You are viewing [info]tessjc's journal

VW Rabbit

  • Feb. 2nd, 2012 at 1:48 PM

photo

VW Rabbit

Seattle, Washington - Das Original!

Tags

vw

rabbit

golf

mk1

a1/typ17

hatchback

german

white

car

seattle

washington

usa

das

original
Flickr.com

Mirror mirror, tell the truth!

  • Feb. 1st, 2012 at 5:45 PM

photo

Mirror mirror, tell the truth!

Tags

pond

mallard

rock

reflection

water
Flickr.com

Morning in Estonia

  • Feb. 1st, 2012 at 5:45 PM

photo

Morning in Estonia

Portfolio | Vimeo | Twitter | Facebook | 500px | RedBubble | Website | Getty | Tumblr | Google+

View on large black please!

On a recent Baltic trip, myself and Greg went to Helsinki and Tallinn. Whilst in Tallinn, we had gotten up for a sunrise shoot and got the most wonderful colours in the sky. It was far better than our previous early morning shoot in Helsinki. The sky in this shot actually reminds me of one of my dawn shots of Battersea in London.

Randomly, my last three photos have all been of UNESCO world heritage sites. This image looks far, far better in the lightbox, so give that a go.

There is a quick behind the scenes video for this photoshoot on Vimeo:
vimeo.com/32603244

No images in comments please.

Details
Canon EOS 5D Mark II / ISO 100 / f/11 / 50mm / HDR

Tags

5d markii

high dynamic range

thefella photography

conor macneill

slow shutter

long exposure

northern europe

republic of estonia

eesti vabariik

unesco world heritage site

old town

european capital of culture

town hall

canon

eos

5d

markii

500d

photograph

photo

slr

dslr

digital

processing

post-processing

photomatix

hdr

high

dynamic

range

photoshop

thefella

europe

baltic

nordic

estonia

eesti

tallinn

capital

city

unesco

sunrise

dawn

morning

estonian

houses

cityscape

buildings

clouds

sky

town

hall

spire

Facebook, Tallinn, Vimeo, Helsinki, UNESCO world heritage sites

Flickr.com


photo

Grey Currawong Foraging on Ground - Strepera versicolor

Photo taken near Flinders Chase National Park, Kangaroo Island, Australia.

Tags

Strepera versicolor

currawong

Grey Currawong

Flinders Chase National Park, Grey Currawong, Kangaroo Island

Flickr.com


[Error: Irreparable invalid markup ('<img [...] http://.livejournal.com/">') in entry. Owner must fix manually. Raw contents below.]

<p><img src="http://www.latimes.com/media/photo/2012-01/67730987.jpg" alt="Novak <a href="http://.livejournal.com/" />Djokovic</a>, Tiger Woods" border="0" width="580" height="338" /></p><p><a href="http://wendelinafyx.livejournal.com/" />Novak Djokovic</a>, left, and Tiger Woods helped provide plenty of drama for sports fans on a Sunday without meaningful football. (Mark Kolbe / Getty Images; Shijilesh Ulleri / Associated Press)</p><p>Sunday was supposed to be the day the sports potatoes got off their couches.</p><p>This is the NFL's contribution to society. No games &#8212; and no, the Pro Bowl is not a game. It is an exhibition. The kids down the block playing flag football hit harder.</p><p>Bill Dwyre</p><p><img src="http://www.latimes.com/media/thumbnails/columnist/2008-12/23456599-19093659.jpg" alt="Bill Dwyre" width="56" height="72" /></p><p>Bio | E-mail | Recent columns</p><p>Also</p><p><img src="http://www.latimes.com/media/thumbnails/story/2012-01/67719977-29200051.jpg" alt="Novak Djokovic's win over Rafael Nadal is as good as tennis gets" width="187" height="105" /> Novak Djokovic's win over Rafael Nadal is as good as tennis gets</p><p><img src="http://www.latimes.com/media/thumbnails/story/2012-01/67717944-29165028.jpg" alt="Brandt Snedeker is a surprise winner at Farmers Open" width="187" height="105" /> Brandt Snedeker is a surprise winner at Farmers Open</p><p><img src="http://www.latimes.com/media/thumbnails/story/2012-01/67712389-29053323.jpg" alt="Tiger Woods can't close strong at Abu Dhabi Championship" width="187" height="105" /> Tiger Woods can't close strong at Abu Dhabi Championship</p><p><img src="http://www.latimes.com/media/thumbnails/story/2012-01/67712994-29071543.jpg" alt="Novak Djokovic beats Rafael Nadal for Australian Open title" width="187" height="105" /> Novak Djokovic beats Rafael Nadal for Australian Open title</p><p><img src="http://www.latimes.com/media/thumbnails/story/2012-01/67720638-29210921.jpg" alt="Brandon Marshall's big game leads AFC to 59-41 win in Pro Bowl" width="187" height="105" /> Brandon Marshall's big game leads AFC to 59-41 win in Pro Bowl</p><p>It is a day to be devoid of five guys, sitting at a table in a TV studio, making six-figure salaries to state the obvious for an audience that will nod in deep appreciation at being told that the Patriots need to establish their running game.</p><p>On this annual blessed day in January, there weren't even any concussions.</p><p>It was Tweener Sunday, the weekend day between the semifinal mayhem and the final mayhem, that football game with the Roman Numerals. Various reasons have been given for this pause in the action, including allowing teams more time to heal up from a season of mayhem.</p><p>The real reason is that the NFL seeks another week for the media to get on its hands and knees and worship. One more five-column picture, one more TV interview with the extra-point-holder, and those 30-second commercials during the Roman Numeral Game will cost $10 million next year, up from $9.5 million.</p><p>So, just because the NFL allows a Tweener Sunday doesn't mean we are supposed to lose focus, as Jimmy or Howie or Coach Cowher might say.</p><p>But this time, two noncontact sports &#8212; tennis and golf &#8212; messed that up.</p><p>First, there was this tennis tournament on the underside of the world, the Australian Open. If you were really into it you could have stayed up all night and watched the men's final. If not, there it was on a Sunday morning replay, Rafael Nadal and Novak Djokovic, going at it in one of the more riveting tennis matches in recent memory.</p><p>They played seven minutes short of six hours. Djokovic won in five spellbinding sets. They served for the entire time at speeds reaching 130 mph. Most of us, even in our youth and even with decent athletic skills, wouldn't be able to twitch before those were past us.</p><p>They say that pro basketball players are the best-conditioned athletes. They say that major league baseball players have the best eyes and reflexes. You watch Nadal and Djokovic and you wonder about that.</p><p>Men's tennis now has incredible three-headed star power &#8212; Djokovic, Nadal and Roger Federer. It also has a No. 4, Andy Murray, trying mightily to make it a Big Four and always putting up a great fight before falling short. The entertainment value is huge, and Southern California gets the next dose. The next big event on the tennis calendar, featuring all four of the Big-Three-Plus-One, will be at Indian Wells in mid-March.</p><p>If that didn't keep you on the couch, the replay of the golf from Abu Dhabi did. Tiger Woods was contending, Rory McIlroy was looking as sharp as he did when he ran away with last year's U.S. Open, and a delightful new player was emerging. Robert Rock, with a playing style that mirrored his name, beat them both and won a tournament that had one of the better fields ever in a non-major.</p><p>The bearded Rock, looking like a cross between Luke Wilson and Brad Pitt, was selling tees and golf gloves in a pro shop in England nine years ago. He was also hero-worshiping Woods, whom he beat Sunday and said afterward, "Just playing with Tiger is a special honor in itself."</p><p>Rock, 34, was asked in his news conference what he thought he would be most remembered for, before this win. He smiled, thought about it, and said, "Not much."</p><p>Handsome, self-effacing and able to putt. Meet golf's newest matinee idol.</p><p>And then there was Brandt Snedeker, another budding star and kind of a Huck Finn character. He won the day at the San Diego Zoo, also known as the Farmers Insurance Open.</p><p>For a while, this had everything Tweener Sunday is supposed to: a boring golf tournament with somebody holding a big lead going into the final round. That somebody was Kyle Stanley, a familiar name to dozens who had sports reporters writing their leads and planning dinner and sports editors making room on Page 6 when he still had six holes left. Going into No. 18, Stanley led by three shots and Snedeker, who was second and had finished, was already in the media tent, talking to reporters about how satisfying second place could be.</p><p>Then Stanley hit a decent third shot onto the sloping, par-five 18th green and the ball spun back and rolled, agonizingly, down the slope and into the water. His next shot, his fifth, went too high onto the green to assure himself of the needed two putts to win. And when he, indeed, three-putted &#8212; for an eight! &#8212; they went and found Snedeker for a playoff, which he won on the second extra hole.</p><p>It was a stunning reversal of fortune. Stanley hadn't even choked. He just got horribly unlucky. You could almost imagine fans who had walked in the gallery and watched Stanley dominate the entire tournament, turning to each other and doing their best Jim Mora imitation.</p><p>"Playoff? Playoff!!"</p><p>After their match in Australia, an exhausted Djokovic praised an exhausted Nadal and Nadal returned the favor. In Abu Dhabi, Rock talked about being in awe of Woods, and Woods praised Rock's unflappable play. At Torrey Pines, Snedeker repeatedly voiced empathy for Stanley's misfortune, and Stanley wept in the media room.</p><p>It was great theater on Tweener Day &#8212; competition, sportsmanship, drama. The Roman Numeral Game will have to go some to match it.</p><p>It might take five concussions.</p><p>bill.dwyre@latimes.com</p><p>Novak Djokovic, Novak Djokovic, Djokovic, Tiger Woods, Tiger Woods, Rafael Nadal, Rafael Nadal, Nadal, NFL, Brandt Snedeker, Brandt Snedeker, Kyle Stanley, Robert Rock, Abu Dhabi, Abu Dhabi, Tweener</p><p><a href="http://www.latimes.com/sports/la-sp-dwyre-20120131,0,4141133.column?track=rss" />Latimes.com</a></p>

Winter Day

  • Jan. 30th, 2012 at 5:45 AM

photo

Winter Day

Tags

lake

frozen

water

sky

sun

light

snow

winter

sweden

cold

color

colour

clouds

reflection

ice

silhouette

backlight

trees

landscape
Flickr.com


Brianna Butler’s assessment of Nazareth’s opening two quarters was simple and to the point.

“In the first half they were staying with us because we weren’t playing any defense,” the Syracuse-bound guard said. “We were just letting them go right by us. We had to pick up our defense.”

The Lady Kingsmen’s initial zone was lifeless, letting a good shooting Point Pleasant Boro (N.J.) team and star Kelly Hughes move the ball for open looks. Nazareth, which trailed by two twice in the second quarter, closed the first half on an 8-0 run capped by a beautiful around-the-back layup from Sadie Edwards and never looked back.

Denis Gostev

Nazareth's Darius Faulk scored eight of her 12 points in the decisive third quarter.

The man-to-man pressure continued after the break and the Lady Kingsmen cruised to a 73-61 victory against the Panthers at the Kennedy Challenge on Saturday night.

“That was actually the plan from the beginning,” Nazareth co-coach Laruen Best said of applying pressure. “They just didn’t carry it through. I think they think that [coach] Ron [Kelley] and I don’t know what we are talking about sometimes.”

Butler excelled in every facet in the first half. With Nazareth, ranked No. 7 in the country by HoopGurlz and No. 16 by USA Today, struggling for offense, she attacked and scored 16 of her 20 points before the break. Yazmine Belk also had 20 points and Bianca Cuevas tallied 12. It was West Virginia-bound point guard Darius Faulk that was the second-half catalyst as she had eight of her 12 points during a game-changing run in the third quarter.

“I just wanted to get the momentum going by getting steals and trying to get people going dishing the ball, but then I had to start scoring myself,” Faulk said. “People just started following.”

Nazareth (7-1) ripped off a 17-3 spurt that trickled into the fourth to help push a 35-29 halftime lead to 57-40 early in the final quarter. Faulk had four straight points on steals, fed Belk for an easy two and streaked down court and scored off a pass from Butler. Point Boro (10-6) connected on four consecutive 3-pointers, including two from Lindsey Haven, to get as close as 65-54 with 2:37 remaining the fourth.

“When there is a need, whether it’s defensively or offensively Darius comes through,” Best said.

Panthers sharpshooter Kelly Hughes, a junior, never truly found her touch consistently, but finished with a game-high 24 points. She suffered a bloody nose late in the second quarter and Nazareth went on a 6-0 run in her absence. Jessica Macchi added 13 points.

The win is Nazareth’s third straight since falling in lopsided fashion to nationally ranked Riverdale-Baptist (Md.). Best said the team was still getting the sadness out of their system after the death of coach Apache Paschall on Jan. 3. The Lady Kingsmen are back at Kennedy on Sunday to face DePaul Catholic (N.J.) at 4 p.m. before a big week of league games. They will try to build off a strong second half.

“We just wanted to get them down so they couldn’t come back,” Faulk said. “And just keep it up.”

jstaszewski@nypost.com

Darius Faulk, Point Pleasant Boro, Lady Kingsmen, Lady Kingsmen, Kelly Hughes, Kelly Hughes, The Lady Kingsmen, Nazareth, Nazareth, Point Boro, Faulk

Nypost.com

Mars in Mind

  • Jan. 27th, 2012 at 5:39 PM

photo

Mars in Mind

Tags

Art Institute

Art Institute Chicago

Art Institute of Chicago

Chicago

Chicago Art Institute

Chicagoland

Cook County

Illinois

Loop

Museum

Turning Point of Thirst

Victor Brauner

painting
Flickr.com

The shadow of the past

  • Jan. 26th, 2012 at 9:36 PM

[Error: Irreparable invalid markup ('<img [...] http://.livejournal.com/">') in entry. Owner must fix manually. Raw contents below.]

<p><img src="http://farm8.static<a href="http://.livejournal.com/" /><a href="http://wodobaas.blog.com/" />flickr</a></a>.com/7029/6763541617_2d55f78ab6_z.jpg" alt="photo" width="640" height="637" onload="F.imageChecker.load(this);" onerror="F.imageChecker.error(this);"></p><p>The shadow of the past</p><p>Day 37/365</p><p>This is for this week's theme of &quot;Shadows&quot; in our flickr Project 52 group.<br />I have one more idea for this theme and think I'll try that in the next few days.</p><p>Frodo and I took a long walk on the trail today because it was in the 60s around 4 PM. I found quite a few cool places to shoot in. Now, I just have to stop feeling shy and go do it!(before it snows again and covers the whole place with snow) :)</p><p>Tags</p><p>project 365</p><p>self portrait</p><p>denver</p><p>colorado</p><p>indian</p><p>photography</p><p>photo</p><p>art</p><p>fine art</p><p>girl</p><p>woman</p><p>shadow</p><p>the shadow of the past</p><p>red scarf</p><p>shadow, flickr</p><p><a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/studiojan/6763541617/" />Flickr.com</a></p>

the lodge

  • Jan. 25th, 2012 at 5:36 AM

photo

the lodge

Tags

crater lake

lake

lodge

national park

snow

water
Flickr.com