Journal
The Song of the Brown Thrasher
A brown thrasher’s song is one of the joys of summer, and a delightful contrast to the repetitive phrasing of many other birds.
A brown thrasher’s song is one of the joys of summer, and a delightful contrast to the repetitive phrasing of many other birds.
A male and female bluebird have chosen an old birdhouse mounted on the end of a grape arbor for a nesting place.
A sequence of pictures of a Northern Flicker cleaning out the chips it has been excavating from the nest it is building in a dead tree.
By staying in the underbrush this tiny bird didn’t provide an opportunity for a good portrait, but because of it’s rare appearance in central New York these images may still be appreciated.
A single subject can be the source of multiple images. A single head of common teasel is quite interesting when considered carefully.
Focus stacking can be used to extend depth of field by combining the partially focused portions of multiple images to form a single completely sharp image.
Goldenrod and insect populations are most numerous in the late summer and early fall, making it a great time to collect some macro photographs of them.
This post is a collection of images taken in and around Denver Colorado, including a few pictures from the Colorado Railroad Museum in Golden Colorado.
Sometimes a single photograph cannot represent a scene the way it is remembered by the observer because the camera has less dynamic range than the eye.
Some thistle plants growing in front of a window provided an opportunity to capture some closeup images and video of the goldfinches coming to feed on them.
Some of the audio and image editing software programs available today have powerful tools that can help you create videos with your still photographs.
This gallery was created from digitally scanned medium format film. This film size produces high resolution images capable of significant enlargement.
Old film negatives and slides can be given new life by converting them into digital images, and many images can be improved with image editing software.
The pinhole camera is the oldest and simplest of all camera designs, so simple that it doesn’t even have a lens – only a small hole in its place. Here are some pictures made with a digital pinhole camera.