photography: December 2008 Archives

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Longwood Gardens is known for its horticultural beauties, but this time of year, the lights of the holiday shine.

The Christmas lights are switched on there until January 11, and if you've never seen the display, it's a place you ought to visit. Weekends are jammed with crowds on weekends, so try to get free on a weekday. Visit the conservatory first to see the trees fountains and flowers--be sure to check the cranberry pond in the lower picture-- but once the sun goes down, just wander in wonder at the lights. And the nightly musical fountain concert.

No tripods are allowed except with special permission from the management, so for some of your shots, take along a bean bag and perch your camera on that for the time exposures you'll probably need. For more information about tripods and photography in the gardens, click here.

The picture at top was a 1.5 second exposure at about f11, flashed to light up Richard and Jennylynn Adleta of Kennett Square, Pa. As they walked under the arch of blue lights, the flash illuminated them, and I zoomed a 17-55 mm lens to create the 'motion'. It's tricky balancing the flash with the lights, and to zoom without creating blue tracks over their faces. I took dozens of shots, mostly because people went to great pains to get out of the picture-- and therefore ruined the picture.

They didn't understand that I wanted people in the photo. Understandable. 'Tis amazing how people are so considerate... Fortunately for me, some people didn't see me lurking in the dark until I blinded them with the flash.

Yep, it's a 'gimmicky' shot, but it's different, and worked. What do you think?

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There are plenty of photographers who do tremendous work in landscapes without a Center of Interest, the 'I' in The Best Rice. But I'm certainly not one of them, and it's not that I haven't tried.

The Muench family and Michael Fatali, among my favorite landscape photograhers, keep turning out masterpieces, seemingly daily, that I just stare and marvel at. Many have no center of interest, but instead, let the eye wander from corner to corner, edge to edge, as I salivate at the colors, the textures and locations.

When I grow up, I hope to shoot as well...

I've never had good luck at shooting without a center of interest. In this photo, taken in either the Canadian Rockies or the Yukon (I forget), the moose immediately grabs the viewers eye and then wanders to the snowy mountains in the background.

Try to find a single center of interest in a photo. Make it stand out with contrasting light, like this moose against the reflected lake, or with color or size. By the way, the 'C' in The Best Rice stands for contrast.

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THE BEST RICE, continued.

The B in The Best Rice is 'balance'. While this photo could have been cropped tighter (and maybe should be, what do you think?), the cat snoozing at top right balances out the action going on at the left.

Actually, there might be too much going on in this photo, and the 'S' in The Best Rice stands for 'simple'. Keep it simple, because the viewer's eye doesn't want to scramble from place to place. Let it anchor on a single subject, and then wander.

The cat's leg being licked clean by the calf is interesting (cute?), and the second adds balance, but it might be too much. In sports pictures especially, the fewer people in a picture the better. Usually.

The photo was taken at Leroy and Joyce Bupp's Seven Valleys-area farm. I can always find a photo worth taking home when visiting the dairy barns. One of my favorite places to search for photos-- and talk with old friends.

For more photos and stories about cats-- and dogs, fish, turtles, ferrets-- check out Rose Hayes' blog here.

About this Archive

This page is a archive of entries in the photography category from December 2008.

photography: November 2008 is the previous archive.

photography: January 2009 is the next archive.

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