Travel

LA Skyline - From the Getty Center

This was originally published to my scottshephard.posterous.com account from Instagram, but I'm trying to cover a few missing days in this blog.

This was taken from the Getty Center, which I have concluded is one of my favorite "buildings" in the world. Of course, it's not a single building - it is a series of buildings, an amazing location and the landscape surrounded the buildings. And that's not to mention thevgreat art inside.

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Japanese Garden

My photo students and I are learning about "Blending Options" in Photoshop so I'm experimenting. These beautiful, smooth stones were part of the landscape at the Japanese Garden on the campus of Cal State in Long Beach, CA.

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Nixon's the One

While visiting the Richard Nixon Presidential Library in Yorba Linda, California, I found this bust of Nixon, apparently looking approvingly at a series of US flags. He seems satisfied. And he's been bronzed.

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The Old, Rugged Tree

While visiting California recently, I wandered over to a cemetery near my aunt's house. It was a cemetery unlike anything in my home state - large mausoleums with drawers for the remains of loved ones. And there were no above-ground tomb stones.The most striking feature was the landscape and trees, most of which were kinds I didn't recognize. I'm guessing this tree, which is framed by the colored class walls of mausoleum vestibule, is older than the cemetery. Is is a banyan tree? I don't know.

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No Devil In These Details

This is no devil - but it is a threatening looking jaguar, which is appropriate for a Jaguar automobile, as seen on my recent trip to California.I appreciate designers who put details in places that one would normally not look - in this case in the center of each chrome wheel. Dogs and mechanics would see this close up. And maybe a random photographer like me, whose camera compels him to see things that would otherwise be ignored.(Originally posted here with Instagram.)iPhone 4

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A Small Collection

These are all photos taken with my iPhone and then manipulated with Instagram. I then put four of the photos together using another app called Diptic. What I am learning is the role that iPhone and iPad apps can play in photography and also in photo manipulation. There's a lot to learn!Incidentally, how about going to one of my student's photo blogs? Holly is an excellent photographer would appreciate your stopping by: Holly's Blog

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Closer To Home

This photo was taken with my iPhone somewhere in southern South Dakota on I-29. It is grungy because the iPhone isn't all that good in low light, but it's made even grungier by an app called Instagram.

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Quit Your Carping!

These aren't carp, of course. They're koi, the prettier cousins of carp. This photo originally appeared on my companion web experiment, scottshephard.posterous.com.Want to watch a very short video filmed, edited and posted with my iPhone? Click here.

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A Beautiful Place

In light of current events in Japan, I went back to my collection of photos. I hadn't really looked closely at this one before but I like it because the place conveys the kind of beauty and peace I found in many locations while visiting Japan. The images of destruction in Japan are wrenching. We might find comfort in the beauty of the Japanese landscape and character, but where do the Japanese go? Memory and photos will hardly suffice in the days and weeks to come.

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On A Mission

This is a Greek kitten, discovered on a back street on the island of Mykonos. He/she is oblivious to my camera and refused to stand still for the photo.

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What I See When I See You

Of course, when I look at my wife, I see more than the Caribbean, white sand and the inviting shade of a palapa. I see much of my past, my present and my future. But in this photo I see the Caribbean, white sand and a palapa.(Confession: I created this post in part so I could say nice things about my wife. And I wanted to be able to use the word "palapa.")

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Writing With Light

Photography does mean "writing with light." But you probably knew that. Did you know that if you ride on the back of a golf cart at night and expose the structures along a certain path at the Moon Palace south of Cancun, you get something like this? You do if you use a shutter speed of 1 1/2 seconds. Try it and see what you get.

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