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Category Archives: Photography

Resolutions, Schmesolutions! Part 2

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That New Year came and went a bit quick: I didn’t even get ’round to producing my Resolutions Schmesolutions Part 2 post – shame on me! Although, here it is, slightly delayed… better late than never hey?

So, I may be what a lot of people call pedantic and slightly obsessive compulsive. No matter how much truth lies in this it is definitely true that I like to organise things, for better or for worse – and usually the latter, which annoys me! This blog acts as a great place to organise thoughts and construct plans. That’s why, this New Year I am going to use this blog as a regular place to organise and discuss my various plans.

So what are my ‘non-resolutions’ for 2007 then? They can easily be categorised into four broad categories: Food/Health, Work, Hobbies/Travel and Money.

Food/Health: I need to start a proper diet. Not diet in the 21st Century meaning of the word but in the actual dictionary definition of the word: a diet as an eating regimen. One that is healthier than my current one and that is more enjoyable. I’m talking more eastern fresh food and less western modified products; fish; prepared lunches; a lot less junk food and more experimental, colourful and flavourful cooking.
‘Menus’ would be a good idea too as with forward planning I can buy nicer, fresher, cheaper food from local markets rather than plastic-laden, reformed goods from supermarkets.
Playing sport regularly would be good too as my once weekly Squash sessions are turning into once monthly.

Work: A third of my life is spent at work: 8 hours a day, sat in the office, writing code and not progressing – just earning. Investing in myself is key to progressing whilst also earning. Building my work-life reputation and increasing my future worth will in turn further my prospects and undoubtedly make this third of my life more interesting and, dare I say it, fun! Courses, certifications and training will all help me to obtain this, as will offering myself up for opportunities that arise in work and at home. Also, enthusiastically working on projects outside of my day-to-day employment can’t fail but help.
As well as working, a further third on my life is spent sleeping. This leaves, after preparing for and commuting to work and preparing and eating meals, around 6 hours. I plan on rising earlier in the mornings and getting into work at a more respectable time, allowing myself to get home from work much earlier and hence reducing my travel time considerably (no rush-hour to contend with) leaving myself with more time at home during more sociable hours.

Hobbies/Travel: I want to learn to take much better photographs than I currently do, make good progress on my personal projects and travel more: all whilst still being able to sit down, watch a film and have a drink.
A big one though is that I want to make the Internet profitable for myself. How? I’m not quite sure yet, but I do know that I do not want to do it with auction websites and in an ideal world I would like to think that it could open up some doors for myself and possibly lead to another income stream.
Writing for an average of 30 minutes a day would also be nice but is ambitious. It’s not something I’m going to do straight away and give-up on within a few weeks, but rather something I want to work towards. Undoubtedly blog based, I hope this will be a method for me to improve my style and content here.

Money: The ‘big gun’ of my New Years plan and something that I won’t discuss here right now to avert a fully blown (and boring) essay.

I’ve given myself a fair bit to do here and the hardest part is going to be how to start and how to continue. I’ve come up with a simple, two step process for hopefully completing all my objectives or, at least, realising that it was futile: progressive goals and ‘freeware’ testing.

Progressive: These goals are the ones that I neither plan on or hope to achieve immediately and hope to achieve in the long run by working towards a goal slowly. These include writing; photography; project work; exercise; and my work plans.

Tests: You can download ‘freeware’ programs from the Internet to use for a 30 day trial period. When these 30 days have passed and if the program is something you cannot use or can do without you delete it and do not use it again. However, if you realise after this period that it makes your life easier, better, or is something that you cannot now live without you purchase the program and make it part of your life. This is what I plan on doing with a few of my objectives: testing them for a month and seeing if it was worth it or whether the goal was futile.
If after this month trial something has made my life better or I want to continue it, it will be a lot easier to continue as I would have already been doing it for a month. If I want to quit: I will.
The foundation of this test is: if something is difficult I can continue doing it with ease for a month (“I don’t like getting up every day at 7am but I’ll continue for a month and then give up.””) but when that month passes I may be used to it and it’ll be easier to continue (“I hated getting up before but now I’m used to it.”). Whereas if something was not enjoyable or not as expected I’ll simply quit (“I ate fish at least twice a week but didn’t enjoy it so now I’ll stop.”). This will be a better method for my diet, early rising and some of my money plans.

How are you planning on sticking to your resolutions or plans?

Unlisenced (sp) Sex Shop

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Unlisenced shop

11.Aug.06 – 13.Aug.06

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This weekend I went home to Abergavenny for the last time. As I type this the house is no longer ours and my home is now Cardiff, and just Cardiff. This weekend wasn’t all sad though. Here are some things that caught my eye and some of my thoughts:

My weekend in pictures

(Clockwise)
A beautiful white rose growing in my garden;
A hand-made road sign with ‘GOOSE’ written on it;
A one-eyed ginger cat sitting on a freshly made hay bale;
An old abandoned church that scared me;
Parking my car at home and wondering if I’ll ever live in another place where the view out of my rear-view mirror will be like this;
Jasmine, my cat;
The post box opposite my (old) house;
A little girl dragging her dog around the village fête’s dog show and thinking how it looked like a moving carpet;
Seeing some flowers in a traffic cone at a skip and realising that beauty can be where you least expect.

On my mind…

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There are two things I’ve been thinking about today.

One is about EarShock – one of my ongoing projects – and the other is about how much I’m looking forward to using my camera again. Especially shooting in the RAW format.

EarShock.com has just had a bit of a face-lift. I’ve used the Joomla Open-Source Content Management System to organise the information, created a new logo and added a few reviews that I pilfered (yet referenced) from Amazon and other sites just to temporarily bulk up the website. Take a look and let me know what you think.

Regarding photography, I’ve decided that shooting photos in RAW is great. Really great. A RAW image on my camera is a lot bigger than a normal capture – approx 9Mb per photo. This is because a RAW photo is the digital equivalent of an undeveloped negative when shooting with a film camera. Nothing is applied to the photographs such as white-balance, colour filters, contrast and even saturation. You get the raw image and you edit it, as you please, on your computer.

Another great advantage is that instead of dealing with the usual 256 colour layers as in a normal photograph, RAW has 65,536 – allowing you great flexibility when editing the picture to emphasize or dull-down parts of the photo as required. I’m getting a RAW-fetish and I don’t even fully understand the medium yet!

Last week I saw one of the most beautiful skies of my life and decided to take a photograph. Below are two shots that came out well, edited slightly, but differently, in RAW. You can click on them to see a slightly bigger version.

Red Sky At Night... (view over Cardiff) Red Sky At Night... 2 (view over Cardiff)

Shelter?

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Today is the last day you can enter a photograph for the second round of the Photographer of the Year competition. This round has the theme ‘Rock and Roll’. The first round though has come and gone and the theme was ‘Shelter’.

I was slightly disappointed when I realised that round one was over and round two was upon us – I had planned to enter the competition and had a few good ideas for photographs I could send in. I completely overlooked the deadlines, forgetting that they were here already.

This seems to be happening a lot recently though: time passing fast without many things being achieved. Is this what life is like once you become settled into a full-time job? Do the working days just pass as a blur with no defined start and end? Weeks, sometimes months, going by completely inconspicuously aside from maybe a couple of memorable nights out seeing a band, going for a nice meal or just relaxing at home with someone when you’ve had a tough day. Apart from these events, the month is forgotten.

Away from my digression into whether or not I’m losing track of time, having a breakdown or maybe just completely “normal”, I was discussing the Photographer of the Year competition. So, the ‘Shelter’ round is over and the photos are up for the public’s vote here. I was slightly disappointed at the selection process – the theme is Shelter and it seems the judges have taken the most obscure definition of the word and applied this to the photos coming in to them.

There is a photo of the Aurora Borealis, a dog being held by a young boy and a landscape at sunset with a man sitting on a chair. Now, I know as an artist one is allowed to have some degree of ‘poetic license’ but I believe some of them are taking this right a bit too far. I can gladly accept that the dog is being sheltered from the harsh reality of life by the young boy (or some other pseudo-intellectual description trying to find meaning in a simple photograph taken as it looked good through the viewfinder)… but the Aurora Borealis? Shelter? I have to disagree on this one, and unfortunately it’s winning the votes by a very, very long way. Mainly, undoubtedly, due to the fact that it looks ‘nice’.

Take a look at the photographs and vote for your favourite, but keep the word ‘shelter’ in the back of your mind while choosing. It may not be easy to take a good photograph, but it’s harder still to take a good photograph relating to specific theme, so give those who took the extra time and effort some respect. Look at the colours depicted, the composition and the ingenuity. I voted for Michelle Nold’s photograph of a shack in Missouri after an ice storm. It’s beautiful.

So, Rock and Roll is upon us now and I would like to send in an entry. Unfortunately I haven’t had time to think about this and haven’t been out with the camera for a few days as I’ve been away. I think I’ll just send in a photo of Green Day from when I went to their 2005 American Idiot gig in Cardiff – maybe I’ll get lucky. I had thought of having a photo of someone throwing a television set out of a window or something similar: it’s synonymous with Rock and Roll and could have been made to look quite dynamic but would have required a fair bit of time to setup.

Well, enough moping about missed opportunities – I need to make this month count but doing something amazing: or at least memorable!