I was working late and just happened to step out for a while (okay, I used the bathroom) and saw the fiery sunset from the lobby. I quickly ran to my office to grab my camera, and then ran to one of the empty offices in the building to take a few shots.
Archive for the ‘Scenery’ Category
Day 183: Fiery Sunset
Friday, July 2nd, 2010Day 174: Green Clouds
Wednesday, June 23rd, 2010Day 165: Nightfall at the Office
Monday, June 14th, 2010Day 161: Instant Pond
Thursday, June 10th, 2010Day 150: Kayaker
Sunday, May 30th, 2010Day 140: Sunset Lamp
Thursday, May 20th, 2010My wife and I were invited by a very good friend to watch a play (“My Fair Lady”) at a dinner playhouse up north. We’ve never been to a dinner playhouse or watched a play together, so we graciously accepted the invitation.
This was a lamp just outside the theater building. The shot was taken as the sun was going down.
Day 91: Cloudy Sunset
Thursday, April 1st, 2010Day 82: Storm Rolling In
Tuesday, March 23rd, 2010A big snow storm came in today. I looked out from my office window and saw the storm clouds rolling in. 2 hours later, the snow started to REALLY come down. The drive home was horrendous. Visibility was poor, traffic was slow and the snow made my side mirrors almost unusable, but I made it home in one piece.
Day 30: Wolf Moon Rising
Saturday, January 30th, 2010Two friends alerted me of the mesmerizing moon rising (special thanks to Lori and Paul). It was the Wolf Moon for 2010 (the biggest full moon of the year, owing to how close it was to Earth).
I grabbed my camera and took a few shots, each with different exposures. I thought the image on my LCD failed to capture just how eerily large the moon was. That, and that from my LCD it didn’t look very different from my previous Project 365 moon entry, made me gave up after just 5 exposures. I resigned myself to finding something else to shoot.
The lessons I learned from that previous moon shoot came back to me. It was either I exposed for the moon to capture its details, or expose for the surroundings and blow out all the details on the moon. This time, though, I realized I had enough to actually play with combining two exposures.
Lots of layer masking here. One for the clouds, one for the tree, and one for the moon. I wish I was more careful with the street lamp when I was shooting, though. I think it’s distracting, but I just ran out of energy to even attempt to edit it out.
Day 1: Blue Moon
Friday, January 1st, 2010For my first entry for Project 365, I thought I would capture the blue moon that greeted 2010.
I learned that the moon isn’t as easy a subject as I initially thought it would be. It was either I exposed for the moon to capture its surface details and underexpose the things I wanted to frame against it, or expose for the framing elements and blow out all the details of the moon. I did both, and ultimately decided on the latter since it seemed to make for a more interesting photo.
Shot on a tripod after waiting for the moon to hang low in the sky. Shot in aperture priority mode and maxed out the f-stop to get the most details I can. Forgot to turn off auto ISO, so it was shot at 1600 ISO and it got grainy at the dimly-lit parts of the the clouds. Post-processing adjustment of contrast to hide most of the high ISO noise, and then white balance to give the moon a blue hue.









