Wednesday, 18 July 2018

The Romance Of The Camera

     As I was getting up from my desk to go outside for a smoke, ( Yes I'm still a victim of that filthy addiction.) I glanced at my little Fuji X70 sitting on the nearby work table in my room and thought "Damn! That's a nice looking little camera!"  Just looking at it made me want to grab it and go make photographs.                                                                                                           
   

     I had just uploaded some pictures from it to my computer and had yet to put it away. Just a side note and a bit of advice to newer photographers, ALWAYS PUT YOUR CAMERA AWAY when not using it! In the years that I spent working in camera shops I saw just as many cameras damaged by household knocks, drops  and spills as cameras that were damaged in the great outdoors. The same camera bag that protects it out in the field will protect it at home!

     Anyway, I got to thinking about the camera and how it can affect one's thinking about photography. I know, I know. there are endless articles and  videos  in the photographic community that tell you that, to a great degree, the camera doesn't matter. And it's true. A good photographer should be able to make great images with just about any camera. Ultimately it's the photograph that counts. To that end, this could just about be the least  important photography piece that I will ever write.

     When I was working in various camera shops back in the dinosaur days of film, I attended several sales seminars and workshops. In one of those seminars I remember the presenter posing the question, "As a salesperson, is it important for the customer to like you?" His answer, "Only if you want to sell them something." Let's take that concept and apply it to functional photography. "Is it important to like the camera that you're using?"  My answer; "Only if you want to take pictures with it." 

     As stated in a previous post in this blog, my other very handsome camera,  a Fuji X100F,  garners a fair bit of attention when I'm out and about with it. http://refractivereasoning.blogspot.com/2017/04/the-silver-camera.html


     One of the comments I often hear is something like "I have a really good camera at home but I just couldn't find the time  to learn to use it properly." Or, "I have a really good camera at home, but it's  too big to carry around. I just  use my cellphone." 

     I don't want to appear to be bashing the huge cellphone community here. I'm all for making great images with whatever technology you have in hand.  I'll support you even if you're chipping out pictures  on a cave wall with a rock!

     But for a true photohound there is something about using a cool camera. A real camera. Something with  great design and full manual controls. There is a romance to it. Think Henri Cartier-Bresson haunting the streets of Paris with his beloved Leica. Robert Capa covering the Spanish Civil War or Vivian Maier making her incredible images on the streets of Chicago and New York with her trusty Rolleiflex. Using a really nice camera makes a statement. It says that the images I make are a little more important to me than an Instagram post that will be forgotten in twenty four hours. It says that I want a be in control of the images  I make. I'm not just taking snapshots, I want to  make photographs                  .

     Maybe I'll walk back what I said earlier about this being the least important photography piece I'll ever write. Maybe it's the most important one. I mean if just the look of the photographic tools in my arsenal can inspire me to go out and use them, I'm way ahead of all those who have "good cameras " and leave them at home. In my experience, half the battle of being a photographer is just getting out with a camera. And as the old saying goes, "The best camera is the one you have with you."

     That being said, I think that I will grab one of my very cool  little cameras and go for a walkabout.  Somewhere out there are pictures that need taking!

                                                      ...more later 
     
                                                  

Friday, 13 July 2018

Finding Vivian Maier and Searching for Myself

      We truly live in an age of mass media. By that I mean,  media both  by and for the masses.  For example, I am writing this post while sitting on  a plastic lawn chair outside my home. I'm writing my own content to  be illustrated with my  own  photos.  With the click of a mouse, (or, in this case, the tap of a screen) it will be uploaded to the internet to be accessed by anyone who wants to see it. In a very real sense I am my own production and publishing company. Just about anyone with a Facebook or other social media account functions,  to a greater or lesser degree in the same way.     
                                                    
     I am a big believer in the sharing of creative, artistic expression.  I've always thought that it is  kind of pointless to learn and practise any craft if it is never to be shared with anyone.  I mean there must be millions of  artists of all kinds, practising their various crafts in seclusion,  whose work will never be known or appreciated.  In the case of Vivian Maier,  the world almost never got to see the work of a master street photographer.  Indeed,  the appreciation of her work came about, almost by accident, after her death.

     Ok, let me back up a bit. This nascent interest in Vivian Maier all started with my employer encouraging me to use up some of my holiday time. They don't like to do a large payout at the end of the year. Fine with me! I decided, without any holiday plans, to take the equivalent of a week off. After a few days of getting caught up on housework, and coming to the realization that one is NEVER caught up on housework, I decided to do a day trip to the nearby city of Hamilton, On.

     I like Hamilton. It is a very cool place. It is a city built on an industrial core, (the steel industry) but yet has a strong arts community. It has an aesthetic which is all it's own. It is a combination working class feel along with a fundamental appreciation of beauty and history. The city has a lot to offer and punches well above its weight in terms of attractions. Yet it does so without the pretentiousness of a larger centre like Toronto.  

     So, anyway, I thought that I'd head to  to Hamilton for my little day trip. Before going, I decided to check out what was on at the AGH (Art Gallery of Hamilton). To my surprise, they had an exhibition of the work of Vivian Maier.

     You'd almost have to be living under a rock, (especially if you're part of the photographic community ) to not have heard of Vivian Maier. Her story is intriguing. The reclusive nanny who, in her spare time, pursued  street photography in New York and Chicago. She amassed a collection of over 100,00 images, yet in her lifetime never shared them with anyone. Her genius as a street photographer was not discovered until after her death.  Like most people, I had heard of her enigmatic story and seen a few of her photos on line. Yet, I had never taken a serious look at her work. So it all came together. I would spend the day in one of my favourite cities making photographs of scenes that are a little less familiar and also go to the AGH to view the Vivian Maier exhibit. 
      
     I arranged for a local shuttle to take me to nearby Brantford where I caught the Go bus to Hamilton. To get to downtown Hamilton,  I had to change buses at McMaster University. The bus that I took from McMaster was one of the newer (Well new to me.) double decker buses that Go has been operating for a few years now.  I took the opportunity to go up to the upper deck and managed to get a seat right at the front windshield. It was kind of cool. I rode into town like a conquering general, snapping pictures all  the way! 

  

            
    
     It was almost lunch time when I got downtown. I decided to grab a bite before I went to the gallery. It's no fun  trying to appreciate great images with a rumbling stomach.  It's even harder to MAKE great images on an empty stomach. At least so I've been told. I'll let you know when I make a great image! 

     With that in mind, I wandered in to Jackson Square but decided that I wanted something a little different than the usual food court franchise fare. From Jackson Square, I meandered over to adjoining Hamilton City Centre. I found what I was looking for in a food counter called Perfect Plate. The owner said that he was going to make me a regular customer and he did! He put together an awesome plate of shawarma  chicken, long grain vegetable rice and a very nice fresh salad. I think it  all came in at under $10.00 complete with a can of pop. Great deal for a great meal!

     With lunch out of the way, I made my way  across King St E. to the Art Gallery of Hamilton. I paid my admission and went into the gallery rooms.  Like most people, at first I just looked at the images long enough to identify them. Most of the photos were taken in New York and Chicago and, having visited Chicago a few years ago, I could recognize some of the landmarks that appeared in her streetscapes. But then my inner photographer kicked in and I started to really appreciate what I was looking at. I started to understand what she was trying to say with each image she took. Almost every image told a story or made a statement in some way. Even the ones where the meaning was a little more obscure  were  just damn good street portraits! Although she never worked as a professional photographer, here was a woman who knew about light and, more importantly, knew how to capture it in amazing images.
     
     
     So how did she do it? I think there are many aspects at play here. For one thing,  the camera she used for most of her work was a Rolleiflex. The Rolleiflex is a fairly sophisticated camera offering complete control of shutter speed, aperture and focus. It has a waist level viewfinder so that the photographer has to look down to focus and compose the picture. However,  to the photographically uninitiated,  the camera would appear as nothing more than a slightly fancy box camera. Inexpensive  box cameras, like the Kodak Brownie  were a common camera used by family photographers and tourists of the day. Secondly, most professional  photographers of her day were men. The average person on the street probably wouldn't associate a woman with doing serious photographic work. Thirdly, she was an unassuming looking person.  She did a lot of self portraits. She would photograph her reflection in mirrors or other shiny objects. ( The selfy obsessed generation of today would do well to learn from her skills. ) In each of them she appears as a rather plain woman. Perhaps even a little strait-laced , not particularly  pretty or fashionable.  She was  the kind of person who would not stand out from the crowd. 

     So she would appear as a plain middle aged woman on the street. Head down, fiddling with what looked to be an old box camera. Perhaps a misplaced tourist. A slight oddity perhaps, but nothing more. I  believe this gave her the ability to just blend in. She found that perfect photographer's balance of being part of the scene but simultaneously being far enough separated to perform the task of capturing it. Also, with no intent of  sharing her photos with anyone, she had the lonely luxury of composing her images to simply please herself. In this age of the internet, photo sharing and social media, she achieved a Tao that most photographers and artists struggle to attain. She had consummate faith in her own vision.   


     Of course the question that will never be answered is why she took so many amazing photographs if she had no intention of showing them to anyone else? That is the enigma that is Vivian Maier. She took the answer to that question to her grave. 

    Lastly, as a photographer, I have to ask myself, "What can I learn from the work of Vivian Maier?"  Two things come to mind. One is to find that ineffable balance of being of the scene while simultaneously being in the process of capturing it. To a modest degree I have achieved that. In the small town where I live, people have become so accustomed to seeing me wandering around with a camera that I  am usually only questioned when I appear without it. A simple walk to the variety store often includes someone asking "Hey! Where's your camera? " I guess, to that end, I've become part of the scenery around here. It allows me a fair bit of creative freedom. The other aspect of my photographic sojourn that needs work is an increase in faith in my own vision. Like everyone else in this age of mass media, I post a lot of  my pictures to the web. Also, like most people these days,  I'd be a liar if I didn't admit to looking at the number of "likes" and views my stuff accumulates. It may sound a little self centered, but I need to think outside the box a little more without worrying about  how my stuff is regarded. It really is the only way to develop a more progressive approach to the craft. 

     
 I need to develop a bit more faith in my own view of the world. That being said, I'm going to grab a camera and go see what I  can see. I might share some of the shots I take. I might not. It's not enough for me to take pretty pictures of the world around me. I have to find my own vision. 

                                   
                           
      
     


               ...more later


     
    

Sunday, 15 April 2018

Waiting For Spring (an impatient rant)

      So It's April and spring is supposedly here, although you'd never know it by the weather. As I write this, there is an ice storm blowing outside with freezing rain warnings in effect. Paris held their annual Maple Syrup Festival today. When I went downtown to acquire some  necessities of life, I noticed that they didn't draw much of a crowd. Probably had something to do with the freezing rain and ice pellets driven by gale force winds! I know, I know. I have a marked propensity to start these posts with a mini weather report. Ah well, so be it. 

Part of my commute to work.Taken in more pleasant conditions.
     I did manage to photograph some spring crocuses that were blooming beside the trail that I use on my way to and from work. You know that you you live in a small town when your commute to work involves a "trail". 
The aforementioned crocuses.

                                                                                                                                      
                                           I'm almost beginning to hate the crocuses and the false hope that they inspire!  The lying little bastards!                                                                                                               
The steps leading down to my home tonight. April 14, 2018.

                                                                                                                                                                 I mean This is ridiculous! It's Springtime! I want to photograph daffodils and tulips. I want to photograph apple blossoms and the infinite variations in the shades of green as the trees burst into leaf. Dammit! I live in Southern Ontario not Tuktoyaktuk!

     Oh well. There's always the stuff that no photographer is ever caught up on. I have  files that I need to print. I have a lot of files that I need to back up to a separate hard drive. And of course there's always editing.... There's ALWAYS editing.

    Spring, I mean REAL Spring will come soon enough. I mean it will come....RIGHT? 


                                                   ...more later

       As always, thanks for reading the stuff that I crank out here. If you like what you see, don't be afraid to hit "like", share it to the media platform of your choice, or leave a comment in the space below.

                                   ...                                                                                                                                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                    
 

Saturday, 17 March 2018

A Day In Toronto

     Okay...Okay. Guilty as charged. I neglected to punch up a blog post for the month of February! I guess that I went through a bit of a  creative dry spell. The mid winter blahs hit me a little harder this year and I couldn't come up with any ideas that I thought were worthy of sharing in the blogosphere. But spring is coming. Although you wouldn't know it by the weather this morning. I just stepped outside and it's freezing out there with nasty wind gusts to boot. Time to cozy up to the computer and see if I can generate something that might be of moderate interest. 

    I have, of late, developed an interest in video production. It's early days yet. I haven't produced anything that I want to share here or on any of the social media platforms to which I subscribe. I've been heavily influenced by YouTube videos by the likes of Peter McKinnon, Sara Dietschy and Matti Hapooja. They are all talented photographers and videographers who, if nothing else, provide some inspiration to pursue the craft through their youthful exuberance. Since every camera that I own has video recording capability, I thought that perhaps this is an aspect of digital imaging  that I should try. I have no intention of competing with them in the form of vlogging. Overall, I'm not really part of the selfie generation. I prefer to keep my furry face BEHIND the camera. I will occasionally take a selfie just as a mugshot for a social media page, but I try to be  pretty realistic about myself. I have a great face for radio. 

     I decided that I would invest in a video head for my trusty Manfrotto tripod as well as an external microphone for recording sound on location . The video head provides a more stable fluid movement than shooting handheld and although the cameras all have microphones built into them, they tend to produce rather thin sounding audio which also is affected by camera handling and wind noise.

     I did my research and could have ordered these pieces of gear online, but decided, instead, to head to Toronto to purchase them. I'd spent almost the entire winter in the small town in which I make my home and was going a bit stir-crazy. I thought that perhaps a trip to the big city might be what I needed to recharge my creative batteries. Also, for me, a trip to Toronto involves train travel and anyone who knows me knows that I love trains. As the son of a railway brakeman/conductor, I was practically raised on them! 


The yard engine in Brantford, Ont. Taken while I waited for my train to Toronto.

                     
     VIa Rail train #70 was right on time and it wasn't too long before I was happily ensconced on a comfortable seat with decent legroom, sipping on a cup of coffee as the train whisked me away to Toronto. Via Rail coffee is surprisingly good. Or maybe it's just the fact that I'm such a caffeine addict that I'll drink any hot water that has been drizzled over the remnants of a coffee bean. I took a few dodgy pictures of the less than spectacular scenery as the train rolled along.



                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                          

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                   By the time I reached Toronto, the skies had started to clear and I made a few photographs on Front Street before making my way uptown in search of breakfast.                                                                                                                                                                            

                                                                                                                                                          

        After a nice late breakfast, I wandered up to Henry's Camera and purchased my new video gear. While there, I took a look at the new Fuji XE-3 camera. I liked it and can definitely see a place for it in the future. But the voice inside my head was screaming " You don't need any more cameras! You need to be using the ones  you already have!"  So with my new video gear safely tucked into my backpack, I hit the streets and did just that.                                                                                                                                                                       
                                
Queen St. W.

Brookfield Place

Eaton Centre
                               
Keeping one eye on the time, I eventually mosied my way back to Union Station to catch my train home.
The Great Hall, Union Station
All in all, It was a good little break from small town life. I'm always amazed by how radically different life can be in two locations separated by just an hour and a half of travel time. 
 It was the subject of a blog post I wrote a little while back. http://multifarious-musings.blogspot.ca/2016/04/contrasts.html

Back in Paris, Ont. now, where the architecture is not nearly as spectacular, but the pace of life is far more comfortable. 

William St. Bridge, Paris, Ont.
                                                                 ...more later
       

Thursday, 4 January 2018

The Case For The Printer

     Happy New Year. 

     The Festive Season is over and life returns to normal. Whatever  normal is! I had a pretty quiet Christmas here in the peaceful little town where I make my home. It's pretty much the way that I like to celebrate the season. I firmly believe that most people tend to stress out a little too much about the holidays. ( See my blog from a few years ago about the subject. http://multifarious-musings.blogspot.ca/2011/12/ghosts-of-christmas-past.html )

     This year I acquired a new printer. My old printer, a Canon MX-870, is working just fine and has been a very useful and reliable machine. The prints that it produces from my digital files are awesome. In terms of colour quality and resolution, they are superior to anything that I have had done at photography shops or local print kiosks.In addition to being my primary photo printer, it also scans, functions as a photocopier and even faxes. ( who the hell sends faxes anymore? It's a feature that I've never used.) Needless to say, I'm keeping it. The only problem I have with it is it's limited capability in terms of picture size. It can only print up to 8"X10". Well actually 8½" X 11" but 8"X10" for easier framing and presentation purposes. 

     Enter my newest acquisition, a Canon Pixma Pro 100. It doesn't scan, make photocopies or send faxes. It would be nice if it brewed me a decent cup of coffee but, alas, it doesn't do that either. What it does  is make beautiful  photographic prints up to 13"X19". It is a printer designed and built specifically for photographic reproduction. Also it was on sale and I got a pretty good deal on it!

     So why, in this day of the internet and digital imaging would a photographer have not only one, but two photo printers? It almost makes no sense. 

     I don't really know the reason, but people seem to like hard copy photographs. My fledgling, part-time photo business is based around the sale of postcards and framed prints of local scenes. I have yet to make a single sale of a digital image.I have provided copies of digital images on thumb drives for the local events that I have covered and they don't (or haven't as yet) even get posted on social media pages. When I photographed "Jingle Bell Night" for the local B.I.A., I handed out business cards to people whose photos I took. I wrote down the number for the image   on the back of each card and offered to send them a digital copy of the image if they just sent me an e-mail. I was doing this service at no cost to them as I had already been paid by the B.I.A. I didn't get even one request for a digital image! But I can sell prints.

     Maybe hard copy photo prints have become something of a novelty. Almost everyone I know is walking around with a cell phone that has dozens of digital mages of events, family and friends. I sometimes wonder if anyone keeps a traditional family album anymore. There are good reasons for doing so. It's easier to share. I can't tell you how many times I've felt a little awkward  looking over someones shoulder while they try to show me their pictures, twisting and turning the  cell phone to make the image visible in whatever light was available. It's always easier and more fun to look at a family photo album around the kitchen table. And a nicely framed photo, hanging on the wall, in a room with decent lighting is easily visible to almost everyone.

     Also, the relatively simple act of matting and framing a photo  for  mounting on a wall gives it a degree of distinction. If Marshall McLuhan was right and "The medium is the message.", then it seems to me that the choice of an image to be enlarged and displayed in a permanent or semi-permanent manner, says a lot about the importance of that image to its owner. Even the casual photographer has hundreds, if not thousands, of images from which to choose.  It says that there is a story behind the photo. A memory of place and time  that gives the image some significance.                                                                                                      
"Manitoulin Sunrise"
Long time readers of my blogs will recognize this image. The story behind it is here.
   
    http://multifarious-musings.blogspot.ca/2013/08/return-to-south-bay-or-what-i-did-on-my_26.html

      This is the first large (13"X19") print made with my new printer. It is a very significant image for me. Although I had been taking pictures with film cameras since I was nine years  old, I had been on something of a hiatus from photography as digital imaging started to dominate the craft. This was one of the first digital images I ever took. It marked a turning point for me in returning to photography, this time, working in the realm of digital imaging. Besides all that, I think it's just a damn pretty picture!

     Then there is the concept of value. Millions of images are uploaded to the internet every day. Anyone on social media takes a moment or two to admire an image posted by friends and family. But, that's about it. The internet has given us all a very short attention span. On this blog post, I've included links to two previous posts. I can only wonder if anybody has actually clicked on them to read my little past blurbs which have existed in cyberspace for years. Probably not. I am thankful enough that anyone reads these posts at all, much less that they would read the posts in my archives. But if I can show you some prints, the images become real. They are something tangible that you can hold in your hand. They are no longer just a passive array of electrons on a computer screen, to be admired for an instant before scrolling on to the next item. Perhaps that is the reason that I can sell prints but not digital imagery.

     So, with the acquisition of my newest printer, my plan is to spend much of the long winter nights making prints. Smaller ones will be put into family albums. Larger ones will be framed and hung on my wall or sold through the retailers that market my stuff. Don't worry. I'll still find time to go out and take some new photos. But hey, it's cold outside... and I'm getting older... I don't thaw out as quick as I used to.... and it gets dark too early and....

    
     
                                               ...more later

     

  

Saturday, 9 December 2017

. Starting Christmas

    So, I watched our local Santa Claus Parade last Saturday. Having lived in this little town for twelve years, I've become kind  of used to the events that mark the changing of the seasons. The Santa Claus Parade, as well as Jingle Bell Night, mark the beginning of the Christmas Season here in Paris, Ont.

     This year,  I was hired by the local B.I.A. as the official photographer for Jingle Bell Night. It was an interesting job. It was the first time that the B.I.A. had hired a photographer to capture the event. I asked if there was anything in particular that they wanted me to photograph. They said, "No. Just walk around with your camera and take some pictures."  That's one of the things I like about small town life. It's comfortable. I guess that I've developed enough of a reputation as the "local photographer" that they trust me to get some photos of whatever event comes along. No pressure. Just get some pictures. Yup. I can do that.                                                                                                                                                       
The Paris Firefighters do a Christmas Toy Drive every year and they were on hand with their vintage 1950.s fire truck
                                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                                                                                                              
                                                            

   
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                              
                                                                                   
                                                                                                                
                                                
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                    As I talked to the people downtown that night, I heard a little grumbling about the town Christmas tree not being up. The tree lighting ceremony is a traditional part of Jingle Bell Night. I talked to some of the local merchants and was told that there were some problems in getting the tree here on time, but, that it should be up in time for the Santa Claus Parade. 

     The Santa Claus Parade was the following weekend and I managed to get a few photos of that too.




My neighbour and her little boy enjoying the parade

The Big Guy himself at the end of the parade.
I guess that this will be my last post to the blog for this year. Like everyone else, I'll be busy shopping, decorating, cooking and just generally enjoying the hustle and bustle of this magical time of year. I'd like to take this  opportunity to thank all the friends who read and follow my meanderings on these pages. I'm not presenting anything of earth shattering importance here. Just the thoughts and adventures of a part-time, small town photographer. But if you like what you see, don't be afraid to leave a comment in the section below or "like" and share to your favourite media platform. It's your kindness and support that keeps me crankin' this stuff out.

     Oh, yeah, in case you're wondering.... They did get the town Christmas tree up before the Santa Claus parade.                                                                                                                

                               Merry Christmas and Happy Holidays everyone!

                                                    ...more later,
                                                                
                                                              Gord

Friday, 10 November 2017

The Fall Colour Season That Almost Wasn't

I guess that the fall colour season is, for the most, part over.  My last little foray into the outside world was met with sideways snow driven by gale force winds. As fall colour seasons go, this year's was not one of the best. We had an unusually warm September. The temperatures during that month were often warmer than what we had experienced in the summer. As a result, the trees were a little slow to turn colour. By the time we advanced to the colder nights of October, some trees where bare, some trees were in full colour and some were still green. The overall effect was kind of blotchy. We didn't quite get the sweeping grandeur of previous years.                                                                                              
View From The Cliffs, Rattlesnake Point Conservation Area, Taken 2 years ago. Canon EOS M, 1/160 sec.,f/11, ISO 400 


  My abbreviated fall colour tour  this year consisted primarily of a trip to Georgian Bay. My go-to destination when I can't think of anywhere else to go.The trip was under dull rainy skies and the photos I took were far from the sweeping vistas of colour from years past.                                                                                                                                                                              
Autumn On Georgian Bay, Craigleith, Ont. Fuji X100F, 1/125 sec. f/8 ISO 200

Autumn On Georgian Bay, Meaford, Ont. Fuji X100F, 1/125 sec., f/11, ISO 200.
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                





     At Thanksgiving time, here in Paris, I was able to capture some photos for my traditional "Autumn At The Dam" series that I usually post on Facebook.                                                             
Autumn At The Dam 2017, Fuji X100F, 2.1sec., f/16, ISO 100 

Autumn At The Dam 2017, Fuji X70, 1/500 sec., f/8, ISO 400
     
     My last stab at fall colour photography was just two days ago. I usually go out in November, after the peak of colours, just to glean a little of what's left. For those interested, I wrote a piece about November photography on my old blog,                                            Multifarious Musings. http://multifarious-musings.blogspot.ca/2012/01/november.html
  
     

Autumn In Paris, Ont., Fuji X100F, 1/100 sec., f/11, ISO 200

     At any rate, this year's efforts in the field of November photography occurred on a beautiful fall morning. The air was crisp and still. There was frost on the ground that was just beginning to melt away as I made my way through a wooded area a short walk from my home. Most of the colours were gone although there was still a lot of colour in the newly fallen leaves on the ground. However, I did manage to find a few pockets where the trees had retained some of their leaves. 



Autumn In The Park, Paris, Ont., Fuji X100F, 1/250 sec. f/8, ISO 200

      But, a lot of my hike that morning was spent just shooting the limited foliage that was left.
Last Of The Leaves, Fuji X100F, 1/250 sec., f/8, ISO 320 


Autumn Trail, Fuji X100F, 1/250 sec., f/8, ISO 320

     If  "Much can be learned of the forest by the contemplation of a single tree."  I would posit that "Much can be learned of the tree by the contemplation of a single leaf."                                                                                                                                                                                
  Like this one;
Fuji X100F, 1/500 sec., f/8, ISO 320
 Or this one;
Fuji X100F, 1/500 sec. f/8, ISO 800
  

Or even this one;
Fuji X100F,  1/500 sec. f/8, ISO 320
  

     So, as the fall colour season comes to an end, I'm looking forward to an interesting winter. I landed a gig as official photographer for " Jingle Bell Night" here in Paris. It's a little downtown street festival  to welcome the beginning of the Christmas season. I recently acquired a decent speedlight (flash unit) for my Fuji cameras and, combined with some other lighting, I'm looking to do some portraits. Stay tuned. Things might get interesting.

     By the way; Thanks to everyone who reads my blogs. If you like what you see here, please feel free to leave a comment in the section below. Also don't be afraid to "like"  and/or share on the media platform of your choice. If you want to see more from the life of a small town photo freak, hit the "follow" button. I try to publish here at least once a month. 

                                    ...more later
                                                            Gord