Archive for the 'Photography' Category

Mmm… Pi.

Friday, March 20th, 2009

I should post something, shouldn’t I? I’m working on a play right now that’s seriously kicking my ass (not least because I keep forgetting my goddamned lines), so the ol’ brain isn’t working so well right now. Anyway.

Last Saturday was, of course, Pi Day. The Boston Skeptics used the occasion as an excuse to throw pies at one another. I used the occasion as an excuse to pull out my camera and take some photos. E.g.:

For even more fun, Maggie made a video! And the Boston Phoenix got in on the photo fun, too, with a nifty slideshow. Hooray!

Skeptics at the Museum

Saturday, December 13th, 2008

So, the Boston Skeptics this month, in lieu of a speaker, took a field trip to Boston’s Museum of Science to check out the Mythical Creatures exhibit. The outing as a whole was a huge success, with everybody seeming to have a lot of fun.

As for the MoS itself, I went there early this year, and I have to say that in the short time since that visit they made a lot of improvements. There are a few new exhibits, not least including Cliff the Triceratops, a nearly-complete Triceratops fossil recently donated to the museum (who has been rightly featured in a lot of their advertising), lots more live shows and lectures than I remember, and other fun stuff. In particular, there was a presentation about optical illusions given by a guy who Rebecca dubbed “Skeptical Grandpa” that everybody got a real kick out of. And of course the Theater of Electricity is always awesome.

Tesla Coil

The thing that impressed me most, however, was the theme of skepticism that ran through all the exhibits and presentations. The Mythical Creatures exhibit, of course, examined the origins of myths like sea serpents mermaids, and giant apes, as well as discussing how mythical creatures can cross-pollinate between cultures and become fixed when a certain definitive account gains prominence. But it went beyond that exhibit to the Theater of Electricity presenter (I want his job so badly) telling us how important it is to test ideas we have, not to mention the entirety Mind Games! presentation that Skeptical Grandpa gave. It warms the cockles of a skeptical heart, it does, to see a museum actually doing its job like that.

Anyway, I put up a bunch of photos on Flickr. Go check ‘em out.

Gay Marriage Rally Part Two

Tuesday, November 25th, 2008

As promised, I’ve uploaded the black & white shots I took at Boston’s Anti-Prop 8 Rally to Flickr. I left in a couple of duplicates that I probably should have left out, but eh. It’s journalistic photography, right? Recording what happened, with all the blemishes. Or something like that.

Anyway, I’m really pleased with the results. The black & white worked out, as did the fact that the film is really noisy from lying around unused for a couple of years. The new shots are in the same set, but they start here.

There’s a lot of good stuff in there, but I think my favourite bit has to be the Wellesley group. I don’t know why, I just like the shot that resulted:

I also really enjoy the All Your Need Is Love sign, so much that I got it both in color and black & white:

Love & Peace, y’all.

Gay Marriage Rally Part One

Tuesday, November 18th, 2008

Last post, I mentioned the gay marriage rally I went to on Saturday. I did bring my camera. However, I made the amateur mistake of not bringing enough film: i.e., any film at all. I figured I would buy some from CVS on the way, but they only had 400 ISO film, and I didn’t think it would be enough for the overcast weather… But anyway, in the event, I ended up going to a CVS in Government Center and picking up some of their 400 ISO film, hoping again to notice a Ritz or Hunt’s or something. I didn’t have a chance to poke around, though, so I was stuck with what I had… which turned out to be a 12-exposure roll.

Shit.

However, there’s a reason I called this post “Part One”. I’ve been carrying around a roll of Ilford 400 B&W film, waiting for an appropriate subject for some black and white photography. Instead, I wound up using it at the protest. You know what? I actually think it’s going to turn out pretty awesome. But the first photo place I went to couldn’t do B&W processing, so they pointed me at another place that does.

Moral of the story is I need to buy a frickin’ DSLR already.

Anyway, here’s the album with the colour photos I had developed today. The B&Ws will go into the same set when I eventually get them done. And here’s a sample:

Photoreality

Monday, November 17th, 2008

One of my favourite hobbies is photography. I’ve sadly had only an off-and-on relationship with it, though.

I took a class in high school and fell in love with the smell of dark room chemicals, but since I had no space for a dark room of my own, I didn’t see the point in buying a camera. Eventually, I went off to college and bought a respectable (for the time) digital compact and had a lot of fun with that. This lead to my buying a film SLR in the awkward period when film was clearly on its way out as the definitive photography medium but digital cameras hadn’t quite established themselves fully. My subscription to Pop Photo let me keep abreast of all the latest developments that I couldn’t possibly afford as the pro photography industry went from “nobody serious shoots digital” to “film is a niche medium for art shooters”.

But I had fun with camera for a while anyway, accumulating a nice little pile of 3×5 prints that I never look at. When my favourite camera shop closed, though, I stopped shooting. They were the only folks I knew who printed with matte finishes, and glossies just look so goddamned cheap. That’s also when I realised that film just doesn’t work for hobbyists any more. If you can’t process your own film, it’s just prohibitively expensive, and the cost only gets worse if you actually want to, god forbid, share your work online. (Never mind the cost of sharing enlargements.)

All this is by way of explaining that I went out and shot my first few rolls of film in a long time recently, and despite the expense I went ahead and had them printed to CD. I’ve got a Flickr account, so I figure I’ll actually start using the silly thing to post photos. I think I’ll buy a cheap DSLR at some point, in which case my use of said Flickr account is going to explode dramatically, but for now I have a couple of random photos of your typical autumn-in-New-England crap up. I also brought my camera to the pro-gay marriage rally in Government Center this past Saturday, so those will be posted as soon as I get them developed. Enjoy.