(by hikari_____)
TREES IN LIGHT & DARK TREE WITH CROWS
with my canon g9
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#Hikaru Kato #photography #cats of tumblr #cats #加藤 光Quiet instant |
~EvidencE~
“even in the quietest moments IV”,
photo by ~EvidencE~ (Mike Quigg) at Cherry Beach Toronto, Canada.
https://www.flickr.com/photos/-evidence-/9080714320/
Kentucky, RA Clayton
This is gold!
Hi! My name is Amadee, and I am a librarian who lives in Arizona. I also love taking photos in my spare time.
Check out our interview with Amadee below!
Both of my parents were very interested in photography. I’d always loved looking at their work, and in high school, I got a 35mm camera as a gift, so I could start taking photos myself. Back then (in the actual 80s), HS students in the Minneapolis area could take classes at area colleges for dual credit. I started taking photo classes at the University of Minnesota and had access to a darkroom and nearly unlimited film and processing supplies without realizing just how amazing that was. I took many photos of friends, acquaintances, and strangers, and I loved looking at work by Nan Goldin and Bill Owens.
After college, without access to a darkroom, I stopped taking pictures almost entirely.
Bluntly, technology allowed me to start taking photos again. The first digital cameras I tried in the early 2000s were terrible: slow, clunky, and with next to no storage capacity. Even so, they seemed like the first step in an interesting direction. By 2008 or so, I had a point-and-shoot digital camera and rediscovered what I loved about photography… except that I no longer wanted to take pictures of people. Soon I started taking photos of tiny things, especially insects, and my little camera wasn’t up to the task. I got a DSLR with a macro lens in 2010 and haven’t stopped taking photos since.
I know many photographers who are nostalgic for film, whether or not they were around in the analog era. More power to anyone who wants to spend the time and money, but I don’t miss film even a little. For the kind of photography I enjoy, which is almost entirely documentary, the ability to take an unlimited number of photos, and see what did or didn’t work right away, makes all the difference.
I was a children’s librarian for many years and just love books. So, when I started writing, I hoped to create books that would connect with kids and spark their imagination. Cortez the Gnome was a book I would have liked to see as a kid, and the art project elements were fun and frustrating. Gentle Hands filled what felt like a gap in my storytimes and gave me a chance to work with a publisher I like very much. Alas, my biggest challenge is that I haven’t had an idea in years! I write occasional blog posts for Free Spirit on topics related to serving youth, but working with kids was the spark for new ideas, and these days my work is mostly admin. I enjoy it more than I would have guessed years ago, but as a wellspring of inspiration, it is not.
Work comes first every time. That might sound like a drag, but I truly like my job and think library service is critically important. In some of the tiny communities we serve, the library is the only gathering place open to everyone, and the only place to access fast internet, enrichment activities for kids, books, movies, and all kinds of other good stuff. I love taking photos, but I would hate to make a job of it.
Amadee Ricketts has been long-time favourite on Tumblr for years. The interest and delight shows up in each photo.
Mid-air meteor & milky way by Eric Wagner
APOD: 2019 October 10.
“…about an hour before totality, the wind died down. This calmness may have been related to the eclipse itself, because eclipsed ground heats the air less and reduces the amount rising warm air.”
– Science, NASA, ‘A Total Solar Eclipse Reflected’, 5 Aug '19.
At this lake in Argentina ~ La Cuesta Del Viento (The Slope of the Wind), 2019, photo by Thierry Legault.
Found a close match: 1959 Ford Fairlane 500 Galaxie two-door.
(From Classic Cars Journal: Pick of the Day, article by Tyson Hugie, July 12, 2023.)
Along the way in the search, it’s fun to look at all the classic cars of the 1950s, 60s and 70s, with their sweet space-age names, and rocket taillights and fins. Galaxie, Skyliner, Sunliner…