Showing posts with label Stone. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Stone. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 15, 2011

Cataract Falls, Take 2


Yesterday's post about my shoot at Cataract Falls concentrated almost entirely on the recreation area's main attraction: the waterfalls. The images of the young tree trunks in that post, however, should have suggested there is more to be found there than just water and falls. But hey, shouldn't any photo outing entail looking for more than just the obvious -- especially if you have the time to explore? I think so.

Today's post will concentrate mostly on the rock and stone formations along the banks of Mill Creek in Owen County, Ind., where the falls are located. I'll include a few other images not used in the previous post as well. Leading off -- at the top -- is a photo treated in high-dynamic range (HDR) software, a melding of three images into one to extract as much detail as possible in the final digital picture.

To see a full gallery of images from the Feb. 12, 2001, shoot at Cataract Falls, follow this link.





Above and below: Single-image frames of the same area; the bottom reflects a slight zoom in. The frame above is a single-frame image of the HDR-treated photo that leads off today's post at the top.


Above and below: Prints left in the snow by a four-legged visitor along the bank of Mill Creek near Upper Falls. Both images are HDR treatments; the one below transformed a drab looking boulder that would have been incidental in a single-frame shot into a striking, colorful primary subject of this HDR conversion.


Above: An exercise in using HDR treatment for a back-lighted subject, in this case ... some trees. The sun was right behind the thick-trunked tree in the foreground.

Above and two below: A sycamore tree along the Mill Creek bank that caught my eye because the sun was behind me, enriching the blue in the background sky.



Above: The inside of the Smith truss covered bridge -- like most old structures with public access -- is riddled with graffiti. This entry -- which someone obviously took some time to compose -- was one that caught my eye.


Above: This view of Mill Creek was taken from one of the three window-like openings in the covered bridge over Upper Falls.


Above and below: Almost the same scene; the one below was processed in HDR software, the one above as a single frame.


 

Above and below: Making the best out of shots shooting into the sun. 

Above: The boulder you see in the creek on the right is the same one in the image several shots up, taken from the bridge and with the sun in a more favorable position -- behind me. 

Above and below: HDR views of Mill Creek, above a long-range vista of a piece of tree debris; below, a tight shot.

   
Above: This sphere, strung to a rope of some sort, loomed over the parking lot at the Upper Falls. I can only guess that it might be some sort of air travel guide.

Saturday, May 1, 2010

Dylan-inspired: The Brains Behind Pa

For a few days, I've been feeling remiss about not adding a post -- before I'd added a post on the Tad Robinson CD release party show from last Friday night -- about The Brains Behind Pa, an Indianapolis band I'd seen and photographed a week before Tad's show.

The show, on April 16, was at the Wheeler Community Arts Center in Fountain Square, where on April 3 I'd seen national country-blues performer Rory Block. The Block concert was an intimate show; the Wheeler is a relatively new (and apparently little known) venue, and it's a couple blocks away from the heart of Fountain Square, so I guess that's why attendance was sparse. But it's an interesting venue for a show of this sort.

"Intimate" also describes the atmosphere for the April 16 show by The Brains Behind Pa, a three- and sometimes five-person side project of Indianapolis musicians Bill Price and Gordon Bonham since 2000. Their songs and sound are inspired by the works of renowned folk-rock legend Bob Dylan. In fact, the band's name is lifted from a line in the Dylan composition "Maggie's Farm" ("Well, when she talks to all the servants about man, and God, and law, everybody says she's the brains behind pa").

"Gordon and I both have a love of Dylan's music and much that inspired him," Price explains at his website, "so we started a side project to kind of explore that music." The results include the CDs "Old Hat" and "Better for the Deal." Also performing with the group are bassist Jeff Stone, accordian/mandolin/keyboard player Garry Bole and drummer Jeff Chapin. On the night of the April 16 show, Chapin couldn't make it, so Jamey Reid sat in for him.

These images are from that show.


Gordon Bonham


Jeff Stone


Bill Price


Gordon Bonham


The full band, The Brains Behind Pa


Bill Price


Jamey Reid

Garry Bole

The shooless foot behind, er, of Garry Bole

For a look at more images from the show, follow this link:

The Brains Behind Pa Photo Gallery