I feel like I'm cheating by not reading everyone's posts before posting something... this whole moving thing is difficult and time-consuming, but on the bright side, I just acquired a camera after being without for way too long. I'm out of practice in both composition and technical but sometimes documenting life and communicating outweighs the artistic. My goal is to become competent, if not fluent, in my camera's functionality in the next month. Hopefully I'll have some decent shots occasionally.
We had a hummingbird fly into the office today - we often leave doors and windows open, depending on the weather and my dog's willingness to stay inside:
How cool - my camera captured a hummingbird's wings at the moment of full forward motion!
This cropped version makes it look like the hummingbird is dead and laying on a tile floor, but no, it's just a cropped, flat version of a not very good shot of something kinda interesting.
I haven't figured out how to best manage photos on my laptop - suggestions, anyone? I've got Picasa, Photoshop CS and the software that came with the camera but I'm willing to try other things. I like the Picasa upload to the picasaweb - very easy instead of having to go thru a FTP-type interface (or the additional step to keep it on my own server). But I'm not quite catching on to how to save my edited or resized stuff to be able to send it up to estrip . I think the first hummingbird photo i uploaded here is 2MB which makes me look like a stoopid noobie... I guess I am at the moment... patience, grasshopper.
I enjoyed some time at one of my favorite spots today - long enough for the sun to go down and the moon become visible.
And two cuteoverload-style photos of Nisha:
This one seems like it needs a LOLcat-type phrase on it:
Wow. That is one beautiful cat. :)
(e:matthew) - We don't know the exact year it was built because our county courthouse records burnt in 1901. We estimate it was built around 1890 and expanded in 1910.
Matt - you'd love the Fenton Mansion in Jamestown. Rueben Fenton was a Governor of New York from 1865-1869, and his house was built prior to his governorship. It is preserved by a local historical society and tours are available - you'd salivate over the decorations. Believe it or not, the place was going to be torn down! I tried to find a website or pictures to link, but to no avail. I do not know why, but Buffalo seems to lack Victorian architecture of the type you see in other places locally. Just my perception anyway - it seems the closest thing we have is certain parts of the west side.
wow, what a beautiful house! Do you have the year it was built, is it pre-1860's?
That's a really nice initiative! Would you be launching it in Buffalo, as well?? :)