Decisions: Black and white OR color

My last blog post shared a photo of my daughter running along the beach with the low-setting sun. Another photo I shot at that same San Franciscan beach was of my son collecting a few of the bazillion sand dollars that littered the beach. I love the innocence of this photo, too, along with the reflection of my son in the water retreating from the beach.

I am thinking of printing the photo on canvas and hanging it in our home. But I am torn between the black and white version of the photo, or the color version. I really like his blue jacket, but I’m not a fan of the orange color of his face. The black and white kills both of those elements, but still makes it a great photo.

If you were printing this for your home, would you go black and white OR color?

Gabe-Beach-5x7
Gabe-Beach-5x7BW

~signed, Carltonaut

Weekly Photo Challenge: Silhouette

Earlier today, my family and I returned home following one of the best family vacations we have had in a long time. Tomorrow morning I get to go back to work and play catch up on the six business days I missed while playing in San Francisco, Disneyland, Cars Land, California Adventure, LegoLand, San Diego and St. George.

As expected, I carried my camera with me everywhere I went. Okay. I’ll be honest. I carried as many as three cameras with me – my Canon 60D, my GoPro HD Hero 2, and my iPhone. What made this vacation so different from all the others we’ve taken, is that when we got home, my kids and gorgeous wife were in 90% of the photos I shot. Usually I have a bazillion “artistic” shots on my SD cards, but not this time. And you know what? I was okay with this.

Wifi at the hotels was pretty hit and miss. I didn’t want to have to pay for it. This prevented me from sharing many of my hi-res photos during the trip, but allowed me to focus on having a great time with my family. With my iPhone, I was able to check my email and saw the Daily Post at WordPress.com’s weekly photo challenge topic – Silhouette. A trip to a San Franciscan beach gave me the perfect opportunity to meet this challenge, and I am very excited with the final outcome.

E-Beach-Silhouette-5x7

Canon 60D | 18-135mm lens | 1/1000 | f/11 | ISO 200

I am strongly considering printing this as a 16×20 canvas printing and hanging it in my daughter’s bedroom. I think this simple photo highlights the innocence and freeness of childhood, with the beauty and splendor of the beach. My daughter loves the beach and collecting shells. This beach yielded a few dozen sand dollars – perfect and unbroken. I have another photo to share in a subsequent blog post, but for now, I share this for silhouette.

~signed, Carltonaut

“You’re Killin’ Me Smalls” – The Sandlot

If you’ve seen the movie, The Sandlot, then when you see this photo, you will most likely get the reference.

050112 Killin me smalls

Canon 60D | 55-200 mm lens | 1/80 | f/5.6 | ISO 100

My son is very excited for baseball… Not! It will be a challenge to get him to be happy about playing baseball. Maybe what it comes down to is me practicing with him to help him get better so he can actually get in base. He was pretty devastated that he didn’t hit the ball during his first game, following a 30 minute practice.

I guess I’d rather worry about this and not rush the days when he’s drooling over a modern-day Wendy Peppercorn!

~signed, Carltonaut

Weekly Photo Challenge: Arranged

The weekly photo challenge – arranged – offers itself to so many possibilities. At first, I arranged some empty Jones soda bottles and took a dozen photos of them. But when my kids decided they wanted to pull out the game Perfection, I thought that is exactly what I wanted to shoot.

All the pieces, neatly arranged in their respective boxes.

040212 UnPopped_Perfection

The countdown begins. 10…9…8…7…6…5…4…3…2…1…POP!

040212 Popped_Perfection

Canon 60D | 18-135 mm lens | 1/250 | f/16 | ISO 6400 | Speedlite 430EX II

Now, let me share some of the challenges I had in taking the shot.

First, I didn’t have a super-bright area to take the photos, which was necessary to use a fast shutter speed to stop the unarranged pieces without any blur. I mounted my flash for the extra light, but none of the auto settings on my Canon 60D would work well, so I had to switch to manual mode.

I used a small white table pushed up against the white wall so I could bounce the flash off the wall to eliminate the shadows from a head-on approach with the flash. It seemed to work well at eliminating the shadows, so the next challenge – timing.

I tried to snap just one photo when it popped, but my timing wasn’t the greatest. I went to more of an automated approach, and when I thought the pop was coming, I held down the button, snapping roughly a dozen photos before the pop. I did this about three times before I felt like I had the photo I wanted.

And, as a photographer’s note, I think that the number of times it took me to snap the right photo, having to reset the pieces each time, I could probably beat the game and place each piece before the 10-second timer would pop them up. After all, that is the name of the game, right?

~signed, Carltonaut