Passions — a blog

Falling for Fairhaven Fun

Taxi

Gotta catch me a cab and head down to old Fairhaven town for a little Halloween fun.

People watching from Tony's window

Maybe I’ll grab a cup of Tony’s coffee and sit in the window watching all the fairies and goblins stroll by.

Am I a witch?

This holiday isn’t just for kids any more. Even older folks get into the spirit of dressing up, painting faces, and assuming an alter-ego for a day.

Trick-or-treaters cross Harris Avenue.Loot bag? Check.

Best friend? Check.

Costume? Check.

A ride to Fairhaven from mom? Check.

Halloween trick-or-treating in Fairhaven Sunday afternoon was a mob scene with sidewalks crowded with hundreds of happy haunters. Check out more photos in the Fairhaven Halloween Gallery.

I felt a bit out of place wandering the streets with a camera but no costume. OK, so I was wearing clothes, but nothing special for the holiday. I hope you all had fun. I know I did.

Macro Play

Dahlia blossom detail

There’s been way too much work and too little play in my life lately. I had an errand to run in Seattle so I headed south this morning, did my shopping, and headed across Lake Washington to the Bellevue Botanical Garden. It’s one of my favorite public gardens in the region, a delight in any season.

I ended up spending about three hours meandering through the garden, photographing whatever my muse called out to me. The four photos here are my favorites from the day, although there are certainly other nice images in my “take.” These were all made with my 100mm macro lens with natural light under heavily overcast skies. Except for the vignettes applied to the edges there’s been almost no post production. These are all about seeing details in the garden.

The first image is a detail of a dahlia blossom. I was among three photographers working the extensive dahlia bed at the garden entrance this afternoon and it looked like all of us were seeking details. I set up my shot and waited for breaks in the breeze so the flower would stop moving. I like the subtle color gradations in the petals of this unidentified cultivar.

Cutleaf Japanese Maple foliage detailWandering on down the path from the dahlias I passed this Cutleaf Japanese Maple, with foliage just beginning to achieve its deep autumn coloration. The branch and leaves I chose to photograph were held above the rest of the foliage, allowing me to separate it from the background with the relatively large aperture of f/5.6.

Cutleaf Japanese Maples are planted extensively in the northwest, and for good reason since they have great year-around interest in the garden. They’re generally compact, slow-growing, have superb structure, and the deeply-incised foliage is a visual delight.

Let your eyes graze the texture and undulations of a single leaf before moving on to the next. Breathe deeply and enjoy the visual melody.

Yellow Torch Lily buds detail

The next texture to attract my attention was this Yellow Torch Lily, a Kniphofia cultivar.

The individual flower buds open from the bottom to the top of the cluster, giving a long period of bloom and lots of opportunities for bees to visit and pollinate. Since the flowers are tubular I presume hummingbirds like them, too but I didn’t see any flitting around today.

What attracted me today was the repeating pattern, not quite regular but not really irregular either. The color intensifies from top to bottom as the buds are closer to opening.

Hydrangea blossoms detailThe final detail I’m sharing with you today is the back side of an individual hydrangea blossom. This one is Hydrangea aspera. To be botanically accurate, what we’re seeing here is actually a large bract that surrounds an infertile blossom.

These aren’t the kind of images that I’ve found to be particularly commercially viable, but they’re what drew me to photography in the first place. So I guess this is what constitutes my personal work. I’ve always had trouble defining just what that term means for me as I’ve always tried to find a market for almost everything I photograph.

In an ideal world I’d spend most of my days outside with a macro lens on my camera, seeking out interesting details among the flowers, foliage, fungi, and other small life forms. I work slowly, contemplatively, shifting a few centimeters one way or another, in essence playing with form, texture, pattern, color contrast, and light. Hopefully I bring much of the same thought process to my better-paying photography.

Thanks to my friend and fellow photographer Doug Bascom, who has been posting very nice garden images on Facebook and inspired me to get out and play a bit this afternoon.

Going to the Dogs

I hate the bandwagon effect, the idea that just because everyone else is doing it you should be, too. Isn’t that what leads all those lemmings off the cliff? But I’ve been hearing from other photographers across the country how much fun they’re having photographing pets. And there’s a certain profit motive involved here as well. I read a few days ago that people in the USA spend some $35 billion annually on their pets.

Taimi Gorman and Oscar

Dogs (and cats) are much-loved members of the family for many households. They give unconditional love and affection, something that is often otherwise missing in our daily lives.

I’m starting to explore those bonds and relationships between pets and humans in my photography. My latest venture, Purebred Pet Portraits, is an outgrowth of my human portrait photography. I’m getting some marketing guidance from Taimi Gorman, owner of Gorman Publicity and the unfortunately now-defunct Doggie Diner in Fairhaven. That’s Taimi with Oscar in the photo at the right. Madeline the pug, sitting on the wooden chair, is also her dog.
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Birchwood August Garden Tour

Wow, where is the summer going? It seems like just yesterday that I joined with dozens of other Birchwood Garden Club members to visit three more unique and interesting Bellingham gardens on a warm summer evening in the golden sunset light. It’s actually been a couple of weeks, August 4 to be precise.

First up was Jennifer Wall’s garden, which is actually in the Birchwood neighborhood. She purchased the home, with an existing garden, a couple of years ago and has been on a journey of discovery to see what was there. Now she’s adding her own personal touches and style to the place. People were oohing and aahing over her plant choices and asking lots of “what’s this?” questions.

Then we caravaned down Chuckanut Drive to the edge of Mud Bay where we enjoyed Donna and Allen Buehler’s waterside garden and the view out over the bay at high tide. Lots of containers here, and outdoor entertaining spaces.

Finally, a few miles further down Chuckanut to a garden that backs up to Larrabee State Park. The Susan and Landry Corkery garden features an extensive collection of trees that blend with the native vegetation. Myriad paths twist, turn, and invite getting lost among the foliage. The Corkerys say they have 66 varieties of Maples, 50 Japanese Maples, 23 Magnolias, 8 Pines, 7 Oaks, and 275 Rhododendrons.

As usual on a garden tour, I just carried a pocket camera. This time is was my Canon S70, which provides more control and choices than the iPhone I carried on the July Birchwood tour. All of the images in the slideshow were processed through Adobe Lightroom and the show itself was produced in Animoto.

Pocket Camera on the Easy Pass Trail

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Last Saturday I made a trip up the North Cascades Highway to scout out locations to take my Pocket Camera Wildflower Photography class at North Cascades Institute on Tuesday. The trail I used the last time I taught the class, Heather Pass and Maple Pass, was reported to still have a lot of snow. So I chose the Easy Pass trail, which climbs reasonably gently for a couple of miles through wonderful forest and then breaks out into the subalpine and alpine splendor.

Since I was teaching pocket camera photography, I only carried my Canon S70 with me to photograph the flowers. My idea was to create a video slideshow to introduce my students to the trail they’d be hiking and to show what can be done with little cameras.

The class has now come and gone, with 15 delightful students who learned a lot. I learned from them, too. The North Cascades Learning Center on Diablo Lake is a great place to have a class, with comfortable facilities, a splendid setting, and outrageously good food. The evaluations are coming in and they’re looking good. I hope to be able to teach the class again next year.

In addition to hiking to Easy Pass, we also hiked and photographed on Sauk Mountain, one of my all-time favorite easy-access wildflower hikes. Following our Tuesday hike and photo session everyone chose three favorite images and we had a group critique with their photos on the big screen. Some of the students had some very nice photos to share.

The slideshow was created in ProShow Producer, a Windows-only program. I used the random effects tool, and then manually adjusted image movement and transitions when the auto feature produced something that I didn’t like. All the images were processed in Adobe Lightroom 3 before bringing them into Producer.

Birchwood Garden Club Summer Tour

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We finally got our first day of summer on July 7, right on schedule. It was the evening of the Birchwood Garden Club July members-only private garden tour, a delightful opportunity to visit four very nice Bellingham gardens. If you’re not a member of an active garden club, like Birchwood, you’re missing out on seeing gardens you otherwise wouldn’t get to see. Thank you, Sheri Lambert, for organizing the tour.

The four gardening families that welcomed us included Ira Penn and Dee Dee O’Connor, gardening on Alabama Hill; Lynette Jensen and Joan Wayne, each gardening on south hill; and garden designer Susann Schwiesow, gardening in Edgemore. Each garden is unique, appropriate to the site, representative of the personalities of the owners and designers, and a joy to explore. There were plant surprises and nice design elements in each garden.

As has become my custom on garden tours, I did all my photography with my iPhone 3G. This very sunny evening with strong contrast pointed out the limitations of the camera. Everything is completely automatic except for where you hold it to compose the image. Auto everything works pretty well in even light, but with bright highlights and deep shadows the camera tended to overexpose, washing out the bright spots and opening the shadows more than I like. Auto white balance doesn’t always know what to do with flowers and foliage, either. The tradeoff is that the camera is small, light, and already in my pocket.

I processed all the images in Adobe Lightroom 3, adjusting brightness and contrast, sometimes tweaking color balance, and applying a vignette to emphasize the center area. I spent less than a minute on each photo. I’ll be talking about the process and showing the technique in a program at the Garden Writers Association annual symposium in Dallas this September.

Nooksack Falls

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Nooksack FallsNooksack Falls is a popular tourist destination along the Mount Baker Highway just a few miles east of the tiny town of Glacier, Washington. The usual vantage point is from the north side of the river and at the top of the falls. There’s a stout fence to keep people from accidentally falling off the cliff and to discourage people from getting too close to the edge.

I’ve photographed the falls several times in the past 20 years and we almost always take out-of-town visitors there when we head to the mountains. It’s the largest waterfall in the county and very accessible.

However, you can’t see the whole falls from the standard observation point. For years, I’ve looked across the river, and across Wells Creek which flows into the Nooksack at the base of the falls. There’s a moss-covered boulder field above the creek and river, drenched in spray from the falls. I’ve thought that there should be a way to get to the south side of the river, and down those mossy boulders to river level. I tried once a few years ago and didn’t make it, probably because I failed to plot a compass bearing to follow through the woods.

Today, pretty much on a whim, I decided to head to the falls again. This time I plotted a bearing on the topo map before heading out. I drove up the road to the Skyline Divide trailhead and parked at the second righthand switchback. From there it’s only a quarter mile, and about 400 feet down, to the base of the falls. Following my compass I headed through the woods, carpeted with a dense layer of stairstep moss and decaying logs.

I came to a vantage point on the canyon rim overlooking the falls and photographed from there. Then I scouted a route down the cliff to the boulder field below. I scrambled down and photographed from several vantage points. The photo here is one of my favorites.

I haven’t processed them yet, but I shot a couple of multi-frame panoramas to stitch together. I’m thinking a big print might be nice. Since I knew how big my subject was, I only carried two lenses, 24-105 and 16-35, and used them both. Scrambling down and up with a tripod in hand was a little dicey, but never really dangerous and well worth the effort.

Now I can cross “see Nooksack Falls from the other side” off my to-do list.

Five Gardens

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Coming up next weekend is the Whatcom Horticultural Society’s 2010 Tour of Private Gardens. There are five gardens on this year’s tour. They’re all different and worth a visit if you’re in the area and interested in gardening. Since I take care of the WHS website I was on the pre-tour for volunteers yesterday and shot a series of images for a video slideshow.

Yesterday was the first really warm and sunny day we’ve had this spring. Not exactly the best light for photographing gardens, but sometimes a photographer’s just gotta deal with the conditions. I shot all of these with my Canon S70 pocket camera and then ran them through Adobe Lightroom to dodge, burn, and generally adjust the contrast a bit. The video was created with Animoto.

Details about the tour, including pricing, directions, and ticket sources, is on the Whatcom Horticultural Society tour web page.

Paint the Hills Red

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Golden Bee Plant & John Day's Pincushion in folds of Painted Hills

The Painted Hills in the John Day Fossil Beds National Monument in north-central Oregon are an out-of-this-world landscape. Layers of colorful bentonite, formed from ancient volcanic ash, change color with the light and moisture content. Each spring they pick up golden highlights from two endemic plants. The taller of the two, Golden Bee Plant or Cleome platycarpa, is an annual with a bright tuft of flowers at the top. The other, John Day’s Pincushion or Chaenactis nevii, is also an annual. Continue reading