Friday, September 3, 2010

These colors turn me on!

Mining Bee on Giant Sunflower
There is something about the colors.  I think it is that yellow and blue are opposite on the color wheel.  I really like the colors!  The Giant Sunflower is currently starting to bloom at Gorman Nature Center.  It is a good place to photograph insects!  Maybe the bee likes these colors too.

Thursday, September 2, 2010

My Part!

insect eggs


        Edward Weston once wrote in his Daybook the following.  "My work has vitality because I have helped, done my part in revealing to others the living world about them…" 

I have a high internal resonance with that statement for much of my photography.  I photograph to see.  If I like what I see, I want to share it with you.  I like the texture created by the eggs in their orderly pattern.  I like the dynamic lines of the cattail leaves.  I like the colors.

Wednesday, September 1, 2010

ID protection

Cessna 172C



I like Aircraft of most kinds.  I have been learning to shoot with my long lens hand held so I shoot aircraft as they fly over if they are within range.  My basic goal is to have a specific name for the subject of my image.  I found that I can do this by looking up the license number of the private aircraft online.  It tells the model number but also lists the owner's name.  I think that I will need to blur the license number before I show that image to protect the owner's privacy. 

Tuesday, August 31, 2010

New discovery!

Northern Pearly-eye

I shot this one yesterday.  Our county, Richland, is one of 11 in Ohio which does not have a documented sighting of this butterfly according to Butterflies and Skippers of Ohio by Ohio Division of Wildlife.  I sighted it on the last leg of my morning hike at Gorman Nature Center, Mansfield.  It was sitting in a patch of sunlight on the trail through the pine forest.  This was a new butterfly for my collection of shots of butterflies.  To me, that is exciting!  I think that I will eventually put in on my website:  http://www.larrysimages.com .

Monday, August 30, 2010

A new bird to my collection!

I heard this call the other day.  I am learning that the sounds in nature are as important as what you see.  I thought that it sounded close so I began looking for the bird.  I did not think to turn on my recorder while I looked.  I found the bird and was able to obtain a successful shot or two.  By then the bird was feeling uncomfortable and had moved further away.  I then turned on my recorder but the bird was a little out of range.  I borrowed a recording form http://www.mbr-pwrc.usgs.gov/id/songwav.html so that you could hear the Rufous-sided Towhee.  The "birders" tell me they usually hear a bird and identify it by sound even though they don't always see the bird.

I used a Sigma 50-500 mm lens hand-held for this shot.  The ISO was set to 1600.  The camera chose 1/750 at f/9.5.