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Showing posts with label camera. Show all posts
Showing posts with label camera. Show all posts

Friday, July 6, 2012

Fin

Our Barcelona trip has ended. Perhaps in the future I'll share more of the photos I took. Perhaps, it is more likely that I won't be able to do that though.


This was the sad sad screen that showed up while we were at Park Güell. 

Luckily Greg had saved some of my earlier photos onto his computer, so I've got those. And I took a few photos with my small camera after the demise of my big camera, but I sort of lost my zeal for photography after this incident. But it is okay. It has been interesting to think about where I want to put myself in the spectrum of caring about my things such that I avoid a throw-away mentality versus not caring about my things to avoid becoming overly materialistic.

Thursday, March 19, 2009

Aurora: with photos (finally) from yours truly.

Last night there was a fairly stable arc far to the north. I took my camera out and borrowed Steve's tripod.





These are the photos I was able to get with my little point and shoot camera. Pretty good eh?!

Tuesday, March 17, 2009

Learning to use my camera, among other things

Today Steve and I had a big shopping adventure, which was great. We even took some time to get coffee from the coffee shop where my card is filed away.

We also stopped in at the Fairbanks Museum which includes the dog mushing museum. I learned a little bit about dog mushing. This sign showed the different ways to harness the dogs.


One of our stops was at a local photography shop. For some reason I picked up the camera that I have and was going to show Steve how I could only choose a mode and add 2 seconds to the exposure time, so I never really knew what the longest exposure time was that I could get. As I was doing this I managed to get it to 15 seconds, which is good enough for bright aurora. I tested out the long exposure, as well as two ISO settings by taking photos of the launch pad from the telemetry building up the hill.


This is with the ISO set to 1600.


And this is with the ISO set to 800.

I don't really know anything about cameras, but I like to pretend to. It is particularly fun to use my point and shoot camera in such ways. The best part was that I borrowed Steve's mini portable tripod and jammed it in a snowbank for stability. Right now we are "in for winds" so if there is good aurora I need to be inside in case we pick up the count, so no more photographer business for the time being.