He truly understood the importance of complimentary colors, in his quote, as did you in this photo. I am not always a fan of the more modern style of houses, but the clean straight lines are softened by the undulating branches and soft yellow blooms of this tree. Nice one!
Nice shot and great example for quote. Also good example of wide-angle lens distortion with bending verticals: barreling.
This non-robot test should give us humans a margin for error, say at least one distorted letter. (This written assuming it gets through on 2nd attempt.)
I first submitted my post before Judy's, which I didn't see until after my successful attempt got through. Funny now seeing she talks about straight lines when, in picture, they are bent inward. NOT A CRITICISM, just INTERESTING.
In December of 2007, after many years on the west side of Los Angeles (and at least a third of those years spent stuck in traffic on Pico Boulevard) my family settled into a happy little house in South Pasadena. This daily blog covered over 4 year as I put down roots in my new home town.
LA: Other
My New Blog Launching 2013
Check out my multimedia column archive: Views from the Front Porch
Published at Patch.
Find Me Elsewhere...
Thank you Charlie's Coffee House for hosting my recent photo exhibit, South Pas: Observed. From October 2011 through January 2012 my pictures graced the walls of the best place in town to get a cup of coffee!
Read the nifty story on photo bloggers Petrea Burchard, Ben Wideman, Kat Likkel and little old me featured in the September, 2011 issue of Pasadena Magazine.
For over 4 years, I presented a picture a day from South Pasadena, California -- an incorporated city within the greater Los Angeles metropolitan area. All photos up to November, 2008 were taken with a Fujifilm Finepix E900 camera. I added a Fujifilm Finepix S2000HD megazoom in December 2008, a Nikon D3100 in 2010 and a Lumix DMC-DS8 in 2011. I shot with them all. In August 2010 I joined the iPhone camera craze and sometimes included pictures captured by my phone. I regularly cropped images and used basic editing software to adjust the brightness, intensify the contrast, and increase color saturation. Other than that, all images came straight from the camera with minimal alteration. (If I couldn't have done it in a darkroom, I wouldn't do it with a computer.)
The bigger picture:
Consider it a love letter to the place I call home.
You can click on any picture to see a larger version.
All photos and prose on this blog copyright Laurie Allee. Reproduction without written permission is prohibited. (Plus, it's really uncool.)
Run, don't walk to the nearest bookseller and pick up a copy of Margaret Finnegan's delightful debut novel, The Goddess Lounge -- undoubtedly the kookiest, most wonderful riff on Homer's Odyssey ever written. Margaret never ceases to inspire and make us laugh at her blog Finnegan Begin Again. Her book is magical, silly, smart and a wonderful love letter to the all the goddesses among us.
Our very own Altadena poet Linda Dove weaves words into thoughtful tapestries in her moving poetry collection In Defense of Objects and chapbook O Dear Deer.
Kevin McCollister of East of West LA blows our minds with haunting images of Los Angeles. But since we can't put his blog on our coffee table, we can buy his fantastic book. I believe Kevin's images truly capture the quixotic and often heartbreaking soul of LA. Don't take my word for it, see what The LA Times had to say.
8 comments:
He truly understood the importance of complimentary colors, in his quote, as did you in this photo. I am not always a fan of the more modern style of houses, but the clean straight lines are softened by the undulating branches and soft yellow blooms of this tree. Nice one!
Nice shot and great example for quote. Also good example of wide-angle lens distortion with bending verticals: barreling.
This non-robot test should give us humans a margin for error, say at least one distorted letter. (This written assuming it gets through on 2nd attempt.)
I first submitted my post before Judy's, which I didn't see until after my successful attempt got through. Funny now seeing she talks about straight lines when, in picture, they are bent inward. NOT A CRITICISM, just INTERESTING.
Very nice. Ordinary scene turned into art.
That Van Gogh, he's a corker
Thanks, guys!
Very nice zen post, LA.
Thanks, Green!
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