Who doesn't love silver party dresses?
Yeah. It's an endless cycle of swimming, doing as little work as possible, long walks with a camera and writing the blog. Broken up by dinners with family or friends, or family and friends. When I get motivated I go to the gym for some resistance workouts but mostly I fritter away time trying to write the second "Henry White" book and swilling coffee in various coffee shops. If the stars line up, and the cameras stores catch up with me while I'm in a vulnerable/gullible mood, I rush to buy some esoteric camera or lens for which I have no real need. When the buyer's remorse kicks in I rush to a computer to see how the stock market looks in a snapshot. If it's in positive territory my angst is assuaged and if the markets are falling I too am crestfallen. Again, the inglorious cycle.
I bought a new light this week. It's a 14x26 inch, flat LED panel made by Nanlite. More or less takes the place of a small soft box and since it's only three inches deep it takes up less room on a set. I like it enough to want a second one. Until I stop myself and remember that I'm trying to go cold turkey on all jobs that might require new equipment. The new light does work well, and it is of the "bi-color" variety, so that's fun too.
I spent the morning doing a long walk through the hills. I went to the noon swim practice today. I got to the pool and it was cold, gray, rainy and windy. I changed into my swim suit and walked out to the pool deck. I was the only one there. Then, right at noon, our coach Annie, showed up carrying a small white board with the sets written on it with colored markers. I put on my swim cap and adjusted my goggles. I wondered if it would just be me, my coach, a couple of lifeguards, the groundsman and the club barrista. Yes, I am kidding. There is no club barrista. If you want coffee to drink while you swim you have to bring your own from home or suffer through something from the guard shack's Keurig machine.
About five minutes into the warm-up Moira showed up, which was a relief. I would have felt guilty keeping a coach out in the weather just to supervise one person. Maura and I swim well together. I have the years of hard won technique on my side and she, at twenty-some years younger has the endurance.
I have one more commercial job to do before we shut down everything for the year-end holidays. It's a single portrait that I'll photograph in the studio sometime next week and then composite together with a conference room image as a background. I've already shot the conference room. That image is sitting in a folder on my desktop--- as a reminder. Then we're on to the next year. 2025. I don't know what to expect. I'm guessing it will be much like 2024 in that my interest in doing work for other people will continue to diminish until I've alienated or scared off the rest of the clients. An interesting goal to work towards.
Just a quick note about the Thypoch 28mm f1.4 M series lens I bought a couple of weeks ago. It's very good. I didn't like using it at first for the same reason that I didn't really warm up, at first, to the Carl Zeiss 28mm I bought earlier in the year. The frame finder lines in the viewfinders of my M series cameras are hard to see well with or without glasses. Recently I bought the bright line finder that Ricoh made for the GRiii; the 28mm equivalent version of the camera. The optical finder fits right onto the hotshoe on the M240s and is a much nicer viewing experience. Both lenses are now vindicated--because they are now a cinch to use. The CZ is sharp everywhere but slow at f2.8. The Thypoch is almost as sharp but one gets two extra stops in the low light and that's nice too.
When I use the Thypoch 28mm on a mirrorless camera, like the Leica SL2-S, I appreciate that it focuses closer than does the Zeiss lens. Something like .4 meters versus .7 meters. Doesn't sound like a lot but in practice it's convenient and visually --- different. But when I get tired of juggling cameras, adapters, bright line finders, et al I find it much more convenient just to drop the Leica Q2 in the camera bag and depend on it for my wide angle pursuits. Horses for Arrows, Courses for Indians. Which is no longer politically correct to write but....hardly matters in the current milieu.
Now considering driving back up to the camera store to buy...just one more of these darling light panels...I wonder how the traffic is today.
Air conditioning at the tiniest bar in Texas.
Yep. That's me. Getting longer every day. On the bridge between the library and downtown proper.
And now ---- the mannequins.
Industrial equipment at the retired Seaholm power plant always looks good in black and white.
Want details? We got details. And brick walls! Micro-contrast galore.
One day one hundred years in the future the important museums will dig into my enormous archive of day-to-day, mundane photographs and create an entirely new theory about what all went wrong in the 21st century. Count on it. I bet the curators are digging through my trash cans right now....
A note to other bloggers: Please don't tell me again how we used to do things in the "good ole days..." Seems those topics are on an endless loop at various blogs.
Endless Q2 photos here. That's the camera with the very good black and white mode. But at the touch of a menu item it can also shoot in color. Sadly, I hear that I lose 25% of the resolution to the interpolation of the Bayer pattern layer on the sensor. That's okay with me because the sensor has 47.5 million pixels. I can afford to go without a few. Especially for images that get used on the web.