Since Nathan was in the first grade, we have been involved with Scouting. One of the activities that they do each year that we enjoy getting behind and helping with is Scouting for Food. For the past 6 years, we’ve gone out and placed bags on doorsteps and then followed up a week later to collect the donations. We then drop them off at a local food bank.
This year, Scouting for Food had a little twist for us. The troop that we recently joined, Troop 26, is very big on hiking. Each month, they do a day hike and an overnight hike. When Scouting for Food comes around, they do the food collection instead of a their day hike, but they still get their hike in.
Once the boys collect the donations, with the help of cars, trucks and SUVs, they gather back up and load up their backpacks with food. Whatever doesn’t fit, and most of it doesn’t, gets driven to the Food Bank. But the boys, in their full Class A uniforms, will hike the 2 miles from the church where they meet, to the Food Bank.
It’s great on several levels. First, the boys get exercise. Second, the boys get to experience what many others around the world do – not everybody gets to just drive down to get their food. Third, everybody who passes them, sees the boys serving the community.
This year, Troop 26 rounded up 2,281 pounds of food for the Santa Barbara Food Bank! After their hike with their loaded packs, they all received a complimentary hot dog, chips and water.
Of course, we had to grab a group photo of the Scouts and the Adult Leaders. Great job everybody!
I got your bokeh right here. After reading several reviews of the Sony RX-1 (here and here) I decided that I needed to rent one to see what the fuss was all about.
I’ll do a more formal write up after my weekend with te Sony RX-1, but my initial impression is that I’m getting an idea of why everybody is excited about this camera. Much more later.
I’ve always loved black and white images. I’ve always been a big fan of the black and white portrait photography of Greg Gorman and I’ve been successful here and there trying to reproduce his style and technique. However, this year, I’m going to work on developing my own black and white style and technique. I’m going to share some of the images I make along the way. That means, some of the conversions will be better than others, but that’s part of the journey.
My first one of the year is one I just completed of a photo I shot last month while spending a day at Disneyland. I did the main color correction and initial edits Aperture and then took it into Photoshop for a little retouching and then finished the black and white conversion using Nik Software’s Silver Efex Pro 2.
As I mentioned in my last post, it was time for us to get out of Dodge and have some fun. So off to Disneyland! One of the things we wanted to see was the new Cars Land attraction and we were not disappointed. The kids absolutely loved the Radiator Springs ride and they said it was their favorite ride at either California Adventure or Disneyland!
The Tow Mater ride looked harmless, but it was actually a bit rough. The cart that you ride in the back whips you around pretty hard. Chris and I were smashing into each other the entire time while we laughed and then tried to catch our breath. I was holding my new GoPro HD Hero 3 camera filming the event and just as I turned it off, we got whipped around and the camera flew from my hands. Luckily though, the case was on it and it came out unharmed.
Like everything at Disneyland, it’s amazing at the level of detail that the artists at Disney put into every aspect of the park. Here are some of the details that I really enjoyed while waiting for the Tow Mater ride.
In between all of the running around, I was able to grab a couple of nice portraits of the kids.
We walked back and forth between California Adventure and Disneyland about 5 times. According to my Nike+ Fuel Band, we walked over 20,000 steps. I don’t know exactly how many because somewhere just past 20,000, the battery died! But needless to say, we were exhausted. On our last trip back over to California Adventure for dinner and a ride on the big ferris wheel, we stopped at the Grizzly River Run to take a look at one of our favorite rides that was under renovation. Nathan loved seeing the infrastructure of the ride as the water was drained. The light was beautiful as the sun went down and I grabbed this shot of one of the main buildings that make up the Grizzly River Run.
After I took this, I had Chris and the kids get lined up for a quick family photo (minus me of course) when a nice passerby offered to take our picture. I said “sure, that would be great!” As I handed her the camera, I showed her that if she pressed halfway on the shutter release it would focus and then after the beep, to press the button. I had already dialed in the shutter and aperture settings manually. All she had to do was prefocus and then shoot. I almost didn’t tell her because you never know how much experience someone has shooting, but I did.
Even though I gave her that info and she said “okay”, she still didn’t do it. And because it was getting dark and my screen is only so big, I couldn’t really tell that she did not in fact follow the simple instructions and she just pressed the shutter release without any focusing at all. I suppose I could partially, or fully, blame my camera which is going on 6 years old now and it’s ancient auto-focus system, but I’m going to put some of the responsibility on the unnamed photographer. 🙂
So we have another nice family portrait that is out of focus. Oh well. A quick run through Nik Software’s Silver Efex Pro 2 and we turn that out-of-focus color image into a lovely black and white image.
I thought this was funny.
Finally as the night was winding down, Nathan stopped to grab a photo of the signature ferris wheel at California Adventure. I love getting candid photos of the kids when they’re not looking. This will go down as one of my favorites.
We’ve been in California now for a little while and haven’t been out of our immediate area much. Weekends have been spent doing the necessary business of unpacking and getting things sorted out in our new (rental) home. Needless to say, this hasn’t been much fun for the kids. They’ve made the best of it though by running around in the backyard and by playing games or watching movies. But not the kinds of things we would necessarily choose to do all things being equal.
But not this weekend. We decided it was time to get out and have some fun. The kids got out of school early on Thursday (actually, every Thursday is early release) so Chris and kids picked me up from work around 2:30 and we hit the 101-South heading straight for Disneyland! We thought it would be a good idea to take advantage of one of the benefits of living in Southern California. But before getting to the Magic Kingdom, we all got to experience first-hand the traffic that is LA.
Wow. Being from Oregon, we’ve never really experienced anything like this. Five lanes in each direction. Completely packed. It took us an hour to go about 6 miles. But in the end, there were no accidents and we arrived in Anaheim early enough so we could grab a bite to eat and still hit a few rides at Disneyland that evening. I’ve got more pictures coming of Disneyland soon, so stay tuned!
One of the things that Devyn has been asking about lately is to see the Hollywood sign. So I quickly Googled where to take a picture of the Hollywood sign and we came up with the Griffith Observatory. Little did we know just how popular this place gets, but let me tell you…it gets crowded up there fast. We had to walk 3/4 of a mile to get back up there as parking is extremely limited. But it was totally worth it.
I think the kids were excited to actually see the Hollywood sign, but at the same time, they were a little disappointed. “It’s a lot smaller than I thought it would be” was heard several times–and not just from our kids. 🙂
But the kids each took pictures of it with their iOS devices and I snapped a few myself. Overall, the 2 hour visit to the Griffith Observatory was totally worth it and I highly recommend it. If nothing else, you can see a fully functional Tesla Coil in action once per hour! Highly recommended.
In the past 6 weeks that we’ve been in California, we’ve spent all of our time in the Santa Barbara area. In our first trip to the Los Angeles area, it really struck me at just how big LA is. Coming from Portland where the most traffic we see is a three lane highway that moderately filled, seeing five lanes in both directions COMPLETELY PACKED is a bit of a shock. The traffic is absolutely insane. I couldn’t imagine driving in that traffic every day.
From the Griffith Observatory, you have an incredible view of Los Angeles. This is only one section of the city, but if you’re not from LA, it gives you an idea of just how big this place is. No, make that how huge this place is.