Showing posts with label drive-by. Show all posts
Showing posts with label drive-by. Show all posts

Monday, February 27, 2017

Eight years of February blog photos . . .








It's fun to look over the pictures I've posted here over time, and this morning I decided to look at my February photos since 2009 and selected one from each February for the past eight years.

in 2009 I was doing a lot of "drive-by" shooting, taking photos through the car window as we were out driving around. I particularly like these trees, taken at Ona Beach on the Oregon coast. There's a lively, whimsical feeling to them that I find appealing.

In 2010 Chris and I were down in San Diego, visiting relatives and Rich and CJ. We stopped in Encinitas to check out the sunset. The sea was glassy smooth, a pewter look that echoed the color of the clouds. I like all the horizontal layers, beginning with a dark strip of beach at the very bottom, the incoming waves and foam, the silvery smooth section farther out, the peachy glow of the sunset, and then a strip of ominously grey clouds at the top.

The folks in lower Bayshore, Waldport, Oregon, certainly remember February of 2011, where, after a night of heavy winds and rain, they awoke to find their yards, driveways, and streets covered in huge, wet sand dunes. The homes are built on a spit, right on the ocean, and Oregon weather such as this can wreak havoc. Unlike snow, which shoveled and it eventually melts, these dunes (some so heavily pressing on garages that the doors collapsed inward) do not melt. A company is contracted to come in, load up all the sand, and take it elsewhere. I've heard of homeowners removing the plates off electrical outlets inside their homes and having sand come pouring out. It gets in everywhere.

In February of 2012, I was thinking about giving my online photo students an assignment to take pictures of jewelry, and so I photographed a silver charm on my mother's bracelet, part of a series of charms she got while we were living in Japan in the early 1960s. It's a lovely image and brings up warm memories.

Always a sucker for shooting letters and grunge, the two came together beautifully in February of 2013, where I was in Toledo, Oregon shooting whatever I could find on train cars.

A big wet snow in February of 2014 was fun to see, and I went out into our back yard where we had an old mailbox (given to me by my neighbor Juanita when she moved away) draped in buoys. Wore my wellies to get out there and tromp around, taking pictures.

In February of 2015 I processed a few photos I'd taken in Kyoto the previous fall, and this one I particularly liked, taken inside a temple.

And then finally last February of 2016, our first winter on Whidbey Island, I took advantage of good weather and went out photographing the military bunkers here on the island. I was drawn to the wall texture, the black and white look, the shadows, and the combination of straight lines and the circle. Fun, abstract stuff!

And now we are on the cusp of March. The rhodies are just beginning to bloom; what might be crocuses are showing their leaves, soon to be eaten down by deer; the owls are remarkably quiet, probably nesting; but the towhees, juncos, and varied thrushes are out in force, gobbling up the seed we scatter for them. The ruby-crowned kinglets have come and gone. But I think I heard a chickadee the other day. Spring is about to spring!

©Carol Leigh
All text, photographs, and other media are ©Copyright Carol Leigh (or others when indicated) and are not in the public domain and may not be used on websites, blogs, or in other media without advance permission from Carol Leigh.

Tuesday, October 14, 2014

Lots and lots of corn . . .

Somewhere between Morton, Illinois and Sioux City, Iowa . . . Shooting out the passenger window on our whirlwind trip across country. ©Carol Leigh

Wednesday, June 4, 2014

Beauty . . .

"Every day I discover more and more beautiful things. It's enough to drive one mad. I have such a desire to do everything, my head is bursting with it." -- Claude Monet

©Carol Leigh

Friday, November 1, 2013

Sometimes I just don't know . . .


Most of the time, when looking at my photos, I know when something is working or not. But every once in awhile, such as with this photo, I just don't know. Most of me likes it, but that solid feeling of confidence just isn't there.

We were driving up to the airport in Portland a couple of weeks ago. The fields right next to the road were dry and light brown. Off in the distance it was raining on low green hills. I selected a slow shutter speed (1/6 second) to create a feeling of movement as I shot out the (moving) car window. I added a texture that would accentuate the golden brown foreground colors and that would also accentuate the grey, rainy skies in the distance.

The reason I like the photo is that it makes me think of an old-fashioned, flat, landscape painting. I also get a definite feeling of movement, which is what I wanted.

But then someone else might think, "That's just a flat, out-of-focus, dirty picture! No artistry there!" If I had the solid feeling of confidence that I usually have, I wouldn't care. But there's a nagging feeling of insecurity lurking in the back of my head that's agreeing with the critic.

But what the hell! I uploaded both these formats to my website at Fine Art America and let's see what happens. I've sold almost 40 pictures there this year, so I must be doing something right. Will this one go out the door? I'll let you know.

©Carol Leigh

Monday, July 29, 2013

Through a Train Window

A row of trees blurs beautifully, seen through a moving window. I like the soft, sort of "Arts and Craft Movement" look. ©Carol Leigh

Friday, November 23, 2012

Daily Dose of Fall #51, #52, and #54



Slowly getting caught up . . . A single leaf with colors of red and green stands out against an out-of-focus background at the Oregon Garden in Silverton. Then you see a lively photo of trees taken through a car window. And finally another single leaf, a dried cherry leaf, taken in my studio where I used a leather-covered algebra book in the background to create a natural look. ©Carol Leigh

Wednesday, November 14, 2012

Daily Dose of Fall #45

Photographed from the window of a moving car. ©Carol Leigh

Tuesday, October 30, 2012

Daily Dose of Fall #30

Shooting from the window of a moving car. Fall color on a very grey Oregon day. ©Carol Leigh

Thursday, October 25, 2012

Daily Dose of Fall #25

This photo was taken through the car window as we drove past a tree farm in Oregon one fall day. The yellow leaves stand out nicely against a darker background. ©Carol Leigh

Thursday, October 18, 2012

Daily Dose of Fall #18

Taken from the window of a moving car. I used a 70-200mm lens at 87mm, ISO 100, 1/8 second at f/7.1. The key is to look for trees where there's a lot of contrast, such as these dark trunks that stand out well against a lighter background. Everything depends on the speed of the car, the smoothness of the road, the light, your focusing, and when you decide to click the shutter. It's a crapshoot. But it's a fun crapshoot! ©Carol Leigh

Sunday, December 25, 2011

Friday, April 29, 2011

Drive-by

It's amazing what you can photograph from the passenger seat as your car whizzes past. You usually have only a fraction of a second to recognize a possible subject, raise your camera, compose, focus, and click. Most of the images are awful, but every once in awhile you're rewarded with color, strong shapes, and interesting forms. I love the look of what appear to be red flowers on the ground amid a grove of trees. Yes! ©Carol Leigh

Monday, March 14, 2011

Another drive-by photo

Another taken through the car window while driving through snow on our way home. ©Carol Leigh

Friday, March 11, 2011

The final leg home


Coming over the last passes in Oregon we hit snow, a lot of snow. It was kind of scary, but the trees were beautiful. I photographed these through the window as we drove past. They were a sort of dull blue color, which didn't reflect my impression of the scene at all, so I desaturated and overexposed the images, creating a black and white high-key effect, more in line with my memories of the snowy beauty outside the car (as opposed to the tension and terror inside my head!). ©Carol Leigh

Tuesday, July 13, 2010

Blue Drive-by

Another version of this same drive-by tree, taken right after the previous one. ©Carol Leigh

Monday, July 12, 2010

Drive-by Fly-by #2

Another attempt to photograph this same tree, and I think this one turned out well. Scratched metal creates some of the texture you see here. ©Carol Leigh

Thursday, June 17, 2010

Drive-by Fly-by

There's a tree on a particular bend on the Coast Highway that I try to photograph every time we drive past. Most of the time the results are awful -- I'm shooting from the passenger side, past Chris, through his window, to the tree. I think I've been successful maybe three times, and this was one of them. ©Carol Leigh

Thursday, April 1, 2010

On the move


Chris and I drove inland to Salem today to run some errands. As usual, I took a lot of drive-by shots, such as this highway worker all decked out in neon green. The red stop sign is a nice complementary color to the green. And then on the way back, we stopped near Oregon State University so I could photograph this row of trees -- this time NOT from a moving car! (What a concept.) ©Carol Leigh