Nils and I went looking for fall foliage today, and at his suggestion we visited some temples toward the north-east of Kyoto. This picture looks down on the Enkouji Temple (圓光寺), which dates to 1667. The fall colors are only just starting, but it's a good start. It was a most excellent day, but I'm exhausted now.
I was planning on posting just two or three pictures, but after my first pass through them, I came up with five that I just had to show. But after preparing the first one, I was so tired that I had to stop. So, many more pictures in the days to come.
I've written up a primer on Digital Image Color Spaces. It talks about color spaces such as sRGB and AdobeRGB, what they mean to the digital photographer, and how to use them.
Judging by the images I see posted on the forums at Digital Photography Review, there are a lot of very good photographers who don't understand this computer-related subject — a subject that's become more relevant in this age of digital cameras and the Internet presentation of photographs.
My Tech-Related Photography Posts
- My Lightroom-to-iPad Workflow
- Lightroom Goodies (lots of plugins)
- Digital Image Color Spaces
- Online Exif (Image Data) Viewer
- Jeffrey's Autofocus Test Chart
- Photoshop Calendar-Template-Building Script
- How to Prepare Photos for an iPad
- A Qualitative Analysis of NEF Compression
- Tripod Stability Tests
more...
It's been quietly part of my photography tech page for a while as I gathered comments from others, but now it's ready for prime time. Other technical posts on photographic subjects are listed at left.
I've been asked for the last month when I'm going to post fall-foliage pictures of Kyoto. Well, for the last month, I've been wondering when the fall foliage season will start!
Some of the leaves are finally starting to turn. I took a short stroll today and snapped a few pictures. (They are all geoencoded, so you can use something like my image-data viewer to see a map of where they were taken.)
The picture above was taken from the middle of Nijo Street, facing east. Some of the trees have started to turn, but none are really brilliant, and the trees in the mountains have barely budged (and yes, they're mostly deciduous, as this picture of me up on the mountain last year shows).
A bit closer to home, the Kyoto Biwako canal as seen from the corner of Nioomon and Reisen, looking North:
That last picture is the playground where Anthony often plays, with the legs of the main gate of the Heian Shrine visible in the background.
This past summer, we all traveled to Ohio for my brother's wedding. I'm finally starting to get around to properly processing the 3,000 pictures from the trip, and have started with those taken at my folks' place.
It's really hard to pick ones to show, because almost all of them fulfill at least one of the litmus tests for a photo to appear on my blog: be a generally pleasing image, assist in telling a story, or show Anthony being cute.
I have an informal 10-pics-per-post limit, so what follows are the 10 I picked. At least I've got them all processed and up on my photo site, so I can link to the others.
These are all from July, 2006.
Here's a bonus picture (doesn't count against my 10-pics-per-post limit 🙂 from when he planted the tree, two days before his first birthday:
They say that the quality of the photographer is much more important than the quality of the camera, and while I'm sure that's true, I felt very limited by the quality of the camera I had with me at Fumie's friend's wedding on Saturday. (Fumie's friend, Machiko or Ma-chan for short, is featured in my previous post.)
Because the wedding was for Fumie's friend, and she'd have various tasks throughout the day, I was on Anthony duty, so I left my semi-pro SLR at home. Still, I couldn't resist bringing something, so I pocketed a small Canon point-n-shoot. It can take some nice photos if there's enough light, but there's nothing about a wedding or reception that has enough light, so all the pictures came out horrible. The few I'm showing in this post have undergone heavy post processing, including treatment with Noise Ninja.
The wedding was between Fumie's friend Machiko and her fianceé Masaya, and was held at the Hotel Okura in Kobe, Japan. It consisted of a 10-minute ceremony in the hotel chapel (bride given away by her father, exchange of rings, signing some documents) followed by a reception elsewhere in the hotel.
Despite some initial apprehension, Anthony performed his ring-boy duties perfectly. Perhaps he remembered from having done in four months ago at his uncle's wedding.
The budding photographer in me can't help but to criticize the hotel on the lighting in their chapel. They do a brisk business in weddings (there were 11 other weddings on Saturday) so they should know that a mix of fluorescent and incandescent lighting makes for very difficult color balance.
After the wedding was the reception, which is not a place you want to bring a four-year-old because it's deathly boring for them. Boring means fussy. But Fumie planned well and brought the toys that would keep Anthony occupied, and so he was wonderful the whole day.

High-school friends of the bride: Fumie, Uma-chan, and Kei-chan
Kei-chan was with Fumie on the night Fumie and I met. She got married herself earlier this year.
They had a very nice little slide show showing the couple as kids, growing up, and then as a dating pair. It included the following picture of the bride and the three ladies shown in the picture above, at age 16.

Ma-chan (bride), Uma-chan, Kei-chan, Fumie
16 years old
It was a very long day for Anthony, but even late, he was filled with energy. This is how he killed some time after the reception, as Fumie chats with the mother of the bride, and Uma-chan, Kei-chan, and Kei-chan's husband look on...

A few more pictures of the happy couple..
|
|
|
|
That last picture (lower-right) is of an event common at Japanese wedding receptions: the couple light a candle on each table. The house lights were dim and the couple was awash in a brilliant spotlight as they moved from table to table. (The bright light accounts for that picture having the best quality of any of them.) It was dramatic; Anthony joined everyone in clapping.
The high-school friends ended up being the last ones remaining after everyone else had gone home, so we got a bonus group shot. I handed my tiny Canon point-n-shoot camera to the pro cameraman (who had at least $13,000 worth of Canon professional equipment around his own neck) and he took this shot for me:
The groom was still quite nervous when that picture was taken, but eventually relaxed a bit. We all went up to a rooftop garden and got a wonderful view of the port of Kobe. It was all quite nice.
One other comment about that last picture: I'm not wearing shoes. We'd driven down from Kyoto with our nice clothes in the trunk, but it turns out that I'd forgotten my shoes. Oops. There's no way I'd ever find my size (Japanese size 32, for the record), so I had to wing it. There was a department store nearby, so I ran over and bought a pair of black household slippers. That's what you see there.
At least it's not as bad as when I went to India for my best friend's wedding. I'd talked to his father before going to ask about what to wear, and he told me quite strongly that it would be brutally hot, and that I should wear shorts. So I did. And I ended up being horribly underdressed. I should have asked his mom, not his dad.























