Weekend Photography Tips – depth of field app

This next tip came in one of my mailings this week and  is only really useful if you have program modes or manual options on your camera.  So, mainly you dslr folks.  

Stanford has some new app's that help you visualize the exposure triangle at work.  You can manipulate the aperture, ISO, and shutter speed online and see how the image is affected immediately.  You can see how much of the image is in clear focus, how much is lit properly, and when parts of the image become over- or under-exposed. 

Fun. : )  

Spring Break so far

Shortly after we returned from Prague we drove up to Frankfurt to pick up the son of our close friends from Colorado. I am still recovering. 

Apr
I can't tell you how many times over the years I have looked out my window to see this boy and his brothers jumping on my trampoline, embattled in Airsoft wars on the prairie, dogs and chickens and kids in a flutter.  We have shared holiday meals and sacraments. We have watched him grow up with our own kids.  I must have blinked however, because I was not prepared for this 6ft, self-assured young man, on break from university studies in Florence, who entered my vehicle. 

Apr
I always figured this move from middle school to college, while of course important, would nonetheless pale in comparison to the unfolding of life from its first appearance on the ultrasound screen to that delightfully mispronounced speech of early childhood. 

Apr

Apr
I was wrong.  This?  This is amazing.  

Apr
It is such a blessing to have true friends.  It is an even greater blessing to raise your kids together and watch this whole crazy incredible life thing happen before your eyes.  We love you Chris and Becki, and we are so grateful that you have included us on this wild adventure. 

Apr
(pictures taken near Burg Nanstein, hiking before dinner at the Schloss Hotel )

Palm Sunday

It is Palm Sunday already and we have spent nearly 7 hrs of it on the road returning from a near perfect trip to Prague.  I am still processing it all and likely will be for some time – figuratively and literally since we took some 400 pictures of that magical city.

I realized this morning that it has been 2 yrs now since we have braided palms in this family.  As this article explains this is a land without palms. Instead, we receive blessed bundles of herbs or branches from flowering spring shrubs. We discovered today that it is the same in the Czech Republic.  Still wonderful, still a reminder of that magnificent procession into Jerusalem so long ago. It is just another of those different things I didn't know before we came here and thought you might not either. 

(You can see more pics here and here)

 palm sunday prague
Whatever is gracing your altars this year, may they bless you greatly. 

palm sunday prague
I will be sharing as we can in coming days but they promise to continue to be full.  We are so very pleased to be preparing to host the son of our dear friends for the rest of his spring break from his semester in Florence. 

Each Pang of the Heart

"Life passes so quickly that is it obviously better to have a most splendid crown and a little suffering, than an ordinary crown and no suffering.

When I think that for a sorrow borne with joy, I shall be be able to love You more for all eternity, I understand clearly that if you gave me the entire universe with all its treasures it would be nothing in comparison to the slightest suffering.

Each new suffering, each pang of the heart, is a gentle wind to bear to You, O Jesus the perfume of the soul that loves You;


 

heart(last frost of the year)

The more the soul grows in love, the more it must grow in suffering too.

What a favor, my Jesus!"

– from the letters of St Therese of the Child Jesus, Divine Intimacy

 

zoom, zoom

At Rebecca's suggestion we have Old Car week at Snapshots Around the World this week.  Go have a look. : ) 

(Paris car show below)

 paris

While I was looking for my old cars in my files I found all those other car shots.  These would be the ones I take while my children shout, "Mom!!! Mom!!  Did you get it? Did you get it???? Oh my GOSH!  Did you SEE that??"

 mas 2
So yes, I saw it.  I got it.  Here ya go. <g>
(Strasbourg, France below)

 mirror
uxembourg

Next to us in the garage in Luxembourg.  Seems wild they let our crazy gang park next to these lol.   There was a brief tutorial about how to exit the vehicle before the doors opened.  And about not drooling on other people's cars….

 luxembourg

No rules about posing though <g>

Weekend Photography Tips – white balance (getting the color right)

White balance, you say? We care about this why? Well, white balance makes the difference between your kids having a nice healthy glow or a funky neon yellow glow when photographed at functions in the school gym or the mall or other places with flourescent light.  It can make them look a little gray/blue or near cardiac arrest in shaded areas or near north facing windows on cloudy days.  It can ruin birthday party pictures. 

Got your attention? Good, because this is an easy fix.  

Cameras come equipped with various white balance settings to suit your setting. By default it is on auto and some do pretty darn well there in many situations.  But again, giving your camera a little hint goes a long way to better pictures.  For instance, telling it you are in the shade will warm up your image by toning down the blues and filtering with yellows. If you tell it you are in a room lit by incandescent lights it can filter with blue instead and so on. Here is why…

Light is not white. 

In fact, the light illuminating your scene might be very cool (lots of blue) or very, very warm (lots of gold). Your camera knows this.  It knows specifically the ratios of different colors from various light sources. What your camera may not know, is which light source you are using at that moment.  That makes for images with varying degrees of color cast. You have two options to fix this. 

1.) Set your white balance in camera.  You usually can choose between auto, sunny, cloudy, shade, tungsten/incandescent, flourescent, and flash at minimum. Auto isn't a bad place to start (it automatically adjusts to flash when shooting in auto mode for instance) unless you are in a gym or indoors on an overcast day.  (If you use a dslr in manual mode you can even set a custom white balance by photographing a white or gray card but that is another story entirely.)

You may not have time to mess around with the camera or might be using your iphone etc.  No problem because…  

2.) You can fix color casts pretty effectively in photo editing programs. 

Real quick – some examples of both.  The first picture is of a plate of Alannah's Blarney Stones on St. Pat's. It was taken indoors at night with the lights on causing a really yellow cast.  Setting the camera again took care of that. 

Mar 2012 wb blarney web

The next image was nearly a toss-er.  It was Abbie first thing in the morning by a north facing window on a rainy day.  It was way underexposed and left her so blue she looked ashen.  No problem.  Free editors like Picmonkey.com to the rescue!  

It works like this.  Upload your image.  Go to 'colors' and then 'neutral picker'.  Drag the eye dropper to something that ought to be white in your picture. In this case I chose a stripe on her nightgown.  The nightgown was not a pure white itself so the editor over adjusted initially.  I used the slider to bring the temperature back down a bit.

 

Mar 2012 wb before after web

 I also hit 'exposure' and slid the 'brighten' slider considerably, which is another post. All that to say, don't delete pictures you love that didn't turn out as well as you hoped until you try a little post-processing fix. Most people have some pictures from sports auditoriums, museums, or bowling alleys they can experiment with. If you are one of them, consider that your Weekend Challenge. 

Hyacinth

 hyacinth linen

It isn't like there haven't been more pressing things to do lately, but hyacinths wait for no (wo)man.  That window is so tight that I photographed these buds in the morning and by afternoon they had already unfurled their trumpets. Just like that.

 It would have been a shame, indeed, not to make time to bloom. 

hyacinth

Auf Wiedersehen, goodbye

I was not expecting to write this post this month.  Of course, I had not ever expected to be writing a post from this beautiful corner of the planet in the first place.  I serve a God of surprises, one after another.  And He has delivered a whopper in the last week. 

This summer I will be writing to you from another country. Again.  

Curious? Let me give you a hint.  What do all these things have in common:

 

Brit blog board

(royals pic from Defence images)

 

Don't let my glasses throw you lol.  It was all I had of me lately.  And yes, I will be reporting from the beautiful British Isles come summer.  There had been hints over the past several weeks.  There was also potential new opportunity here locally.  We were just getting so ready to KNOW that we beseeched St. Joseph to join us in that intention last week. Amazingly, the day after the novena word came down on both fronts.  The opportunity here was definitely not to be, and a wonderful new door opened in England. 

 I have no idea what that will end up looking like.  We have been researching housing and have seen bright, open, gallery white spaces as well as stately old Miss Potter style homesteads.  Tudor copies to townhouses.  Remains to be seen what that will come down to in the end. My head is still spinning. 

For this Anglo-phile it is a dream come true.  I was a charter subscriber to Victoria Magazine and still own every one of them.  While my high school friends were caught up with Madonna, and long before people had personal computers, I was enthralled with biographies of old English royalty.  There are books on chintz and china, lace and needlepoint on my bookshelves.  I have never even needlepoint-ed. (is that a word?) My daughter and I have developed strong opinions on variations of black tea. I was born for this <g>

Still, I would be kidding you if I didn't say that rapturous joy over this prospect is the only emotion we have experienced.  I will be honest, when things are going well in my life I rarely rock the boat. In fact it would be more accurate to envision me huddled at the center – in my lifejacket – holding very, very still.  So it was a conscious act of faith to step out of that hull and consider that there might be even more opportunity and possibility someplace other than the pond on which I was floating.  Big leap of faith. 

The train of thought went like so…. This house is not particularly full of character, but for the first time in maybe ever, it works. What if the next one didn't?  We have good neighbors.  Even if it did take 18mo for the neighbor to speak to us on ground level. (ie instead of from her balcony, poised for a hasty retreat)  What if the new ones are awful?  I haven't had to use my GPS in recent months.  I was enjoying that.  I like knowing where the store is.  We found a dentist.  We have a groove.  

What if….??

Let me tell you, you can 'what if' until you can barely breathe, which is why my dear Gram did not approve of 'what if' in the least.  And that knowledge brought me up short with this 'what if'  instead –  What if God knows all these things.  What if He knows the plans He has made for me, plans to bless and not to curse.  What if I just step out in trustful surrender and enjoy the ride?  Like I did two years ago…

It is in that spirit of adventure that will say goodbye to this tremendous valley and these great,  Grimm forests to say hello to cottage-lined lanes and the white cliffs of Dover. I will say goodbye to summer winefestivals and hello to high teas. I will say goodbye to yellow fields of rapeseed and hello to hills of heather. 

I hope you will join me. 

Meantime, you can expect chatter about home organization and moving a big clan like ours.  This isn't across town.  It is across a continent. Across a channel. We haven't even worked out the details there yet, but we will.  I am sorting through my pinterest pins and determining what has worked here and what could be done better next time. It is a fantastic challenge and I am truly enjoying it. 

There are more countries on the continent to see before the move and a lot more pictures to take yet too. It is going to be a busy year indeed. : )