Showing posts with label net. Show all posts
Showing posts with label net. Show all posts

Saturday, April 2, 2011

Color on a grey day





It rained every day but one in March, and April's turning out the same way. We did have a few rain-free hours, however, and so we scurried out to take a few photographs. All these grey days make me gravitate toward color, which I found in these fenders or bumpers, as well as in the fishing nets. And now we're back to another week of rain. 32" of the stuff so far this year... ©Carol Leigh

Wednesday, December 15, 2010

Raining, and I didn't even know it ...





 It's been raining here on the coast for oh, I don't know, 40 days and 40 nights, I'd wager, and everything is completely soaked. Today was a day of bright sun, followed by clouds moving through, followed by rain, more sun, etc. It's exciting weather! Very dramatic. These fishing nets looked great under bright overcast conditions, and I went nutso photographing them. So intently was I working that I didn't realize it was raining until I saw big water droplets all over my sweatshirt. A few more images and then it was definitely time to go. I keep a towel in the car to dry off -- both myself and my camera gear. Glad I had one today.

Although you're probably tired of seeing my fishnet photos, I find them incredibly exciting. I could visit this facility every day for a week and not get bored. Yeah, I know ... I'm weird. But you know what? At least I have a passion, something that takes me so out of myself that I don't know it's raining. But I do know enough to keep a towel in the car! ©Carol Leigh


Monday, August 30, 2010

Opposites attract



Repeating soft swoops caught my eye in this first photo, and I like how the rusted and weathered cables stand out against the monochromatic texture in the background. The next photo is completely the opposite, with lively citrus-colored floats and blue/sea-green netting. The dark black asphalt gives the light colors and the lacy-patterned nets a sense of grounded-ness. And then in the third photo, a yellow textured rope holds together the bright green and bright blue bundles of nets.

This is what I love about living on the Oregon coast -- access to colors and textures and weathered things all glowing in soft light. But then, too, I love the look of a harbor full of fishing boats, offshore sea stacks in the fog, the barking of sea lions, and the delightful surprise of seeing a bald eagle or an osprey soaring overhead.

In a couple of weeks the 34-foot motorhomes towing their Suburbans will be gone, coastal beaches will empty, and life will become quiet once more. For two nights in a row, around 10 p.m., I've heard large flocks of Canada geese heading south. Is this going to be an early winter? Or is their GPS unit out of order? "Recalculating . . ." ©Carol Leigh

Monday, August 9, 2010




On overcast days I look for color and for detail. The diffused light makes colors glow and gleam. And it softens shadows, revealing details in nooks and crannies. So it was off to the fishing nets, where there's always something different, something colorful, and where texture is rampant.

Walking among all these piles of nets, looking, looking, looking, is (for me) not unlike the excited, anticipatory feeling of being seven again on Christmas morning. ©Carol Leigh

Sunday, April 25, 2010

Nautique bleu



Three more examples of nautical blue. All the colors stand out especially well because of overcast (if not downright drizzly) skies. ©Carol Leigh