Cedarburg is a city of some 12,000 residents located in Ozaukee County, Wisconsin, about 20 miles north of Milwaukee and about 10 miles from my home. It was founded in the 1840s as a mill town taking advantage of the water power available from the river that flows through the town. When the mill industry ended decades ago, the town became a bedroom community located within a reasonable commuting distance from Milwaukee. More recently, Cedarburg has developed into a tourist destination, attractive for its quaint and well preserved downtown shopping district. I have not spent as much time as I should have exploring the town for its photo opportunities. After all, it's only a 15-minute drive from my home. Yesterday, I had an opportunity to spend a couple of hours in Cedarburg with my camera, and this is what I got.
Saturday, August 8, 2020
CEDARBURG SCENES
Some of the "trappings" of the town are predictable. They include a clock "tower" and posters of civic opportunities.
They also include nicely restored homes, many of a victorian style, that have been converted to various commercial uses. This first has been converted to a museum. The masonry of this house has many fine details, including the following.
I believe the following was converted into a B&B. Note the ceramic goose.
Cedarburg also features a number of churches, all of which appear to be well maintained. Here is an entrance to one and a gorgeous stained glass of another.
The town has more than its share of boutiques and other shops, many featuring whimsy and kitsch.
(No, I do not.)
(Not sure what Uncle Sam [?] is supposed to be holding.
I think this was the entrance to a (newer) drinking establishment.
This being August, the town had a fair amount of flora on display. This coneflower had a visitor, a Japanese beetle.
A hosta that had an unusual turquoise central element, the color of which I was not quite able to capture with my camera to the same extent that my eye witnessed.
And some coleus leaves that, yes, were as "electric" as what appears in the shot.
Finally, because I can't seem to help myself, here is a shot of a couple of barrels that I rendered in black & white.
My guess is that this is not exactly a "fan favorite," but I liked the image for its simplicity of composition.
John
Wednesday, June 24, 2020
FUCHIA "GILLIAN ALTHEA"
This year we got baskets of something called Fuchia "Gillian Althea" to hang at the entrance to our home. The plants feature abundant showy flowers, each two to three inches across. The blossoms have a complex system of petals, and I decided to use my macro lens to photograph just a portion of one of the blossoms to create a colorful abstract.
What drew me to this particular flower was the fact that the backlighting of the blossom's interior created a sense of depth that appealed to me.
My macro lens allows me to get very close (2-3 inches between the front of the lens and the subject). As a result the image is not greatly cropped. The drawback is that the optics reduces significantly the images depth of field. I chose to focus on the leading edge of one of the petals, but even at relatively narrow aperture of f/22, the overall focus is a bit soft. Because the image is semi-abstract to begin with, in post processing I softened it further by reducing contrast.
The next day I took another shot of the same blossom but in different lighting conditions. Here is how that turned out.
In this shot I wanted to emphasize more the backlighting of the blossom's interior. The light was warmer as well. I also introduced a bit more overall contrast between lighter and darker elements. All of which served to make for a more dramatic shot. This was taken at an extremely narrow aperture of f/64, my macro lens's limit. Even so, there are elements of greater and lesser sharpness of focus.
John
© 2020 John M. Phillips
HUMMINGBIRDS
Each year we put up a hummingbird feeder outside our living room windows that overlook our deck. And each year I am amazed that the neighborhood hummingbirds find the feeder to get sugar fixes. And almost every year I tried to capture some of those visitors with my camera. This year has been no exception.
I am the first to admit that I lack the patience to do wildlife photography, even on those occasions when I don't need to leave my living room. Not only are hummingbirds notoriously skittish around humans, but they are nearly always in motion. And, let's face it, they are tiny. Given those problems, even with a telephoto lens they are difficult to capture in photos. As a result, I am never going to get award-winning shots of these beautiful birds. But here are some images that I was able to capture.
These photos warrant a few comments. First, all were taken from inside our home rather than from the deck. The birds were simply too wary to stick around when I was outside on the deck. The glass was relatively clean, but in the middle photo (of the bird sitting vertically) the bird's breast's reflection in the glass is apparent. Second, the shots are cropped to an extent. Even from a distance of 5 or 6 feet (when I am lucky) and with a 300mm lens, the birds appear small. Third, the top of the feeder is a red faded over the years to a magenta. That color serves to attract the birds, which is good, but, depending on the light, the red reflects off the birds' nearly white breasts, false-coloring them a pink. I was able to eliminate most of the reflected color in post processing, but not all.
Hummingbirds are amazing and I am generally happy to have captured what I did.
John
© 2020 John M. Phillips
Wednesday, May 20, 2020
CALLA LILIES
In this time of coronavirus, a couple of weeks ago I acquired a new houseplant, this time some healthy looking calla lilies. The plant included a number of fairly tightly packed blossoms, and I wasn't sure how to capture them in photographs. I finally decided that my best bet would be to take photos of isolated blossoms against a suitable background. I was able to isolate individual blossoms, and then it became a matter of depth of field.
The blossoms have a variegated green and yellow exterior and a primary yellow interior. My first effort was to isolate a single flower against a generic red background (a chair in our library).
I decided to crop the shot as a square, and I ramped up the color saturation. I like the color combination, and I thought the increased saturation matched my aesthetic sensibility. The issue was the depth of field. This was shot at f/8 with my 90 mm macro lens, focused on the flower's top front edge. Because the macro lens allows me to shoot from very close range--a matter of a few inches--the depth of field is quite shadow. Close inspection reveals that the back edge of the flower, just 2 or 3 inches further away, is quite out of focus. There is something to be said for that, but I decided to shoot at a much smaller aperture to pull more of the flower into reasonable focus.
This next shot, which is of only a portion of the blossom, was shot at f/36. This was an 8 second exposure.
The back edge of the flower is in better focus, but still not great. I like the composition of this shot better than the first, even though (or perhaps because) it only includes a portion of the blossom. Again, I increased the color saturation.
Here, for the record, is the same shot in black and white.
I then noticed that two of the plant's blossoms were positioned "back to back" and felt that that composition might provide some interesting near-symmetry. My first shot was at a very narrow aperture of f/36 to bring both flowers into fairly good focus. The focus was on the front edge of the flower on the right.
Here there is very little remaining background texture (except a faint line running diagonally in the upper right. I like this shot, although it almost looks like the background has been removed artificially. A matter of artistic preference.
John
The blossoms have a variegated green and yellow exterior and a primary yellow interior. My first effort was to isolate a single flower against a generic red background (a chair in our library).
I decided to crop the shot as a square, and I ramped up the color saturation. I like the color combination, and I thought the increased saturation matched my aesthetic sensibility. The issue was the depth of field. This was shot at f/8 with my 90 mm macro lens, focused on the flower's top front edge. Because the macro lens allows me to shoot from very close range--a matter of a few inches--the depth of field is quite shadow. Close inspection reveals that the back edge of the flower, just 2 or 3 inches further away, is quite out of focus. There is something to be said for that, but I decided to shoot at a much smaller aperture to pull more of the flower into reasonable focus.
This next shot, which is of only a portion of the blossom, was shot at f/36. This was an 8 second exposure.
The back edge of the flower is in better focus, but still not great. I like the composition of this shot better than the first, even though (or perhaps because) it only includes a portion of the blossom. Again, I increased the color saturation.
Here, for the record, is the same shot in black and white.
In this case I darkened the red and lightened the yellow. I didn't think the black and white was quite as effective as the color version.
A few days later I spent some more time with the lilies, in this case against a textured white background (our bedspread). First a shot of an entire flower.
This was shot at f/16, which produced fairly good depth of field for the flower. The background was far enough away that its texture is sufficiently out of focus to eliminate it as a distraction. But there is a different problem with this composition--the camera is positioned too low relative to the flower so that very little of the flower's yellow interior is visible. So following is a second shot taken from a higher angle that does a better job of revealing the flower's yellow interior.
It is evident that the texture of the background is a significant element in the shot. That's not all bad, but I thought I would take one more shot in which I separated the flowers further from the background to eliminate it as an element.
Here there is very little remaining background texture (except a faint line running diagonally in the upper right. I like this shot, although it almost looks like the background has been removed artificially. A matter of artistic preference.
John
Wednesday, April 29, 2020
WOODS IN FOG
The other morning we experienced some dense fog in our neighborhood, and I took advantage of it to get a few photos of the woods in a nearby park situated on a bluff overlooking Lake Michigan.
Fog can be a real friend to landscape photographers because it can provide added depth to their photos. In some cases fog can also be useful in eliminating background distractions. In this case I did some post processing to emphasize the fog and the depth that it creates. I did crop down the shots to improve the shots' compositional balance. I felt too that the photos worked better as black and whites. I also softened up the shots' apparent focus to emphasize the fog. This is most apparent in the shot cropped as a landscape.
John
Fog can be a real friend to landscape photographers because it can provide added depth to their photos. In some cases fog can also be useful in eliminating background distractions. In this case I did some post processing to emphasize the fog and the depth that it creates. I did crop down the shots to improve the shots' compositional balance. I felt too that the photos worked better as black and whites. I also softened up the shots' apparent focus to emphasize the fog. This is most apparent in the shot cropped as a landscape.
John
Monday, March 2, 2020
MILWAUKEE CENTER/SAINT KATE
One of the more interesting building complexes in downtown Milwaukee is the Milwaukee Center, which includes four theater venues, an office tower, and a hotel, all surrounding a central atrium. The hotel recently changed hands and was remodeled as one with an arts motif that goes by the name Saint Kate--The Arts Hotel. I recently visited the complex and hotel with my camera.
I was impressed with the new hotel. Its common areas included a number of small galleries that feature, shall we say, "different" art displays.
One gallery included displays of items of dated technology devices. Here are a couple.
The first is an array of laptops, the second a handsaw that is covered with a circuit board.
Another unusual piece was located in a stairway.
Other pieces were slightly more conventional, including this one that is comprised of symmetrically arrayed drawings of butterflies.
One piece that I especially liked was a mobile located in the hotel lobby. I worked quite a bit in post processing to isolate the mobile visually from its background.
Here is a shot of one portion of the mobile.
But my favorite piece of art was a painting of an individual. What was interesting was not the subject matter but the artist's technique, sort of a pointillism that featured "blobs" of paint rather than small dots.
In keeping with past practice, I took a number of shots of just a portion of the painting, which highlights the technique and shows that a seeming random collection of blotches of various colors can collectively create a recognizable subject.
It was at about this point that a security guard for the hotel approached to inform me that photography of the artwork in the hotel was forbidden. Oops. I thanked him and left the hotel with my camera to photograph the central atrium and related public portions of the building complex.
I did like the composition of one shot of an open staircase from a second level.
But most of the shots I took were of walkways between the various areas of the complex leading to the entrances. It was a sunny day and I liked the patterns created by the sunlight streaming through the glass-panelled arches above the walkways, including the reflections off the highly polished floors. Here are some of those shots. Some I left in color.
Others I converted to black and whites.
My favorite was this last.
John
I was impressed with the new hotel. Its common areas included a number of small galleries that feature, shall we say, "different" art displays.
One gallery included displays of items of dated technology devices. Here are a couple.
The first is an array of laptops, the second a handsaw that is covered with a circuit board.
Another unusual piece was located in a stairway.
Other pieces were slightly more conventional, including this one that is comprised of symmetrically arrayed drawings of butterflies.
One piece that I especially liked was a mobile located in the hotel lobby. I worked quite a bit in post processing to isolate the mobile visually from its background.
Here is a shot of one portion of the mobile.
But my favorite piece of art was a painting of an individual. What was interesting was not the subject matter but the artist's technique, sort of a pointillism that featured "blobs" of paint rather than small dots.
In keeping with past practice, I took a number of shots of just a portion of the painting, which highlights the technique and shows that a seeming random collection of blotches of various colors can collectively create a recognizable subject.
It was at about this point that a security guard for the hotel approached to inform me that photography of the artwork in the hotel was forbidden. Oops. I thanked him and left the hotel with my camera to photograph the central atrium and related public portions of the building complex.
I did like the composition of one shot of an open staircase from a second level.
But most of the shots I took were of walkways between the various areas of the complex leading to the entrances. It was a sunny day and I liked the patterns created by the sunlight streaming through the glass-panelled arches above the walkways, including the reflections off the highly polished floors. Here are some of those shots. Some I left in color.
John