Photo Category

The Narrow House

June 30th, 2010 by james in Architectural Design, Photo

Design can be so effective in stretching your head or those around you. The use of color, light and shadow here just made my day. Great design. Would move in tomorrow. Well, would love to sit in the street at night and look in. Is that creepy?

bassamelokeily_7.IIEApCkTSFgZ.jpg

More photos after the jump. (via today and tomorrow)


Wooohooo!!! PhaseOne takes ownership of Microsoft Expression Media (formerly iView)

June 4th, 2010 by james in Graphic Design, Illustration, Mac, Photo

This is the best news I’ve heard in a couple of years on the DAM (Digital Asset Management) front.

phaseone-2010-06-4-18-07.jpg

Check out the news via PhaseOne’s website.

Also, here is an interview from PhaseOne’s CEO, Henrik Håkonsson


Hold On

June 28th, 2009 by james in Art, Film, Me, Music, Photo

This photo I shot today was inspired by the documentary Scott Walker – 30 Century Man. It is the first photo in a series I am interested in developing called Hold On.

You can view this splendid Stephen Kijak film on DVD or stream it online via Netflix.

If you dig Brian Eno, David Bowie, Radiohead, any sort of Avant-garde music, see where they got their inspiration. Here is some more info at IMDB and Wiki.

hold-on.jpg


White Island – Isles of Shoals

June 11th, 2008 by james in Family, Me, Photo

Made it out to White Island of the Isles of Shoals to visit my brother Dan his wife Melissa and my niece Emily. We arrived in Portsmouth after a quick drive down from Portland. We did some food shopping for the island and then packed our gear on the Shoals lab boat Kingsbury that would take us out. When we arrived at Appledore Island where the Shoals Marine Lab is we helped unload the cargo hold full of supplies. It was packed to the rim with everything from fresh produce to massive logs of cream cheese. A huge group of students and faculty came to help unload and it was quite a sight. There must have been more than 50 people all lined up in a chain gang all the way up from the dock to a small dump-body truck and a few other small utility vehicles. We unloaded hundreds of boxes in no time with each person only having to hand it a few feet to the next person. I felt like I was a worker at the the base of a big ant hill and it the experience was quite calming. No thought, just pass the box, get a box, pass the box. Quite lovely.

We then departed Appledore on the Kingsbury and another member of Shoals Marine Lab followed us in a 12 foot Zodiac boat to help us land on White Island. Last year a landing ramp was installed here which helped our landing tremendously compared to the last time we visited Dan a few years back. That time was a wet landing in decent swells and chop and the shore changes with the weather. Sometimes it is almost like a rough beach and others it is very rocky. We made a much smaller chain gang this time. 3 people. Missy, Nicole and I. Dan went back to the boat that was drifting a few hundred yards off shore to get the rest of our gear. We had just missed Susie an intern for the last 2 years being pecked on the top of the head by a tern. She was bleeding pretty good Missy had said but was doing fine.

We lugged our tubs of clothes, bedding, laptops and cameras up to the house on White Island where they all stay. Since last year, the terns have expanded their habitat from the adjoining Seavy Island to White, encroaching on the house and surrounding areas. In order to walk from shore to the house you had to walk through a flock of dive-bombing terns protecting their nests. Dan’s solution is to carry a stick with bright paint on one end and wave it above you as you walk to avoid being pecked in the head. I chose the rudimentary arm wave. I could hear when they were getting close but I’m sure my method is flawed and I’ll have to have a dent in my cranium before I use the stick method. Nicole took to the preferred method instantly and was quite cute traipsing the board walk through the tern’s turf like a cartoon band leader.

We got unpacked and realized that we left the pump for the air mattress at home. Luckily they had a quite effective boat pump that Nicole mastered and we were running in no time. I debagged all of our gear. I think I was a bit overzealous with the waterproofing. Next time I’ll ease up for sure. Our gear could have taken gale force winds, sideways rain and sea-foam no problem. With the new ramp this was entirely, flat out over-kill. I do tend to err on the side of cautious but at least if something happened our gear would have been fine.

We spent time with Emily, cute as the dickens and had some wonderful stir fry for dinner. Dan showed me around a bit and everyone was preparing for the next day’s tern census. I’ll have more later but here is a quick shot I got with the lighthouse to my back of Seavy Island, the the terns and the sunset. Now to see if we can sleep through the foghorn that sounds every 30 seconds, 24/7/365. One tends to forget its existence after the first day we’ve been told and experienced but it will be interesting to see if that happens every time you visit or if you only don’t sleep well the first time out. Wish us luck!

dscf72711.jpg

High tide covering the land bridge between White and Seavy Island at sunset with the New Hampshire coast way off in the distance.


Scott Kelby’s Top Five list.

April 28th, 2008 by james in Graphic Design, Photo

Scott Kelby on his Photoshop Insider blog wrote a “Top Five List For Everything!” It has some great links for products and links that will help you with all aspects of photography, photo gear, photoshop, and of course, steak.

skblog-title12.gif

If you are a photo/design nerd like me, bookmark his blog and read it often. He’s got the goods. He also has a great training site. Check out some of the great courses there.

kelbytraining-logo-horiz2.jpg


Added photos, designs and illustrations.

April 8th, 2008 by james in Graphic Design, Illustration, Photo

I finally added content to my photo, design and illustration pages. I am still working on the format and they need home and contact links etc. Let me know your thoughts. I will be adding more images as I find them in my archives.

photos-added6.jpg

Now to work on my bio and consulting pages. Wish me luck.


Memjet is going to take over the printing world.

March 21st, 2008 by james in Photo

memjet-nozzles.jpg

These little beauties made in Australia as the result of over 10 years of development by Silverbrook Research are going to take over the printing world. Remember the name Memjet. Cheaper, faster, less EVIL than HP, Epson and Canon. I surely wish they were available today. I’d send my Epson R2400 back in a heartbeat. Lovely prints, but Adobe, Epson and Apple can’t apparently play together well in the sandbox… More on them later

Go here for a good write-up on the new technology.

Go here for some amazing videos.


“Photo industry braces for another revolution” by Stephen Shankland

March 5th, 2008 by james in Photo

Some news from Stephen Shankland at his c|net blog Underexposed on the future of photography. It is an interesting read if you haven’t had your ear to the tracks in the last year. Check it out.


Lightroom is growing up

March 4th, 2008 by james in Photo

lightroom4.jpg

Adobe Photoshop Lightroom is growing up. I love this program. I wish I could fast forward a year or two to instantly use it in its more mature form but for now I think it is a great start.

Here is a great new source for how-to’s and help. It is called Lightroom Help Home.

Now if they can only get the Epson R2400 driver to work without multiple colorsync kludges.