jeangenie's 52 for 2009 - Week 26 Night

He He He...I'm not laughing at you ...but with you...:lol:

I love reading your stories each week...:love:

But even thought it's not in anyway a crowd shot...it's really good...:clap:

It's the sort of thing we all see from time to time but never bother to notice the photo opportunity in front of us... so from me to you...that's a great thinking outside the box for this week...:thumbs:
 
:agree:

A great shot that really sums up your week it seems. I can sooo appreciate the frustration when you can see an image in your head but despite all efforts fails to materialise in front of you, I've been there and bought the t-shirt.

P.S. The 24-70 is a lovely piece of kit isn't it, I bet you want to get one of your very own now don't you :)
 
He He He...I'm not laughing at you ...but with you...:lol:

I love reading your stories each week...:love:

But even thought it's not in anyway a crowd shot...it's really good...:clap:

It's the sort of thing we all see from time to time but never bother to notice the photo opportunity in front of us... so from me to you...that's a great thinking outside the box for this week...:thumbs:

You're very kind, Marcus. I really appreciate your lovely comments. :)

:agree:

A great shot that really sums up your week it seems. I can sooo appreciate the frustration when you can see an image in your head but despite all efforts fails to materialise in front of you, I've been there and bought the t-shirt.

P.S. The 24-70 is a lovely piece of kit isn't it, I bet you want to get one of your very own now don't you :)

There weren't any t-shirts, Simon. Only woolly hats. :lol: Sorry!

Yep the 24-70 is lovely but I had a lot of trouble adapting to in for candids in a crowd. I usually like to zoom in close to fill the frame with people and kept feeling that I wasn't connecting with the subjects. I definitely need my own to practise on. :D

Thank you for your encouragement - it really helps.

Jean
 
Cool photo! Quite thought provoking... and an eerie looking forest helps get that etherial quality. Plus we all know "two's company but trees a crowd!"

I'll get my coat...
 
I take my hat of to you Jean :) (well someone did anyway :)) I thought my crowd was sparse - you've topped that :) Its a good shot and well spotted but the words are just great - you have summed up many of the elements I learned or at least noticed for myself this week but I just don't have the eloquence to write down!

Points #1,#3,#6 and #7 all applied to me this week!

As for the 365s - gawd 'elp us! One a week is enough to drive me up the wall :)

Well done on getting it in and well done on the narrative :)
 
Good one Jean, a very different take but I like it. Some great learning points too. :thumbs:
 
Really like the special shot i think you have pulled it off very well :)

and those crowds do seem to have vanished this week glad you didn't get dishartened and managedd to get a pic :D
 
This is a really nice shot Jean,

It's a shame that you were hoping for this :crowded: and got this :tumbleweed:

However I do believe that both the trees and the leaves consider themselves to be part of their crowd :lol:

Well done for getting an interesting, clear, well taken shot in anyway.
 
Week 6 is excellent. I love the arrangement and the splash of yellow colour. Well lit too. A bigger depth of field might have helped but that's only a minor niggle.

Sounds like you had quite an ordeal with no.7. There are never crowds at the place and time you need. Afraid the hat in a tree doesn't do a great deal for me. I like the sound of the ideas you had though. Definately one to revisit in the future.
 
Plus we all know "two's company but trees a crowd!"

Hehehe - I did meet the brief after all - just took someone who could see the wood for the tress to point it out to me.

Thank you for your kind comments, too. :)



I take my hat of to you Jean (well someone did anyway :)) I thought my crowd was sparse - you've topped that
Points #1,#3,#6 and #7 all applied to me this week!

As for the 365s - gawd 'elp us! One a week is enough to drive me up the wall

Ahhh - so the hat was yours, John. :lol: And it sounds as though your week was about as good as mine. Thanks for cheering me up, though :)



Good one Jean, a very different take but I like it. Some great learning points too.

You're very kind, John. :)



Really like the special shot i think you have pulled it off very well

and those crowds do seem to have vanished this week glad you didn't get dishartened and managedd to get a pic :D

Thank you Ruth. I've just worked out why this 52 is called a 'challenge' - it's a new mountain to climb every week. :bang:




This is a really nice shot Jean,

It's a shame that you were hoping for this :crowded: and got this :tumbleweed:

However I do believe that both the trees and the leaves consider themselves to be part of their crowd

Thank you Angela. Yet another way of looking at crowds. :D




Week 6 is excellent. I love the arrangement and the splash of yellow colour. Well lit too. A bigger depth of field might have helped but that's only a minor niggle.

Sounds like you had quite an ordeal with no.7. There are never crowds at the place and time you need. Afraid the hat in a tree doesn't do a great deal for me. I like the sound of the ideas you had though. Definately one to revisit in the future.


Thank you Matt. I tried to get a deeper dof on the week 6 but the light was fading and it became a race against time! Week 7 certainly doesn't scale any photographic heights - but I'll get one of my 'crowd' shots sooner or later!

Jean
 
I can sympathise with your problems getting your crowd but the shot works gives a where are they feel. It's nice when a shot makes you think about its story.:clap:
 
Ooh I actually like that crowd shot! And it MAY not be quite crowd like, I actually think it is. Like once upon a time there was a crowd, right....there.
:thumbs:
 
I had much the same difficulty this week Jean, I struggled too.

Good that you had the vision to head off in a totally different direction to get your shot.
 
Well done for getting one in at all this week :thumbs:

I know too well how hard it can be, especially when life won't cooperate :D

But you have got a crowd of trees and a crowd of branches :lol:, as well as a crowd of leaves, and I suppose it's the same as when you want a clear shot of something and the crowd gets in the way :D

Better luck this week, and thanks again for the learning points and your description of why you couldn't get the shot you really wanted.
 
I can sympathise with your problems getting your crowd but the shot works gives a where are they feel. It's nice when a shot makes you think about its story.:clap:

Thank you - I needed the sympathy. 'Where are they' was what I was feeling all week. :lol:

Ooh I actually like that crowd shot! And it MAY not be quite crowd like, I actually think it is. Like once upon a time there was a crowd, right....there.
:thumbs:


Thank you Shorty. Imagination is great - as in 'imagine the crowd in that space over there'. :lol:
 
I had much the same difficulty this week Jean, I struggled too.

I'm surprised how many people had the same problems with a crowd. Where are they all? :shrug:

But you have got a crowd of trees and a crowd of branches :lol:, as well as a crowd of leaves, and I suppose it's the same as when you want a clear shot of something and the crowd gets in the way :D

Better luck this week, and thanks again for the learning points and your description of why you couldn't get the shot you really wanted.

Jill - thank you so much - trees, branches, leaves - I just didn't think about them as crowds. :bonk:

Thanks also for the comments - you're very kind. :)

Jean
 
At last - a theme where I had an immediate idea - and stuck with it, although I didn't have a chance to shoot it until today.

Wealth = chocolate biscuits. :nuts:


It seemed topical at the moment when so many people are feeling the financial effects of the recession to think about the nature of wealth. Sociologists talk about poverty in terms of Absolute Poverty (starving, homelss, destitute) and Relative Poverty (what you feel is poverty, eg not being able to afford to buy Christmas presents, not being able to afford two holidays a year, not being able to afford a new luxury yacht). So poverty to one person can be riches to another.

Bear with me - I'm getting there!!

So, I thought what is the difference between Absolute Wealth and Relative Wealth, and remembered a particular time in our lives when we were very, very hard up. Absolute Wealth would be not having to think about money at all. Relative Wealth was brought home to me one day by my then toddler son.

He had been playing with the children next door and came back very excited. I asked if he had had a good time.

"Oh yes, and they have really funny biscuits at Sarah's - they've got chocolate on them."

Chocolate biscuits were a luxury too far in our house, and my son didn't know there was such a thing. :'(


So my Wealth picture is piled high with chocolate biscuits. :)


DSC_1426LR.jpg



Lessons learned this week:

1 Shoot food after lunch not before. It was hard to resist sampling the props.

2 You can't shoot chocolate biscuits in sunshine. :bonk:

3 Photographically I don't think I stretched myself this week. I just shot on a white background in the garden.

4 The chocolate side of a half-coated biscuit is covered in crumbs from the non-chocolate side of its neighbour. The end biscuit is always broken.

5 I've cheated a little, I think. Aren't Jaffa Cakes deemed for VAT purposes to be cakes not biscuits?

6 I've rediscovered a total addiction to Oreos. :love:

7 The sun is either in the wrong place or disappears all together.

8 Mr JG doesn't like chocolate biscuits, so I'll have to eat them all. :banana:

Jean
 
lovely story and really like the picture. They don't do proper biscuits or chocolate over here so I'm going to spend a little longer studying yours now...
 
Jean,

mmm, chocolate buscuits.

It's a fantastic shot and a great twist on the pile of money, the DoF is excellent, it definately needs the whole image in sharp focus. In fact I like everything about it :thumbs:

Thank you very much, Simon. tbh, I tried f8 and f16 because I couldn't choose which biscuits should be in focus and which out - I was focusing on ALL of them - hungrily. :lol:

lovely story and really like the picture. They don't do proper biscuits or chocolate over here so I'm going to spend a little longer studying yours now...


dizzy - Thanks for the comments. It amazes me that the combined brains of the American people can't come up with decent biscuits and chocolate. It seems to be one of the things people miss most about the UK. I'll share mine with you if you want to pop over. :)

Oreos are American - they're ... mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm, (licking lips emoticon)

Jean
 
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Jean, that's a cracking shot, what a yummy pile of wealth that is :thumbs: And what a shame you're gonna have to clean up on that pile too :D. Lovely story to go with it too
 
Lovely shot Jean and a great idea. The focussing is great, and I really like the border you chose too.

Right now where did I put those Bourbons :lol:

:clap: :clap: :clap: :clap:
 
My blood sugars have gone through the roof just looking at them. Well done

J
 
What a beautiful shot! Clever interpretation on this week's theme too. You're making me salivate just looking at them! :D
 
Crisp,good colour and dof. I like the filled frame and the renegade black biscuit at the bottom right - it stops it being too regular.:clap:
 
Lovely story and great interpretation of the theme... I have to say - in my world having enough money to by bottles AND tins of proper diet coke (which I do now - can't live without the stuff!) rather than own brand fizzy brown stuff is wealth indeed - so I completely get where you are coming from :thumbs:

Re Jaffa Cakes - I thought that you tell the difference between cakes & biscuits by how they behave when they go off. Biscuits go soft and cake goes hard... now has anyone had a Jaffa Cake long enough to know what happens because I havn't!
 
:clap:
Excellent perspective on the theme! I scrolled down and thought "Biscuits?!" :thinking: lol :lol:

I really like the shot personally. very professional looking. you'd perhaps expect to see it in an advertising leaflet or a food magazine.

Great “out-of-the-box” thinking!, get it?....“out-of-the-box”?? Pardon the pun!! :lol:

Sorry, couldn't resist :coat:

Umm….chocolate hobnobs……
 
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Excellent interpretation and shot Jean - great natural colours and lighting

I love the rationale behind the shot as well! :clap:

Crumbs, I thought, that takes the biscuit :)
 
Jean

A quick catchup, sorry I've missed a couple. Wealth is a great shot, even if you haven't stretched yourself.

I like the crowds shot as well, that was definatelty a tough week, so well done for getting a shot and one that is different.

Mark:thumbs:

PS DS rofl:thumbs:
 
Jean, that's a cracking shot, what a yummy pile of wealth that is And what a shame you're gonna have to clean up on that pile too. Lovely story to go with it too

Thank you kindly, John. This was one shoot I didn't mind clearing up after. :lol:

Lovely shot Jean and a great idea. The focussing is great, and I really like the border you chose too.

Right now where did I put those Bourbons

Thanks, Angela. Damm - I'll have to reshoot - I forgot the Bourbons. :D

My blood sugars have gone through the roof just looking at them. Well done

J

Jon - Thank you. It was hard to resist sampling after each shot!

What a beautiful shot! Clever interpretation on this week's theme too. You're making me salivate just looking at them!

Your kind comments are much appreciated, jamlid. I hope you'd got a handy packet of biscuits to satisfy the cravings. :)

Crisp,good colour and dof. I like the filled frame and the renegade black biscuit at the bottom right - it stops it being too regular.

Thanks, Frank. Sad to report the lone Oreo bottom right didn't survive long. :naughty:

Lovely story and great interpretation of the theme... I have to say - in my world having enough money to by bottles AND tins of proper diet coke (which I do now - can't live without the stuff!) rather than own brand fizzy brown stuff is wealth indeed - so I completely get where you are coming from

Re Jaffa Cakes - I thought that you tell the difference between cakes & biscuits by how they behave when they go off. Biscuits go soft and cake goes hard... now has anyone had a Jaffa Cake long enough to know what happens because I havn't!

Thanks DS. It's often the small 'luxuries' which are hardest to give up! Thanks for the theory on Jaffa Cakes. If anyone has ever put them to the test, I'd be interested. I can't imagine how you could conduct such an experiment unless they go off in less than 30 minutes. :lol:

Excellent interpretation and shot Jean - great natural colours and lighting

I love the rationale behind the shot as well!

Crumbs, I thought, that takes the biscuit


:lol::lol::lol:

Thanks John. The light was mostly heavy grey cloud, with a small maglight on the Jaffa cakes to warm them up a bit. Plus white card reflectors and a kitchen-foil-covered chopping board. Plus Mr JG to juggle all the bits and pieces.

Jean

A quick catchup, sorry I've missed a couple. Wealth is a great shot, even if you haven't stretched yourself.

I like the crowds shot as well, that was definatelty a tough week, so well done for getting a shot and one that is different.

Mark

PS DS rofl:thumbs:

Thanks Mark - on both shots. A 'proper' Crwod shot is now sitting heavily on my conscience, especially since there's a reshoot option this week. :thinking:


Jean
 
:clap:
Excellent perspective on the theme! I scrolled down and thought "Biscuits?!" :thinking: lol :lol:

I really like the shot personally. very professional looking. you'd perhaps expect to see it in an advertising leaflet or a food magazine.

Great “out-of-the-box” thinking!, get it?....“out-of-the-box”?? Pardon the pun!! :lol:

Sorry, couldn't resist :coat:

Umm….chocolate hobnobs……

:lol::lol::lol:

Thanks JammyC - I'm afraid I haven't been inundated with picture editors looking to use my shot. Hey, never mind - I can comfort eat to get over the disappointment. :D

Jean
 
What can I say.....:nono:

You women can turn any subject back to food...:lol:

I've put on a couple of pounds just studying the shot...:nuts:

That a lovely shot, loving the DOF...:love:

Congratulation, your shot takes the biscuit this week...:coat:
 
What can I say.....You women can turn any subject back to food...:lol:

Oh not that old chestnut again. Well I suppose us women can't have our cake and eat it, guess we'll just have to egg roll with the punches and take the criticism. It will be a bitter pill to swallow, but a spoonfull of sugar should help with that!:cuckoo:

sorry, :coat: I think the study has finally taken its toll :coat:
 
What can I say.....:nono:

You women can turn any subject back to food...:lol:

I've put on a couple of pounds just studying the shot...:nuts:

That a lovely shot, loving the DOF...:love:

Congratulation, your shot takes the biscuit this week...:coat:

Hehehe :lol: What can I say, except 'Crumbs! Thanks for the kind comments.'

Oh not that old chestnut again. Well I suppose us women can't have our cake and eat it, guess we'll just have to egg roll with the punches and take the criticism. It will be a bitter pill to swallow, but a spoonfull of sugar should help with that!:cuckoo:

sorry, I think the study has finally taken its toll :coat:

Excellent :lol:

Keeping your sense of humour with an essay looming is key to survival in the study zone, Angela - along with an endless packet of biccies, of course. :)

Jean
 
Week 9 Identity

This MUST be an easy one! Everybody has an identity. 'Identity' is a way of labelling people and we're doing that all the time! So why was it so hard to come up with an image for the theme. :bang:

I thought of documents relating to identity, but Graulges beat me to it - and his exotic French collection is much more interesting than my bus pass. :D

So I got to thinking - always dangerous :) How on earth do you identify yourself except as, in my case, a wife, a mother, a mother-in-law, a grandmother, a dog owner, Plot24(back) on the allotment, etc, etc? Well, I suppose we're all the products of our particular gene pool and our identity is formed from this.

I've just started to delve into our family history so my contribution for this week is an item from my family past. It's a medallion which was given to families of servicemen killed in World War I, and commemorates my Uncle who died at 18 in the last few days of that war. It would be a matter of pride to think that his bravery and sacrifice has travelled through the generations, and comforting to hope that none of us will ever be called on to demonstrate that level of courage.



DSC_1499Final-portraitLR.jpg



With this I wanted to suggest a continuity of some kind from the past to the present and into the future. I came up with the idea of the shadow from the medallion (the past) stretching forward (into the present day). This meant backlighting of some kind, but keeping the detail in the medallion.


The big plan was to use natural light for the medallion, with a back light to cast the shadow forwards, supplied by other means - roll out the trusty maglight.

The trusty maglight, its big brother and its little sister all failed dismally to do what I wanted. End of Plan A.

Plan B - use bright sunlight to get a strong shadow and balance object lighting as best I could with camera settings. Well I got the shadow - changes subject rapidly, ignoring object lighting and ended up doing the rest in photoshop. :thumbsdown:

Lessons learned this week:

1 I wanted a challenge - and I found it. :(

2 Lighting was crucial - yes I know it always is - but this was painfully crucial.

3 Don't even try to use a torch in the same room as a dog whose big passion in life is chasing reflections, shadows and lights. Especially when you've got to dodge round the tripod, squeeze past a desk and position torch before the shutter is released.

4 Recognise when something isn't going to work and move on.

5 Finding something to prop up a heavy metal disk isn't easy if you don't want it, or its shadow to be seen. Tin of baked beans - too tall, any tin cast unacceptable shadow at the sides, Blue tak wasn't strong enough, clever little contraption with 2 holding clips wouldn't sit on the product table. Grrrr ...

6 Photoshop is wonderful - and yet again I've discovered how much I don't know. :bang:

7 But - I HAVE learned how to use the timer on my camera. :banana:

8 I need to be a bit more careful with cropping. I've not left enough space on the right. :bonk:

9 I would have liked the shadow to be longer and narrower but the sun didn't co-operate.

... and, if you're wondering - I did think about cleaning the medallion but I thought it looked more like the 'past' in its natural state and it did just cross my mind that it might be easier without too much light bouncing off it. :)

C&C very welcome - I'm not convinced that I've really demonstrated 'Identity', but I enjoyed the challenge.

Jean
 
Great detail and lighting, and as ever great reading about your inspiration and about your approach and lessons learned.

I guess our identity is formed by those who went before us and your uncle, like so many others, paid the ultimate price to allow others to continue their identity for future generations!
 
Another fascinating piece of personal history, the picture is good too, I think you overcame your obstacles well to achieve this shot.:clap:
Mark:thumbs:
 
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Yep, you have done well Jean, another good image linked to a powerful story fitting the theme.

Interesting to read the challenges you overcame too, well done.
 
:wave:

That is a very impressive shot, and an interesting interpretation of the theme! :clap: I know, now I can see it, how you intended the shadow to work, and indeed, it does! :clap:;)
 
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