Archive for September, 2007

New Camera, yay!

Sep.24, 2007, under Uncategorized

I finally scrapped up enough pennies to buy me a new camera, yippee!
It is an evolutionary leap from my original baby, Francine, the trusty e300. The new baby in the house doesn’t have a name yet, but sure is she pretty! It an e510 which brings in some now tricks for my photos, the Image Stabilization that is built into the camera is amazing & it is much much faster to do many of the in-camera tasks. Lots of other interesting lil’ thingamagigs as well that I am still figuring out. I have some new photos from this cutie on flickr now.

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What is Arrrrt?

Sep.16, 2007, under Uncategorized

This question has been asked many time before, here’s a little light tent action!

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Best of 2005

Sep.04, 2007, under Photographic

Warehouse, by nate_marsh.

I put together a small set of my favorite photos from 2005, or the last 6 months of 2005. That’s when I got my baby, the e300!

Here is the set: http://www.flickr.com/photos/nate_marsh/sets/72157600048557212/

Love you baby!

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Infrastructure

Sep.04, 2007, under Personal Recollections & Musings, Photographic

P8312780, by nate_marsh.

I read a fantastic book earlier this year about something I had no idea I would enjoy so much – a complete page turner that I really could not be separated from for long. This book was called: A Field Guide to the Industrial Landscape. The central point of this book (in my mind) is that we everyday stumble through a complex landscape representing the pinnacle of human engineering, yet we rarely make an effort to understand even the basics of how it all fits together to make up the infrastructure that nearly all of us encounter.

This book doesn’t bash you over the head with superstructures and this complex web, instead it feeds you the different pieces and gives you the tools to better understand how the world seemingly hums along. The book is by no means exhaustive and the author goes to pains to point out that everything he discusses is immensely more complicated. The reason this book is so amazing is the authors ability to break complex systems into interesting pieces. The icing on the cake is that the author has included thousands of his beautiful photos of whatever he is talking about. Much of the greatest photos are of stuff that, post-9/11, would be nearly impossible to access, let along snap some shot. Seriously, this book is nearly perfect in what it provides – my old man even uses it in one of the classes he teaches!

In celebration – I made an infrastructure flickr set of some shots I enjoy, maybe you will too!

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