Here are a couple of pictures I’ve made today while driving home from work. Nothing special, but provides some variety from “pictures in the office” theme that I have been following recently.
Album location: /photos/2004/2004-11-03_POTD
Here are a couple of pictures I’ve made today while driving home from work. Nothing special, but provides some variety from “pictures in the office” theme that I have been following recently.
Album location: /photos/2004/2004-11-03_POTD
There is a huge collection of crashes and stupid error messages from (mostly) Microsoft software at Microsoft Crash Gallery. As usual, some are scary, others are funny.
Here is a piece of stationary for today’s entry. It is a yellow marker. Neither a pencil, nor a pen, that I had looked good. This one came out just fine. I have postprocessed it a bit too much, but it now looks exactly like I wanted it to.
Album location: /photos/2004/2004-11-02_POTD
I have just finished reading “Complete Guide to Photography” book by Michael Freeman. It is the best book on photography from those 10 or so that I have seen so far. It is aimed at beginner, but it doesn’t bore too much with the usual things like what is aperture and “Rule of Thirds” that everyone can read on the web (although these topics are covered). Instead, it takes the reader much further. It explains all sorts of aspects of photography and tells how to make good pictures. It talks a lot about lines, shapes and colours. It explains how to find and frame images in the most clear way.
The book is generic – it does not focus on the either film or digital photography. It talks about photography in general, prodiving examples for both worlds. The language is very clear. The terminology is kept to the minimum. Sentences are short. Parts of the book are broken into chapters, which are, in turn, broken into sections. Sections are very small units – few sentences or paragraphs long. Very easy to consume. There are plenty of pictures to illustrate the text.
Something I found surprising about this book. Although sentences were short and sections small, the book was so informative and thought provoking that I had to stop reading a lot of times just to consume what I’ve just read. While reading it I had always the urge to go back and reread sections, because I had a feeling that I left something important out. Immidiately after I have finished reading the book, I wanted to start all over again. And I will. Just not right now.
Another helpful side of the book are projects. Alsmost every chapter contains a project that you can do on your own to see and compare what you get with what is promised by the book. Some projects are interesting even without academia on the background.
This book is worth a buy. It will easily become a most used book of a photography beginner like myself. Unfortunately though I couldn’t find this particular book anywhere in the web shops. The copy I have is from a friend, who borrowed it from the library. I even head to scan the cover of it, although it didn’t fit into the scanner completely. On the web, I see only “The Complete Guide to Digital Photography” by Michael Freeman, which probably a newer and revised edition.
I found this story with picture on LiveJournal. It is in Russian, so I’ll roughly translate what is says for those of you who don’t read the language.
Basically, it says that there was this guy Jesse somewhere in Holland, who has some rare desease and he cannot walk, so he is always in the wheel chair. Anyway, once this guy told to his mother that he loves Subaru Impreza. His mother went out to the Internet and asked people who own Subaru Impreza if they could come and give her boy a ride or something. Now, picture this – 164 Subaru Impreza cars came into a small town at the same day. That’s some show, isn’t it? The guy was obviously very happy.
There are a few pictures here.