The haze
has us
in a slow, pink
and grayconfusion; everything
we know---
the horizon,
for example,and the distant
ridge of land---
has vanished,
the boatglides without a sound
over a sea of curled
and luminous glass,
there are cloudsin the sky wherever
that is, and clouds
in the water,
and maybewe have entered heaven
already, the happy boat
sliding
like a beedown the throat of a huge
damp flower.
Some birds,
like streamers of white silk,approach us crying.
Ah, yes,
how easy,
how familiarit seems now,
that long,
lovely thrusting up and down
of wings.---At Sea by Mary Oliver
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If that's your own photo, I must tell you it's your first great one. It's all about light, and there couldn't be a better illustration than your "where we no longer are" photo.
Posted by: sfmike | Tuesday, July 28, 2009 at 01:49 AM
Thanks, Mike. Means a lot coming from you. Of course, like all my pictures, good and not so good, this is an accident. I need to take a class, I think.
Posted by: Lance | Wednesday, July 29, 2009 at 09:58 AM
I dunno about the class, unless you want a bunch of feedback from fellow students and a lot of rules (half of which should be broken, anyway). You've got a good eye, which is the hardest part. Now what you need to do is practice, a lot, until you get to the point where the good stuff outnumbers the crap by at least 60-40. Play with the camera - see what it does, and doesn't do, and when you don't like a picture, try to figure out what didn't work, and when you do like a picture, try to figure out what did.
Then practice some more. ;)
Posted by: Rana | Monday, August 03, 2009 at 01:26 AM
I will add, that classes can be a bit fun, if the group is good and the instructor helpful. But, really - there's about 10% technical stuff, 10% native talent (which you have, based on the pictures you have chosen - even if they're not typical yet, your choice of them shows that you know what's good), and the rest is playing and goofing up until it makes sense without requiring conscious deliberation.
Posted by: Rana | Monday, August 03, 2009 at 01:28 AM
It is such a great photo, Lance. And it fits perfectly with Mary Oliver's At Sea.
Posted by: Kathleen Maher | Tuesday, August 04, 2009 at 09:55 PM