Family Portrait in the Park

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This morning I photographed a young family in Bellingham’s Cornwall Park. The forecast was for possible snow and/or rain, but the morning dawned calm and partly sunny. It was still cold, only in the low 30s, at 10 am when we started but this is an outdoors family that was prepared for the conditions. Here’s a sampler from the session:

The little boy in the photos is about 20 months old and just beginning to talk. He liked throwing fir cones in the creek, collecting rocks, and going down the slide on the playground. He reminded me that little kids have a very short attention span so I had to be quick.

We worked for about an hour until the little one said “done” and headed toward the car.

Because my subject was so mobile I shot handheld this morning, using on-camera fill flash most of the time. I had set up off-camera flash for the first shot, but with a sync cable to the camera. It worked, but I’m really coveting some wireless flash triggers.

Spring Snow

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In the past seven days we’ve seen our weather go from cold and snowy to warm and blustery. We had about 4 inches of snow on Wednesday, which lingered into Friday. Today it’s the warmest so far this year, 54° in the shade on the north side of the house. The morning’s blustery winds have died down, but not stopped.

Iris reticulataBefore it melted away from the garden on Friday afternoon, the first of our little dwarf iris, Iris reticulata, opened through the snow. Today, three of them are in bloom on our sunny corner, along with a veritable purple sea of crocus.

In wandering around the garden today I saw the first Erythronium leaves starting to poke up, as well as a tiny little Fritillaria leaf. Each day seems to being another discovery of a plant coming out of winter dormancy and starting once again to grow.

We’re greeted with the sweet smell of Sarcococca and Viburnum bodnatense ‘Dawn’ every time we come in or leave the house, thanks to having planted these to fragrant shrubs near the front door.

The daffodils have buds but it will still be at least a couple of weeks, and probably more,  before they start bringing their yellow cheerfulness to our corner.

Northwest Flower & Garden Show 2009

It’s February, which means that it’s time for the Northwest Flower and Garden Show in Seattle. This is the 21st year for the show, and unless a new producer comes forward in the next 6 weeks or so it will be the last. Rumors say potential buyers are kicking the tires and checking under the hood, but no one’s opened their wallet just yet.  Let’s hope it continues.

I go to the show on Thursdays because northwest members of the Garden Writers Association get together that night. I carried a camera this year and worked around the crowds enjoying the display gardens to try to capture the feel of the show. Here’s what caught my eye …

The big trends in the gardens, which reflected the theme “Sustainable Spaces,” were a lot of use of regional natives (including cultivars) and outdoor living spaces. There were at least two gardens with green walls. The new plant introduction that drew my eye was a cultivar of our native vine maple (Acer circinatum) with very red bark called ‘Pacific Fire’. I asked whether it is resistant to the verticillium that is killing my ‘Sango Kaku’ Japanese Maple and was told that it is. I’ll have to see if I can find one at the nursery this spring. It’s being introduced by Monrovia Nurseries.

I always wander through the plant sales area, sometimes with a list in hand. This year I was just going to look and didn’t plan to buy anything. Sure, put a gardener and plant nut in an environment with hundreds of cool plants to take home and expect them to keep their VISA card in their pocket. Not going to happen. I was pretty good and only bought six little bags of roots and had a place for most of them in mind. From Far Reaches Farm I bought our native Trillium parviflorum, the low-growing Geranium orientalitibeticum, and the delightful early-blooming Primula dendiculata that I’ve been admiring at VanDusen for years.

Down the aisle at Sundquist Nursery I picked up the east coast native Trillium erectum and two west coast natives, Iris setosa and Lilium columbianum. When it warms up this afternoon I’ll get out in the garden and plant them all.

A note about the video slide show, which was created with Animoto. I photographed the gardens with my Canon 5D and a 24-105mm IS lens, hand held. A tripod just doesn’t work among the crowded display gardens. I set the camera to ISO 1600, which is surprisingly clean with regard to noise. Because the light is tungsten I set the camera for it, but still had to tweak the color a bit in Lightroom afterwards. The show lighting is theatrical, so contrast is rather high. Only if you spend a lot of money on landscape lighting will you ever see your own garden with light like the show gardens. A couple of the gardens had the lights on a day cycle so you got a feel of day and night in the garden. Not all visitors caught on to that idea, based on conversations I overheard.

The show runs through Sunday afternoon. For details visit the NWFGS website.

Red is for Valentine’s Day

Red Amaryllis

We may think of roses for Valentine’s Day, but why not the beautiful flowing bulb we call Amaryllis? This one, originally purchased for Christmas, took its sweet time coming into bloom so that it reached its glory in February.

Amaryllis is one of those plants, like geraniums, with confusing botanical names. The genus for the flower pictured above is Hippeastrum. There are many named cultivars, all hybrids as far as I can tell so the species name doesn’t get used. There is also a genus Amaryllis with a single species, Amaryllis belladonna, which is another flowering bulb.

Regardless of what you choose to call it, they’re beautiful flowers that come in a range of mostly reds and shades of white and pink.  I photographed this one in my studio against a white background lit with a blue gel over the light. Then I returned it to our dining table where we have been enjoying it for many days.

Cusp of Spring

Notwithstanding the cold and spitting snow in Bellingham today, the earliest signs of spring are popping up in our garden.  I was out a couple of days ago to prune back a bunch of herbaceous material that had frozen back during our December cold snap. At the same time I noticed that the first of the early crocus were showing color.

Early Crocus

This particular crocus was right along the sidewalk where it gets a little warmer from the sun hitting the pavement. We have hundreds of these early crocus scattered around the garden and most of them are just showing the tips of their foliage. It will be a while before the rest of them start blooming. We’ve also got snowdrops that are showing buds. Some years we’d have more things in bloom by now, but it’s been a colder winter than normal.

At least we’re not still buried under 10 inches of crusty old snow like a gardening friend in Coeur d’Alene reported a few days ago.

Photography Merit Badge Class

I’ve been working with three Scouts from Bellingham’s Troop 3 on the Photography Merit Badge since early January.  We started with the basics of what is a camera and how does it work. We’ve looked at photos to help the boys get a sense of what makes a photo a good one. Saturday afternoon we met at Whatcom Falls Park to make some photographs, using the bridge, falls, creek, and each other as subjects.

With digital cameras its easy to give a quick assignment, have the boys shoot, then do an instant critique from the display on the back of their cameras. Then they can go and improve the pictures that need work. We spent about 2 hours working on the basics of composition:  rule of thirds, leading lines, filling the frame, and so forth.

While the boys were shooting, I was photographing them. Here’s a quick video of some of my photos of the boys.

These were shot with my Canon S70 pocket camera, optimized in Lightroom 2.3, and the animation created with Animoto.

End of an Era

Today I delivered hundreds of pounds of note cards to theWashington Native Plant Society offices in Seattle. Yesterday, the good people from the ReStore in Bellingham picked up another truckload. After 15 years, I’m out of the note card business.

Back in 1993 when I was laid off from my day job, I went into business with a line of note cards. I invested thousands in printing and then tried to peddle them through retailers. After a year I determined I couldn’t make a sufficient living in the paper products business and changed course. Since then I continued to sell some of the cards, but mostly they were taking up space.

That space will now become a more friendly camera room for portraits. I’ve still got some cleanup work to do, but it feels good to have the cards gone. The two groups that took them, along with the Whatcom Land Trust, which took some cards earlier this month, will put them to good use in the coming years. Otherwise they would have fed the hydropulper at some paper mill.

Animating a Glorious January Day

I got a call the other day from one of the young men in Troop 3 asking if I’d spend part of the day with them as they visited and photographed on the WWU campus and in Fairhaven.  I agreed and had a good time wandering around campus in the morning and the historic neighborhood in the afternoon. I carried my pocket camera and had a short animated video in mind while shooting.

Last week I was at the PPA ImagingUSA conference and learned aboutAnimoto. This was an opportunity to play with the free version, which is limited to 30-second videos. It works the same for longer versions, but you have to pay.

Here’s a clip from Western:

And from Fairhaven this afternoon:

Everything in the two videos was photographed with a Canon S70. The raw files were processed in Adobe Lightroom 2.2, then exported as JPEGS and uploaded to the Animoto site to create the videos.

Winter Solstice

Once in a while we get a “real” winter in Bellingham.  This is one of those years. We’ve had several days with lows below 20°F and snow that’s stayed around.

Bridge at Whatcom Falls, winter

Today I drove out to Whatcom Falls Park to photograph the falls and the stone bridge in the snow. We’d had another 4-6 inches of snow overnight and the temperature was still in the 20s so the conditions were perfect. I spent about an hour around the falls shooting from as many vantage points as I could safely get to. One of my favorites is to look downstream at the bridge from the top of the falls, which is the view here.

I also photographed the falls from on the bridge, and from streamside downstream from the bridge. I have a nice photo from that vantage point from the snow of Christmas 1996 which was published on a calendar for Towner Press a few years ago. I have a large print of that one available for sale if anyone is interested.

Lighted shrub at VanDusen
After warming up with a bowl of soup at home, I headed north to VanDusen Botanical Garden in Vancouver for their festival of lights. The roads were a bit messy, but I made it without difficulty, only to find a sign on the entrance saying the lights had been cancelled for tonight because of the weather.  I got there about 3:45 and the garden closed at 4:00 pm, so I had only a short time in the garden. They had a few of the lights turned on, so I got a handful of photos before I had to leave.

It was snowing the whole time I was in Vancouver, so the streets and roads were in worse shape on the way home, particularly on the Canadian side of the border. Hopefully I can get back up to VanDusen for the lights while there’s still snow on the ground as the display there is very nice and well worth the trip.

A Walk to Whatcom Falls

Weathered Siding

Winter arrived in Bellingham yesterday, with blowing snow last night and temperatures dropping from our typical mid-30s and low-40s down to the teens. Then the sun came out, so I decided it was time for a walk along the Railroad Trail to Whatcom Falls Park.  The round trip distance is something like 8 miles, which makes for a nice Sunday afternoon stroll. It was definitely too icy for me to want to take a bike ride.

I put my new iPhone in my pocket, set to play music through Pandora, and headed out. Sidewalks and trails were icy in spots, bare in some, and just packed snow the rest of the way. The wind was still blowing, but I was bundled up against it. I started out a bit cold, but by the time I got to Barkley I was toasty warm and took my gloves off.  I carried my Canon S70 camera in my pocket in case I came across anything interesting.

I don’t know the history of the building in the photo above, but I’ve liked looking at it every time I walk or bicycle the trail just east of the I-5 crossing. With the low afternoon sun accenting the weathered wood and peeling paint I just couldn’t resist.

Whatcom Falls

There were lots of people out on the trail — walkers, joggers, a few on bicycles, and a couple of parents pulling little kids on sleds. Dogs of every size accompanied their humans, too.

When I got to Whatcom Falls Park there were several people on the stone bridge enjoying the rushing water of the falls.  A couple of other people were also taking pictures.  I used the bridge as a tripod, resting my camera on the railing so I could use a slow shutter speed and blur the water. There’s always a lot more water flowing over the falls in the winter than in the summer, so they look fuller and more exciting.

This time of year I don’t do a lot of photography, so it was good to get out and exercise my shutter finger as well as my legs.  I don’t think it would atrophy from disuse, but there’s no reason to take that chance.  Periodically I think I should discipline myself to make at least one photo each and every day. I’m pretty focused, but I haven’t made the daily photo a habit. Perhaps that should be my New Year’s resolution.