Photo Journal

The Challenge of Seeing

Photography makes one conscious of beauty everywhere, even in the simplest things, even in what is often considered commonplace or ugly. Yet nothing is really 'ordinary', for every fragment of the world is crowned with wonder and mystery, and a great and surprising beauty

Alvin Langdon Coburn

HEY! Marfa, Texas.

A metal pole with arms, casting its shadow on a pillar out in front of the NPR station in Marfa, Texas. It looked so much like a person waving his arms - I had to take a picture. Converted it to black and white so background colors wouldn’t distract from image in the foreground. Marfa had so much bright sunshine that the shadows were fantastic everywhere. I will include more photos of my visit there in a future post.

This week I’m doing something a little different. Almost all of the pictures here (except for the first and last) are not mine, but were taken by subscribers who accepted my challenge a few weeks ago and took pictures of ordinary objects in unexpected ways. I included their names, and their own words wherever possible. They are posted in the order I received them. My comments, if any, are in italics. Any mistakes here are mine!

This was really eye-opening and fun for me. I loved seeing everything you all shared, and felt like I got to know you a little better. If you enjoy this, please let me know! Maybe I’ll make challenges a periodic part of this blog. Now, on to the photos

From Lisa Potter - Aluminum boom, 70mm by 6000mm

Love these crisp, industrial photos, taken from the ends of the metal booms.

Lisa Potter - Aluminum booms - 70mm by 6000mm.

They’re all the same size, but you can see how distance makes the ones further from the camera look smaller. RL

Lisa Potter - an intimate portrait of a houseplant and its shadow.

An example of taking a photo of only part of a subject, but still expressing a complete idea. RL

Lisa Potter - Peeking through the leaves at her cat, Pearl.

An example of using an object in the foreground to frame your subject, which is further away. - RL

From Michelle Shaw - Crystal Doorknob

“As I looked around to uncover my subject matter, one of our doorknobs caught my eye.  

We live in a house that was built in 1870, and when we remodeled, I fell in love with these crystal doorknobs that we now have throughout the home. I love having something special, that feels so good in my hand every time I open a door in our house. It’s like a beautiful spark, an auspicious beginning, to whatever is in front of me.”

This is an example of extreme close-up photography, where the photographer fills the lens with her subject, creating an abstract image.

Michelle has been my yoga teacher for a few years now. She has a newsletter that comes out on Thursdays, which I look forward to every week, full of wisdom, humor and practices to help improve your sense of wellbeing and health. You can find her at www.MichelleShawYoga.com or on Instagram as @MIchelleShawYoga.

A different view, from Rita Labelle. Taken with her I-phone angling down at her linen closet.

Changing the angle changes its appearance - the sides of the cabinet begin to look like wedges at the bottom - the straight line between the two doors becomes triangular… RL

Rita Labelle “The flowers faded, the leaves furled.”

From a hyacinth after it finished blooming, leaves curling. RL

From Rita Labelle - “rotated the picture”

Rita used the same picture as above, but rotated and then cropped it to get a close-up of curling leaves. The greens are so beautiful against a textured white background.

Rebecca Majewski - “The Beauty of the Car Wash”

I love that something so simple as a car wash becomes magic when you get close in like this.

Rebecca Majewski. “The Beauty of the Carwash.”

I like to think of this one as ‘the car wash blues’. Amazing how the light streaming through the soapy water creates such beautiful colors and shapes.

Rebecca Majewski - “The Beauty of the Car Wash”

From Mary Deur - “The first 2 photos are part of my world right now. We are watering these little seedlings every day. It is so amazing that something so beautiful comes from a tiny seed.”

I love the extreme simplicity here - it makes the seedling seem even more tender to see its fragile roots against the hard surface. RL

Mary Deur - Seedlings.

I love that you can still see fragment of the seed, split open, at the tips of the seedlings.

Mary, her daughter and granddaughter grow and sell flowers and floral arrangements - you can find them on Instagram @three.flowers.farm.mi. The bouquets they create are beautiful! RL

From Mary Deur: “The 3rd photo is taken of the underside of a wooden bowl my dad made. I look at it every day.

It’s amazing the beauty we have around us if we take the time to look.”

From Lois Bartlett - “Just a graceful tissue with folds and lifts. My eye went from lower left to upper right. Reminds me of challenges I face …daunting with the possibility of collapse and yet upwards if the tissues were released to fly away, free in the breeze. Challenge faced and resolved.”

Reflections, From Lois Bartlett - “I was sitting in my chair and noticing the reflection in the glass of the picture frame. The colorful sunset photos were superimposed with the giant outlines of trees from my yard. It felt like you could walk through the rainy day right into the beach at sunset.”

Using reflections is another technique for getting an unusual picture… this is almost like a double exposure as well, with one image superimposed over another. RL

From Kat Needham - Light on Granite - From the top.

The End of the Line, El Paso, TX.

On the last night of my road trip into west Texas, I stayed in El Paso at a hotel near the airport. Before my flight, I walked outside and noticed these power lines overhead…the literal end of a segment, against a clear blue sky. It seemed like an appropriate photo for the end of my trip and for the end of this post. Thank you all for being here!

Spring Promise

I am going to try to pay attention to the spring. I am going to look around at all the flowers, and look up at the hectic trees. I am going to close my eyes and listen.

Anne Lamott

Texas Storksbill

Spring Arrival

Leaving behind a chilly wind,

And a little frost last night,

winter went away.

In the morning,

spring would arrive

with dewy promise.

I woke early-

going outside -

the roosters crowed,

and the sun rose

through cloudy skies.

I searched for signs:

Budding of trees,

Blooming of flowers,

Singing of birds,

Greening of grass,

And just like magic,

they were there,

and there I was

again to see it -

With wonder

And gratitude.

Prairie Verbena

Blossom by blossom the spring begins.

Algernon Charles Swinburne

Dandelion and Henbit Deadnettle

Bunch-flowered Daffodil and a camera-shy green insect

Bluebonnet

Salvia

Anemone and Prickly Pear

Golden Crownbeard and a contented bee

Grackles ignoring the signs…

All of these photos were taken in Texas - in case you are wondering about the change of scenery.

Thank you for being here once again. I wanted to remind you of my challenge a few weeks ago:

I have a challenge for you! I’ve been playing with perspective all month - on and off- sometimes it works, sometimes it doesn’t; but it always makes me see things differently; and it’s fun. So, my challenge is this: take a picture of something ordinary. Your toaster, your coffee maker, some tracks in the snow, a shadow that falls on your wall… anything; but take it in an unusual way. Then, if you like it - share it with me! I will post a gallery of the images in a future blog! Send them to rhodatude@gmail.com and make sure to include a little description of what it is and how you took the picture.

(click here to see the entire original post) - please submit photos by April 1, 2023 if you want your photos to be included in my April 5 blog post. I hope you are having a lovely spring so far. See you next week.

Looking Up

When you look up at the sky, you have a feeling of unity which delights you and makes you giddy.

Ferdinand Hodler

A woodpecker  

shuffles up the dead palm tree,

pausing and knocking,

picking out her morning meal

in tiny bites.

She shuffles and knocks

pauses and eats,

up and up,

until gradually

she’s circling

the frondless tip -

where she stops

and lifts her head

to the blue sky.

I spent a week looking up, and this is what I saw:

Seagulls flying overhead, calling.

The noisy green parrots looking down -

wondering what I was looking at.

Crows that alight anywhere,

mourning doves who do not approve of crows.

And then the moon,

the moon,

the waning moon.

Looking up was another assignment from the Zen Camera book by David Ulrich. He meant it more generally, as in keeping your head up and looking around you, observing your surroundings rather than burying your face in your phone, or getting lost in your thoughts, but I decided to take it literally for this week. So, here’s to looking up!

Thank you for being here!

Once you have tasted the taste of sky, you will forever look up.

Leonardo da Vinci