Tetrahedron

Tom Noddy and Bubble Tetrahedron

Tom Noddy and Bubble Tetrahedron

One of my best friends is Tom Noddy, aka “the Bubble Guy.” Tom appeared on the Tonight Show back when Johnny Carson was still host, and he travels the world doing his act. I’d always wanted to shoot some of his bubbles, but I had no experience shooting portraits in MF 3d. This is one of the simplest bubbles he makes. He also makes a cube, a dodecahedron, a 6-pointed star, a carousel, etc, etc.

Settings unrecorded. I had help from Don Lopp, who attended the shoot. We draped black velvet behind Tom, had a floor lamp beside him, and I bounced a flash off the ceiling.

EMP Backside #1

Experience Music Project, Seattle Center

Experience Music Project, Seattle Center

The EMP (Experience Music Project) is Seattle’s version of the Rock ‘n’ Roll Museum, at the Seattle Center. The building is designed by Frank Gehry. I’ve never been inside (it’s kinda pricey – I’d rather have a new camera filter) but the outside has given me a lot of photo ops. Remember waaaaay back in loop 19A, when Dave Casey had a photo of the “sculpture thingie by the EMP?” The shadow of that sculpture thingie can be seen in this shot.

Shot with a TL-120, Provia 100F, 2 minutes.

Spinning Wheel & Needle

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Spinning Wheel & Needle

Also taken at the Seattle Center. The Fun Forest is a funky collection of carnival rides below the Space Needle. It’s destined for the scrap heap soon. I wanted to get down there and get some shots before it disappears.

I really enjoy taking shots of carnival rides. There is definitely a lot of patience involved (waiting for the ride to unload, then load, and once the ride finally starts going, trying to discourage folks from walking right in front of your camera) but it’s totally worth it. There are so many great surprises after you get the film back. Most of my night shots of rides are from the Puyallup Fair, a huge Fair that runs about 3 weeks in the fall, and one weekend in April, about 30 miles south of Seattle.

Across Mexico

These are most likely images made with Provia 100 (though I can’t say with certainty). The wonderful image of the tree was produced with my Sputnik. The others were done with my TL120-1.

Coca Cola Sign was taken on a spring break trip 2008 to the state of Michoacan. This is the same trip where my film was not processed correctly and I lost over 2/3 of the images due to “muddy” processing. And a light leak from the 120 because I didn’t have the red window covered with the slidey thing 🙁

The Church in Patzcuaro was also taken on the same spring break trip. Patzcuaro is located west of Mexico City, closer to the state of Morelia.  This image was processed by the same troublesome lab.

Back in June 2004, on the way to Mazamilta, Mexico we came across this gorgeous tree in front of a simple dwelling. Lake Chapala is about a 30 minute drive from Guadalajara.

The Island of Janitizio is near the town of Patzcuaro, located west of Mexico City, closer to the state of Morelia. On the island a statue of Jose M. Morelos has been erected. Entering the statue one can follow the spiral stairs up to the head and then up the narrow steps inside his raised arm. The inside is covered with murals depicting the life of Morelos. Morelos was the leader of the movement for Mexican independence from Spain in 1810 after Miguel Hidalgo was executed by the Spaniards. The first inhabitants of Michoacan, the state where Janitzio is located, thought that because of the extraordinary beauty of this lake, it was the door to heaven and that through it the gods used to come down to earth.

Pioneer Church

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This is made with my Horizon 202 Pan camera on a slide bar with Fuji Sensia.
WARNING may require “rubber eyes” – doesn’t bother me, but caution is advised! An old church at a local “Pioneer Village”, just before a wedding party arrived. This was difficult to mount and may be difficult to view. Looking forward to some critical comments on this picture/mounting etc.

Backlit Wonder

Here are four samples I hope you will enjoy.

Early morning mist
Provia 100F
Original slide, taken with tripod mounted Heidoscop at 1/40 sec. @ F25 on August 6, 2007
Shot at a small lake in northern Maine near Mount Katahdin.
Back-lit dew on horsetails
Velvia Pro100
Original slide, taken with tripod-mounted Heidoscop at 1/15 sec. @ f25 on May 22, 2007.
I did a whole series experimenting with back-lit subjects, not the easiest thing to pull off successfully with the uncoated lenses and less-than-ideal viewfinder on the Heidoscop.
Snackbar waitress
Vevlia Pro 100
Original slide, taken with tripod-mounted Heidoscop at 1/8 sec. @ f25 on July 29, 2007
These snackbars are common throughout rural Quebec. I am pleased that the waitress cooperated with the shot.
Early the morning after
Velvia Pro 100
Original slide taken with tripod-mointed Heidoscop at 1/30 sec. @f25 on June 24, 2007.
About the Image    Quebecers celebrate their national identity on June 24th, the feast day of Saint John the Baptist, the patron saint of Quebec. Hundreds of thousands of people party into the night, and early the next morning when I took this shot there were still thousands of people at the site of the festivities. The clean-up crews are very efficient, finishing cleaning the site by 10 AM.

Textures in Ice

My apologies to those without a viewer for the 80×140 mounts. I tried to find a couple of 80×132 mounted images to include, but was unable to find any I liked well enough. I guess that means I need to get out more!

Glacier With New Ground

Glacier With New Ground

  • Film    Provia 100
  • Description    Juneau, June 2007
  • Tripod mounted TL120-1

As with First Growth (loop 18) and Fast Water, Thin Moss (loop 19), this image includes fresh ground recently revealed by the retreating Mendenhall Glacier. This, however, is land which was under the ice only ten years ago.  The cracks catch blowing dust and soon there’s lichen. The moss comes in next and before you know it, there are little bits of grass and fireweed growing. The willows and alders aren’t far behind. In another ten years, it will be hard to walk through the bushes and tress that will be covering this ground.

Surface of the Glacier

Surface of the Glacier

  • Provia 100
  • Juneau, June 2007
  • Tripod mounted TL120-1

About 1/3 of a mile ahead of the previous location we’ve reached the edge of the ice. The debris littering the center of the glacier is comprised of sand and boulders brought down from the surrounding mountains and carried by the ice.  There is nothing here to provide scale so it is very hard to figure out what is a rock on a nearby piece of ice and what is a boulder a mile away.  This is consistent with actually being there.
The ground here was probably under the ice just last year. There are no lichens and no moss. It will be interesting to return over the next few years and watch life take hold.

Melting Ice

Melting Ice

  • Provia 100
  • Juneau, June 2007
  • Tripod mounted TL120-1

The mountainside in the background used to look just like this. As the ice fell back from the slopes, piles of rubble were left behind and life encroached from the other direction.

While this interface between ice and rock is devoid of all plants, I now notice a bit of trash down there at the bottom.  I didn’t notice it at the time, but it is very evident in the image.   When I was there, it felt like walking on the moon, but obviously, I wasn’t the first to visit.

Where Ice Meets the Land

Where Ice Meets the Land

  • Provia 100
  • Juneau, June 2007
  • Tripod mounted TL120-1

Moving closer, the next view is under the ice.
It is a cold, damp space were rocks and ice are almost indistinguishable. The ice is dirty enough to pass for rock, and the rock is smooth enough to be taken for ice. Over it all is the steady rain of melt water from the ceiling.

The Mendenhall is in steady retreat. This coming year, my hike to the ice will be a little bit longer. The year after that, a longer still.