Wednesday 22 May 2013

Merry Christmas photo

Merry Christmas photo
christmas card photo paper
Image by Mac(3)
or Festivus, for the rest of us!
Happy Holidays!


6th April: tomorrow's bag
christmas card photo paper
Image by scribbletaylor
I spent this evening choosing paint colours in time for the decorator who is turning up in the morning, clearing the room ready for decorating and preparing for my interviews tomorrow.

Lacking a photo for today I thought I'd do one of those what's in my bag ones. I had played with it a bit in Picnik but haven't time to wait for it to save so am going with the SOOC version.


Christmas Pudding
christmas card photo paper
Image by Jonathan_W
5th December

See the set as it develops

Tuesday 21 May 2013

It's Chriiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiistmas

It's Chriiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiistmas
easter photo card
Image by squacco
Gawd bless the lovely ninaduckling. She took pity on me when my yousmellofwee (it's a long story) secret santa never arrived, and fixed it for me to have Christmas in February. Yay!


Passover Matzo Bird
easter photo card
Image by P&L Personality Plugin
Have a nice passover
This is the final outcome. See the process


my old canon
easter photo card
Image by _nickd
at easter lunch on sunday, my parents handed me the first remotely fancy camera that i ever owned, a canon ftb, manufactured in 1972. the lens is a 50 f/1.8. it still works flawlessly.

basically in high school i just invented a bunch of excuses to take pictures of the dog, a lazy beagle named missy, short for miscellaneous, because she was my most willing subject.

including the camera, though, the bag of my photographic past contained:
- incredibly pretentious (weird prism thing; blue; brown) and sometimes useful (red, for b&w infrared film) filters
- a filter mount for some bizarre square filter system that i was somehow enamored with in 1996
- a vivitar flash manufactured in 1961
- a card that implored people who had found the bag to call my parents' house, ending in a very swashy scripty "thanx!". i had no idea that i ever wrote "thanx" in my entire life. i would like to publicly apologize for this egregious fault.
- manuals for everything. why did i keep these? clearly i knew how to work the damn camera.

but that's not all! the useful things that the bag contained:
- a roll of shot tri-x film, pictured, ca. 1999-2000
- a roll of film, probably also tri-x, that i ostensibly wound towards the end of high school, also pictured
- thirteen other rolls of heinously expired film, including color positives, C-41 process black and white, and (gloriously, blessedly) ilford delta 400 pro.

meanwhile, the special lady found her own stash of ridiculously expired film:
- a 120 portra 125asa
- two 120 delta 400(!!!)
- a 35mm hp5 400 that's been donated to me for The Cause
- a full-blown 100' canister of expired-as-hell hasn't-been-produced-for-years agfa 400 film, which will handily produce several 36exp rolls if i can find a way to swap it into a changing bag or film roller. (does anybody have either?)

so here is what is going to happen. i took the tri-x to central camera and will post a bunch of embarassing shots of what is likely missy here. every month from now on, i'm going to shoot a roll on the ftb, process it, scan the negatives, and post ultra-hi-res shots of the results here.

which brings me to this: does anybody have access to a really, really good negative scanner that i can use once a month?


Stationary Swap Rec'd
easter photo card
Image by Julie K in Taiwan
I received this great collection of stationary stuff from Denise www.flickr.com/photos/warmnfuzzy/

Love the Easter Egg Plush!

Thank you so much!


Thinking of you
easter photo card
Image by cathy.fong
Made another card again today!
wew..im just so in love with DT's cards. i wish i had enough time to make one card inspired from each designer. I have my own favourite from each of them. in fact... lots of favourites. hehe

This clean and simple card is inspired by my friend Elizabet's mini easter tags here :
www.flickr.com/photos/elizabethallan-art/5609106357/in/ph...
Don't you just love the colour she use?
details blogged here :
allbycathyfong.blogspot.com/2011/05/inspired-by-lovely-co...

Cool Photo Card Supplies images

100 views of Cuba, Dec 2011 - 47
photo card supplies
Image by Ed Yourdon
This set consists of what I felt were the best 100 photos of the 3500+ images that I took in Cuba during a weeklong visit in December 2011.

More details later, as time permits...

***********************

Cuba. For today's generation of Americans, the notion of traveling to Cuba is probably like that of traveling to North Korea. It's off-limits, forbidden by the government -- and frankly, why would anyone bother? But for someone like me, who spent his childhood in the Cold War era of the 1950s, and who went off to college just after Castro took power, and just before the Bay of Pigs and the Cuban missile crisis, the notion of traveling to Cuba has entirely different overtones.

And yet Cuba is only 90 miles away from Key West (as we were reminded so often in the 1960s), and its climate is presumably no different than a dozen of Caribbean islands I've visited over the years. Numerous friends have made quasi-legal trips to Cuba over the years, flying in from Canada or Mexico, and they've all returned with fabulous pictures and great stories of a vibrant, colorful country. So, when the folks at the Santa Fe Photographic Workshops sent out a notice in November 2011, announcing a series of photo workshops in Havana, we couldn't resist the temptation to sign up.

Getting into Cuba turned out to be trivial: an overnight stay in Miami, a 45-minute chartered flight operated by American Airlines, and customs/immigration formalities that turned out to be cursory or non-existent. By mid-afternoon, our group was checked into the Parque Central Hotel in downtown Havana -- where the rooms were spacious, the service was friendly, the food was reasonably tasty, the rum was delicious, and the Internet was … well, slow and expensive.

We had been warned that that some of our American conveniences -- like credit cards -- would not be available, and we were prepared for a fairly spartan week. But no matter how prepared we might have been intellectually, it takes a while to adjust to a land with no Skype, no Blackberry service, no iPhone service, no phone-based Twitter, Facebook, or Google+. I was perfectly happy that there were no Burger Kings, no Pizza Huts, no Wendys, no Starbuck's, and MacDonalds. There was Coke (classic), but no Diet Coke (or Coke Light). There were also no police sirens, no ambulance sirens, and no church bells. There were no iPods, and consequently no evidence of people plugged into their music via the thin white earplugs that Apple supplies with their devices. No iPads, no Kindles, no Nooks, no … well, you get the picture. (It's also worth noting that, with U.S. tourists now beginning to enter the country in larger numbers, Cuba seems to be on the cusp of a "modern" invasion; if I come back here in a couple years, I full expect to see Kentucky Fried Chicken outlets on every corner.)

But there were lots of friendly people in Havana, crowding the streets, peering out of windows and doorways, laughing and shouting and waving at friends and strangers alike. Everyone was well-dressed in clean clothes (the evidence of which could be seen in the endless lines of clothing hanging from laundry lines strung from wall to wall, everywhere); but there were no designer jeans, no fancy shoes, no heavy jewelry, and no sign of ostentatious clothing of any kind. Like some other developing countries, the people were sometimes a little too friendly -- constantly offering a taxi ride, a pedicab ride, a small exchange of the "official" currency (convertible pesos, or "cuqs") for the "local" currency (pesos), a great meal or a great drink at a nearby restaurant or bar, a haircut, a manicure, or just a little … umm, well, friendship (offers for which ran the gamut of "señor" to "amigo" to "my friend"). On the street, you often felt you were in the land of the hustle; but if you smiled, shook your head, and politely said, "no," people generally smiled and back off.

As for the photography: well, I was in one of three different workshop groups, each of which had roughly a dozen participants. The three dozen individual photographers were well equipped with all of the latest Nikon and Canon gear, and they generally focused on a handful of subjects: buildings and architecture, ballet practice sessions, cockfights, boxing matches, rodeos, fishing villages, old cars, interiors of people's homes, street scenes, and people. Lots of people. As in every other part of the world I've visited, the people were the most interesting. We saw young and old, men and women, boisterous children, grizzled elders, police officers, bus drivers, and people of almost every conceivable race.

The streets were clean, though not spotless; and the streets were jammed, with bicycles and motorbikes and pedi-cabs, taxis, buses, horse-and-carriages, pedestrians, dogs (LOTS of dogs, many sleeping peacefully in the middle of a sidewalk), and even a few people on roller skates. And, as anyone who has seen photos of Havana knows, there were lots and lots and LOTS of old cars. Plymouths, Pontiacs, Dodges, Buicks, and Chevys, along with the occasional Cadillac. A few were old and rusted, but most had been renovated, repaired, and repainted -- often in garishly bright colors from every spectrum of the rainbow. Cherry pink, fire-engine red, Sunkist orange, lime green, turquoise and every shade of blue, orange, brown, and a lot more that I've probably forgotten. All of us in the photo workshop succumbed to the temptation to photograph the cars when we first arrived … but they were everywhere, every day, wherever we went, and eventually we all suffered from sensory overload. (For what it's worth, one of our workshop colleagues had visited Cuba eight years ago, and told us that at the time, there were only old cars in sight; now roughly half of the cars are more-or-less modern Kia's Audis, Russian Ladas, and other "generic" compact cars.)

The one thing I wasn't prepared for in Havana was the sense of decay: almost no modern buildings, no skyscrapers, and very little evidence of renovation. There were several monstrous, ugly, vintage-1950s buildings that oozed "Russia" from every pore. But the rest of the buildings date back to the 40s, the 30s, the 20s, or even the turn of the last century. Some were crumbling, some were just facades; some showed evidence of the kind of salt-water erosion that one sees near the ocean. But many simply looked old and decrepit, with peeling paint and broken stones, like the run-down buildings in whatever slum you're familiar with in North America. One has a very strong sense of a city that was vibrant and beautiful all during the last half of the 19th century, and the first half of the 20th century -- and then time stopped dead in its tracks.

Why that happened, and what's being done about it, is something I didn't have a chance to explore; there was a general reluctance to discuss politics in great detail. Some of Havana looks like the less-prosperous regions of other Caribbean towns; and some of it is presumably the direct and/or indirect result of a half-century of U.S. embargo. But some of it seems to be the result of the collapse of the Soviet Union in the early 1990s, and the subsequent collapse of foreign aid that Cuba depended upon.

As for my own photos: I did not attend the ballet practice sessions, nor did I see the rodeo. I did see some interesting graffiti on a few walls, which I photographed; but for some reason, I missed almost all of the numerous political billboards and stylized paintings of Che Guevera on buildings and walls. What I focused on instead was the "street scenes" of people and buildings, which will hopefully give you a sense of what the place is like.

Enjoy!


100 views of Cuba, Dec 2011 - 17
photo card supplies
Image by Ed Yourdon
This set consists of what I felt were the best 100 photos of the 3500+ images that I took in Cuba during a weeklong visit in December 2011.

More details later, as time permits…

***********************

Cuba. For today's generation of Americans, the notion of traveling to Cuba is probably like that of traveling to North Korea. It's off-limits, forbidden by the government -- and frankly, why would anyone bother? But for someone like me, who spent his childhood in the Cold War era of the 1950s, and who went off to college just after Castro took power, and just before the Bay of Pigs and the Cuban missile crisis, the notion of traveling to Cuba has entirely different overtones.
And yet Cuba is only 90 miles away from Key West (as we were reminded so often in the 1960s), and its climate is presumably no different than a dozen of Caribbean islands I've visited over the years. Numerous friends have made quasi-legal trips to Cuba over the years, flying in from Canada or Mexico, and they've all returned with fabulous pictures and great stories of a vibrant, colorful country. So, when the folks at the Santa Fe Photographic Workshops sent out a notice in November 2011, announcing a series of photo workshops in Havana, we couldn't resist the temptation to sign up.

Getting into Cuba turned out to be trivial: an overnight stay in Miami, a 45-minute chartered flight operated by American Airlines, and customs/immigration formalities that turned out to be cursory or non-existent. By mid-afternoon, our group was checked into the Parque Central Hotel in downtown Havana -- where the rooms were spacious, the service was friendly, the food was reasonably tasty, the rum was delicious, and the Internet was … well, slow and expensive.

We had been warned that that some of our American conveniences -- like credit cards -- would not be available, and we were prepared for a fairly spartan week. But no matter how prepared we might have been intellectually, it takes a while to adjust to a land with no Skype, no Blackberry service, no iPhone service, no phone-based Twitter, Facebook, or Google+. I was perfectly happy that there were no Burger Kings, no Pizza Huts, no Wendys, no Starbuck's, and MacDonalds. There was Coke (classic), but no Diet Coke (or Coke Light). There were also no police sirens, no ambulance sirens, and no church bells. There were no iPods, and consequently no evidence of people plugged into their music via the thin white earplugs that Apple supplies with their devices. No iPads, no Kindles, no Nooks, no … well, you get the picture. (It's also worth noting that, with U.S. tourists now beginning to enter the country in larger numbers, Cuba seems to be on the cusp of a "modern" invasion; if I come back here in a couple years, I full expect to see Kentucky Fried Chicken outlets on every corner.)

But there were lots of friendly people in Havana, crowding the streets, peering out of windows and doorways, laughing and shouting and waving at friends and strangers alike. Everyone was well-dressed in clean clothes (the evidence of which could be seen in the endless lines of clothing hanging from laundry lines strung from wall to wall, everywhere); but there were no designer jeans, no fancy shoes, no heavy jewelry, and no sign of ostentatious clothing of any kind. Like some other developing countries, the people were sometimes a little too friendly -- constantly offering a taxi ride, a pedicab ride, a small exchange of the "official" currency (convertible pesos, or "cuqs") for the "local" currency (pesos), a great meal or a great drink at a nearby restaurant or bar, a haircut, a manicure, or just a little … umm, well, friendship (offers for which ran the gamut of "señor" to "amigo" to "my friend"). On the street, you often felt you were in the land of the hustle; but if you smiled, shook your head, and politely said, "no," people generally smiled and back off.

As for the photography: well, I was in one of three different workshop groups, each of which had roughly a dozen participants. The three dozen individual photographers were well equipped with all of the latest Nikon and Canon gear, and they generally focused on a handful of subjects: buildings and architecture, ballet practice sessions, cockfights, boxing matches, rodeos, fishing villages, old cars, interiors of people's homes, street scenes, and people. Lots of people. As in every other part of the world I've visited, the people were the most interesting. We saw young and old, men and women, boisterous children, grizzled elders, police officers, bus drivers, and people of almost every conceivable race.

The streets were clean, though not spotless; and the streets were jammed, with bicycles and motorbikes and pedi-cabs, taxis, buses, horse-and-carriages, pedestrians, dogs (LOTS of dogs, many sleeping peacefully in the middle of a sidewalk), and even a few people on roller skates. And, as anyone who has seen photos of Havana knows, there were lots and lots and LOTS of old cars. Plymouths, Pontiacs, Dodges, Buicks, and Chevys, along with the occasional Cadillac. A few were old and rusted, but most had been renovated, repaired, and repainted -- often in garishly bright colors from every spectrum of the rainbow. Cherry pink, fire-engine red, Sunkist orange, lime green, turquoise and every shade of blue, orange, brown, and a lot more that I've probably forgotten. All of us in the photo workshop succumbed to the temptation to photograph the cars when we first arrived … but they were everywhere, every day, wherever we went, and eventually we all suffered from sensory overload. (For what it's worth, one of our workshop colleagues had visited Cuba eight years ago, and told us that at the time, there were only old cars in sight; now roughly half of the cars are more-or-less modern Kia's Audis, Russian Ladas, and other "generic" compact cars.)

The one thing I wasn't prepared for in Havana was the sense of decay: almost no modern buildings, no skyscrapers, and very little evidence of renovation. There were several monstrous, ugly, vintage-1950s buildings that oozed "Russia" from every pore. But the rest of the buildings date back to the 40s, the 30s, the 20s, or even the turn of the last century. Some were crumbling, some were just facades; some showed evidence of the kind of salt-water erosion that one sees near the ocean. But many simply looked old and decrepit, with peeling paint and broken stones, like the run-down buildings in whatever slum you're familiar with in North America. One has a very strong sense of a city that was vibrant and beautiful all during the last half of the 19th century, and the first half of the 20th century -- and then time stopped dead in its tracks.

Why that happened, and what's being done about it, is something I didn't have a chance to explore; there was a general reluctance to discuss politics in great detail. Some of Havana looks like the less-prosperous regions of other Caribbean towns; and some of it is presumably the direct and/or indirect result of a half-century of U.S. embargo. But some of it seems to be the result of the collapse of the Soviet Union in the early 1990s, and the subsequent collapse of foreign aid that Cuba depended upon.

As for my own photos: I did not attend the ballet practice sessions, nor did I see the rodeo. I did see some interesting graffiti on a few walls, which I photographed; but for some reason, I missed almost all of the numerous political billboards and stylized paintings of Che Guevera on buildings and walls. What I focused on instead was the "street scenes" of people and buildings, which will hopefully give you a sense of what the place is like.

Enjoy!


100 views of Cuba, Dec 2011 - 25
photo card supplies
Image by Ed Yourdon
This set consists of what I felt were the best 100 photos of the 3500+ images that I took in Cuba during a weeklong visit in December 2011.

More details later, as time permits…

***********************

Cuba. For today's generation of Americans, the notion of traveling to Cuba is probably like that of traveling to North Korea. It's off-limits, forbidden by the government -- and frankly, why would anyone bother? But for someone like me, who spent his childhood in the Cold War era of the 1950s, and who went off to college just after Castro took power, and just before the Bay of Pigs and the Cuban missile crisis, the notion of traveling to Cuba has entirely different overtones.
And yet Cuba is only 90 miles away from Key West (as we were reminded so often in the 1960s), and its climate is presumably no different than a dozen of Caribbean islands I've visited over the years. Numerous friends have made quasi-legal trips to Cuba over the years, flying in from Canada or Mexico, and they've all returned with fabulous pictures and great stories of a vibrant, colorful country. So, when the folks at the Santa Fe Photographic Workshops sent out a notice in November 2011, announcing a series of photo workshops in Havana, we couldn't resist the temptation to sign up.

Getting into Cuba turned out to be trivial: an overnight stay in Miami, a 45-minute chartered flight operated by American Airlines, and customs/immigration formalities that turned out to be cursory or non-existent. By mid-afternoon, our group was checked into the Parque Central Hotel in downtown Havana -- where the rooms were spacious, the service was friendly, the food was reasonably tasty, the rum was delicious, and the Internet was … well, slow and expensive.

We had been warned that that some of our American conveniences -- like credit cards -- would not be available, and we were prepared for a fairly spartan week. But no matter how prepared we might have been intellectually, it takes a while to adjust to a land with no Skype, no Blackberry service, no iPhone service, no phone-based Twitter, Facebook, or Google+. I was perfectly happy that there were no Burger Kings, no Pizza Huts, no Wendys, no Starbuck's, and MacDonalds. There was Coke (classic), but no Diet Coke (or Coke Light). There were also no police sirens, no ambulance sirens, and no church bells. There were no iPods, and consequently no evidence of people plugged into their music via the thin white earplugs that Apple supplies with their devices. No iPads, no Kindles, no Nooks, no … well, you get the picture. (It's also worth noting that, with U.S. tourists now beginning to enter the country in larger numbers, Cuba seems to be on the cusp of a "modern" invasion; if I come back here in a couple years, I full expect to see Kentucky Fried Chicken outlets on every corner.)

But there were lots of friendly people in Havana, crowding the streets, peering out of windows and doorways, laughing and shouting and waving at friends and strangers alike. Everyone was well-dressed in clean clothes (the evidence of which could be seen in the endless lines of clothing hanging from laundry lines strung from wall to wall, everywhere); but there were no designer jeans, no fancy shoes, no heavy jewelry, and no sign of ostentatious clothing of any kind. Like some other developing countries, the people were sometimes a little too friendly -- constantly offering a taxi ride, a pedicab ride, a small exchange of the "official" currency (convertible pesos, or "cuqs") for the "local" currency (pesos), a great meal or a great drink at a nearby restaurant or bar, a haircut, a manicure, or just a little … umm, well, friendship (offers for which ran the gamut of "señor" to "amigo" to "my friend"). On the street, you often felt you were in the land of the hustle; but if you smiled, shook your head, and politely said, "no," people generally smiled and back off.

As for the photography: well, I was in one of three different workshop groups, each of which had roughly a dozen participants. The three dozen individual photographers were well equipped with all of the latest Nikon and Canon gear, and they generally focused on a handful of subjects: buildings and architecture, ballet practice sessions, cockfights, boxing matches, rodeos, fishing villages, old cars, interiors of people's homes, street scenes, and people. Lots of people. As in every other part of the world I've visited, the people were the most interesting. We saw young and old, men and women, boisterous children, grizzled elders, police officers, bus drivers, and people of almost every conceivable race.

The streets were clean, though not spotless; and the streets were jammed, with bicycles and motorbikes and pedi-cabs, taxis, buses, horse-and-carriages, pedestrians, dogs (LOTS of dogs, many sleeping peacefully in the middle of a sidewalk), and even a few people on roller skates. And, as anyone who has seen photos of Havana knows, there were lots and lots and LOTS of old cars. Plymouths, Pontiacs, Dodges, Buicks, and Chevys, along with the occasional Cadillac. A few were old and rusted, but most had been renovated, repaired, and repainted -- often in garishly bright colors from every spectrum of the rainbow. Cherry pink, fire-engine red, Sunkist orange, lime green, turquoise and every shade of blue, orange, brown, and a lot more that I've probably forgotten. All of us in the photo workshop succumbed to the temptation to photograph the cars when we first arrived … but they were everywhere, every day, wherever we went, and eventually we all suffered from sensory overload. (For what it's worth, one of our workshop colleagues had visited Cuba eight years ago, and told us that at the time, there were only old cars in sight; now roughly half of the cars are more-or-less modern Kia's Audis, Russian Ladas, and other "generic" compact cars.)

The one thing I wasn't prepared for in Havana was the sense of decay: almost no modern buildings, no skyscrapers, and very little evidence of renovation. There were several monstrous, ugly, vintage-1950s buildings that oozed "Russia" from every pore. But the rest of the buildings date back to the 40s, the 30s, the 20s, or even the turn of the last century. Some were crumbling, some were just facades; some showed evidence of the kind of salt-water erosion that one sees near the ocean. But many simply looked old and decrepit, with peeling paint and broken stones, like the run-down buildings in whatever slum you're familiar with in North America. One has a very strong sense of a city that was vibrant and beautiful all during the last half of the 19th century, and the first half of the 20th century -- and then time stopped dead in its tracks.

Why that happened, and what's being done about it, is something I didn't have a chance to explore; there was a general reluctance to discuss politics in great detail. Some of Havana looks like the less-prosperous regions of other Caribbean towns; and some of it is presumably the direct and/or indirect result of a half-century of U.S. embargo. But some of it seems to be the result of the collapse of the Soviet Union in the early 1990s, and the subsequent collapse of foreign aid that Cuba depended upon.

As for my own photos: I did not attend the ballet practice sessions, nor did I see the rodeo. I did see some interesting graffiti on a few walls, which I photographed; but for some reason, I missed almost all of the numerous political billboards and stylized paintings of Che Guevera on buildings and walls. What I focused on instead was the "street scenes" of people and buildings, which will hopefully give you a sense of what the place is like.

Enjoy!


100 views of Cuba, Dec 2011 - 43
photo card supplies
Image by Ed Yourdon
This set consists of what I felt were the best 100 photos of the 3500+ images that I took in Cuba during a weeklong visit in December 2011.

More details later, as time permits...

***********************

Cuba. For today's generation of Americans, the notion of traveling to Cuba is probably like that of traveling to North Korea. It's off-limits, forbidden by the government -- and frankly, why would anyone bother? But for someone like me, who spent his childhood in the Cold War era of the 1950s, and who went off to college just after Castro took power, and just before the Bay of Pigs and the Cuban missile crisis, the notion of traveling to Cuba has entirely different overtones.

And yet Cuba is only 90 miles away from Key West (as we were reminded so often in the 1960s), and its climate is presumably no different than a dozen of Caribbean islands I've visited over the years. Numerous friends have made quasi-legal trips to Cuba over the years, flying in from Canada or Mexico, and they've all returned with fabulous pictures and great stories of a vibrant, colorful country. So, when the folks at the Santa Fe Photographic Workshops sent out a notice in November 2011, announcing a series of photo workshops in Havana, we couldn't resist the temptation to sign up.

Getting into Cuba turned out to be trivial: an overnight stay in Miami, a 45-minute chartered flight operated by American Airlines, and customs/immigration formalities that turned out to be cursory or non-existent. By mid-afternoon, our group was checked into the Parque Central Hotel in downtown Havana -- where the rooms were spacious, the service was friendly, the food was reasonably tasty, the rum was delicious, and the Internet was … well, slow and expensive.

We had been warned that that some of our American conveniences -- like credit cards -- would not be available, and we were prepared for a fairly spartan week. But no matter how prepared we might have been intellectually, it takes a while to adjust to a land with no Skype, no Blackberry service, no iPhone service, no phone-based Twitter, Facebook, or Google+. I was perfectly happy that there were no Burger Kings, no Pizza Huts, no Wendys, no Starbuck's, and MacDonalds. There was Coke (classic), but no Diet Coke (or Coke Light). There were also no police sirens, no ambulance sirens, and no church bells. There were no iPods, and consequently no evidence of people plugged into their music via the thin white earplugs that Apple supplies with their devices. No iPads, no Kindles, no Nooks, no … well, you get the picture. (It's also worth noting that, with U.S. tourists now beginning to enter the country in larger numbers, Cuba seems to be on the cusp of a "modern" invasion; if I come back here in a couple years, I full expect to see Kentucky Fried Chicken outlets on every corner.)

But there were lots of friendly people in Havana, crowding the streets, peering out of windows and doorways, laughing and shouting and waving at friends and strangers alike. Everyone was well-dressed in clean clothes (the evidence of which could be seen in the endless lines of clothing hanging from laundry lines strung from wall to wall, everywhere); but there were no designer jeans, no fancy shoes, no heavy jewelry, and no sign of ostentatious clothing of any kind. Like some other developing countries, the people were sometimes a little too friendly -- constantly offering a taxi ride, a pedicab ride, a small exchange of the "official" currency (convertible pesos, or "cuqs") for the "local" currency (pesos), a great meal or a great drink at a nearby restaurant or bar, a haircut, a manicure, or just a little … umm, well, friendship (offers for which ran the gamut of "señor" to "amigo" to "my friend"). On the street, you often felt you were in the land of the hustle; but if you smiled, shook your head, and politely said, "no," people generally smiled and back off.

As for the photography: well, I was in one of three different workshop groups, each of which had roughly a dozen participants. The three dozen individual photographers were well equipped with all of the latest Nikon and Canon gear, and they generally focused on a handful of subjects: buildings and architecture, ballet practice sessions, cockfights, boxing matches, rodeos, fishing villages, old cars, interiors of people's homes, street scenes, and people. Lots of people. As in every other part of the world I've visited, the people were the most interesting. We saw young and old, men and women, boisterous children, grizzled elders, police officers, bus drivers, and people of almost every conceivable race.

The streets were clean, though not spotless; and the streets were jammed, with bicycles and motorbikes and pedi-cabs, taxis, buses, horse-and-carriages, pedestrians, dogs (LOTS of dogs, many sleeping peacefully in the middle of a sidewalk), and even a few people on roller skates. And, as anyone who has seen photos of Havana knows, there were lots and lots and LOTS of old cars. Plymouths, Pontiacs, Dodges, Buicks, and Chevys, along with the occasional Cadillac. A few were old and rusted, but most had been renovated, repaired, and repainted -- often in garishly bright colors from every spectrum of the rainbow. Cherry pink, fire-engine red, Sunkist orange, lime green, turquoise and every shade of blue, orange, brown, and a lot more that I've probably forgotten. All of us in the photo workshop succumbed to the temptation to photograph the cars when we first arrived … but they were everywhere, every day, wherever we went, and eventually we all suffered from sensory overload. (For what it's worth, one of our workshop colleagues had visited Cuba eight years ago, and told us that at the time, there were only old cars in sight; now roughly half of the cars are more-or-less modern Kia's Audis, Russian Ladas, and other "generic" compact cars.)

The one thing I wasn't prepared for in Havana was the sense of decay: almost no modern buildings, no skyscrapers, and very little evidence of renovation. There were several monstrous, ugly, vintage-1950s buildings that oozed "Russia" from every pore. But the rest of the buildings date back to the 40s, the 30s, the 20s, or even the turn of the last century. Some were crumbling, some were just facades; some showed evidence of the kind of salt-water erosion that one sees near the ocean. But many simply looked old and decrepit, with peeling paint and broken stones, like the run-down buildings in whatever slum you're familiar with in North America. One has a very strong sense of a city that was vibrant and beautiful all during the last half of the 19th century, and the first half of the 20th century -- and then time stopped dead in its tracks.

Why that happened, and what's being done about it, is something I didn't have a chance to explore; there was a general reluctance to discuss politics in great detail. Some of Havana looks like the less-prosperous regions of other Caribbean towns; and some of it is presumably the direct and/or indirect result of a half-century of U.S. embargo. But some of it seems to be the result of the collapse of the Soviet Union in the early 1990s, and the subsequent collapse of foreign aid that Cuba depended upon.

As for my own photos: I did not attend the ballet practice sessions, nor did I see the rodeo. I did see some interesting graffiti on a few walls, which I photographed; but for some reason, I missed almost all of the numerous political billboards and stylized paintings of Che Guevera on buildings and walls. What I focused on instead was the "street scenes" of people and buildings, which will hopefully give you a sense of what the place is like.

Enjoy!


100 views of Cuba, Dec 2011 - 18
photo card supplies
Image by Ed Yourdon
This set consists of what I felt were the best 100 photos of the 3500+ images that I took in Cuba during a weeklong visit in December 2011.

More details later, as time permits…

***********************

Cuba. For today's generation of Americans, the notion of traveling to Cuba is probably like that of traveling to North Korea. It's off-limits, forbidden by the government -- and frankly, why would anyone bother? But for someone like me, who spent his childhood in the Cold War era of the 1950s, and who went off to college just after Castro took power, and just before the Bay of Pigs and the Cuban missile crisis, the notion of traveling to Cuba has entirely different overtones.
And yet Cuba is only 90 miles away from Key West (as we were reminded so often in the 1960s), and its climate is presumably no different than a dozen of Caribbean islands I've visited over the years. Numerous friends have made quasi-legal trips to Cuba over the years, flying in from Canada or Mexico, and they've all returned with fabulous pictures and great stories of a vibrant, colorful country. So, when the folks at the Santa Fe Photographic Workshops sent out a notice in November 2011, announcing a series of photo workshops in Havana, we couldn't resist the temptation to sign up.

Getting into Cuba turned out to be trivial: an overnight stay in Miami, a 45-minute chartered flight operated by American Airlines, and customs/immigration formalities that turned out to be cursory or non-existent. By mid-afternoon, our group was checked into the Parque Central Hotel in downtown Havana -- where the rooms were spacious, the service was friendly, the food was reasonably tasty, the rum was delicious, and the Internet was … well, slow and expensive.

We had been warned that that some of our American conveniences -- like credit cards -- would not be available, and we were prepared for a fairly spartan week. But no matter how prepared we might have been intellectually, it takes a while to adjust to a land with no Skype, no Blackberry service, no iPhone service, no phone-based Twitter, Facebook, or Google+. I was perfectly happy that there were no Burger Kings, no Pizza Huts, no Wendys, no Starbuck's, and MacDonalds. There was Coke (classic), but no Diet Coke (or Coke Light). There were also no police sirens, no ambulance sirens, and no church bells. There were no iPods, and consequently no evidence of people plugged into their music via the thin white earplugs that Apple supplies with their devices. No iPads, no Kindles, no Nooks, no … well, you get the picture. (It's also worth noting that, with U.S. tourists now beginning to enter the country in larger numbers, Cuba seems to be on the cusp of a "modern" invasion; if I come back here in a couple years, I full expect to see Kentucky Fried Chicken outlets on every corner.)

But there were lots of friendly people in Havana, crowding the streets, peering out of windows and doorways, laughing and shouting and waving at friends and strangers alike. Everyone was well-dressed in clean clothes (the evidence of which could be seen in the endless lines of clothing hanging from laundry lines strung from wall to wall, everywhere); but there were no designer jeans, no fancy shoes, no heavy jewelry, and no sign of ostentatious clothing of any kind. Like some other developing countries, the people were sometimes a little too friendly -- constantly offering a taxi ride, a pedicab ride, a small exchange of the "official" currency (convertible pesos, or "cuqs") for the "local" currency (pesos), a great meal or a great drink at a nearby restaurant or bar, a haircut, a manicure, or just a little … umm, well, friendship (offers for which ran the gamut of "señor" to "amigo" to "my friend"). On the street, you often felt you were in the land of the hustle; but if you smiled, shook your head, and politely said, "no," people generally smiled and back off.

As for the photography: well, I was in one of three different workshop groups, each of which had roughly a dozen participants. The three dozen individual photographers were well equipped with all of the latest Nikon and Canon gear, and they generally focused on a handful of subjects: buildings and architecture, ballet practice sessions, cockfights, boxing matches, rodeos, fishing villages, old cars, interiors of people's homes, street scenes, and people. Lots of people. As in every other part of the world I've visited, the people were the most interesting. We saw young and old, men and women, boisterous children, grizzled elders, police officers, bus drivers, and people of almost every conceivable race.

The streets were clean, though not spotless; and the streets were jammed, with bicycles and motorbikes and pedi-cabs, taxis, buses, horse-and-carriages, pedestrians, dogs (LOTS of dogs, many sleeping peacefully in the middle of a sidewalk), and even a few people on roller skates. And, as anyone who has seen photos of Havana knows, there were lots and lots and LOTS of old cars. Plymouths, Pontiacs, Dodges, Buicks, and Chevys, along with the occasional Cadillac. A few were old and rusted, but most had been renovated, repaired, and repainted -- often in garishly bright colors from every spectrum of the rainbow. Cherry pink, fire-engine red, Sunkist orange, lime green, turquoise and every shade of blue, orange, brown, and a lot more that I've probably forgotten. All of us in the photo workshop succumbed to the temptation to photograph the cars when we first arrived … but they were everywhere, every day, wherever we went, and eventually we all suffered from sensory overload. (For what it's worth, one of our workshop colleagues had visited Cuba eight years ago, and told us that at the time, there were only old cars in sight; now roughly half of the cars are more-or-less modern Kia's Audis, Russian Ladas, and other "generic" compact cars.)

The one thing I wasn't prepared for in Havana was the sense of decay: almost no modern buildings, no skyscrapers, and very little evidence of renovation. There were several monstrous, ugly, vintage-1950s buildings that oozed "Russia" from every pore. But the rest of the buildings date back to the 40s, the 30s, the 20s, or even the turn of the last century. Some were crumbling, some were just facades; some showed evidence of the kind of salt-water erosion that one sees near the ocean. But many simply looked old and decrepit, with peeling paint and broken stones, like the run-down buildings in whatever slum you're familiar with in North America. One has a very strong sense of a city that was vibrant and beautiful all during the last half of the 19th century, and the first half of the 20th century -- and then time stopped dead in its tracks.

Why that happened, and what's being done about it, is something I didn't have a chance to explore; there was a general reluctance to discuss politics in great detail. Some of Havana looks like the less-prosperous regions of other Caribbean towns; and some of it is presumably the direct and/or indirect result of a half-century of U.S. embargo. But some of it seems to be the result of the collapse of the Soviet Union in the early 1990s, and the subsequent collapse of foreign aid that Cuba depended upon.

As for my own photos: I did not attend the ballet practice sessions, nor did I see the rodeo. I did see some interesting graffiti on a few walls, which I photographed; but for some reason, I missed almost all of the numerous political billboards and stylized paintings of Che Guevera on buildings and walls. What I focused on instead was the "street scenes" of people and buildings, which will hopefully give you a sense of what the place is like.

Enjoy!

Monday 20 May 2013

Tour of my study.

Tour of my study.
photo card printer
Image by Greh Fox
The place in the house where I spend most of my time at. Photo did not go through much post processing. Adjusted the alignment, temperature & tint.

Click the photo and you'll be able to mouse-over to find out what's right on my desk.

Settings: Aperture: f/3.5, Exposure: 1/40, ISO100, EV 0, Range: 28mm

Equipment: Canon 40D + Contax Zeiss Vario-Sonnar 3.5-4.5/28-70mm T* Planar MF.
© Copyright Aaron Moraes. 2009. Some Rights Reserved.


Christmas Loot
photo card printer
Image by rikhei
What I got for Christmas. Not pictured is the awesome photo printer my parents got me. The notes are helpful, but you can also just look at the large size of this photo to get a better look. :)


BOYE_AN001_0014
photo card printer
Image by Greene Connections
Funeral card of Emma (Coughanour) Hamilton [1846-1892] - wife of Frank Hamilton, daughter of Daniel Coughanour & Margaret Hood. The funeral card states that she "Died September 4, 1892. / Aged 45 years." Original, no printer listed. The Album 1 Series photographs are in a large photograph album which contains many unidentified images believed to be connected to the Coughanour family and including Hamilton, Woods, Yohe, and possibly Jones, relations. An inscription inside the front cover reads, “Presented to Grandpap / By / Bulger & Snider / Dec. 25, 1887.” Several handwritten inscriptions and a handful of funeral cards specifically name the Elliott, Hamilton, Miller, Woods and Yohe families. It is possible that the album may have passed from Hester (Coughanour) Yohe [1858-1938] to the family of her elder sister Alice (Coughanour) Woods [1849-1926] and brother-in-law Dr. Samuel D. Woods [1848-1930], with whom she lived out her last years. The album in combination with the additional contents of the James A. Boyer Collection was recovered from the home of Dr. Samuel D. Woods [1848-1930] and his wife, Alice Coughanour [1849-1926], after more than 75 years of storage. At the time of recovery the home was being sold after 105 years of continuous family ownership. The collection had passed with the ownership of the Woods home in Connellsville, Fayette County, Pennsylvania, as follows, Dr. Samuel D. Woods [1848-1930] and his wife, Alice Coughanour [1849-1926], to their son Alfred H. Woods [1875-1960] and his wife, Mary Ellen Hill [1879-1954], to their descendants Samuel D. Woods, Mary Frances (Woods) Myers, Virginia (Woods) Boyer [1904-1986], and Alfred William Boyer, until the majority of the collection was recovered by James Alexander Boyer and his wife, Lucinda Bowers, who shared the collection with with the Greene Connections: Greene County, Pennsylvania Photo Archives Project in 2006.


JACB_AN001_0094
photo card printer
Image by Greene Connections
Funeral card of Osee Kent - daughter of John T. Kent & Eliza Bell. Original, no printer listed. The funeral card states that she "Died Feb. 26, 1889. Aged 10 yrs. 8 mos. 19 dys." The Jacobs-Kent Series probably began with Eleanor Ann (Kent) Jacobs [1832-1902], wife of Henry Moore Jacobs, and daughter of David Kent & Elizabeth Barnes. Eleanor's photographs were passed to her son Joseph Warren Jacobs [1868-1947] to his daughter Helen Mae (Jacobs) Fonner [1922-1999] to her daughter Anna (Fonner) Blystone who with her husband, George Blystone, owned and shared the photographs with the Greene Connections: Greene County, Pennsylvania Photo Archives Project in 2005. Each generation added to the collection with photographs from their own family and in-laws. The Jacobs-Kent Series is a part of the Helen Mae (Jacobs) Fonner Collection.


TOOK_AN002_0009
photo card printer
Image by Greene Connections
Funeral card of John Anderson - husband of Anna Howshow. Original, no printer listed. The funeral card states that he died April 10, 1893, aged 78 years. The Watson-Anderson Series photographs were most likely passed from Robert Watson [1847-1942] and his wife, Catharine Anderson [1848-1933] to their daughter Ella May (Watson) Throckmorton [1893-1988] and her husband, Robert Lawrence Throckmorton, Sr. [1889-1964] to their daughter, Katherine Jane (Throckmorton) Toothman who owned and shared the photographs with the Greene Connections: Greene County, Pennsylvania Photo Archives Project in 2006. The Watson-Anderson Series is a part of the Katherine Jane (Throckmorton) Toothman Collection.

Center for International Collections and Microforms, Maps and Non-Print staff, Ohio University's Alden Library, 1999

Center for International Collections and Microforms, Maps and Non-Print staff, Ohio University's Alden Library, 1999
anniversary photo card
Image by Ohio University Libraries
Staff for the Center for International Collections and Microforms, Maps and Non-Print located on the first floor of Alden Library. L to R, front row: Lucy Conn, Judy Connick, Lian The-Mulliner, Edie Luce; back row: Liren Zheng, Jeff Ferrier, Ted Foster.

Part of 1999 project to document the various library departments for Alden Library's 30th anniversary. Each department had a group photo and description in the library newsletter.

Below is from the library's newsletter, Intercom:

Microforms, Maps and Non-Print
When Alden Library first opened in 1969 the Microforms collection was moved from the basement Reserve Room of Chubb Library to the 6th and 7th floors of Alden, in the middle where the computers are currently. It was difficult to maintain the collection in such a setting and thus in the Spring of 1970 Microforms was moved down to the 2nd floor and staffed. In August of 1970 Ted Foster became the Head of Microforms having previously been in the Reference Department. At this time the Copy Service* became part of the Microforms collection.

In 1972 the Microform Collection and the Copy Service moved to the more central Fifth floor (now Documents service area). To make room for the Documents Department in 1978 the Copy Service moved to what is now the Ryan Room and the microtext portion of collection moved to the first floor incorporating the Map collection and video discs and cassettes and other media. The Map Collection moved to the 1st floor of Alden from the direction of Gertrude Linnenbruegge and then Mary Stahl until her retirement. Beyond the many able graduate assistants for maps and area studies, associates to work with Ted Foster at some point have included Stan Shaw, Mike Holkum, Mike Benz, Gyneth Thompson (Karen's mother), Alice Weaver, Cheng See Dale, Dorothy Scarmack, and currently Edie Luce, who moved from the Cataloging Department 1992. Chau Hoang filled in while Edie was on leave in Indonesia.

The first few years were devoted to the creation of a classification system, a card catalog and assorted printed guides to the larger sets. Advances in technology have enabled more of the collection to be incorporated into the Alice system and allowed the Microforms, Maps and Non-Print collection to supplement Alice with its own Web Pages. The department is more service oriented and less format oriented today than in previous years. The ultimate goal is to seamlessly convert from one format to another suiting particular user needs at the moment. With the rapid expansion of digital applications the Department is now undergoing fundamental changes and is looking forward to what potential the new millenium holds.

*If anyone is counting, the Copy Service has occupied the following areas: fourth floor in an alcove behind the former office of Bill Betcher, "machine room" on Second Floor-now P-Circ; fifth floor (now Documents offices); the now Ryan Room; Third floor 318 now classroom; Fourth floor 412b now David Dudding's area; and Second floor 253 formerly Preservation.

Southeast Asia Collections next edition.

[List of employees, at that time, and start year]
Theodore Foster (1968)
Edith Luce (1988)
(Southeast Asia staff included)


Southeast Asia Collection
In 1967, Northern Illinois University invited a cataloger from Cornell's premier Southeast Asia Collection to interview for the curatorship of its Southeast Asia Collection (the occupant had taken a comparable job at Yale). Two professors offered to drive her back from the home of barbed wire and winged corn to O'Hare airport. They informed her that they had been hired to start a Southeast Asia program at OU. After interviewing her at the airport, they recommended her, and invited her to campus, meeting her in Columbus with the OU plane. So in September 1967 Lian The (Now Lian The-Mulliner) began her long journey with the "Southeast Asia Collection." Quotes are appropriate because although Professor John Cady, one of the pioneers in Southeast Asia Studies in the U.S., had been at OU for a number of years, few books in the library focused on Southeast Asia. By this time, Chubb Library was so crowded that she (and her counterpart in African Studies) actually had their main offices in the Center for International Studies. Housed on University Terrace (beside Scott Quad), the move to the new Alden Library (initially to the 3rd floor, in the offices now housing Anne Goss and the OhioLearn room) prompted Joni Mitchell to pen, "they've paved paradise and put in a parking lot."

From the modest beginning arose OU's foremost research collection. In 1970, the collection became a participant in the Library of Congress cooperative acquisitions program (then called PL480) for Southeast Asia (inheriting serials from Indiana University, which OU replaced as a participant). In the 1970s the Southeast Asia Program won federal funding as a national center under the National Defense Education Act. Recognizing that the collection would be the one enduring legacy of the funding, tens of thousands of dollars were devoted to acquisitions. The result was a massive growth in resources, but much of it uncataloged. With federal grants under Title II-C of the Higher Education Act, Swee-Lan Quah was hired in 1981 (from the National Library of Singapore) to lead a decade-long effort to reduce the backlog and catalog the specialized materials. In the late 1980s, funding from the Henry Luce Foundation provided seed-money for a Southeast Asia Reference position (originally held by Lindsey Reber and currently by Jeff Ferrier). In seeking the Luce funding, the Library also identified resources on the Overseas Chinese as a vital resource being neglected nationally. At other libraries with substantial East Asian Collections all materials in the Chinese language would be sent to East Asian Collections where materials focusing on Southeast Asia received the lowest priority. In identifying and addressing this national need, the Collection was building on its earlier identification of Malaysia, Singapore and Brunei as being inadequately collected. The earlier focus led to the incorporation of library funding into the endowment for the Tun Abdul Razak Chair with the Malaysian Government. Unfortunately, the Razak Chair endowment remains the only academic endowment with a substantial library component. In the 1990s, the Dr. You-Bao Shao Overseas Chinese Documentation and Research Center offered a counterpoint as it was supported by a library endowment with support for research. Initially headed by Lian with the assistance of a graduate student in history, Hong Liu (now a lecturer at the National University of Singapore), Liren Zheng was hired in April 1998 as the first full-time curator.

With grant funding and normal turnover, many current staff have contributed to the success of the Southeast Asia Collection, including: Lucy Conn, Judy Connick, Doreen Hockenberry, David Miller, Suzi Mingus, and Annette Talbert. Working in the Collection has encouraged a good number of graduate and undergraduate students to pursue library degrees. As a research collection, it is an exciting nexus of librarianship and scholarship. Today, its bibliography of resources on Malaysia, Singapore and Brunei, has been published for nearly twenty years and is currently distributed on CD-ROM and over the Internet by RMIT (Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology) Publishing. Currently in total disarray, staff are looking forward to new offices and a new service point when renovation is complete this summer.

[List of employees,at that time, and start year]
Lian The-Mulliner (1967)
Lucy Conn (1985)
Jeffrey Ferrier (1990)
Liren Zheng (1998)
(Microforms, Maps, & Non-Print included)

Alden Library site: www.library.ohiou.edu/.
See more historic images of Alden Library: media.library.ohiou.edu/



September tango - Sep 2012 - 14b
anniversary photo card
Image by Ed Yourdon
(more details later, as time permits)

***************************************
Nearly three months elapsed after I photographed the tango dancers at the 10th anniversary of the VolvoTango gathering on Pier 45 (where Christopher Street runs into the Hudson River in New York City's West Village), before I finally came back in mid-September 2012. I had been preoccupied with other duties, and I was away from the city for most of August, finally returning to the Big Apple just before the Labor Day holiday weekend …

I returned to Pier 45 on a Sunday afternoon in mid-September, and then again a few days later, on a Wednesday afternoon. I chose the dates primarily because a glance at the sky in mid-afternoon told me that the "golden hour" before sunset would almost certainly provide me with the kind of light that I love to see on the dancers' faces.

As I've mentioned in other Flickr sets, I have now met a few of the dancers at previous tango events, and I made a point of introducing myself to several others, handing out business cards with my Flickr address so that people would be able to find these pictures without too much difficulty. But the dancers have good reason to be more interested in the music, and the movement of their partners, than a guy on the sideline with a camera -- so most of them simply ignore me...

As I've also pointed out in some previous Flickr albums (here, for example), I do not dance the tango; and even after watching the dancers for nearly three years, I know almost nothing about the history, the folklore, or even the steps and rhythms of the tango. But after accidentally stumbling upon a local gathering of tango aficionados on a business trip to Washington in August 2009 (see my Flickr set Last tango in Washington), I discovered that there were similar informal events throughout New York City. When I got home, I searched on the Internet and found a schedule of upcoming tango events at several different NYC locations -- including Pier 45, where I made my first visit in mid-April of 2010, which led to this set of photos.

Altogether, I've now taken a dozen sets of tango-related photos, and you can see a thumbnail overview of them in this Flickr collection. And if you'd like to watch some other examples NYC tango dancing, check out Richard Lipkin's Guide to Argentine Tango in New York City.


Birch Tree Pair
anniversary photo card
Image by jocelynsart
a pair of birch trees, my favourite tree, taken in Collingwood Ontario.

this photo I have created into an anniversary card, available via Zazzle.
I felt the image symbolizes a young married couple and inside the card I have two older tree trunks laying on a beach together which symbolizes growing old together in love.

www.zazzle.com/couples_anniversary_card-137069558949708693


Get a 20th Birthday T-Shirt for Completing Coaster Challenge
anniversary photo card
Image by seaworldSA
SeaWorld San Antonio Coaster Challenge participants can win this 20th Anniversary t-shirt by completing the coaster challenge in the month of November 2008.

RULES

1. Coaster enthusiasts who visit the park between Nov. 1 and Nov. 30 can participate in the 20th Birthday Coaster Challenge.
2. Participants can pick up a Challenge card at Guest Services, and each time they ride one of the qualifying coasters, get their card punched.
3. When participants have completed 20 rides, they can redeem their Challenge card for a 20th BirthdayT-shirt. Participants can also vote for the SeaWorld Ride Operations Team with the most spirit.
4. Participants can then share their ride stories and photos by visiting SeaWorld’s Coaster Connection. Weekly spirit results will also be posted on the site.
5. Participants can ride a maximum of twice back to back, if no other guests are in line for the ride.
6. Participants must follow all ride safety rules for each coaster, including meeting the minimum height requirement.
7. The Coaster Challenge will launch at the park and on the Web November 1.

Visit www.seaworldcoasters.com for more info

BUTterflies say HI to Tralfamadorians (channel 4, deal 2, trick K)

BUTterflies say HI to Tralfamadorians (channel 4, deal 2, trick K)
cheap photo card
Image by KevinHutchins314
BUTterflies say HI to Tralfamadorians ("So it goes, so it goes.")

(Captions? Queer Disks? Yeah, we heard about those in the IN-D CLUB, when we smoked the KIND BUD and danced to the DUlCet DUB in the BACKROOM. Queer awaRDS for an INnATE exCESS of POLLIamorous DISKS? The disko Inferno? BUT don't we all wish for a KIND reward? Your BUD Kevin enjoys the proCESS, relishing the Titanomaxia at Flaming Holey's. Whether five minutes, 5 YEARS, or five aeons: perspectives shift; not so STUNNING, we just get OLDER.)

How can the Medium provide leadership? How will the Dealer cooperate defensively? What will the Contractor reveal of their strengths or weaknesses? Will the Initiate be able to protect his Wizard Ace of Trump? Will the Wizard of the Void be able to triumph over material elements? And where is the Demon hiding?

Strategy:

Medium = You have no Air and no Fire; your Cosmic Tribe dancers in the Void are certainly in no position to act here; and so you either must select another of the dangerous Earth dancers or attempt a splash into the untouched Waters. When you'd tried to lead onto the Earth with your Π Pion of Pentacles during an earlier trick the response from the Contractor had been ominous: the Bitch had prognosticated both 9 and 2 of Pentacles but the contract-taker acquiesced with the 9 instead of the 2 Deuce, suggesting he may have held the 9 as a "cinglette/bluffer". If he already put the 2 Deuce (and any other Pentacles) into his écart (discards) then he could now be ready to pounce from the Void, and Earth cards could be trumped. On the other hand, he did hold at least that Earth 9, and he could be pussy-footing around with the 2 Deuce and/or some other possible card such as the 10 Ten of pentacles. Obviously you should expect the Ω Archon and the Υ Upsilon face cards of Earth pentacles to be held by your co-conspirator (the Dealer). Should you throw another coin from your Earth troves, or should you finally splash into the Waters?

Examination of the verrrry lengthy collection of Cosmic Tribe dancers which you hold in the cups of Water is contrasted with your rather short list of dancers on the pentacles of Earth. Is the contractor going to trump into this tierce with his Wizard if you play either of those suits? Perhaps both of those elements are trouble. If you play your face card among the pentacles you will be using that Ψ Psion to signal to your partner as much information as possible about your knowledge of the distributions in that element and its court of Earth members. You might be trumped, but you might have better odds of escaping now rather than later. With a bold banging, crashing and stomping, your Queern Of Disks Ψ Psion of Earth leads into this trick.

Dealer = You have three reasonable options now as you are required to follow suit into the Pentacles of the Earth. You could be extremely conservative and play a pip card from your Disks, trying to avoid losing any of your face cards in case the contractor trumps the Queern Ψ Psion which was led. You could be extremely risky and play your tremendous Ω Archon Warlock of Earth Pentacles, but you are afraid to risk his +4 tête points in such a dangerous predicament here. The Ψ Psion is shouting rather loudly, and you want to go along with your partner's suggestion, but you don't especially enjoy the possible outcome of the cheap conservative extreme nor the expensive dangerous choice at the other extreme. So the third option is a sort of middle-ground: you could "run in the Horse Race" and gamble on your other Earth face card; you could send your Υ Upsilon Cavalier of Pentacles (+2 tête points) and he could be your "Dark Horse in the running". If your side wins this trick, that's great, then you'll get the points for the Ψ Psion and the Υ Upsilon; but if you lose (if the contractor trumps your Disks) you won't be risking your most expensive diamond Ω Archon King Warlock of the Earth.

In an effort to take your chances by running right down the middle-of-the-road you decide to follow suit here with your Υ Upsilon face card of Earth: the Chevalier Carreau diamond-horseman of the pentacle element. And they're off!

Initiate (Contractor) = You were so clever in the earlier trick when pentacles were requested, you disguised your 2 Deuce, your 1 Ace, and your 10 Ten of Earth by utilizing the 9 of pentacles at that time. But now your little charade is coming unveiled and the truth will begin emerging as they ask about more Earth Disks. You can try to keep up this performance as long as possible, although your opponents will soon recognize the obfuscation. This is the time to play the other Bitch card: give them the 2 Deuce of Disks which had been prognosticated, and you'll satisfy this trick while exposing as little information as you can. Your disguise won't last much longer, but you can try to sustain it until they force your hand.

Scansion:
Medium = lead Ψ Psion of Earth.
Dealer = follow Υ Upsilon of Earth.
Initiate (Contractor) = acquiesce Earth 2.
Defense scores on face cards +3 tête points for the Ψ Psion, +2 tête points for the Υ Upsilon, plus they earn +1 Tricky Point for the tierce; these 6 are added to their previous 11 for a new subtotal of 17 points at the end of this Trick K. The Medium continues to maintain the tempo.




unidentified HGC clone
cheap photo card
Image by AutomaticDefence
Indeed, another unidentified video card, although things are a bit clearer this time. The few online sources don't agree on the manufacturer, but other facts could be established, most importantly compatibility with the Hercules Graphics Card (HGC). Combining the better attributes of the two choices available when IBM's original PC was launched in 1981, it offers the for the time high text resolution of the Monochrome Display Adapter (MDA) and graphics capability, albeit in black and white only instead of the CGA's 16 colours. However, the CGA is limited to 640x200 in any mode and thus customers often opted for a sharper text display more suitable for word and spreadsheet processing. The Hercules, as a single card, was conveniently also cheaper than the option to install both of IBM's adapters alongside in a system.

As a result, the HGC is not a standard per se, widespread success of the original 1982 version and copies rather established it as one. This model comes in the shape of a full-length ISA board, but later clones like the pictured TD3088A-equipped example generally have a much higher degree of integration and as it was common back then, a DB25f parallel printer port is usually provided as well. The reference to the Republic of China in place of or supplementing Taiwan can be seen on some hardware before 1991.

Available licences for this photo:
Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported (recommended)
GNU Free Documentation Licence 1.3


Cheap PVR. One fewer power supplies. Total fan count: 3
cheap photo card
Image by Lester.L.
I got a new 250 gig harddrive (which brings the total price tag to 8) , got rid of an 80mm fan and fooled around to see if the computer would boot with only one power supply. Lo and behold, It Did!

So I did some rearranging, moved the 120mm fan up to draw air over the HDDs and push it over the vid card's cooling fins. Eliminating the second PSU and the 80mm fan drops the fan count from 5 to 3.

Previous configuration: www.flickr.com/photos/lesterofpuppets/73002918/in/set-721...

Nice Photo Card Stock Paper photos

I'm a woman... I can multi task
photo card stock paper
Image by scrappy annie
I've just finished a sketch book so I sat down this morning to decorate the front.
As usual I took a drawing from inside, which I scanned into Photo Shop and then manipulated it and printed it out on to a sheet, using four images to a sheet.
Two of these were to decorate the front and back of the book, and two were "stock images" for cards(Numbers one and six)
I then had a search in my scrap paper box and found some previously prepared strips of card which had flower shapes punched out ( Number two) These were applied round the image as a frame, together with some scraps of gift bags. I also glued scrap paper to pages of my new sketch book (Number 3), and added some gesso.
Whilst glueing the flower strips I noticed that the PVA had come through on to the newspaper I was using as a table protector, so I sprinked embossing powder on the glue, heated with a heat gun and then overpainted with crayons. (Number 7)
I then PVA'd the two remaining images to calico (Number 6) and then when these were dry I overpainted with PVA both these and the journal front.
I then painted copper acrylic paint on to the journal front, and the images, and the remainder of the paint was left on the brown paper bag I had used as a pallet ( No 4). This will be used as either a base for jewellery or to puch flowers. I keep all these paper and painted flowers in an old cheese box( Number 5).
The remaining sample ( Number 8) is from an old table cloth I was cutting up while I was waiting for things to dry. This is intended for the suffrage series.
Of course other things were going on at the same time....the washing machine was rumbling on, I opened the greenhouse and did some watering, I put the four recycling bins out for collection, spoke to my son in Australia via Skype and burned a disk for a friend.
Pretty typical morning at home really!!!
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Grimm Graveyard Limited Print - Sepia
photo card stock paper
Image by cartoonsRcool
Grimm Graveyard Limited Print - Sepia can be found at:
www.etsy.com/listing/111669406/mixed-media-print-grimm-gr...

Photo by cartoonsRcool
Grim Character by - s4ndm4n

Printed on Linen paper with blow torch burned edges. Mounted on 11"w x 8.5"h white card stock. Limited edition print of 13 pieces.

Visit me on Facebook too!
www.facebook.com/cartoonsrcool


Grimm Graveyard Limited Print - Black and White
photo card stock paper
Image by cartoonsRcool
Grimm Graveyard Limited Print - Black and White can be found at:
www.etsy.com/listing/111669584/mixed-media-print-grimm-gr...


Photo by cartoonsRcool
Grim Character by - s4ndm4n

Printed on Linen paper with blow torch burned edges. Mounted on 11"w x 8.5"h white card stock. Limited edition print of 13 pieces.

Visit me on Facebook too!
www.facebook.com/cartoonsrcool