I call this image “Look at the Pretty Light in the Sky!” the last of my 10 image series. Ever wonder what a dinosaur looked like at night? Wonder no more!
This is a real photograph, well actually its about 40 some photos stitched together. The foreground is a life-sized pair of dinosaur models filmed at night on location. So yes, this is an actual panoramic photograph.
I combined this with my image I took of the Comet Lovejoy in Kansas along with a winter Milky Way / Orion shot over Moab (the dinosaur models are in Moab).
I spent a lot of time to remove all trace of human artifacts from the pictures. Bridges, light pollution, railroad tracks, overhead power lines, giant power pylons, planes, satellite trails and more all were removed to make a scene that is as free as possible from modern life.
Why did I do this labor of love? Because I love dinosaurs, I mean who doesn’t? Since I was a child when I played with my little plastic dinosaurs and wondered about their world. What did it look like?
Sitting under the Milky Way in remote areas, my mind wondered what would the sky have looked like then? There were no realistic photos or even drawings that exist. Now they do.
Check me out on Instagram as well @dave_lane_astrophotography
Latvia-based Digital Artist Andrejs Pidjass creates stunning AI-generated hearts. Andrejs creates weird, disgusting and beautiful art created using Artificial Intelligence and Adobe Photoshop. He use Mid Journey App to create these stunning art pieces, on top of that he use photoshop to create the final output.
Scroll down and inspire yourself. Please check Andrej’s Instagram for more amazing work.
The United States is a big country, spanning an incredible diversity of ecologies and biomes, from evergreen forests to grassy plains to snow-covered mountains to barren deserts. Visiting all these regions can take a long time and a lot of resources and all of them, surprisingly, can be seen in just one place: Oregon.
Oregon is the jewel of the Pacific Northwest, from its jagged coastline to its frozen peaks, but it’s also home to canyons, deserts, and a bucolic countryside. For photographers, Oregon holds a little bit of everything to suit any style or discipline. The hardest part is knowing where to start, so let’s take a short look at the natural and visual wonders the state has to offer.
Oregon Coast Photography
The Oregon coastline is among the most rugged and picturesque to be found throughout the entirety of the West Coast. Here, the irresistible might of the Pacific has carved away at the basalt bluffs of ancient lava flows, slowly moving the tideline inland over millions of years. Left behind are an array of crooked towers and massive islands—“sea stacks” like Haystack Rock which jut from the sand and surf, crowned with coastal scrub and warped cypress like sculptures in a Japanese garden. In the dark sands which border the roaring waves, colorful round stones and the famous Oregon agates can be found below the guiding glow of the state’s many beautiful lighthouses, adding a touch of delicacy to this raw borderland.
Oregon Sand Dunes
South of Newport and Waldport, just inland from the sculpted coast is the Oregon Sand Dunes National Recreation Area. Here, unique wind and tidal patterns have conspired to bring huge quantities of sand inland, dropping it among the pines and firs in mountains up to 500 feet high. The resulting landscape is surreal and offers unique artistic and recreational opportunities. In some places, of course, the dunes also take on a more classically desert-like image, forming vast undulating barrens between forest and sea.
The Forests of Oregon State
Also bordering the coast, and spreading into the valleys, up the slopes of the mountain ranges, and across the Columbia Plateau in the north are vast wild forests which make up nearly 50% of the state. Oregon has twelve national forests: Deschutes, Fremont-Winema, Klamath, Malheur, Mt. Hood, Ochoco, Rogue River-Siskiyou, Siuslaw, Umatilla, Umpqua, Wallowa-Whitman, and Willamette. Each is a haven for wildlife, old growth timber, and wildflowers and home to rivers, lakes, mountains, and stunning scenery of all types. Endless trails and OHV paths crisscross these wildernesses, offering intimate access to environments whose personality changes with each passing season.
Oregon Rivers | From the Columbia To The Sea
The two greatest rivers in Oregon are the Columbia and the Snake. The Columbia begins in Canada and gains tributaries and precipitation as it moves south until, by the time it reaches the Columbia Plateau, it measures half a mile across and carves a deep and picturesque canyon along the whole border between Oregon and Washington. The Snake begins in Wyoming, at nearly the same spot where Ansel Adams captured his famous image of the Grand Tetons. Surging through the prairies of eastern Oregon, it detours back into Washington before finally joining back up with the Columbia on its way to the sea.
Oregon State Waterfalls
Any state with great rivers is bound to have waterfalls, and Oregon is popular for its wide variety of majestic cascades. Some, like the Multnomah Falls on the Columbia, Watson Falls in Umpqua National Forest, or Tumalo Falls near Bend are known for their size, allowing visitors to witness tonnes of water plummeting through empty air to the rapids below. Others, like Punch Bowl Falls (Columbia River) and Proxy Falls (Willamette National Forest) offer a greater sense of mystique and fantasy, trickling over emerald beds of moss or bubbling down into secret crystalline pools.
Oregon Lakes
To complete the trifecta of aquatic scenery, Oregon is also known for its many lakes. Detroit Lake’s 3500 acres offer ample opportunities for water sports and hiking while Timothy Lake boasts fantastic views of the slopes and glaciers of Mount Hood. Oregon is also, of course, home to the king of all lakes. 7,700 years ago, Mount Mazama obliterated itself in an incredible eruption, creating a deep caldera that gradually filled with rainwater to become Crater Lake. Crater Lake is now a national park and home to spectacular vistas and the clearest water on Earth. Visitors can travel the length of the crater’s rim or travel by boat out to Wizard Island, the micro-volcano in the lake’s center.
The Cascades | Mountains of Oregon
The western half of Oregon is broken by two great mountain ranges: the Oregon Coast Range and the Cascades. The former belongs to the family of subalpine mountain ridges which run all along the West Coast and, like its relatives, is marked by a wetter climate and lush evergreen forests. Oregon is also one of the few places where the native ranges of the coast redwood and western red cedar overlap, resulting in huge swaths of old growth timber. The Cascades, on the other hand, are true glacial peaks and home to famous summits like Mount Hood, Mount Jefferson, and the Three Sisters. Climbers, hikers, skiers, photographers, and more all flock to the Cascades for their challenging landscapes and unrivaled alpine and glacial scenery.
Willamette Valley Oregon
In between the two main ranges in Oregon and spread along the various river valleys of the state are peaceful valleys with warm summers and foggy winters. Here, small towns, drowsy farms, and scenic country roads offer a more relaxed and social side to Oregon’s natural beauty. The Willamette Valley, especially, is a must-see for its rolling hills of vineyards and fruit trees that change to gold each fall. Portland, Eugene, and Salem also all fall within this region, so it’s a great base-camp or jumping-off point for any more serious adventure into the surrounding backcountry.
Volcanic Landscapes of Oregon
On the eastern side of the Cascades, the landscape gradually becomes flatter and more barren. This doesn’t mean there is less to see here, however, as eastern Oregon is actually one giant geological showroom for the volcanic processes which helped form the entire West Coast. Grasslands are covered with jet-black boulders, and spine-like ridges mark the path of ancient volcanic mudflows. The best place to get a taste of the region’s geologic history is to visit the obsidian fields near Bend. Here, visitors can walk across and between huge piles of the glassy black rock that seem to burst out of the surrounding scrub forest.
Oregon Canyonlands
As touched upon above, Oregon is also known for its canyons. Most famous among these is the Columbia River Gorge, stretching inland from the meeting place between Washington, Oregon, and Pacific. Beautiful forests, majestic cliffs, fragrant orchards, and quaint towns all surround the mighty Columbia, making it a great destination for photographers and tourists alike. Lesser known but just as grand are the Owyhee Canyonlands, bordering another of Oregon’s great rivers. A much drier and desert-like landscape, the Owyhee Canyonlands are a maze of sage and stone with opportunities for climbers, hikers, photographers, and anyone with an ATV.
_______________________
Even with all the regions described above, this list covers only a fraction of the destinations, biomes, and beauty Oregon has to offer. Wherever and whenever you go, you’re bound to be inspired and have a memorable experience that will draw you back again and again for years to come.
One of the things that can make your life as astrophotographer a bit easier is to have an external power source for your DSLR instead of using the in camera batteries. Turns out that it doesn’t make any difference on dark current, but it’s the increased capacity that matters. Most of us will want to ‘leave and forget’ their setup running for a certain amount of time once we are setup and everything is running smoothly. But with the potential of your camera’s battery running out this is sometimes tricky (checking battery) or will cause loss of exposure time because the battery ran out. Another situation we need more capacity than 1 battery might offer is when we are doing time lapses. This is another setup you might want to just get up and running and only return to wrap it back up at the end of the night. You’ll need more battery capacity in most cases! An external battery with bigger capacity is the useful solution here.
External battery for Nikon cameras
I hear surprisingly often that there is way to power a Nikon camera with external power. I can assure this is not true, as there are multiple solutions to power the Nikons with a power bank or even using regular power outlet. What you’ll need is a battery adapter. This battery adapter is basically just like a regular battery, except it is connected to a cable that you can hook up to the power bank or the AC converter. The battery adapter have different names for the different batteries they represent. So be sure to check you have the right one for your particular camera model!
EP-5A; For EN-EL14 battery replacement in Nikon D3100, D3200, D3300, D5100, D5200, D5300> EP-5B; For EN-EL15 battery replacement in Nikon D500, D600, D610, D7000, D7100, D750, D800, D810(a) EP-5; For EN-EL9 battery replacement in Nikon D40, D40X, D60
The official Nikon adapters are said to be a bit ‘wonky’ at the connection between the battery adapter and either the AC adapter or the battery pack. Also, like with all official Nikon accessories, they are way more expensive than 3rd party alternatives. In all cases you should be sure to check the reviews for comments on the connection of the cables!
Next to the battery adapter you’ll need the actual AC adapter or battery pack of course. It is important that the power source will have 7.2V – 8.4V as output. So you can’t just hook the battery adapter on to any powerbank you might already have. Be careful to check the output of your power source as the wrong current might hurt your camera! The official AC adapter is called EH-5/EH-5A or EH-5B.
Ex-Pro Nikon On-The-Move
The solution I’m currently using is the Ex-Pro Nikon On-The-Move 7600mAh power bank with power adapter. You can simply get a separate addition adapter if you want to be able to use this with different camera models that use different batteries.
The connection from the battery adapter to the power bank is very solid and I have never suffered a disconnect. The power bank works just fine. It comes with a nice sleeve for some additional protection and ways to hang/stick/mount it to your setup. Or simply attach it to your belt if you are moving around and what to use this. I used it in Namibia where the temperature gets to 0 degrees Celcius and it keeps working just fine.
The only thing you’ll have to do is to paint the leds for the charge indication. It’s a blue color that’s quite bright. Just get some red nail polish and make them dim and red
One of the more common questions she’s asked at the Lambton County Archives is how to preserve memorabilia, Nicole Aszalos says.
Article content
“We all have our own archives at home,” the archivist and archives supervisor said. “We have images of us as children, adults and our grandparents — all of that.”
She’s one of two speakers appearing at the Judith and Norman Alix Art Gallery this month for Art & Ideas talks, tying in with the museum’s current 10th anniversary Re View exhibition.
The first Nov. 4-Jan. 21 exhibition in the year-and-a-half series includes a look at the photography of J.S. Thom, who built the 1893 Thom building that’s housed the gallery for the past decade.
Aszalos’ Nov. 17 talk, Archiving Memories, is billed as delving into the evolution of different photography technology types, including those Thom used, and what’s known about how they degrade over years and strategies for helping make them last.
Article content
“We all have those meaningful documents and photos and items to us that we want to preserve,” Aszalos said.
Tintype photography, for instance, will show embossed fingerprints after decades while acetate negatives are inherently self-destructive, she said.
Still, there are strategies to get around some of those shortcomings, she noted.
“To still preserve them (for a while), even if it’s not ideal.”
A second Art & Ideas talk featuring heritage planner Jack Mallon is set for Nov. 24.
His session will focus, in part, on the evolution of the Thom building’s renovations for the gallery, which incorporated Victorian and modernist styles, a gallery news release stated. Mallon is also expected to discus the 1953 Sarnia tornado, its impact on downtown commercial Victorian architecture and the subsequent urban renewal, the release added.
Both free talks begin at 7 p.m., and people can register at jnaag.ca, under the Lecture Series: Art & Ideas section.
(WXYZ) — A 17-year-old North Farmington High School student has been arrested after allegedly posting photos of high school girls to a pornographic website, Farmington Hills police say.
Police say the photos were of a “nonsexual nature.”
“The nature of the photos were not inappropriate. They were normal photos. Either taken of individuals in school or taken off social media websites,” said Chief Jeff King, of the Farmington Hills Police Department.
Chief Jeff King says what was inappropriate is what was done with those photos.
North Farmington High School got notice around 9 pm Monday that someone posted them to a pornographic website.
According to police, the Farmington Hills Police Department school liaison officer along with North Farmington High School administrators and the Oakland County prosecutor’s office worked together to investigate a complaint and arrest the teen on November 9.
Police say the suspect was taken into custody within 24 hours of receiving the first complaint.
In a letter sent to North Farmington High families, the district superintendent outlined the timeline of events.
“This violation is beyond disturbing,” wrote Farmington Public Schools Superintendent Chris Delgado.
According to the letter, on November 10, additional victims were invited down to the cafeteria over the PA system in order to have their names added to a list for law enforcement and to offer them counseling support.
The suspect has since been released to the custody of his parents.
“The posting of images to websites with the intent to terrorize, frighten, intimidate, harass, or molest is a crime. Investigators will aggressively pursue these matters to the full extent of the law,” said Farmington Hills Police Chief Jeff King in a statement.
An investigation is ongoing. Anyone with additional information is asked to call the police department at 248-871-2610.
Si no tenemos telescopio o buscamos temporalmente un telescopio de características especiales tenemos la opción de acudir a algunas empresas que permiten el alquiler de telescopios por horas o días. Habitualmente estas empresas son tiendas de telescopios o empresas de astroturismo que ofrecerán este servicio con o sin monitor.
El problema de este sistema de alquiler es que puede resultar bastante caro y quizá para probar un telescopio o probar por primera vez si la astronomía es o no lo nuestro convendría acudir a una agrupación astronómica donde sus socios normalmente no tendrán ningún inconveniente en que les acompañes a una salida con telescopios de manera totalmente gratuita.
No obstante, si lo que queremos es hacer uso de un telescopio desde nuestra propia casa, tenemos también la opción de alquilar un telescopio remoto situado en la otra parte del mundo y descargar las imágenes en nuestro ordenador
Alquiler de telescopios en Internet
Existen algunas empresas que permiten el alquiler de telescopios en Internet y obtener hermosas fotografías que podemos descargar después en nuestro ordenador. Algunos observatorios también emiten en ocasiones sesiones de observación en directo que podemos seguir desde nuestra propia casa.
iTelescope
iTelescope lleva ofreciendo servicios online de alquiler de telescopios desde el año 2004. Comenzaron en California y Australia y hoy en día tienen telescopios alrededor del mundo bajo los cielos más oscuros de Estados Unidos, Australia, Chile y España (como por ejemplo la isla de La Palma).
En la actualidad cuenta con más de 1000 miembros activos y ha desarrollado más de 300.000 misiones de observación.
Se puede reservar un telescopio a una hora determinada con antelación o hacer uso de los telescopios libres en un momento determinado. Disponemos de información meteorológica y del estado del cielo antes de hacer la reserva.
El sistema de uso permite un modo de control presencial en directo con el que podemos obtener imágenes en tiempo real o bien programar una sesión de captura desatendida de un objeto determinado y al día siguiente recibiremos las imágenes obtenidas. La plataforma ofrece también tomas de calibración (darks, flats y bias).
Si no se está satisfecho con la calidad de las imágenes obtenidas iTelescope nos reembolsará el dinero pagado incluso si el problema es causado por nubes o viento.
Para un plan de inicio con cuota mensual de 20$/mes tenemos precios de entre 24 a 60 dólares la hora o incluso telescopios «premium» con precios entre 68 y 132 dólares la hora.
Disponemos de acceso a una completa biblioteca de fotografías astronómicas compartidas, webinars y tutoriales de procesado de imágenes.
Telescope Live
Telescope Live ofrece servicios de alquiler de telescopios remotos desde su página web. Tiene varias modalidades de membresía desde 4€/mes hasta 274€/mes. Permite utilizar tanto su banco de imágenes siempre actualizado (On-click Observations) como realizar observaciones a medida (Advanced request).
Dispone de varios telescopios desde 10cm hasta 60cm, todos de gran calidad en Chile, España y Australia. En su web encontraremos tutoriales, galería de imágenes y todos los meses un concurso de astrofotografía.
The Virtual Telescope project
The Virtual Telescope project permite también alquilar dos telescopios, un Celestron C14 (25€/hora) y un Planewave 17 (50€/hora). Mediante un sistema de donaciones permite tener acceso a un banco de imágenes.
También realiza observaciones online cuando hay eventos especiales como eclipses o pasos de asteroides cercanos.
Astronomía desde casa
Personalmente me parece una gran idea y una forma muy económica de poder usar un telescopio de grandes prestaciones, disfrutar de la astronomía sin salir de casa o poder hacerlo a horas diurnas (por el desfase horario que tenemos con respecto al continente americano, si es que me lees desde España). Por contra creo que este sistema quita todo el encanto y la magia de la observación «al natural», la visión directa del cielo y el contacto con la naturaleza.
Como aficionado a la astronomía e informático de profesión me parece un despliegue espectacular ya que este tipo de proyectos requieren una gran inversión, no solo en infraestructura y equipos ópticos sino también en electrónica de red, ancho de banda y mantenimiento. ¿Te animas a probarlos?
Aviso: No tengo ningún tipo de relación con Mytelescope.com ni he usado todavía su servicio. Las opiniones vertidas en este blog son únicamente a título personal y no me hago responsable de ningún tipo de problema, disconformidad ni desavenencia que puedas encontrar con respecto al servicio que ofrece Mytelescope.com
Veteran Globe photojournalist John Tlumacki has covered everything from the joyous fall of the Berlin Wall to the unthinkable carnage of the Boston Marathon bombings. Try to put yourself in his shoes for a moment.
“Photography can be so mean,” says Tlumacki, a two-time Pulitzer finalist. “For your whole life and career, you embrace it. Each photo you hope tells a story. But as a photojournalist, sometimes the photos become emotional baggage that pull you down into depths never felt before.”
Tlumacki befriended some of the victims of the Marathon tragedy, who thanked him for recording history. But the trauma he witnessed also seared into his soul.
“The photographs I took of the 2013 Boston Marathon bombings just didn’t end up on my camera disks, but they have been stored in my mind forever,” he says. “On really bad days, they come back to haunt me, and other times, they remind me of how fragile life is.”
Still, photography is amazing. At a fraction of a second, it forever freezes a moment in time. It can then be savored and studied. Television, on the other hand, is fleeting. It is viewed and then disappears.
When The Boston Daily Globe started publishing 150 years ago, the paper was as gray as a winter’s day. Each edition had tens of thousands of words — and no photographs. Over the years, drawings, cartoons, formal portraits, and, finally, news photographs were included.
One of the early news photos was a three-second time-exposure of lightning. It appeared on Page 8 of the Globe on October 5, 1898, next to a recipe for stewed potatoes and vanilla fingers.
Slowly, the newspaper began to evolve. On April 13, 1908, the Globe ran a photograph from the Great Chelsea Fire, spanning the entire width of the front page. About two years later, it published a photograph of Halley’s Comet and called it a “pretty good spectacle.” Long before motor-driven cameras, news photographers hauled around 4 by 5 Speed Graphic cameras — bulky contraptions that require the film to be exposed one frame at a time — so they had to make every shot count.
The craft was often passed down from generation to generation. Photographer LeRoy Ryan worked for the Globe and The Boston Post for 42 years. Before he retired, he hand-crafted several black metal dodging tools for his son David, a full-time Globe photographer since 1975, and others to use in the darkroom.
Former photography chief Bill Brett began his distinguished Globe career as a newsboy hawking papers on a Dorchester street corner. Sports photographer Frank O’Brien started as a messenger in advertising and then revolutionized the sports section with unique features that captured more than just the game. Feature photographer extraordinaire Ulrike Welsch, the first female photographer on the staffs of the major Boston newspapers, and Ted Dully, who left all his worldly possessions to the Boys & Girls Clubs of Boston, dominated Globe front pages in the ‘70s and early ‘80s with stunning, uplifting images.
These photographers would each hold court in the large community darkroom, teaching the next generation of Globe photographers their craft.
Today, there’s no more darkroom. No chemical-stained fingernails from sloshing prints in the developer. Photographers now transmit their digital photos from a laptop anywhere they choose.
Today’s staff is perhaps the best ever. Jessica Rinaldi won a Pulitzer in 2016 and Erin Clark and Craig F. Walker were finalists within the last few years. At the most recent Patriots’ Super Bowl victory in 2019, the three photographers on hand for the paper — Barry Chin, Jim Davis, and I — had more than a century of experience combined.
In the early stages of the pandemic, despite the editor’s concern for their health, Globe photographers went into the hospitals, nursing homes, and funeral homes to document this horrific disease. Half of them became infected with COVID-19.
What follows in this special issue is an eclectic mix of photographs from this multitalented group, culled from the Globe’s archives. Each of these images tells a story, as only a photojournalist could tell it. Two of these photographs, by director of photography Bill Greene and staff photographer Suzanne Kreiter, respectively, are personal favorites.
The Greene photograph shows snowflakes kissing the faces of the “Lost Boys of Sudan” — orphans of war, safely sheltered here in Boston. The Kreiter image features a young Syrian refugee playing in an empty cardboard box in her new apartment. Both images magically capture something that we yearn to see more of in these troubled days: Joy.
Explore some indelible images by Globe photographers:
1908 — By Boston Globe staff
Damage is surveyed in the aftermath of the Great Chelsea Fire. At first glance, this could be showing the destruction of Dresden in World War II. The graininess of the photograph only adds to the misery contained within it.
1933 — By Boston Globe Staff
Boys playing baseball on Boston Common in February. Every inch of this frame, with every single kid engaged, has something to be savored. The brownstones surrounding the Common look the same today, but this is the age of the Boston scally cap.
1926 — By Hugh E. O’Donnell
Police pour illicit liquor down an East Cambridge sewer during Prohibition. Like fine wine (but not rot-gut whiskey), photos like this get better with age. For photographers, access is everything, and these officers clearly love getting their picture taken.
1960 — By Ed Kelley
John F. Kennedy gives a speech at the Boston Garden on the eve of the 1960 presidential election. This photo, which captures every detail of that historic moment, was once lost, and eventually found lying on the floor between two file cabinets.
1961 — By LeRoy Ryan
Young residents in Winthrop play a hazardous game with violent waves during a winter storm. It’s a safe bet to say LeRoy Ryan got sopping wet from the ocean spray, his hands numb; this was probably his only frame before the kids started clowning for the camera.
1964 — By Bob Dean
Access was better in the ‘60s, even for The Beatles. “In those days you were welcomed at concerts,” Dean said in a 1984 interview. “You could move around anywhere you wanted backstage, front stage, onstage.” Today, news photographers usually get to take photos for three songs only.
1965 — By Paul Connell
Martin Luther King Jr. addressed a joint session of the Massachusetts Legislature that year. Instead of a headshot that could be from anywhere, Connell went slightly behind Dr. King and used a wide angle to show the Legislature.
1965 — By Dan Goshtigian
Celtics legend Bill Russell grabs a rebound during a game against the Los Angeles Lakers at the Boston Garden. Sometimes one perfectly composed frame can capture the essence of a man’s career. You can feel the energy as Russell rips down a rebound against the hated West Coast rivals.
1969 — ByDonald C. Preston
A woman walks under the elevated line on Washington Street in 1969. This is a classic time-capsule picture: shadows and light, misty sunlight, strong composition. You can almost hear the train coming.
1972 — By Ulrike Welsch
A construction worker carries a tree at a dizzying height atop 1 Beacon Street. Welsch wore a miniskirt to work that day, but rushed to Woolworth’s to buy slacks. Armed with an ultra-wide 20-millimeter lens, she wrapped her left arm around a pole and took the picture one-handed.
1972 — By Frank O’Brien
Boston Red Sox owner Tom Yawkey, left, consoles a sobbing Carlton Fisk after losing to the Detroit Tigers in a critical game. “Yawkey glared at me the whole time because Fisk was a rookie,” O’Brien told me. “He called me the next day and apologized.”
1974 — By George Rizer
Firefighters worked to put down a fire aboard a plane at Logan Airport. The lesson here is never argue with law enforcement. Rizer was threatened with arrest by a state trooper when he arrived at the airport. Wasting no time, he ran upstairs to the observatory. He placed his camera on a railing because of the slow shutter speed and the cold truth that news photographers hate to lug tripods.
1978 — By David Ryan
Cars are stuck on Route 128 in aftermath of the Blizzard of 1978. To get a shot like this from a helicopter, photographers typically set their shutter speed at 1/1,000th of a second to minimize vibrations.
1981 — By Frank O’Brien
Larry Bird smokes Red Auerbach’s cigar after the Celtics defeated the Houston Rockets to win the NBA Championship. “It was kind of bizarre,” O’Brien recalls. “Larry yanked the cigar out of Red’s mouth and put it in his mouth. To me the whole thing was disgusting.”
1982 — By Wendy Maeda
Jim Rice carries 4-year-old Jonathan Keane into the Red Sox dugout after he was injured by a line drive at Fenway Park. In baseball, photographers have to be ready for the unexpected. Rice is a Hall of Famer, but for many fans, this is his greatest moment.
1982 — By John Tlumacki
A firefighter runs from the intense flames as two triple-decker homes burn in Dorchester. This falls under the “shoot and scoot” philosophy of photojournalism. Tlumacki was able to make three frames before he was driven back by the searing heat.
1982 — By Ted Dully
A woman walks near the Christian Science Center in Boston after a spring snowstorm. The swirling snow, the energy of the hardy soul, and the beauty of Boston all come together in a beautiful wide angle composition. You can feel the cold, clean air.
1983 — By Jim Wilson
Marines in Delaware honor their comrades killed in a terrorist bombing in Beirut, Lebanon. This photograph was taken by longtime Globe photographer Jim Wilson, who passed away earlier this month. Behind his camera, there was always a smile.
1984 — By Stan Grossfeld
Migrant workers cross the Rio Grande between Mexico and Texas to find work. To make this picture, I waded into the river with a wide angle lens on my camera. The workers were apprehensive. “Yo loco en la cabeza,” I told them in broken Spanish, meaning “I’m crazy in the head.” They embraced me like a brother.
1984 — By John Tlumacki
Patriots fans, ashamed to show their faces, sit motionless in the stands during the final game of the season. Photographers should not just be cheerleaders for the home team. If the team stinks, find a way to show the smell.
1986 — By Joanne Rathe
Youths mourned a Black community leader who had been killed in South Africa before he and other anti-apartheid activists were to meet with an official from the US State Department. What makes this telephoto-lens photo so compelling is the faces, which tell the story, and the mood and the light.
1986 — By Janet Knott
Christa McAuliffe’s parents and her sister reacted after hearing that a malfunction had taken place after the Space Shuttle Challenger’s liftoff of Cape Canaveral. The Challenger exploded, killing all astronauts. “Mayhem in the spectator stands ensued as all reacted with horror and disbelief,” says Knott, who kept shooting. Then the problem was getting the picture back to the Globe. She went to the airport, only to find out the flight to Boston was canceled. She begged the Orlando Sentinel to use their darkroom and transmitted her pictures from there.
1989 — By John Tlumacki
November 11, 1989: People celebrate on a section of the Berlin Wall, at Potsdamer Platz, after its opening. Patience, patience, patience: Tlumacki waited for the perfect composition and then fired. Amateur photographers ask, “How many pictures did you take?” The answer is as many as you need.
1990 — By Michele McDonald
Jo-Anna Rorie, a midwife, attends to a patient at Dimock Health Center in Roxbury in a photo taken as part of reporting on racial disparities in the infant mortality rate. Developing trust between the subject and the photographer is critical. If you are honest and sincere, people will let you into their lives.
1992 — By Yunghi Kim
A press card is no protection in a foreign land. Yunghi Kim and former Globe reporter Wil Haygood were taken hostage by a rebel group in Somalia. When the rebels weren’t watching her, Kim shot photographs, at great personal risk. “She is as brave as they come,” Haygood says. After intervention from the United Nations and the aid group CARE, they were released.
1993 — By Bill Greene
Volunteer Pam Christian in Des Moines, Iowa, after working on sandbags during the Great Flood of 1993 along the Mississippi River. A great photograph can capture elements of emotion, composition, and light to bring awareness to disasters in a way statistics never can.
2001 — By Bill Greene
A week after arriving in the United States, two orphans from Sudan marvel at the snow near where they live with their foster family. When Bill Greene checked the Doppler radar and saw a snow squall was forecast, he called the foster family and asked if he could come over to visually record the special moment.
2002 — By Barry Chin
Tom Brady spikes the ball after scoring a touchdown in the home playoff game that became known as the “Snow Bowl,” en route to the Super Bowl. Photographers root for snow over rain: It’s prettier, it makes better pictures, and it is easier to keep your cameras working.
2002 — By Jim Davis
For this historic shot from the Super Bowl, Davis chose his spot wisely, behind the lineman but ahead of kicker Adam Vinatieri. It’s easy to get blocked out by referees, TV camera people, players, and others. Davis also resisted the urge to follow the ball and kept his lens on Vinatieri, proving that sometimes reaction is better than action. Vinatieri’s 48-yard field goal sealed the Patriots win against the St. Louis Rams, 20-17.
2003 — By Jonathan Wiggs
In Iraq, Wiggs used a low camera angle to capture the pain of relatives finding the bodies of loved ones who were executed under Saddam Hussein’s reign, a dozen years earlier. “One day you’re in a America and comfortable and the next day you’re at a mass grave with people killed by a murderous regime,” Wiggs recalls. “It was a horrific scene just seeing the inhumanity and the grief of the loved ones. It still lives with me.”
2004 — By Barry Chin
Red Sox catcher Jason Varitek and Alex Rodriguez of the New York Yankees tangle during a bench-clearing brawl. This moment lit a fire under the Boston team, which eventually went on to win the World Series. The old saying “beauty is in the eye of the beholder” holds true here: For Sox fans, this iconic image elicits happiness; for Yankee fans, pain.
2004 — By John Bohn
Jason Varitek, Keith Foulke, and Doug Mientkiewicz celebrated after winning the World Series against the St. Louis Cardinals. John Bohn positioned himself high above the third-base side and used a long telephoto lens to record the end of the Curse of the Bambino. Afterward, the Globe team scooped up dirt from home plate with the blessings of their gracious St. Louis hosts.
2008 — By Essdras M Suarez
A 6-year-old who was on a respirator through a tracheotomy showed off some ballet moves while attending summer camp in Newton. Suarez captured this remarkable child’s spirit by using soft window light and a beautiful composition that gives her room to move.
2011 — By Jim Davis
Davis knew that the Bruins captain Zdeno Chara would be the first to get to hold the Stanley Club. He set his shutter speed to 1/640th of a second on his 500mm lens and waited patiently. “I’m not a technical guy,” Davis says. “You anticipate the moment, follow him, and push the button.”
2013 — By John Tlumacki
Police officers react to an explosion at the finish line of the Boston Marathon, while runner Bill Iffrig, 78, remains on the ground from a previous explosion. The blast from the terrorist attack tossed the camera Tlumacki was using in the air. This is the epitome of a dedicated news photographer, firing off frames instead of fleeing.
2014 — By Pat Greenhouse
Erin Vasselian receives a flag at the Abington gravesite of her husband, Marine Sergeant Daniel Vasselian. Daniel Vasselian was killed in Afghanistan two days before Christmas. Pat Greenhouse showed respect by using a telephoto lens and a high ISO speed. “I would not have used flash under any conditions,” she recalls. “It would have been disruptive.” The results are a moving portrait that shows a widow’s grief and the pain of war.
2015 — By Jessica Rinaldi
Pedestrians walk through a maze of snowbanks in downtown Boston amid a historically snowy winter. Here, the size of the T sign, the gigantic piles of snow, and the half buried pedestrians make for a unique image.
2016 — By Lane Turner
Deontae McLeod-Annon, left, 16, and Tina Samson, 17, share a moment on a trolley on the Mattapan-Ashmont High-Speed Line. A good photographer is like a tiny fly on the wall, but with a camera. Invisible.
2016 — By Keith Bedford
A girl cheers near the end of the Independence Day celebration at the Hatch Shell, along the Charles River Esplanade. Sometimes in photography, less is more. With hundreds of thousands of fans to choose from, Keith focused on just one to frame the event perfectly.
2017 — By Suzanne Kreiter
Abdulkader Hayani, a refugee from Syria, sets up a new, donated sewing machine as his youngest daughter, Ameeneh, plays in the box it came in. Capturing happiness in photography is one of life’s greatest gifts. The moment lasts forever and never gets old.
2017 — By Matthew J. Lee
This photo is all about anticipation. Matt Lee saw the police chasing this demonstrator at a “free speech” rally on Boston Common that was meet with a sizable counterprotest in August 2017. “He was cornered and I was thinking what’s his exit route going to be?” Lee says. Lee hustled there first and recorded the moment with a wide-angle lens.
2019 — By Erin Clark
A family in Biddeford, Maine, moved to a campground after being evicted from their home. This photograph has the classic rule of thirds where there are important elements in each section of the photo. But what sets it apart is the sunlight skimming across the mesh of the tent. Minutes later, maybe even seconds, it is gone.
2020 — By Jessica Rinaldi
Funeral director Joe Ruggiero, left, and apprentice funeral director Nick Verrocchi move a casket inside a makeshift storage area at the Ruggiero Family Memorial Home in East Boston. A great photograph takes the viewer someplace they have never been, and in April 2020 Jessica Rinaldi bravely captured the horror of the surging COVID-19 pandemic while protecting the dignity of victims.
2020 — By Craig F. Walker
This is a gift from the photo gods. Walker was driving by Carson Beach in the early days of the COVID pandemic and saw a man encased in a bubble. It was already twilight and a flash would ruin the mood, so Walker adjusted his settings and placed his camera on the ground. He aimed up with a wide-angle lens to take advantage of the open space in the almost nighttime sky.
Stan Grossfeld is a two-time Pulitzer prize-winning photojournalist and an associate editor at The Boston Globe. Send comments to [email protected].
Zbrush is one of our favourite tools for 3D modelling, and there’s a treat coming up for anyone who uses the software or wants to learn more. The four-day Maxon ZBrush Summit 2022 starts on Sunday (November 13) with awards, presentations, showcases and more.
The first summit since Maxon’s acquisition of the software, it’s set to include a combination of hybrid, mixed reality and live broadcasts, featuring digital artists and industry leaders from around the globe. There will also be the annual live sculpt-off. To learn more about the software, see our pick of the best 3D modelling software and our Zbrush review. We also have a roundup of the best Zbrush tutorials.
The Maxon ZBrush Summit 2022 will run from Sunday November 13 until Wednesday, November 16. The opening day will see members of the ZBrush community will go head-to-head for prizes from sponsors such as Dell, Xencelabs, Gnomon School, Wacom, Gnomon Workshop and more in the annual ZBrush Sculpt Off Challenge (see the teaser above and last year’s contest below). The winner will be announced on Wednesday.
The event aims to showcase a variety of ZBrush artists around the world together with sculpting showcases, presentations, and announcements. Raf Grassetti, art director of God of War Ragnarök will discuss the evolution of traditional sculpting to digital, including crypto art/NFT creation and shed light on how other aspiring artists can master the craft. He’ll dissect his recent collaboration with XM Studios: The Four Horsemen to explain how he goes about sculpting, polishing and posing the complex characters.
Meanwhile, LA-based creature designer Dan Katcher, best known for his Emmy-winning dragons in HBO’s Game of Thrones will talk about how his experience designing the skeleton of the dragons inspired his work with NYU dental students and Tisch photography students on the evolution of digital dentistry. The summit will also hear from Damien Canderle, who did character modelling on Netflix’s “Love, Death & Robots,” the artists behind Lightyear and The Sea Beast and award-winning creative studio Framestore
You can find out more and watch all the presentations streaming live at www.zbrushlive.com (opens in new tab).
NGC 7000 (North America Nebula in the constellation Cygnus) – In the image are also objects LDN 935, B 352, CR 428, NGC 699, NGC 6989, LDN 933 and LDN 941. The blue star on the bottom is Deneb
North America Nebula… An object I always loved and I always feared. But still beautiful and amazing in its detail and charming appearance. I also see the symbolism behind it now when I’ve moved to US with family and kids. It was time to grab the bull by its horns and look at it straight in its eyes.
This image consist of 12 separate exposures between 2 and 2.5 minutes each at ISO 1600 with a Canon DSLR taken 10/26/2019. I’ve made an unprocessed blog post earlier about this nebula, but really never had the time to technically deep dive into post-processing and stacking. I thought since I’m about to write an article on the Observer in its coming issue about postprocessing and I’ve chosen Nebulosity, why not give it a try. I’m kinda allergic to try something more expensive than that, such as PixInsight. One day I’ll get my hands on it too.
So here we are… Behold The North America Nebula a.k.a. NGC 7000. Quite wide object (120 x 100 arc minutes) in one of the most interesting constellations of the northern hemisphere, Cygnus.
Image was taken through William Optics FluoroStar 110, with a Canon 50D DSLR, EQ6 Pro mount.
But all in all… I still don’t give up on this object… I’ll be back soon to collect more of its distant and faint magnitude 4 light!
Niklas Henricson
The fascination of star gazing had already started during the very first years of my childhood. I was looking up at the night sky with my grandfather every summer night, studying constellations, the phases of the moon cycle, counting satellite passages and by using his binoculars to discover globular clusters of stars. Equipped with star maps from his home-library I was gradually discovering more and more of this fascinating world we call universe.
Even though years went by, the interest and fascination of cosmos had never left me… I found myself occupied with many other things before astronomy finally became my main hobby in recent years.
I was born in Stockholm, Sweden 1979 and grew for the most part of my childhood years in Greece. Later I’ve studied physics at Lund’s university and was hoping to continue with astronomy. At my free time I was an active amateur astronomer in South Sweden, Lund. At some point I was also appointed as chief of observatory for the Tycho Brahe Astronomy Society in Lund.
Circumstances in life led me to move with my family to California. Today I’m working as a sofrware developer within the aviation industry and weather systems for airports. During my off-time, I spend most of my time with my wife Melissa and our daughters.
My main hobbies are astronomy, astrophotography, game development and I was also a member of several astronomy societies in south Sweden but time was never enough to continue being an active member.
This blog is dedicated to my family (Melissa, Vanita and Lena Grace), our friends and to all of you who share the same fascination towards the beauty of this science and all the mysteries yet to be revealed by our constant discoveries!