Sunset At Pt Dume State Park, Malibu

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On 12 Jan Mitzi and I went to the first major west coast exhibition of the Kelly Collection of American Illustration Art (thekellycollection.org) at the Weisman Museum at Pepperdine University. By invitation of the collection owner I might add. The opening reception ran from 5-7 to be followed by dinner at a restaurant a few miles up the coast. We over-estimated traffic and arrived early so I drove up the PCH to make sure I knew the restaurant’s exact location. As it turned out it was on the entrance road to the Park. So we drove out to the beach to see what we could see. Now you can see what we saw.

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Sometimes Sunsets Are Silver

Sometimes Sunsets Are Silver

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Birds In Flight

I’m getting a little better at capturing birds in flight – or maybe they are taking pity on me and slowing down when I come into sight – so I thought I would put a Flickr set together that I could collect them into. This is the first installment – some gulls that came my way on a recent trip up the coast to Santa Barbara. These were in Port Hueneme.

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Icons

Here’s a couple of photographs that so far as I know I haven’t posted anywhere. The first: Mt Whitney, at 14,505 feet the tallest peak in the lower 48. Just a touch of snow at the time – early December 2012.

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I like it. But I had not gone into the Alabama Hills that morning to shoot Whitney. I was after a shot of another icon, the Möbius Arch, the signature natural landmark in the Hills.

I was out early and was lucky enough to run into two other photogs who were skilled and who had been there before. So I followed their moves. That’s how I got not only my best Arch shot but in process managed an image of an icon within an icon. The peak to the left which appears to be higher – and isn’t- is Lone Pine Peak.

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Anyway.

It’s my shot but I’d never have gotten it without help from Bernie and Jim. Thanks guys!

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SF Giants Victory Parade

Not what you’d call timely reporting but while I was in Oakland visiting Charles the SF Giants won the World Series and of course had a parade. Charles and I took the BART over to the City to get a look-see. If you click on the photograph shown here it will take you to FLICKR where the entire set is located. Nothing spectacular but some rather good candid fan shots – including one of Charles – rare indeed

Dogs

I couldn’t bring YoYo along on this trip and I miss him every day, especially in the mornings: he is great to wake up to. Big smile. Tail wagging. Reminding me that no matter what I have a purpose – and a friend. And that he’s going to have a wonderful day and I’m invited to tag along should tag along.

I checked in on Yo a few days ago. He’s doing great. I doubt he misses me. Dogs are enlightened beings – unlike their humans.

I’m not without a four-legged friend though. I find them everywhere when I’m out shooting. They particularly like beaches and seem to like people with cameras. Sometimes I’m not sure whether I’m looking for them or they’re looking for me.

I ran into this guy roaming round Malibu with his humans. He was much friendlier than they were. Dogs are like that. So are humans.

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At The Point

So, how’s your day coming along?

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Sunrise – Moonset – Sand Dunes

One of the things I had been looking forward to on my recent camping trip to Death Valley – also my first visit – was seeing the night sky from one of the darkest places on earth. Being an eastern urbanite that sky is something that I am otherwise routinely deprived of.  I wasn’t fully aware of the depths of my deprivation until one summer night sitting outside my dwelling in Arroyo Seco, near Taos, I glanced up and really saw the Milky Way for the first time. It was almost as if I were looking at the underside of a very sparkly lid – it was that tangibly imposing to me. I had been in a few planetariums in my life and in a few dark areas; but nothing I ever saw displayed in any of them came close to looking at the real thing hanging there over my head that night. So, I figured this would be one of the many treats to expect in the Valley. A super dark sky and a big ol Milky Way.

Typically, I paid no attention to the state of the sky before arriving. I just go. I thought I would see exactly what I intended to see: A gazillion stars spread out endlessly across the night sky. The moon had different plans and for most of my stay was up early shining like a flood light and not setting until late the next morning.  But even had I done the research ahead of time my visit schedule wasn’t going to change. Fortunately I’m going to be under wide open western skies for some time and the Valley is only a short 5 hour drive from my base camp in Los Angeles. There will be other chances, assuming the Mayans weren’t hiding the real date somewhere.

I went with what I had and since I had to be up early for sunrise lighting I was also able to get moonsets. I suppose I could have done the moonrise but when it’s full like this it’s very difficult to acquire any contrast on its face and a moon without contrast just looks like – well, a big flood light. Nothing especially interesting about that.

I already posted one of my Zabriskie shots on Google+ in the Death Valley Photographers Community – a part of which I now count myself, but nothing’s come through the blog yet so here you have a sunrise scene that I took from the top side of the Texas Springs campground area – nice when the shots come to you – and then a shot of the moon setting on the western side of the Valley over the Panamint Range. These were shot on different days because the sunrise shots I got from the Zabriskie overlook just didn’t work. (I feel as if I’m lucky when any of them turn out.)

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I also have to admit that this sunrise caught me by surprise. I was a little late getting out of the tent on this morning and hadn’t expected to see anything other than a bright morning sky. The gear was locked in the car. The camera had no lens mounted. So I had to scramble. Hand held. The shutter was a little on the slow side to get the image and it suffered as a result from a lack of sharpness. But still. I can’t remember the last time I saw so much sunfire in the morning sky. It is what it is. And that ‘is’ works for me.

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I was more prepared for the moonset and I like the result. The geology and the astronomy that manifest their ways in Death Valley make it a wondrous place. This Valley certainly earned its name. It holds the bones of many men and animals who arrived in its depths at the wrong time and became permanent footnotes in its long and violent history. Even today taking anything in this place for granted can cost you your next sunrise – all your next sunrises. No matter. It is a visual delight and one of the grandest exhibitions Nature puts on anywhere on earth.

Since I’ve been recalcitrant in getting any of the première shots online let me add one more; this of the Mesquite Sand Dunes near Stovepipe Wells. I’m sure as people make return trips to DV that favorites places established in earlier visits become replaced by new ones that hadn’t quite resolved for them earlier. This place is simply too grandiose (is that redundant?) for anyone to make a selection for all time. But they can one at a time – and I did. The Dunes. They are mesmerizing. They are also easy to get lost in if you fail to hold the high ground. I posted a couple of videos on Facebook of my walking round these piles of sand and acquired a pretty spiffy self-portrait that is posted in the Selfy-Sunday Group on Google +. This shot is my favorite – so far. It’s a soft exposure and I just like the way so many of the colors that define this place blend together in it.

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This was taken late morning and so the light here is also from the sunrise. The area in the foreground I think is referred to as The Devil’s Corn Field but I’m not entirely sure. If it weren’t so late and if I weren’t so lazy, I’d look it up.  As it is, if you’re really curious – or perhaps know – you can chime in.

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Street View East vs Street View West

When I left the East Coast back in early October I did so with the idea that I might not return, at least as a permanent resident. I’ve been there for decades but the more time I spend in the West, the weaker my ties to The Commonwealth become. So when I left I rented my condo out for an indeterminate period to my friend Barbara. Yesterday she sent me this pic, a view from the bedroom window. It speaks for itself. All chilly thoughts I might add. It was certainly a shock to Barbara too: she just returned from Phoenix. I doubt there was snow there.

It got me thinking. So I went to our living room window and took the other shot. I don’t know that you’d call it a stark difference but its unquestionably a sunny one. I know which one I prefer. She’s got flakes piled one upon the other; we’ve got a couple of wayward palm fronds.

It’s a little more expensive to live here, a fact brought home every time sales tax is applied. But so far as the weather is concerned, you get what you pay for. Lacking an earthquake, or the return of the Republicans to the Statehouse, this place is looking better with every passing ray of sun.

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Duffie The Wonder Dog

Duffie The Wonder Dog

I met Duffie – and his human, Jason, at Navy Beach along the south shore of Mono Lake. They had just finished kayaking and were packing up for their trip home to Bend, OR. Duffie brought me this ball – and then dared me to toss it away. I did. It came back, and back and back. Duffie is a great ballplayer.

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These Things Run Rampant In Beverly Hills

This is how it came. Couldn’t see that it needed a single solitary edit

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Just A Cottage In The Hills

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ReBlogged-Kerstenbeck

I just love the work done by Kerstenbeck Photography and this is certainly no exception.

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The essence of all being is Energy. Our physical and ethereal selves depend on the unrestricted flow of Life Energy that is the source of wholeness and wellness. Though the channels through which this energy flows are open systems and influenced by factors outside of our control, we ultimately choose what impact these will have in our lives. It is up to us to identify and clear blockages in the energy field to ensure that flow is maintained. A healthy, grounded individual absorbs some portion of the energy emitted by other people and the environment, but this does not interrupt the continuous stream of balanced energy sustaining them. The same individual copes constructively with stress and upset, and they are not subject to the stagnation that frequently goes hand in hand with negativity. When we keep the energy in and around our bodies flowing harmoniously, we are naturally healthy, vibrant…

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A Wonderful Day In The Neighborhood

Took the opportunity today to just go out and walk around the neighborhood a little to see what I might find. The highlight of the outing for me was watching a woman come out of a store and immediately go to war with the door of her Land Rover which apparently was not cooperating with her remote device. This went on for about 30 seconds or so. Then something caught her eye: the identical black Land Rover parked immediately behind the uncooperative one. The remote seemed to be ok with that one. Away she went.

l have to tell you that walking around this particular neighborhood can be a little intimidating. The most popular auto brand on the street is Mercedes. It’s also the low end brand, or at least vies with Lexus for the dubious distinction. Lamborghini’s and Maserati’s?  Sure. But you can also pick up a shiny new McClaren on this street.Image

In fact you’d probably be able to get one of those long before you’d find a cab ’round here. I saw three or four in the course of a two hour stroll. Fortunately we have Uber.

I did manage to get a few iPhone shots- which is what I had in mind, Today is 12-12-12 and I had signed up on Google+ to contribute a photograph to the event. Some six hundred others also signed up but I said I’d be there so…..

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We have lots of little alleyways along Robertson and a few along Rodeo and Canon. reminds me of Paris except that these pathways are not so extensive or grand. Here we have the entrance to the Beverly Players theater and then the rather long entrance to something called Super Vision. You need good eyes to see to the end.

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Christmas decorations are up around the Hills but we’re also into the fourth day of Chanukah and decorations honoring the holiday are visible in lots of the shops around the hood.

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Cars caught my eye today since there are lots of them and quite a few that you’d rarely see elsewhere. Take this Mercedes Formula Racer for instance – sponsored by an old friend of mine:Image

This is a DUI sitting stock still, no?

I also ran across a vintage favorite sitting on the backlot of an establishment called Auto Doctors. I guess it wasn’t feeling well.Image

Looks good though, don’t you think? 

Rodeo Drive is the better known street here but it’s paralleled by Canon Drive which is to food what Rodeo is to clothes. Even the Pizzeria has valet parking.  As I was walking up one side of Canon I noticed a photographer on the opposite side of the street taking pictures of some street sculpture and made a note to check it out on my way back. It turned out that the photog was also street sculpture. 

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I got in on the act.

A couple blocks further and I ran across a slightly different sort of sculpture adorning the entrance to a public parking lot – next to a Private Client Chase Bank. So, are these rocks coming or going? And what’s a Private Client Bank anyway?

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The best shots of the day were of the opposite sides of a fountain in the entrance courtyard to an office building I passed.

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This corner gift shop had one of the most attractive awnings I’ve run across here or anywhere.

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And although they don’t get a lot of publicity the residential parts of this area – the un-gated, Image

normals areas – are all but pastoral.

I walked past one building that I found particularly attractive in a art deco-ey way and spent some time after I returned home recasting it with some of the iPhone apps i’ve collected. Here’s the series.

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What follows is a combination of edits performed with Luminance, Mobile Monet, Color Blast, Paint FX, PhotoCopier, and 100 Cameras.

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This final version also incorporates an Instagram filter – Kelvin I think. Pretty cool huh?Image

For those of you who have been asking about the work done in Death Valley – be patient, we’re almost there. Will be up soon.

 

 
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Mono Lake South Tufa

Sunrise captures of the South Tufa Area of Mono Lake in Lee Vining, CA.

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Mobius Arch

I first heard of this Arch in the Alabama Hills from a photog I ran into at Zabriskie Point one morning. I’ve spent a couple of days scouting the location and tomorrow hope to get situated just before sunrise and see how well my planning works out. This afternoon just as the sun was setting over the edge of Eastern Sierra I snapped a few shots of the Arch and these ones in silhouette worked rather well. IMHO

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Whitney Portal

Whitney Portal

Sunset over Lone Pine, CA and Lake Owens as seen from the Whitney Portal

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Panamint Dust Up

Panamint Dust-up

Panamint Dust-up

I was crossing the Panamint on my way to Darwin Falls and ran right through this minor sand storm. Winds nearly ripped the door off my car on my first attempt to get out and set up to shoot. Turned out rather well though. The sand clouds in the background look innocent enough but take my word – they were more than mere dust devils. More like sand evils.

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Mono Lake

A number of people were thrown off when I told them a principal waypoint on this trip would be Mono Lake. For the most, easterners haven’t a clue what Mono Lake is. Aside from being a very large body of saline water, it sits in the middle of what once was the western portal of a project of the early 30’s that was designed (and run by) the LA County Water Department. LA County Water still plays a large role in the control of this area since it depends upon the basin to supply its jurisdiction with water. Turn off the spigot up here and people in Santa Monica will get mighty dry.

The reason I wanted to visit here once again – came last September with the Green Tortoise group – was to record the place to a degree that was impossible last fall. I needed to be here early morning and early evening to get the right lighting. I was also hoping for a little morning glow to capture the image you see here. Didn’t get the glow but its still a decent shot.

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Mt Whitney

Taken from Lone Pine

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Dante’s View Redux

 

Dante’s View is about 6000 ft above the bottom of Death Valley’s lowest point – 287 ft below sea level. I am about 500 feet above the point. Much too high for me. But WTF. This caps off a long day trekking round the desert. Getting cold up here. Later

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Mt Hood

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When I arrived in Washington State I had in mind that I’d be able to capture some photos of Mt Rainier. I had done so on a crystal clear day a couple of years earlier and it never occurred to me that I had been subject to extreme good luck when I took it. I faced grim reality on this visit. The fact is Mountains in WA are rarely visible. Too much rain. Too many clouds. Aberrant, unpredictable weather patterns. You name it. When I brought this up to a WA native she simply said “What mountains?”; So, no Rainier, no Olympus, no Cascades, and no Mt St Helens. I had in mind to visit Hood River, OR when I headed south and by now was pretty sure there would also be no Mt Hood.

And for the time I was in Hood River that was the case. This was temporarily offset somewhat by the utterly striking surrounds provided by the Columbia River Gorge and places along the river like Multnomah Falls. But as I headed south again, this time on my way to Bend, I came round a curve and what you see here is what I saw. It just popped right up in front of me. I literally slammed on the brakes, hopped out camera in hand, and began shooting. I was taking no chances it too might disappear.

Not the greatest shot you’ll ever see of Mt Hood but a lot better than the ones I didn’t get in WA.

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