My 1995 visit to Toronto
Bitter cress and a lot of other names
Gone bananas
Bubbly day
Believe it or not
Starling on an apple bough
Keep the inside of the chimney clean, it says
Liverworts and mosses, frisky
Reports of his death were premature
Arctic blue, a.k.a. Newfoundland Blue, butterfly
Seen one, seen 'em all.
I didn't dare remove any golf balls
Blue jays flyin' in the rain
Dandy Long Legs
Bumblebee
Walking past a muddy puddle
Some friends of ours
Again! A Northern Blue, maybe?
Dragon's mouth orchid
Delta to Frankfurt or Dubai or somewhere
Scabiosa just starting out
Not among the friendly ones
After the spider ate what s/he wanted
One night, after a drink
Kelly
First columbine
Reunion
A and M, Redscale
A few seconds apart, 24 years ago
New Moon setting
Frost heave
When focus is not as critical
Just overexposed, thassall!
Mother preening her young
Three-Way Switch Drawing
Saturday night sky
White-crowned sparrow
Spring snow
Squill or Scilla, whatever
Kalmia leafing out
Batmobile masquerading as iceberg
Moss in my pot
Iceberg about five km from my door
My father in 1994, at 83
The Rose in the harbour, 1995
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59 visits
The cat wonders what I am at


An old friend saw my 24-year-old picture (next to this one in the stream) and suggested it would be difficult to do with a modern digital camera. I thought that it probably would be no more difficult.
So I set my Fujifilm X100T on a pile of books, aimed it at the then-sleeping cat, set the shutter at B, put in a locking release cable (from the 1950s), and took in hand a little flash (from the 1970s).
Then I did a 15-second exposure with three mes and one cat who meantime had been awakened by my flashes. She seemed a lttle put-out and a moment later turned so her face was away from any other flashes I'd produce. Smart but lazy cat.
I changed it to b&w because the face in the extreme upper right was clearer that way.
So I set my Fujifilm X100T on a pile of books, aimed it at the then-sleeping cat, set the shutter at B, put in a locking release cable (from the 1950s), and took in hand a little flash (from the 1970s).
Then I did a 15-second exposure with three mes and one cat who meantime had been awakened by my flashes. She seemed a lttle put-out and a moment later turned so her face was away from any other flashes I'd produce. Smart but lazy cat.
I changed it to b&w because the face in the extreme upper right was clearer that way.
(deleted account) has particularly liked this photo
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I think there were three flashes. The first was of the cat; that flash caught me darkly in the upper right corner. Then the other two flashes were of my own face.
I didn't notice my book there until afterwards and I like that it is there along with the pencil and note-paper stuck in it. :)
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