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Saturday, March 01, 2003. As well, I lost the facility to have long exposure times and control over shutter speeds, but the instant gratification of my new Fuji electronic '210' equivalent, zoom digital. A lot of people own cameras, and for most,it is a handy tool for recording family events like holidays, birthdays and the like. Apr 28, 2009. View news & video headlines for Tuesday, 28 Apr, 2009 on Reuters.com. Norton 360 V22 Crack there.
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Mind Streaming-John Coxon's on-line journal Mind Streaming John Coxon's Online Journal Links and Saturday, March 01, 2003 FUN WITH PHOTOGRAPHS What is this? Click on the image to find out what this crop was originally taken from from. NOW TRY THESE! Johncoxon 5:14 PM -. Tuesday, February 25, 2003 ALWAYS CARRY A CAMERA I gave all my 35mm SLR camera equipment to my youngest son, Tom, for his college art work, including an awesome telephoto lens that I sometimes still yearn for. As well, I lost the facility to have long exposure times and control over shutter speeds, but the instant gratification of my new Fuji electronic '210' equivalent, zoom digital camera, and the abiltiy to review what I had just shot, to print out pictures myself, and send them as prints, or post them, as files, to friends over the Net, more than compensates. Just recently, Angela's young daughter, Naomi, was desperate that I accompanied them, last Sunday, to the local riding stables, particulalry as she had just learned her father, a combat soldier, now living in Germany, was flying, very soon, to Kuwait, and she just had to send him pictures of her riding lesson.
Now I think of myself as a bit of a photographer, and we are very blessed, as is the fair City of Salford, that we are only a few miles drive from the countryside and, from home, just a few minutes, by car, from the picturesque Ryders Farm, now a local equestrian centre. A lot of people own cameras, and for most,it is a handy tool for recording family events like holidays, birthdays and the like. Snapping involves shooting such things, and it depends on your awarenesss of light, framing and other variables how well you do. Who hasn't got back, from the processors, a blank film, because they forgot to take the lens cap off, forget to load a film, or took pictures in what obviously, to knowing others, was poor light and it seemed bright enough to you!
Ever had those pictures where, mysteriously, vital parts of family members had been cut off, where tree branches sprouted out of someone's head or worse. Ever got back photos with that dreaded 'daytime partial eclipse', that pink crescent that tells you, you should have kept your finger off the lens? Ever been to an evening football match, or a concert, and wondered why all you got back were predominently black photos with a tiny speck of light, centre, when you expected to see your idols as your eyes saw them in the stadium? Essentially, for family archive and communication purposes we got one of a few vital shots that were asked for.
Such a lovely place also provided an obvious context picture, as Angela and Naomi dutifully walked up past the old farmhouse to the stables together. Now even though it was a sunny Sunday morning, it was really cold and my feet got restless. So, camera in hand, I decided to explore the old farm and then an image yelled out 'Take me!' , 'I'd look great on a chocolate biscuit tin' and so I shot this.
I was pretty impressed that a digital camera could produce an image as sharp as this one. I shot a lot of other interesting things, the tidy derilection common to farm premises, old obscelete machinery and buildings, and patterns and textures cried out for capture, as, with an open mind, I wandered around. With thirty pleasing images, I went back to the car park to wait for Angela and Naomi. As I sat there, something awesome happened.
Now, photographers have moments when they could weep because they aren't carrying a camera and there is something unique happening for a moment to capture right in front of them. They blink, and it is gone forever. There are some very rare birds in Britain, but the few of this particular fish-loving species, still tend, as solitary predators, to hang around, even urban areas, where there are stretches of water or domestic ponds which offer them stolen fast food. (You have to net over your outdoor goldfish pools as insurance against this elegantly beautiful, but increasingly rare creatures.) Suddenly, on the pitched roof of a nearby bungalow, this graceful, slow wing-beated individual came into land on that tiled roof right in front of me. Out of the car, quietly, and over the road. 'Don't move yet', I whispered.
Three shots and then it was off, with those languid wing beats, waving complete indifference to me; left breathless and speechless. Here is the result, not brilliant, but well, a cherished record of a really special moment. Johncoxon 2:29 AM -. Sunday, February 23, 2003 STREET ART: UK PUB SIGNS Hanging, hand-painted pictorial signs have been a common feature of traditional pubs, inns and ale houses for centuries, although more recently, where pubs have been taken over by big leisure corporations, there has been a tendency to invent new pub names and generate signs which suggest history but mock it.
Pub sign historians tell us that the pub sign was originally imported by the Romans who introduced the use of relief terracotta signs or tied greenery called 'taberna'to poles to indicate where wine was on sale. This may be where the English word Tavern is derived from. Since the majority of the population were illiterate in the early days, the tradition of a picture with a name for an alehouse goes back to the twelfth and thirteenth century. Scph10000 Bin Rom1 Bin Download.
Swinton is on one of the busy routes out of Manchester to the large industrial town of Bolton, and it is quite surprising just how many pubs are dotted along its route, owned, I may say, by a variety of breweries and some leisure groups. Some like the Golden Lion and the Robin Hood have quite a large section of their pub devoted to family-style restaurant facilities, drawing in extra trade throughout the day and both are owned by leisure groups. The majority of local pubs simply sell drinks and bags of potato crisps, and peanuts or pork 'scratchings' (teeth-crunching roasted pieces of pig skin!) will normally be all that's available at the bar. Of course the salt content of these snacks increases your thirst. There are a large number of takeaways, and typically fast food joints are busiest when the pubs turn out. I have photographed four signs from my immediate neighbourhood as examples of the genuine pub sign. The Nelson, on Bolton Road, bears the image of Admiral Nelson, a national hero after his historic naval victories, hence a very popular pub name in our country even today.