March 21st, 2008 at 10:02 pm

We had yet another big snow storm recently. This truck isn’t going anywhere soon. They’ll have to wait until the thaw.
The truck is about as close to the camera as I thought best, since it is the main subject matter. The panorama also shows how large the snowbanks are in the general area. Overall, the road uses up about 1/3 of the right portion of the picture. The snowbanks on the far side of the road also act as a barrier to keep your eye in the picture.
Category: funny pics | 4 Comments »
March 5th, 2008 at 9:30 pm

Here is another picture of the snowy road after that snow storm. I tried to frame the photograph using the houses on one side and the snow bank and telephone pole on the right. I also tried to aim this little camera so that the sky takes up about 1/3 of the top of the picture. The curved road guides the eye slowly around the photograph because curved lines tend to slow down the eye as it travels in a picture.
Category: photos | 3 Comments »
February 18th, 2008 at 10:56 pm

We had a snow storm a few days ago. There’s a pile of it on someone’s car. On this photograph, I just wanted to show the pile of snow on the car and some of the snowbanks in the background. I did however, use the rule of thirds on the sky. That is the sky uses about 1/3 of the image.
Category: photos | 3 Comments »
December 30th, 2007 at 12:10 am

This is a wide angle panoramic photograph of the pier posted previously. I mainly like this photograph because of the camera angle. The building on the left and the expanse of the pier itself on the right.
Below is a 360 degree panorama of the pier. It was photographed hand held with my junk camera of course. To view the java version you’ll need to have java installed. To view the quicktime version you will need to have quicktime player installed. Both are free.
Panorama Java Viewer Version

View Pier Java Get Java
Panorama Quicktime Version

View Pier Quicktime Get Quicktime
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October 29th, 2007 at 9:05 pm

A while back I posted a photograph of an old dam that I found. Here is the new improved version complete with a pedestrian bridge.
The railing leads your eye from the left edge of the photograph into the distance where it meets the walkway. The walkway and the dam below lead your eye across the image where the concrete part of the dam in the distance helps to stop your eye from leaving the photograph. Your eye tends to get boxed in where the dam is.
The water spilling over the dam has lines in it, leading the eye along the spillway to the calmer water of the river.
Category: photos | 1 Comment »