Wednesday, 17 July 2013
Monday, 13 May 2013
Tuesday, 2 April 2013
That day
And he walked the streets.
A man with dreams and a hope for something better.
And so it was decided.
Look forward, look back and
believe that change will come.
Monday, 25 March 2013
A night without a shadow
It is as though the universe said...
Sunday, 24 March 2013
Grit and Grime
I've been going through last week's shots and I found this unprocessed photo taken in Brick Lane. You can see that the sky is completely overexposed, there is a lot of lens distortion, but I figured it had some potential.
This is the image as imported from the camera and exported from the RAW image. I made no adjustments.
I then cropped the photo and corrected the lens profile distortions and processed it for black and white. (You can see that the lines on the buildings are not vertical and not straight). The first adjustments were to correct exposure, reduce the highlights (the white sky and the reflected light) and increase the contrast.
The I did a lot of dodging and burning (on the face, the jacket and the bricked areas) and it looked like the following photo. You can see that the face is less shiny and the two halves are more similarly lighted.
This is the image as imported from the camera and exported from the RAW image. I made no adjustments.
Grit and grime - raw photo |
The I did a lot of dodging and burning (on the face, the jacket and the bricked areas) and it looked like the following photo. You can see that the face is less shiny and the two halves are more similarly lighted.
Grit and Grime in black and white |
It didn't work for me unfortunately. And then I switched it back to colour. And this was the result:
Thursday, 21 March 2013
Black Street Part IV
Another excursion to Brick Lane. Got a few nice photographs I think.
First, a chunky but very determined-looking man on his way somewhere.
And a fierce-looking woman.
This guy seems to be from Jamaica and had a radio at his feet and danced the day away.
This is my favourite one of the day. I like the shape of the umbrella and that she was looking down, seemingly lost in thought.
This one is special. Petticoat Lane market and she seemed startled or even shocked. I like the angle of the photo, the size of her eyes and that she looks over her shoulder.
Determinism |
Imagine |
Dude |
Another Day |
Shocked |
Thursday, 14 March 2013
The Spectator
Does innocent even mean anything?
Be careful of whom you are staring at.
Looks and smoking - both can kill.
The moment...
Wednesday, 13 March 2013
Narcissistic Phone...
Tuesday, 12 March 2013
A year and twelve years later
Yesterday it was a year since Simone passed away.
Simone Collings |
Paul invited me a few weeks back to join them for drinks to remember her. I didn't know anyone there, except for Paul and then he introduced me to Mike, Simone's uncle - Jenny's brother. On 6 February it was twelve long years since Jenny also passed.
On 8 February last year Simone sent me this picture of her mother and it is really precious to me.
A beautiful photo of Jenny |
This morning I wrote him a letter to share some of my memories of Jenny and to think of her.
Jenny du Preez |
The day she died, Monique wrote this beautiful poem:
Hi Sweetie,
You were a woman old, wise and wealthy
self taught and well read
In your bright life you saw
a painted Paradise with harps and lutes
and you said “Damn those who would make life a hell”
Some frightened you – some gave you joy and happiness
But you had that joy, dear
to whom all sinners in the end must come,
filled with faith, without idleness or pretenses
In that faith you lived and died.
Jenny and Rudolph |
And I wrote this one:
To my friend Jenny
The entire Sweden is crying for you today.
Yesterday I saw white snow everywhere
This morning it is wet and cold and gray.
I can see it in the trees and the clouds and me
Yes I know you told me to never look back
or to cry
And the way you told me to reflect on everything
and move on.
This time it is me who is crying
I cannot but remember you.
We just talked yesterday
and everything was going to be fine.
Remember the many walks and brunch?
Our ditch in Kista?
Thank you for listening
and always telling me why.
Thank you for being you
and making me live every day.
I will miss you
but your smile
and friendship will be with me
Your friend
Rudolph
Monday, 11 March 2013
Snowy day in March 2013
The cold weather returned with a vengeance yesterday and it even snowed a little today.
One of our guerrilla daffodils:
A beautiful combination of yellow lichens, a wooden beam and a light dusting of snow:
The Reimerswaal is a new Dutch dredger that sometimes dock here. Here it is through a flurry of snow:
I took a photo of this lonely bird bobbing up and down on the River Thames with snow flakes falling around it:
This was the view of our block of flats with the snow falling down:
Here are our guerrilla daffodils, with a few in flower:
And this was the Reimerswaal a few minutes later after the snow stopped falling:
The Semper Vivums look really pretty with snow on them:
The mini narcissi flowers in the pot:
Some of the purple crocus flowers waiting to come out:
One of the few "Malva" leaves that survived the frost:
Even the spider's web in the watering can caught some of the snow:
Yes it is really cold. This is a glass pot full of rainwater that froze overnight.
One of our guerrilla daffodils:
Guerrilla Daffodil with a snowy background |
Lichens with snow |
Dredger Reimerswaal |
Bird on the River Thames |
Snow falling in Greenwich |
Snow on the weeds |
Here are our guerrilla daffodils, with a few in flower:
The bulbs we planted in the fall |
Another photo of the Reimerswaal |
Semper Vivums |
More Daffodils |
Crocus flowers |
Crocus flower |
Malva leaves |
Snow trapped in a spider's web |
Frozen rainwater |
Sunday, 10 March 2013
Visit to the Pitt Rivers museum in Oxford
We visited the Pitt Rivers Museum in Oxford yesterday and it is a wonderful place. Stacked full of the strangest artefacts and the occasional surprise, it is really a worthwhile experience. Amazingly, I asked whether photography is allowed and they said yes.
This is Herman in the main display area. You can see that it stretches over three levels and the lower level is filled with hundreds of display cabinets.
Herman in the Pitt Rivers Museum |
This totem pole is at the far end of the hall and it stretches up almost to the ceiling.
Totem pole |
Looking back towards the entrance:
A packed museum |
On the right is this... call it a garment. Eskimos wear it to protect from the weather. And it is made of seal intestines. This is a closeup photo of the embroidery:
Intestine garments |
I really liked these wooden carvings:
Carvings |
I just had to take this photo. He didn't look too excited about being so close to the shrunken heads or Tsatsas. Compare how small the objects are.
Herman looking at Tsantsas (shrunken human heads) |
A colourful mask:
Inuit mask |
Another Inuit mask:
Mask |
And traditional Victorian mourning attire:
Victorian funeral attire |
And Indian toys and dolls:
Inuit dolss |
And these are my favourite objects - Egyptian Ushabti dolls. They were made to resemble a real person and then buried along with the pharoah or master. I first read about them at school in Wilbur Smith's River God and I've been fascinated by the idea of Taita's Ubshabti (as described in the The Seventh Scroll).
Egyptian Ushabti dolls |
This hall as closed and all the dinosaur fossils covered by plastic. But look at the glass ceiling:
Glass ceiling |
Plant fossil |
And a fossil of a prehistoric animal:
Fossil |
This is Pyrite - I think commonly called "Fool's gold". They have a huge crystal in the collection:
Pyrite crystals |
Covered fossils in the museum |
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