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While all of my photographs are copyrighted, they are available for non-exclusive licensing and I also sell large size prints. Contact me via email at greg.jones.design@icloud.com for pricing info.

Welcome

to my personal blog. Here I post examples of my photography and writing. I specialize in making unique and highly detailed photographs. Notice I said making and not taking. Yes I take photos but a lot of time and work is involved in pushing and punishing the pixels in my images to achieve the look I like.

Please feel free make comments about any of my words or photos. I enjoy constructive critiques, learning about locations to shoot or photography techniques. Click on the "Share Article" link to share any of my photos via Flickr, Facebook, Instagram, etc.

Want to use one of my posts in your own blog? No problem, but please make sure it links back to the original post here and do the right thing and give me credit. Don't copy my words, crop the images, remove the watermarks or claim my work as your own. This has happened more times than I can count so I've had to report copyright violations to ISP's and regrettably the violators blog is usually taken down.

Can't we all just get along?

Entries in Travel (174)

Wednesday
Oct142020

Union Station - Ornate Stairway

This is one of the beautiful stairways leading into Chicago's Union Station's great hall. Amazing!

How I took this shot:

This handheld vertorama was stitched from 4 HDR sequences each containing 3 shots ( -2ev, 0ev, +1ev). I would have used my tripod but one of the security guards was already watching me, I didn't want to give her a pretense to kick me out. It's happened to me more than a few times before.

Wednesday
Oct142020

Union Station - Group Critique Busted!

When I entered the great hall in Chicago's Union Station, I saw about 10 art students sketching the interior. I walked around for 15 or 20 minutes taking photos. When I was leaving, I noticed they had put their sketch pads on the floor and had gathered in a circle. I assume this was a group critique. I thought I could sneak up on them, raise my camera with fisheye lens above my head and get a quick shot. You can see I got busted.

Wednesday
Oct142020

Chicago - My Kind of (windy) Town

Kathy and I concluded our passage on Amtrak's Empire Builder train in Chicago. After emerging from the beautiful Union Station (once our phones had acquired enough satellites to provide GPS navigation) we walked to our nearby hotel on Franklin street. We were only going to be in town for a single day, so after getting something to eat, we walked around for a bit, taking some photos of the dramatic architecture this city has to offer. Kathy wanted to visit the Chicago Institute of Art but we found it was closed during our visit, so the next morning we walked to Millennium Park and took some photos there. Apparently the park only recently opened to the public but we found some parts open, while others remained closed. In the case of Cloud's Gate also irreverently referred to as "The Bean", visitors were able to view it only from a distance with barricades having been put up to prevent crowds from gathering beneath it. This didn't bother me too much. I was able to obtain some photos of it without a ton of people in the shot. 

The view of Chicago's skyline from Cloud's Gate is truly spectacular. The day was cold and windy but the sky was mostly clear. Any clouds that appeared were quickly carried on the wind to destinations unknown.

A word about Chicago: I know all major cities have issues with homelessness, blight, trash, noise, crime, etc. but my initial impressions on this visit to what was admittedly a very small area in downtown Chicago were these: The streets, sidewalks, buildings, and bridges were for the most part clean. By comparison, the streets and sidewalks in downtown Los Angeles in my experience are filthy and no government agency seems to be charged with more than an occasional street sweeping. After a street sweeping, the ground is still black with dirt, gum, and who knows what else. The people we met were polite and friendly. There seems to be an emphasis on culture and preserving the city's history and finally the city's architecture is beautiful.

I'd love to return in the near future for an extended visit. There is so much I want to see.

While taking photos in the city, I made sure to create several panoramas but the Affinity Photo software which I am using on my iPad Pro does not seem to be able to successfully stitch them. I may have to just post individual HDR merges and stitch the panoramas when I return home. 

We are currently back on an Amtrak train crossing West Virginia. Looking forward to being in Washington DC tonight.

Monday
Oct122020

1948 Chevrolet Fleetline and Point Fermin Lighthouse

About 6 or 7 years ago during my vacation from work, I attended a car show at the seaside town of San Pedro, California. The Legends car club was hosting their yearly big event at Point Fermin park. Roll in was scheduled for 7am but we arrived around 5am and found about 50+ cars waiting in the dark to be admitted. The organizers recognized my wife from her attending other events and they kindly granted us both early admission. We walked around the park and found the host club member's cars parked in some prime spots. One of those was this pristine 1948 Chevrolet Fleetline located right in front of the historic Point Fermin Light house. With the moon rapidly setting and the blue hour fading more and more by the minute, Kathy and I didn't waste time. We setup our tripods, cameras, remote shutter releases and started shooting. Later that morning there were thousands of people walking around the park and taking photos the way we like to take them became impossible. That was ok because by that time we were packing up and making ready to leave with several hundred photos each saved on our memory cards.

Monday
Oct122020

Mission Inn Grand Courtyard Overview

Here's another old vacation image from one of my visits to the historic Mission Inn Hotel in Riverside, California. This hotel is very large and consists of one main multi-story building. The architecture is California mission style as established by the Franciscan Padres from Spain who founded 21 California missions in the mid to late 1700's with a goal of "pacifying" and bringing religion to the native Indians. Instead, their European diseases decimated the tribes who had no immunity.

 

Monday
Oct122020

Sunrise at the Mission Inn

I had just left my room at the historic Mission Inn and Spa in Riverside, California when I saw the sunrise looked like it was going to be spectacular. Althought it was still quite dark, the horizon was turning more orange by the minute. I went back to my room, grabbed my camera, tripod, expodisc white balancer, and off camera shutter release. I decided to shoot an 4 image wide x 3 image high HDR panorama. Each photo consisted of 10 exposures between -5ev and +5ev for a total of 120 individual exposures. The final panorama was more than 20,000 pixels wide and the color corrected file tipped the scales at 1.4GB in size. After taking this shot, I quietly walked around the property taking more photos until one of the security guards stopped me, asking if I was a registered guest. I produced my room key and gave him my name. He radioed the front desk. Once they confirmed my identity, I was allowed to continue taking photos so long as I didn't disturb any of the other guests.
Monday
Oct122020

Chihuly Glass House Sunburst

It's been raining a lot along the route of the Empire Builder train making photos out the windows difficult. The scenery is still beautiful however, especially with the foliage changing colors. We have seen green hillsides with streaks of fiery red or bright yellow leaves extending for miles.
Anyway, since I can't take more photos from the train windows, I have decided to process and post some images from past vacations. This one is from the Chihuly Gardens and Glass museum in Seattle Washington. There is a rule of thumb in photography which states, don't shoot right into the sun. HDR allows me to break lots of rules including this one.
Sunday
Oct112020

Old Iron Horse at Havre Montana

I was sitting in the observation car of the Empire Builder train, busily putting away by camera gear and iPad when one of the tiny screws holding my glasses together decided to come loose and skid across the table. I am widely acknowledged by my family as having very little hand eye coordination but I somehow was able to lunge for the tiny fastener, catching in my hand as it fell off the edge of the table preventing it from disappearing forever. As I was using a tiny screwdriver to reassemble my glasses, the conductor announced that we were going to stop for 15 minutes at Harve, Montana. I hadn't stepped off the train since leaving Portland so I decided to stretch my legs and enjoy the fresh air. The fresh air was cold. The temperature was 47F which is about 50F colder than California. When I alighted from the train the first thing I saw was this amazing old locomotive. I took a couple of photos with my cell phone but being predictably unsatisfied with them, I broke out my Sony a6000 and shot a lot of photos from different perspectives, including 18 photos that make up this HDR panorama. Unfortunately, I don't have any iPad software that can correct the wide angle bowed distortion which appeared when I stitched the six HDR brackets, each consisting of 3 shots spaced every 2ev. I think I also "over cooked" this image a bit. I may replace it later with a version that doesn't make my eyes bleed.
Sunday
Oct112020

Endless Sky - Shelby Montana

 

This image is typical of the type of vistas passing by the windows since the Empire Builder train entered the state of Montana. What beautiful scenery! I do have to deal with the window reflection which can be present even with the use of a polarizing filter but I really don't care. Being on the train has been a great experience for me so far. I'm really enjoying myself.

Sunday
Oct112020

Empire Builder Observation Car Panorama

Now on Amtrak's Empire Builder train traveling across the State of Montana. There has been some amazing scenery to see today. I woke up early as usual, 5:50 am, grabbed my camera bag and walked through several train cars to what has quickly become my favorite place to hang out, the observation car. I ordered breakfast, and settled in to watch the sunrise. Last night my wife insisted she would sleep on the top bunk in our Roomette. However, she found the mattress and tight confines (The curved ceiling is just 6" above your head at one point) uncomfortable and she was unable to sleep. We agreed to switch places which was an adventure given the tight confines of the space we occupied.

This photo was taken using my Sony a99 camera and my now 35 year old Minolta 16mm fisheye lens. I took 6 portrait orientation shots and then imported them to my iPad Pro. I am using a new (to me) photo editor called Affinity Photo. It brings new capability to the iPad including the first good HDR tone mapping software I've found and the ability to stitch panoramas. This photo is my first try using this feature. Since there are misalignments and it duplicated items in the final stitched image, I'll give it a C grade.