Sunday, October 31, 2010
Saturday, October 30, 2010
weird stuff
We spent some time wandering around this store in Sunnyvale called "Weird Stuff," that is basically a warehouse for aging technology. You can buy twenty-year-old laptops for $5, a scoop of nuts and bolts for fifty cents, and I purchased two packages of ten cryogenic vials (plastic test tubes with caps) for $1 a bag.
There were bins of these circuit boards, which I think were power supplies for older computers. I thought they were very pretty. They are so detailed and specific, with all the different numbers and colors yet they were so mass-produced and now in this bin for $5-$10 each.
There were bins of these circuit boards, which I think were power supplies for older computers. I thought they were very pretty. They are so detailed and specific, with all the different numbers and colors yet they were so mass-produced and now in this bin for $5-$10 each.
Friday, October 29, 2010
ikebana
Over the weekend, my aunt's Ikebana school held its biennial floral show. Ikebana is the Japanese art of flower arranging. The show was at this community center in Cupertino and the demonstration room was so packed we couldn't even get in.
Thursday, October 28, 2010
boating
Last week I took the ferry to Sausalito for the first time ev-ar. It costs $8.25 one way in cash, $5.15 with this new Clipper deal that I need to investigate. It really fascinates me that some people take the ferry every day as part of their commutes.
I think I need more boating time in my life.
I think I need more boating time in my life.
Wednesday, October 27, 2010
world series
The World Series starts tonight!
We ended up watching the last few innings of Game 6 of the Giants-Phillies at Kennedy's in North Beach Saturday evening. It was very exciting.
We ended up watching the last few innings of Game 6 of the Giants-Phillies at Kennedy's in North Beach Saturday evening. It was very exciting.
Tuesday, October 26, 2010
Monday, October 25, 2010
barkin' up the trees
The bark that covers these trees in Yosemite is cool, maybe even as cool as the red bark covering the manzanita trees. It is all layered and flaky and about three inches deep.
Sunday, October 24, 2010
manzanita
I love these trees, too--although some people prefer to call them 'bushes' over 'small trees.' I always thought that this reddish-brown stuff covering them was some sort of tree sap or resin, but it is actually their bark. You learn something new every day!
Saturday, October 23, 2010
startling juxtapositions
One minute, we were enjoying a picnic in Yosemite. The next minute, we were in the middle of a wedding.
Few images are as stressful as a bride on a cell phone with this look on her face. In the middle of a forest.
Few images are as stressful as a bride on a cell phone with this look on her face. In the middle of a forest.
Friday, October 22, 2010
el capitan
Yosemite is very beautiful. I think it is very odd that this is one of its biggest attractions, El Capitan:
Thursday, October 21, 2010
triple wind
I do love wind farms. This is the wind farm in the Altamont Pass on 580.
These look like first-generation turbines:
And these look like their newer cousins in Indiana:
These look like first-generation turbines:
And these look like their newer cousins in Indiana:
Wednesday, October 20, 2010
s'mores!
One of my favorite things about being in nature is eating the most artificial things, like flaming marshmallows.
Tuesday, October 19, 2010
love of trees
I love the trees that fill the hillsides of Coulterville, California, in Mariposa County. I think they are some kind of elder, and did a little bit of investigation online. Are they acer negundo californicums? I don't know.
Monday, October 18, 2010
renovations
Sunday, October 17, 2010
Saturday, October 16, 2010
Friday, October 15, 2010
Thursday, October 14, 2010
dashing through Santiago
When I went to the Atacama Desert in northern Chile last year, I had two eight-hour layovers in Santiago. That's just enough time to run into the city for an afternoon of good wandering, punctuated by a good meal.
This was shot in the Brazilian neighborhood.
This was shot in the Brazilian neighborhood.
Wednesday, October 13, 2010
Tuesday, October 12, 2010
Monday, October 11, 2010
Fleet Week
Sunday, October 10, 2010
sunday props
I just want to say that shooting football is incredibly difficult. I only managed to shoot three photos all night of someone carrying the ball, and this was one of them. I think of all those photos in the sports section of the Chicago Tribune...and my hat goes off to them. My proverbial hat.
Saturday, October 9, 2010
rah rah rah
I shot a high school football game last Friday in Wheaton, Illinois. It was a pretty big game--the reigning state champions (Wheaton Warrenville South) v. their rivals (Wheaton Warrenville North). It was only the second football I've ever been to. I found the cheerleaders sort of fascinating.
Friday, October 8, 2010
my favorite place in NYC
This is my favorite view in all of New York City. It's the Renwick Smallpox Hospital on Roosevelt Island, the narrow strip of land in the East River between Manhattan and Queens. Behind the hospital, you can see the 59th Street bridge, which spans the island but there isn't an exit, which is weird. You can't drive to the island; you can only gain access to it on the subway (F) or the endlessly fascinating funicular.
This photo was taken in February, 2009. The ruins of the hospital were under renovation for the preparation of South Point Park. (Last I heard, it was going to be turned into a café.) My friend and I sneaked in to shoot this photo just as the sun was rising, and we had the entire tip of the island to ourselves. It was a truly amazing feeling to be alone on an island wedged between two boroughs.
This photo was taken in February, 2009. The ruins of the hospital were under renovation for the preparation of South Point Park. (Last I heard, it was going to be turned into a café.) My friend and I sneaked in to shoot this photo just as the sun was rising, and we had the entire tip of the island to ourselves. It was a truly amazing feeling to be alone on an island wedged between two boroughs.
Thursday, October 7, 2010
Richard Serra
I ended up seeing a lot of Richard Serra this past year--his work, not the man himself. I am consistently surprised at how much I love his work. I saw his wood sculptures at both the MoMA in New York and the Guggenheim in Bilbao, and both times I was overwhelmed by a sense of reverence for space, time, and nature. And I am not usually into "stuff like that."
This is a piece of his that I saw at the Reina Sofia in Madrid. Again, completely in awe of it. Why? I don't really have a vocabulary to talk about sculpture. All I can say is that I went back to see it after I was done looking at the Guernica.
Here is a detail of the metal:
This is a piece of his that I saw at the Reina Sofia in Madrid. Again, completely in awe of it. Why? I don't really have a vocabulary to talk about sculpture. All I can say is that I went back to see it after I was done looking at the Guernica.
Here is a detail of the metal:
Wednesday, October 6, 2010
Tuesday, October 5, 2010
phantom jet
I'm hoping for some clear skies today! This is a shot from a Christmas Eve flight to Singapore in 2008. I'd never seen the plane's shadow like that before.
Monday, October 4, 2010
the red door
Sunday, October 3, 2010
a time for reflection
I really miss the café culture of Buenos Aires. This was one of the cafés I usually stopped at in San Telmo, El Federale. You could sit there for hours, undisturbed, and sometimes I intended to...but would get distracted by thoughts of my bed.
Saturday, October 2, 2010
thanks for waiting
All I can think about lately is how much I miss this man and how excited I am to see him soon. Here he is, making me pasta at my parents' house:
We all know how much I love a man who can make pasta. I just think mine is so much cuter. Yay!
We all know how much I love a man who can make pasta. I just think mine is so much cuter. Yay!
Friday, October 1, 2010
petanque players
Happy October! All of my camera bodies are at Canon for repair right now. I finally got around to processing some of these mediocre petanque shots from Madrigal de Las Altas Torres. Petanque is like bocce ball. And they play it for hours.
What a boys' club, right?
What a boys' club, right?
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