Thursday

A missed moment



Recently I attended a private party at a software developers headquarters and though I was there to also have some fun, it was mostly business, as I have another website dedicated to a specific smartphone and its many different applications available for taking pictures. So I found myself in San Franscisco on Cinco de Mayo, a day in which a full moon was the also the closest all year to the earth, thereby appearing larger than normal the rest of the year.


While at the event, there was this one person who captured my attention and during the evening our paths crossed a few times. We gave each other a smile and the first one she gave me I managed to capture with my iPhone.




Looking back, I wonder if I let pass an opportunity or if I simply misinterpreted her smile and the way she looked at me. I also ask myself if she is not too young for me or I am just too old for her. I guess I will never know. For now I remain simply content knowing that her loving expression and smile was meant for me, since no one else was close to where I was standing.







Thank you for your visit
E.A.



Wednesday

The beauty of flowers



The last ten days or so, I have been exploring further the potential of the iPhone 4S camera as an artistic tool, including the many different applications at iTunes to manipulate and enhance those images.


Though there are obvious limitations, there are also many other advantages allowing for spontaneities without having to carry around a bulky load hanging from ones shoulder. So on a recent walk I came across a magnolia tree just begging to be examined more closely for that interesting flower.



Magnolia


With my previous plans of a trip to the southwest derailed, I have not yet focused on local locations other than to be observant and apply some of the Instagram philosophy to my way of observation of potential subject matter and iPhone photography.



Flowers with thorns — Instagram


This renewed vigor in photography has not only been a bust creatively but also kept the dark clouds from invading the mind, clouding ones objectivity and daily routine from collapsing.





Thank you for your visit
E.A.



Tuesday

My day-dream plans derailed



It only feel like yesterday since my last post and in that measure of time, fuel prices have spiraled upward, derailing my day-dream plans for a road trip in a couple of months.


Despite it being only postponed for a year, this will permit me to set aside funds whenever they become available, in the meantime I will be able to better prepare myself sinceI will have a year to do the research and develop a complete itinerary.



Untitled — created with an iPhone 4S


While briefly being disappointed, in the end it may have all worked out for the better. Especially since my son gave me an iPhone 4S last Christmas, the gift has rekindled a new passion for photography, exploring the  iPhone’s camera capabilities and limitations.


Using a smartphone to create iPhoneography art, this has me looking at the concept of photography differently and to develop my own interpretation of Iphoneography. Once I have established good foundation and a small body of work, I will then venture into Instagram, that which actually launched iPhoneography.



A thin red line — created with an iPhone 4S


The two images in the post were just taken yesterday using the iPhone, while being at an IKEA store, when I saw a section of the concrete floor where the carpet had been removed and leaving traces of adhesive, bolts and contractors blue and red markings. It simply underscores y excitement  at the iPhone’s camera immediacy. Though the camera lacks some functions and software capabilities, it is a wonderful alternative to carrying around a camera that is not only bulky, but also weighs several pounds.







Thank you for your visit
E.A.



Saturday

In a blink of an eye a month has passed



There were plans to post for my one year anniversary, which occurred last January 20th. Yet before one new it, the month of January had passed in a block of an eye. Though I did write and posted, a few days later decided to withdraw it back to a draft and save it for another time. In the meantime, my mind was preoccupied with a road trip I would like to take in April.


So out came the camera and tripod, some props and I then cleared off the dinning room table, as I use it for my table top photography, especially since it receive northern light.




When we arrived in New York from Europe, my father drove us in a deep burgundy colored Chevrolet across the US. One of the roads we took, was highway Route 66 before finally arriving in Los Angeles.


I still have faint memories of our trip through New Mexico and Arizona, a land that captured my imagination and had me falling in love with American Indian culture. Since the fifties were the hay days of western culture movies, I always was routing for the Indians, even though they ended up usually dead, for ‘a good Indian is a dead Indian,’ was the expression of the day.


Even though Route 66 is no longer what it was in 1959, due to being replaced with an alternative route, I cannot help but feel drawn to the area. In part because of the distinctive fifties Americana Road architecture now, mostly decaying, succumbing to time and nature.


Then there are the old western movies by director Henry Ford, which featured wide open desolate plains, where mountains raise up from the red earth, reaching for the sky, where one feels close to ones god. The kind of landscape captured by American Impressionist Edgar Paynes.


It is here I wish to photograph, as well as paint my impressions of the land and what remains of the architecture and its people.


For now this road trip is only a dream, a wish that may have to wait another year, but then I have waited a long time since my last road trip, which was through Ireland and I was twenty-five.







Thank you for your visit
E.A.