Category Archives: Photography

Great photos

Two great photo links on MetaFilter today:

Georg Gerster aerial photography.
From his website:

“Georg Gerster was born in Winterthur, Switzerland, on April 30th, 1928 […]. Since 1956 he has been a freelance journalist specializing in science reporting and aerial photography. He has undertaken extensive visits to every part of the world, including Antarctica.”

Click on “Picture Gallery” in the left margin on his website to browse a gallery of his photos (direct linking does not seem to be working).

Seb-Przds mindbending photos.
Flickr user Seb Przd specialises in spherical panoramas and conformal mappings. Be sure to take a look at his Equirectangular and Stereographic Projections galleries as well. He explains his technique here.

A Fan of the Desert

Hal writes that today would have been Edward Abbey‘s 80th birthday.

I discovered the author by accident when I found his book Desert Solitaire among a bunch of 75% off foreign language books at my favourite bookstore in Bonn. It must have been either shortly before or after André’s and my first trip to the USA because Arches National Park rang a bell, so I bought the book and instantly liked his writing style, as well as his descriptions of what Arches was like before it became a National Park.

I’ve since read The Fool’s Progress and The Monkey Wrench Gang, too. I enjoy his books partly because he describes landscapes and areas we visited during our trips to the US and instantly recreates the feeling of being there in my mind. I can almost smell the sagebrush…

Another book by him deserves being mentioned here: The Hidden Canyon with photos by John Blaustein. The text is Abbey’s journal of a boat tour through Grand Canyon.

In Desert Solitaire I first read about the controversy of building Glen Canyon Dam to create Lake Powell, which to me seemed strangely out of place in the middle of the desert when we visited it in 1999. If you want to see Glen Canyon the way it looked before the dam was built, I recommend the book Glen Canyon: Images of a Lost World by Tad Nichols, which is another favourite of mine I wrote about before (10 Jan 2001, 3 Nov 2004). You can see some of Blaustein’s photos here and here.

Sunny autumn

Yesterday and today were beautiful days here in the Hunsrück – there was fog in the morning, but it cleared after a few hours, and then it was sunny and quite warm (though a bit windy today). Since the weather was worse during the previous week this inspired me to take a few photos in the garden.

Here’s a late insect (I don’t think it’s a bee, it just mimics one) busy gathering some nectar – I didn’t think I would see any this late in the year.

bee on a yellow flower

And here are some pretty purple flowers for you, Garret. Happy Birthday!

bee on a yellow flower

Click the photos to enlarge.

Makes me wish we had time for a trip to the US

We’re in the midst of packing everything we own in boxes and are actually making good enough progress that I can spend some time in front of the computer, savouring our fast DSL connection. We’re moving to a very small village, and it looks like our internet connection will be a third of the speed we’re used to now. If we’re lucky.

Anyway, I greatly enjoyed Daniel Beck’s Big Things in America photos series of a recent road trip. The photos are awesome, especially some of the panoramas. We’ve been to several of the places he’s photographed… ah, wonderful memories!

Daniel collected ideas for his road trip on Ask MetaFilter, and the link to the finished gallery was posted on MetaFilter today.

Sun and moon halos and much more

sun dog - NebensonneWhile looking for an explanation for sun dogs earlier today I discovered Eva Seidenfaden’s great collection of photos: “www.paraselene.de (deutsche Version) is a gallery of images with brief explanations dedicated to atmospheric optics and astrophotography”.

I have seen sun dogs before and knew that there were more halos, arcs and the like (Halos, Nebensonnen, Bögen etc.) but thought they were only, if ever, visible in Antarctica – this misconception might stem from the fact that I first saw photos of these phenomena at an exhibition called Arctica – Antarctica (Arktis – Antarktis) at the Bundeskunsthalle (Kunst- und Ausstellungshalle der BRD) in Bonn. In any case, Eva Seidenfaden has some exceptionally beautiful photos, and I urge you to browse her collection yourself!