|
Recent Additions
Cameras
Other Digital Darkroom Portraiture Sports/Action Lighting Outdoor/Travel Wildlife Film & Processing Photo Allies Blog Co-Op Forums Galleries Photo News Past eNewsletters David B. Brooks Jon Sienkiewicz Turn Your Hobby Into Cash Industry Voice Glossary Trade Shows Workshops Photo Links Shutterbug Radio Manufacturers Contact Us Outdoor Tips Travel Tips Portrait Tips Sports Tips Lens Tips Software Tips Family Tips Instant Links Editor's Notes Talking Pictures Picture This! Features Book Reviews Student Union Point of View Web Profiles Exhibits Photo Clubs News & Notes Help Digital Help Business Trends Digital Innovations Globetrotter Master Class Passport The Darkroom Catalog Showcase Shutterbug Shopper Photo Lab Showcase Service Directory Free Product Info Classifieds Photography Lighting Digital Photography Equipment Film Processing Lexar Media Camera Lenses |
Auld Lang Syne; It’s Music To My Ears
“Ah, music. A magic beyond all we do here!”—J. K. Rowling Because a Baltimore guitarist named Joe Farace recorded with a rock group called Orange Wedge I occasionally get e-mail about the band. Recently a German record label called Long Hair (www.longhairmusic.de) that focuses on 1960s and ’70s music contacted me asking if I wanted to talk about doing a reissue. Their reason: “More and more people get back to the old music because it is often better than most contemporary stuff.” I hated to disappoint them by telling them that I’m not that Joe Farace. Because of research done by Shutterbug’s Andrea Keister, she was able to do something I couldn’t; find that other Joe Farace. He’s now a guitarist for a band called Bottle of Blues and you can read more about them at www.bottleofblues.net. You can even listen to some of their music there. Enjoy!
www.geocities.com/bedfordnights/
The no-nonsense site features collections of images based on their method
of capture and astronomical category. Thus you’ll find Nebulas next to
Narrowband Imaging followed by Galaxies and Black and White Photography, which
contains photographs of the Horsehead Nebula that are beautiful to behold on
so many levels. Closer to earth, be sure to check out Lanoue’s Aurora
Borealis images and be sure to read how he inadvertently captured his first
one. My favorite part of the site follows the construction of his observatory,
showing more than a trace of Yankee ingenuity and craftsmanship and visibly
demonstrating how hard work, a few tools, and passion for a subject have allowed
Lanoue to create these breathtaking images that are indeed out of this world.
Page’s images manage to capture the inherent beauty of the craft of
racing yachts and, like John Toll’s lovingly crafted cinematography in
the motion picture Wind, manage to illustrate that hard work and teamwork are
important components of winning, too. Occasionally there are a few more images
of people who might be the nautical equivalent of traditional “grip and
grin” photos than I might prefer to see, but that shows the reality that
without corporate sponsorship neither the yachts nor the photographs of them
could exist. Page considers himself to be a “transportation” photographer,
so in addition to racing yachts you’ll also find classy images of Bentley,
Rolls Royce, and Land Rover automobiles—the kinds of cars yacht racers
drive, I guess—rounding out his galleries.
Article Continues: Page 2 »
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||





