has a point-and-shoot camera.
Thus, this is my best idea for the theme:
Click to enlarge the photo, and you'll see it's not fog; it's confetti.
I took this right at the end of the Paul McCartney concert in Salt Lake City in 2010. I like the way the light catches only the edges of the heads in the crowd and the way it makes the paper seem to shimmer in the air.
Thus, this is my best idea for the theme:
Click to enlarge the photo, and you'll see it's not fog; it's confetti.
I took this right at the end of the Paul McCartney concert in Salt Lake City in 2010. I like the way the light catches only the edges of the heads in the crowd and the way it makes the paper seem to shimmer in the air.
Tuesday, September 6, 2011
Photo Non-Contest #161 -- White Part 2
More white.
The original monument to commemorate the arrival of settlers in the Great Salt Lake Valley -- white against an October sky (unretouched colors).
Even though Max already did the Salt Flats, I'm adding in a couple. This is salt foam accumulating on basalt rocks at the Spiral Jetty in the Great Salt Lake. The water has a pinkish tint because of a strange, salt-loving critter that lives in it. (The GSL is the second-saltiest body of water in the world, right after the Dead Sea. It has up to 5 times as much salt as average ocean water.)
Max called these "saltbergs" since they look like mini icebergs from a distance. This is salt foam hardened into crusts around the basalt rocks in the shallow water of the lake.
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