Last night on the way home I went to Anderson Park in Redmond to shoot some more “Tree Socks”.  While there I took some pictures of some of the log cabins in the park.

I was walking round one of the cabins trying different compositions and saw this stone chimney.  I took some pictures as the wall was kind’a interesting and didn’t think much more of it.  When I got home I reviewed all the pictures and found this shot of the stone chimney against the wooden slats of the cabin looked really cool.

This is kind of an example of interesting textures.  The horizontal wooden logs that make up the cabins walls, against the siding that sits in the roof’s eves and the stone of the chimney go together to create, I think, a great image.

The sun was setting way off to the left and didn’t really affect the image directly, but it did add some great shadows on the cabin’s walls.  In post processing I boosted the saturation a little and warmed up the image, finally I added a vignette (or a vinegar as my 30 year old niece calls it) and the image was complete.

I now know why Carter was lifting weights last night.   He was prepping for his attempt at lion taming.

Last week on the way home I stopped off at Anderson Park to take some pictures.  When I got there I found these fantastic tree socks decorating loads of the trees.  I was really pleased with the images I shot, so today I went back to take some more pictures.

When I got there the sun was starting to go down so I had to work fast.  The socks were still on the trees so I started working the scene looking for a strong composition.

The park not only has trees but also has a number of wooden log huts.  Some of the trees were close to one of the huts so I walked around it taking pictures.  I found one position where you could just see the setting sun between the hut and a tree and shot that.

When I got home I was really pleased with the image but I wanted to do something to kind-a make it pop.  I know that black and white images that have selective color are considered a little tacky, but I tried it with this image and liked the end result.  Lisa did too (and she is always right) so I left the image that way.  I think the park looks great in black and white and the socks really stand out, as they are the only items in the image in color.

I think Carter is trying to build some body mass, this evening I caught him pumping iron muttering, “feel the burn”!

So I have two questions tonight.  Firstly, why is it that I sit in my office all day looking out the window at a beautiful day, sun shining, warm outside etc., but when I leave the office to come home (and take my evening picture) it starts to rain?  What’s that about?  And secondly, why am I so obsessed with the weather all the time!  I think it’s because it’s so crappy here at the moment.  When Summer gets here it will be great (can’t wait).

Anyway as it was raining when I left work (and it was really cold tonight) I decided to pick a picture from my backlog.  Tonight’s image was taken last month at Clyde Beach Bay in Bellevue.  I was there taking a sunset picture over Lake Washington but behind where I was standing was a small bay surrounded by some beautiful homes.

I have no idea who lives in these houses but I’m really jealous I’d LOVE to live here it’s absolutely amazing.  They all seem to have boats too and I love the idea of walking through my garden to the lake and jumping in my boat for a quick trip to Seattle.  Well, when I win the lottery this is where I’m moving.

Tonights circus lesson is on the trapeze.

Last night we all went out for dinner (we have an excellent Thai restaurant called Silver Spoon near by) and when we got home we noticed that outside the house one of the bushes had a single pink flower.

Now this is not something we normally get excited about but we figured that this was possibly a sign that Spring is almost here.

So I could share the joy, I thought I’d photograph our single flower for your pleasure.  It’s not particularly exciting, and as you can see it was raining earlier, but hopefully it means that color is returning to the Pacific North West (we are getting a little bored of green, brown and gray).

Incidentally I have a good feeling about this week.  I think I should get my new D4.  If it doesn’t arrive, expect pathetic complaining and tragic depression.

After a relaxing day off and a few green beers, our Halo heroes get back to their circus training.  Tonight it’s acrobatics.

James and I had to go to Kirkland today to buy some shelving, and when we walked out of the store the sun came out.  We immediately (after quickly popping into Taco Bell for an excellent Crunch Wrap Supreme) headed down to the waterfront to see if we could get a nice picture for the day.

The sun wasn’t really going down yet but it was right in front of us above the water and there was blue sky above (that’s two days in a row).  There was a little girl playing on the rocks, picture right, so James and I enjoyed the sun until she buggered off.  Then I took the shot below.  Walking back to the car I took several other shots of the sky – I know this sounds lame but when you live in the Pacific North West and you have gray skies for so long, you tend to get a bit emotional when you see blue above you.  Anyway, it will probably be gone tomorrow and I wanted some other pictures to remind me of what it looked like.

A year ago nobody would go out with me if I wanted to take any pictures, apparently I was phenomenally slow and amazingly boring (James’ and Lisa’s words not mine), but since I’ve been doing this “picture a day” thing, I’ve learnt to shoot miles faster.  No longer do I look confusingly at the camera wondering what aperture value or shutter speed I should select, it’s finally become second nature and I can see what I want and get the shot really quickly.  So why mention all this?  Well, firstly James was impressed with me today as I was so fast, but all these learnings mean nothing when you have some snotty kid jumping on the rocks in front of you.  I’m just saying…

Happy St. Patricks Day – ‘nough said.