Hull Pictures
/Went up town today. The weather and the lighting wasn't bad. I love the way that the c4di and Deep buildings complement each other.
Rob Miles on the web. Also available in Real Life (tm)
Went up town today. The weather and the lighting wasn't bad. I love the way that the c4di and Deep buildings complement each other.
As part compensation for a day spent looking at cars, today number one wife and I went to look at the Yves Saint Laurent exhibition at the Seattle Art Museum.
After as much haut couture as we (or at least I) could handle, we headed off to take a ferry ride to Bainbridge Island. We had no particular need to go there, but the weather was being very kind to us and, hey, life's in the journey....
I've been taking pictures of the pavement. As you do.
I took the stupidly wide angle lens up town today. The light was wonderful and so I nipped into Hull Holy Trinity Church in the middle of town and discovered yet again why it is one of the best places in the universe and space.
I took this picture in Chicago and I've only just got around to fiddling with it. I think it would make a good album sleeve picture (if we still had albums and sleeves).
Went to Dalby Forest today. Wonderful place. I came over all artistic and took the above picture of the trees reflected in the lake.
I do like York Minster.
Went out to take a picture of the sky tonight but I missed the actual sunset bit, and I'd forgotten I still had the fish-eye lens on the camera.
Oh well.
This picture of the stairwell would be perfect if I'd managed to avoid including my feet....
The university was looking especially splendid this morning.
We went to Castle Howard today. Lovely place. They had some owls there.
More programming today. But we took a break by heading to the Folly Lake Cafe for lunch. I think they do the best chips in Hull. But I'm biased. They taste like the ones my mum used to make.
Anyhoo, the food was lovely and the day was very pleasant. And I'd taken my Lensbaby, a simple lens which you can tilt to play with depth of field and whatnot. To adjust the lens aperture (the size of the hole that lets the light in) you drop in metal discs with different sized holes. And it has the ability to make very interesting images with selectively blurred bits. Great fun to play with.
Every now and then I take a picture that I'm really, really, pleased with. This is one of them. I took it today wandering round the waterfront in Hull. This is fast becoming one of my favourite places. The Fruit Market is coming along a treat and interesting cafes and shops are springing up. It's a pity you have to cross the A63 to get to this part of town, but it's well worth a few seconds waiting at a pedestrian crossing.
I took a few more pictures that I'm happy with. You can find them here.
I took a very wide angle lens to Bristol last Saturday. I got some quite interesting photos.
Took the big camera with the fish-eye lens for a walk around Bristol today. We climbed to this tower. Next time I hope we have time to go to the top and take some more pictures.
So we're staying in this awesome flat in Bridgeport Chicago and I notice that the ceiling light is rather neat. So I tip my camera onto its back and take the above picture.
And a huge lump of dust drops off the back of the lens onto the camera sensor.
So now every photograph has a grey dot on it (you can see it on the shot above to the right of the centre).
Now, the rational part of me knows that this doesn't matter at all in the great scheme of things. Really. But the other, stupid, part of me will focus and obsess on this little grey mark, panic that the camera is now broken and it will never be right again.
Eventually I did the right thing. We wandered down to Central Cameras in Chicago (an amazing camera shop) and I bought a rocket.
I don't know who's idea it was to shape this dust blower like a rocket, but it works for me. The good news is that a couple of puffs at the sensor from this wonder machine and the dust has gone completely. I held the camera upside down while I did this, so hopefully the dust has dropped off completely. At least I've managed to convince myself that this has happened.
I've now formed the habit of dusting the base of a lens before I attach it to the camera. And the word on the street is that the sensor in a digital camera is actually quite well protected, certainly not just a naked piece of silicon, and cleaning it is reasonable (and not particularly dangerous) thing to do.
Good news: it's only a short distance from the car park to where you work.
Bad news: the distance is straight up.
I'd not heard of Burnby Hall until this weekend. They are presently having a tulip festival, and number one wife wondered if I'd fancy going along an taking some pictures.
Would I just.
So it was into a bag with a goodly assortment of lenses, tripods and kinds of other paraphernalia (that's the great thing about photography - plenty of scope for paraphernalia) and then off down the road to Pocklington.
It was lovely. We got there nice and early when there was a bit of an angle to the light and it was nice and quiet. It's a great place to visit. Good food, good weather (at least today) and lots of tulips. We saw loads of families with picnics making a proper day of it. And there was even a brass band at 2:00.
Not sure they've fully grasped how Secret Gardens work though....
I didn't actually go to Sewerby Hall to take pictures of a pig. But since it was there......
Flickr are doing this new image tagging thing where something works out what is in your pictures and tags them for you.
Seems about right.
Rob Miles is technology author and educator who spent many years as a lecturer in Computer Science at the University of Hull. He is also a Microsoft Developer Technologies MVP. He is into technology, teaching and photography. He is the author of the World Famous C# Yellow Book and almost as handsome as he thinks he is.
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