Saturday, February 27, 2010

wink

Those of you who read this blog may think that Jimmy is my only friend.  Luckily, only Jimmy reads this blog.

Friday, February 26, 2010

red ladder


I love blue and orange together (good thing I go to UVA).  I hope those beams aren't completely rusted, though, and that it's just paint (although it makes so much sense to paint steel beams rust-colored, so that when they do actually rust no one can tell).

Thursday, February 25, 2010

lamppost

 Pictures taken at dusk always have such a delicious, dreamy look.  Actually, dusk in general rocks, from a lighting standpoint and just as a time of day.

Also, random biology fact--the term for organisms active at dawn and dusk, these in-betweeny times: crepuscular (think deer, or rabbits).  Yeah, I hadn't heard it either.

Monday, February 22, 2010

Sunday, February 21, 2010

unkempt

One of the graveyards at UVa.  This shot is so melodramatically literal, but hey, I didn't stage the shot. 

This is the less well-kept cemetery at UVa, and you almost wonder if it was meant to look mysterious and tangled.  Of course it would have headstones hidden in wild thorny rosebushes, and faded bouquets surviving in the melted snow.  Or maybe I shouldn't be so cynical about these things.  Faked or not, the cemetery is a charming place, full of dead University presidents and names that we have on our classroom buildings today.

Saturday, February 20, 2010

Monday, February 15, 2010

hotlips

When I'm home alone for the afternoon, I have a bad habit of picking out a particularly lurid lipstick and slathering it on--maybe thinking that since I use these colors so rarely, putting on several layers will make them worth the money.  A downside of this is that I generally forget about this and then go out about my business with fuschia lips.  So that's why the UPS guy gave me such a weird look...

Monday, February 8, 2010

Sunday, February 7, 2010

frosting





My house after 24 inches of snow.  I tried shoveling it with my dad, but then our mini snowplow broke, and there was no way we'd finish the 0.1 mile driveway (almost the length of two football fields) before next week.

Saturday, February 6, 2010

corgi

My friend's Welsh Corgi, taken in Arizona.

By rights I should be posting pictures of the 12+ inches of snow we've gotten so far in Virginia (and it's still snowing!)  It's a little cold to be venturing out though, but maybe when it stops falling I'll take a  few snaps of what it looks like.

Tuesday, February 2, 2010

of rods and cones

One of my favorite things about night photography is that the camera can capture colors that often go unseen by the eye.  This orange sky is no exception--I remember the sky being a muddy brownish purple and was surprised to see this blaze against the low-lying clouds that night.

Based on what I've learned about the human eye and its light-sensing cells (and I really don't know whether this is true or not, but it makes sense), our cones, which sense color, aren't as sensitive to light as our rods.  Cones aren't adapted for helping us see at night, and rods take over, meaning the color (wavelength) sensitivity of our scotopic (dark or night) vision is different than that of our photopic (light) vision.  I'm learning more about the human visual system in my Sensory Neuro class, so I'll update if I'm horribly wrong, but basically our color vision just doesn't work as well at night, and we miss images like this--unless you're like me and carry a camera to random places (even out to bars for the night).

Speaking of carrying cameras: My point-and-shoot (Sony WSC-120) broke the other day after a year of hard use and good service--not its fault, but gravity's. I'd definitely recommend this camera--most of the photos on this blog were taken with it until I got the Nikon d40. It's a great multipurpose camera for everyday use and more. Honestly, what I said earlier about bars was slightly untrue--I don't routinely carry a dSLR out at night with me (and obsessively guarded the camera in its case on my lap when I was actually out), and had only brought it specifically for night pictures of the snow. Without my wonderful little point-and-shoot, though, which fit so beautifully in a clutch or a pocket, I feel like I'm missing all these opportunities to document my life! I'm searching for a replacement now (although I might just get one of the same model).