Posts tagged: photos

Our Conquest of Spain: Arrows and Sticks

By bethany (dreadlock girl), September 18, 2009 3:46 pm

Through the fine skill of archery, we have conquered little kid step at a time the northern mountains of Spain: Los Picos de Europa. Our journey has taken us from Soto de Sajambre to Oseja de Sajambre by use of our somewhat faithful feet and our trusted silver steed (a huge Ford van). The sights have been incredible-too much to see and enjoy. The boys are loving every new adventure and are very good at taking things as they come, it has been a very good trip so far!

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Make sure to check back in soon for pictures of castles and aqueducts and the boys avidly eating it up!

Photo Spain Posts to Date:
Spain Through My Camera Lens

I will try to post pictures here again, but I will be uploading them all to my flickr album España.

If you want to see our pictures of Spain in your google (or selected) reader sign up for the RSS for the España flickr album.

Spain Through My Camera Lens

By bethany (dreadlock girl), September 15, 2009 3:05 am

We are in Spain for the next bit, some of you have begged for pictures, others have done nothing short of threatening me….either way I feel the love, thanks! We have loved every day so far, and we are headed to Segovia to see the sights there, the castle there is impressive and the aqueduct is insanely cool. Stay tuned, I hope to have pictures up of that soon….depending on internet connection. Until then, enjoy a little tidbit of our journey in photos.

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I will try to post pictures here again, but I will be uploading them all to my flickr album España.

If you want to see our pictures of Spain in your google (or selected) reader sign up for the RSS for the España flickr album.

Dreadlock Girl Photography Tips: Work that Thing!

By bethany (dreadlock girl), July 22, 2009 6:37 am

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1.) When you are down, low, low down, you will get some of your best shots especially of kids and animals. I try to be at the level of the being that I am taking a picture of. It looks more natural for kids to be looking straight at the camera when it is level with them, and even if they aren’t looking, get down on your knees to shoot. It really does make a difference.

2.) Flash, what flash? A flash can work, but I think the ones that come with cameras (which is what many of us have) really don’t work worth their existence. Forget you have it! That means, get your camera off of the setting which sets up your flash automatically. Mess with your ISO and shutter speed and ditch the flash for good. One day I will buy an expensive flash to try out, but I have heard it from the best that even those make your victims look, ” like a deer in the headlights”.

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3.) Get Closer, there is no 6 inch rule when it comes to photography, get in close and then zoom in further. Most shots I see just don’t have the detail they could because the subject you are shooting is 15 feet away! Walk right up, and then zoom the rest of the way. Your subject should fill up a large part of the picture. If there is something worth looking at around the subject, take that into account, if not, then why do you want it in your picture?

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4.) Experiment! If you want to get good you have to waste time in training, it is like so much else out there: some people are naturally just good at it, but that is a rare stroke of luck and doesn’t happen to most of us. The rest of us are just shooting away, hoping to capture something good, once in a while. To get good, try new things. Don’t do the same spot as last time, take your camera with you and try a different location, different lighting than you are used to, try mixin’ it up. If the shots don’t turn out, then try again, adjust the light meter, the shutter speed, try a new angle. If you push yourself you will grow!

Sometimes I do get to places just when God’s ready to have somebody click the shutter.

~Ansel Adams


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Be sure to come back next Wednesday to Dreadlock Girl for some tips on Group Photo Shoots. Nothing fancy, just what I have learned so far.

I always love answering questions for readers. I’d love ideas on future Dreadlockgirl Photography Tips sessions if you have them. Leave me a comment, I love hearing from you!

Previous Dreadlock Girl Photography Tips:
The Basics
Capture Real People, In Real Life Shots

Dreadlock Girl Photography Tips: I am going to do several of these posts, I am not a professional photographer by a long shot, but I love taking pictures and seeing beautiful pictures so I want to share what I have learned with you.

Dreadlock Girl Photography Tips: Capture Real People, in Real Life Shots

By bethany (dreadlock girl), July 10, 2009 2:28 pm

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There are so many wrong moves we make when taking shots of other people. What I love to do most is capture real people, real faces that they make, and doing what they really do. Kids play, they don’t generally stand still in a dress shirt with their feet pointed slightly to the left, arms crossed, head slightly tilted, wearing what could be a plastic smile. But we try to capture that moment to keep? Sorry, but posing people unnaturally is probably my biggest nightmare. I am not a professional, I like to get real shots, I don’t need to pose people, when I do have to pose them I do it so that they hardly know they are being posed. If these tips work with my 3 and 5 year-old boys it seems they would work (with slight variations) on most people.

1.) You do the work: Let your subject (victim) be while YOU do the work of moving around to get the best shot. Call it the photographer’s diet– it works for me. You are the one trying to get the good shot, so when you force your kids to do all the work, you really will get only mediocre expressions from dissatisfied subjects. Let them play, let them throw sand, let them cry…real pictures work best and they are the most memorable ones.

2.) Work (read: play) with your subject: Ask the person what their favourite thing to do is, and get pictures of them doing that. If you are taking pictures of your children you probably already know what they like to do, so instead of telling them you are going to take pictures just ask them if they want to play pirates, or if they’d like to go outside and shoot their cap guns. While they are doing it, take pictures.

3.) Don’t give commands: Try as little as possible to say things like,  “wait, just stay like that!” or “don’t move!”…those kind of comments clue them in and they won’t want to cooperate. There are moments that you would like to capture, and you can avoid sounding like you are only interested in taking pictures say things like, ” I think that gun has some caps left in it” or ” ” do you think you can shoot the top of that tree over there?” — again be real, this isn’t about manipulation, but working with them to get a good outcome. Don’t lie to get them to do what you want, but it is okay if you use your imagination. This works well for little kids. I don’t have teens yet, so I’ll give you tips on that when we get there.

A shot of how chaos, can be better than organization- let it be, and SHOOT!
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4.) The magical window of picture perfectness: There are times when you need a specific shot and the subject just has to cooperate. These shots are rare, but still  they happen. When this is the case, get your shots within an age specific amount of time. My kids are 3 and 5 years old, they can sit and look happy for about 2 minutes without touching something or acting grouchy. That means I have 2 minutes. I need to have my camera ready, have the light meter set right, and everything just set so that I can shoot pictures for that whole time. When they are done, YOU are too. Resist the urge to beg, bully, and boss them into anything once the magical window is closed. You will all have a better day.

A necessary posed shot, I gave myself about 5 seconds, the equivalent of two shots to get this one right..the little feet weren’t going to stay still for long. (It was a no-nap day)IMG_3968

I always love answering questions for readers. I’d love ideas on future Dreadlockgirl Photography Tips sessions if you have them. Leave me a comment, I love hearing from you!

Previous Dreadlock Girl Photography Tips:
The Basics

Dreadlock Girl Photography Tips: I am going to do several of these posts, I am not a professional photographer by a long shot, but I love taking pictures and seeing beautiful pictures so I want to share what I have learned with you.

Master in Strategic Communication

By bethany (dreadlock girl), July 6, 2009 7:32 pm

Brad has been working for two years on a Masters in Strategic Communication at the Turnbul Center (belonging to the University of Oregon) up in Portland. We are thrilled it is over. Driving up twice a week for classes, working all day then studying at night, working on projects and a thesis is not nearly as fun as it sounds.

A couple of weekends ago we scrambled to get the boys out of bed at a severely ugly hour in order to get Brad to his graduation ceremony. After we went to the corner cafe in Brownsville, Oregon with the family, it is one of our favourite unknown-but-should-be-known spots.

What’s next? Well, we’ll get to that. We’re going to enjoy the completion of this step for a second though.

Commencement

School of Journalism and Communication

Saturday, June 13th, 2009

McArthur Court

University of Oregon

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Ellyn Nealon, my sis-in-law gets full credit for the pictures with me in them. (Thanks Ellyn!)

For more pictures of this event visit my flickr album: Brad’s Masters Graduation University of Oregon

Good Food, Great Friends.

By bethany (dreadlock girl), June 24, 2009 8:14 pm

Oh, goodness, the food was just amazing, I mean if you haven’t had meat cooked by the Jonah man, you haven’t really even ever eaten good meat! So tender, so filled with flavour…Beer can chicken, and corn on the cob, along with tons of other yummy delicacies from the Lang kitchen. The guys chatted it up outside, we gals followed the kids around until they didn’t need following, and we enjoyed the good food and great peeps we got to eat with.

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