Archive for the 'Fall Colors' Category

Foliage, mostly from around Kyoto

Breakdown: When Good Intentions Don’t Scale

This is a long post. The executive summary is:

The verb "to scale" in computer science refers to a solution's ability to handle dramatically increasing demands. Filtering spam by personally inspecting each message, for example, works fine if you get only a few each day, but reaches its limits when you get hundreds a day, and becomes totally unworkable if you got thousands. Personal inspection just doesn't scale to those kinds of numbers, which is why in real life we need a totally different approach, such as automatic filtering as a first line of defense.

When I first started writing [...]


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Cherry Blossoms Amid the Fall Foliage

My fall-foliage photos always seem out of season compared with the rest of the world, Kyoto not getting its color until mid November after much of the Northern Hemisphere's autumn has passed. In line with that, this post features an out-of-season element in an out-of-season photo: cherry blossoms in late November.

Five minutes away from my place, buried back in the mountains of eastern Kyoto, is the small Himukai Shrine, featured in "Thatched Roofs and Colored Canopies" and "Changing Seasons, Changing Lenses" earlier this month. Among the spectacular colors I didn't even notice the lone blooming cherry tree off to [...]


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Stone Carvings: Curves, Crowns, an Ouchie, and More…

Among the seemingly infinite variety of objects in the gardens behind the Nishimura Stone Lanterns stone-carving workshop in the mountains of north-east Kyoto, Japan, I was particularly taken with the curved pieces. And of these, there was quite a variety, including water basins, pedestal tops, lantern-top adornments, and sloping roofs like the one in the photo above.

The roof of this piece looks thin and delicate, but the original block of stone it was made from must have necessarily been thick and substantial, only to surrender most of its mass to the carver's chisel. The bulk of that original block [...]


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Thatched Roofs and Colored Canopies at the Himukai Shrine, Kyoto Japan

In my previous post, "Changing Lenses", I showed a picture of a friend in front of a serious splash of fall colors. The leaves were so low in the view because we were at the top of a set of stairs. From the bottom of the stairs, looking up, the view was the impressive canopy seen above.

The view was pretty impressive from most everywhere...

In the background of the center of the shot above, you can just barely make out bits of the namesake for my "Gate of Disrepair" post.

The shrine area itself is fairly small, but picturesque...

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Changing Seasons, Changing Lenses

From our visit last month that yielded the "Gate of Disrepair" post.

Continued here...


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