Archive for October, 2006

the sun makes everyone happy

365.006 - jump

Anyone who’s lived in the Seattle are for any amount of time knows that the weather here has a tendency to stay cold, gray, and wet for a good 6 months out of the year. Last week was the beginning of that gray period, as each day was pretty much cold, gray, and (sometimes) wet. It was dreary. It was depressing. And it put me in a really pissy mood. Some frustrations at work didn’t help, but that’s beside the point. I was totally enjoying the wonderful summer we had, and now it’s all gone. Fall has arrived in full force.

Then, to my surprise, it was sunny and clear all day yesterday. The sky was blue. The sun was shining brightly. And everyone was happy. It was still kind of chilly outside, but no one cared. It was an absolutely gorgeous autumn day at the end of October, and there was no rain in sight. I spent most of the day bouncing back and forth between different parks in Kirkland and Bellevue, and every where I went, people were cheerful and in good spirits. It was wonderful.

The good moods all around put me in a great mood. I was smiley and chatty when I was getting my hair cut. (Side note: The Shop in Kirkland is a cool place to get your hair cut. Small, intimate feel. Not at all like a fancy schmancy salon. Friendly people working there. A bit spendy at $18 for men’s cuts, but the service is totally worth it.) I smiled and said “hello” to people I passed while walking around. I struck up several small conversations with people as I was taking photographs (usual comments about beautiful fall colors, surprisingly good weather, etc.). I helped some high school kids in formal wear take pictures at the lake (that’s a new one for me). And even the long lines at Starbucks and Jamba Juice didn’t bother me.

With the good mood and good weather around me, I decided to try a fun self-portrait for 365 Days. The pond at Bellevue Downtown Park had been emptied for the fall and winter seasons, and I thought it might be a neat thing to do a jumping portrait in the middle of the empty area. I set up the self-timer on my D70 (forgot the remote at home) and timed my jumps to be at the peak when the shutter fired. It took me at least 20 or 30 tries to get a decent shot, and each time I had to go reset the self-timer from normal shooting mode (one of my pet peaves about the D70). It must have looked pretty odd for everyone at the park to see me prop my camera on my camera bag, walk about 5 feet away from it, stand still for 10 seconds, jump in the air, and repeat the process over and over again for about half an hour. Not a single person stopped to ask me what I was doing. I probably looked pretty insane. Regardless, I’m happy with the final shot I got. Now that I have a better idea of how to time the jumps, I’m going to have to try more jumping photos elsewhere. I just have to remember to bring my remote and maybe a small tripod.

It’s been a wonderfully relaxing weekend, and I expect today will be no different. I’ve got my coffee and a bagel and free wi-fi at Tully’s (where I am right now). I had an extra hour of chilling time last night/this morning. The sun keeps popping in and out from behind the clouds, but at least it’s not raining. And I’m still in a good mood from yesterday. Life it pretty good.

friday fun

365.004 - a little on edge

Random tidbits for this gloomy autumn Friday…

  • Heroes is a freakin’ good show. After a few weeks of separate storylines, everything is starting to converge. Not sure if there is enough material to go beyond one season, but, man, what there is so far is really really good.
  • On Monday, I started participating in 365 Days. The goal is to shoot one self-portrait every day for a full year. I always have a camera with me, so shooting at least one picture a day shouldn’t be too hard. :)
  • The Macbook Pro line has been upgraded to the Intel Core 2 Duo processor. In addition to that, default shipping RAM has been doubled (1 GB for the base config, 2 GB for the others), bigger hard drives are included, Firewire 800 is on all machines, and a new airline power adapter is included for free. I really really really want one now. Anyone got a spare $2500 they want to give me?
  • Apple has finally released the updated .Mac webmail interface to the world. It looks like OS X’s Mail app and has all sorts of Web 2.0 goodness, but it’s a bit slower than the previous version of the webmail UI. It’s too slow to run on my 5-year-old Powerbook, but, then again, I just use Mail on there. In Firefox on my Dell laptop, it’s not too bad. If anything, it’s all shiny and new.
  • Firefox 2 was released this week as well. It’s got shiny new buttons, spell-checking in form text entry areas, and a close button on each tab (FINALLY!). I know there are other updates/upgrades, but, frankly, I won’t notice most of those.
  • Trogdor will be an unlockable song in Guitar Hero 2. As if I needed yet another reason to buy this game in a couple of weeks.
  • Weeks after placing my order, my Lomo LC-A+ is finally with UPS and on its way to me. It should be arriving sometime at the end of next week. I have a feeling my film stash will drop slightly next weekend.

I suppose I should get some work done today. First, must eat lunch.

sunset cruise

slowly cruising past the autumn sunset

As I was driving home last night, I saw a gorgeous sunset in progress and decided to head down to Kirkland Marina Park to get a few shots. I didn’t have time to dig my D70 out my backpack, so I stuck with my new Fujifilm FinePix F30 compact digital camera for the photos. They actually turned out quite nicely, and a few people at the park asked me to email them copies when I got the chance. I guess not everyone carries a digital camera with them at all times.

I was getting ready to head back home when I saw a car cruising by on the water. Yes, that’s a right. A car on the water. I stood there, kind of confused, kind of amused, that someone actually owned a car that doubled as a slow-going boat. The Curbside Dockside, as it was called, puttered past the dock and up the boat launch in the parking lot. The guy driving it said that some German company used to make these cars way back in the 60’s. I didn’t hear much more beyond that — I was too busy checking out the car and snapping photos (none of which turned out nice at all).

It’s times like this when I’m glad I always carry a camera with me.

pumpkin fun

Oh man! What a gorgeous weekend it was! Mostly clear skies. Sunny. Warm. And tons of fall colors everywhere. It totally made up for the mostly crappy weather during the week. Of course, the weather is back to being overcast again, but I don’t mind so much since I’m sitting in a cube all day.

The beautiful weekend weather couldn’t have been timed better either. Saturday was the monthly Seattle Flickr Meetup day, and our destination this time around was Spooner Farm out in Puyallup. The farm featured a giant corn maze, u-pick pumpkin patches, farm animals, and pumpkin sling-shots. I was really worried that it would rain and be very muddy out there, but that wasn’t the case. It was just simply gorgeous out there. There was a lot of great light for photography, not to mention all the cool possibilities involving pumpkins, corn stalks, and other farm-related goodness.

My favorite part of the day was the pumpkin sling-shot. For $1 you get 3 small pumpkins (from baseball- to softball-sized) that you can sling-shot out to several targets setup in a field. If you hit one the targets on the fly, you win a giant pumpkin. I dropped $3 on 9 shots, and, on my 8th shot, I nailed the target dead on. I got to put my name up on the winner’s whiteboard, and I got my choice of giant pumpkins. There were several insanely huge pumpkins there, but most of them were either too deformed to be of any use or they were just simply too big for me to carry. I ended up choosing one that could stand upright on its own and that I could carry up 3 flights of stairs to my apartment. Now I just need to figure out how I’m going to carve it.

You can check out my photos from the day in my Flickr photostream. Or you can just browse through them using that giant Flash widget at the top courtesy of PictoBrowser, which, by the way, is a really cool app that my buddy Jed’s co-worker made. It’s quite slick.