Chinelo Unmasked

Chinelo Unmasked

This was one of the chinelos, a type of dancer from the Mexican City neighborhoods of Milpa Alta and Xochimilco. They usually appear around carnival time when they serve to mock old men and disguise the wearers.

Wikipedia says:

This dance developed as a mockery of the Europeans with their fine clothing, beards, fair skin and mannerisms. The modern Chinelos costume began to take shape from between the mid 19th century to the early 20th. The elaborate dress, gloved hands, uptilted beard and arrogant stance also makes fun of the salon dancing of the upper classes during the period of the French intervention as well as Porfirio Díaz’s attempts to “Europeanize” Mexico at the end of the 19th century…

The dance, literally called a “brincon” or “jump” is a set of repetitive steps. The choreography is very simple. With feet apart and knees slightly bent, the dancers take two shuffling steps, then leading with one shoulder or the other, take a small jump to the right or left. Dancers join in and drop out for longer events but the group dances as long as the band plays. Most Chinelos dancers are young men as it is tiring and the costumes can be suffocating. The role of a Chinelo dancer is passed on from parents to children. On some occasions children dance on a different day than their parents

I ran into a problem when photographing this: there was too much noise in the background. What I did was to make two copies of the photo. I changed the first to a monochrome, then laid it on top of the full color second. Then I used a background eraser to bring out the colorful figure.

I don’t hide my secrets.

Posted in Background Erase, Nikon D70, Orange County Tagged , , , , , , .

Blonde Riding a Coach

Blonde Riding a Coach

This woman was riding a carriage filled with women singing Italian arias. Few people realize that Italian Americans supplied much of the work force in the mines and so did their part to tame the West.

This is a very popular photo on flickr. Guess few people can resist a blonde who is publicly declaring her search for a cowboy.

Another photo that began as a digital color shot that I turned into black and white using yellow filtering.

Posted in Filtering, Nikon D70, Orange County Tagged , , , , , , .

Man in a White Hat on a White Horse

Man in a White Hat on a White Horse

I went to the Swallows Day Parade in San Juan Capistrano last month. It’s a great parade. You will never have seen so many horses in your life, however. The stream of riders, bands, reenactors, and dancers took two hours to pass. It started with some reenactors shooting off their guns to wake up the crowd followed by legions of horses.

This guy was one of my favorites among the horsemen. I converted it to black and white using a red filter setting to bring out the drama of the moment.

Posted in Nikon D70, Orange County Tagged , , , , , , , .

The Teepees

The Teepees

Date: September 30, 2014

Every few years, I must take a long road trip. My favorite destinations all lie to the east of where I live: the deserts of Arizona, Utah, and Nevada are particular favorites. I select several cameras and films, then get in the car and head to the first of a string of motels on our route.

This time I resolved to cross-process some of the pictures. That this became a favorite not only on flickr but also lomography.com surprised and pleased me.

The yellowish green tint annoyed some of my fans and disappointed me. I only got to try Ektachrome once and the final result pleased me far more than the Precisa, but there you have it.

Posted in Arizona, Cross-Processing, Nikon N8008, Petrified Forest NP Tagged , , , , , , , , .

Rainbow Train HDR

Rainbow Train HDR

Date: January 10, 2015

The HDR was an afterthought. I took several sequential photos of this passing train. When I got home and set myself to the task of choosing between them for the shot that would appear in flickr, I realized that I hadn’t moved the frame much. Moved by curiosity, I ran them through the HDR plugin in Paint Shop Pro. This colorful image was the result, a better one than any of the individual photos.

Posted in HDR, Nikon D70, Orange County Tagged , , , , .

Forest and Meadows

Meadows and Forest

Date: April 3, 2015

I found that I had five Instax shots left over in my camera, so I went out to take them in nearby Whiting Ranch. I vowed that I would make five better-than-acceptable photographs; but I could only realize it for three of them.

This is the first photo that I took and I am quite pleased with it. I noticed how the lines of the meadows, the forest, and the trail all curved into one another, so I positioned myself so I could grab their sweep.

The day wasn’t too warm; and it was a little overcast. Spring was already fading into summer’s yellow. We had had decent rains during the winter, but also a few very hot days which confused the vegetation and forced early flowering and dying.

Posted in Fuji Instax 210, Whiting Ranch Tagged , , , , , , , , .

Confiscation

When the man has an AK-47, you do as he says.

I was in Osijek, Croatia as part of a Quaker peace mission when I had the chance to snag some InterNet time at the local phone exchange. Croatia was at war with Serbia at the time, so security in this frontier city was tight.

I had my camera — the Nikon N8008 that I still use — with me.

After I had finished, I was leaving the building with a student when we were stopped by a soldier of the Croatian army. He spied my camera and interrogated me. “What have you been taking pictures of,” he demanded. “Did you take any photos of important people?”

I dreaded where this was going, so I opened my camera, pulled out the film cannister, stretched out the film, and gave it to him. Now this guy wasn’t the sharpest tool in the shed it turned out. He held the film up to the light and tried to make out what I had been photographing.

A few weeks later I was in Zagreb, showing my wife and some French volunteers the Old City. The best viewpoint turned out to be next to a place where they were holding some kind of event. Several soldiers carrying AK-47s wandered outside. As we approached the overlook, one of them challenged us. What were we doing here?

One of the French volunteers started to argue with him. How dare he stop us? We had rights!

The one thing you learn about a country at war is that your rights go on the back burner. Arguing with a soldier who was just doing his job in a war zone wasn’t very smart, either.

“Shut up,” I said to the volunteer firmly. I then explained to the soldier that we were just here to enjoy the view. I pointed to the overlook. “We’ll be there for three minutes and then we’ll go down those stairs and be out of your way.” He nodded with a half smile and an eye on the French volunteer. We did exactly as we promised and had no further problems.

Posted in Croatia, Stories Tagged , , , , , , .

Fuchsia-Flowering Gooseberry

Fuchsia-Flowering Gooseberry

Date: March 15, 2015

These came out very early this year. Temperatures were in the nineties — in February! — so many flowers started to bloom. I’ll be looking for Mariposa Lilies in April!

The flowers are a favorite of the Anna’s Hummingbird.

I’ve been told that you can eat these, but they don’t taste the greatest. Still people have historically made jam out of gooseberries.

Posted in Close-up, Limestone Canyon, Nikon D70 Tagged , , , , , , .

Weeping Angel

Weeping Angel

This may be my most famous photo. Lord knows that it has been stolen often enough! Even Doctor Who got into the act, though not by pilfering my work.

There are many Weeping Angels scattered around the country. This one stands in Cypress Lawn Cemetery in Colma, California. Colma is unique in that it is almost entirely given over to cemeteries serving the City of San Francisco which outlawed them just before the turn of the last century.

I found this shot just as you see it. The light was bluish due to heavy cloud cover.

If you see it around, tell the people who have it that the credit belongs to me and to honor that.

Posted in Bay Area, California, Nikon N8008 Tagged , , , , , , , , , , .

Bust

Bust

Date: June 17, 2013

Some of the garden art at Villa Vizcaya, Miami, Florida. Another Sprocket Rocket creation.

Obviously a Roman empress or an Italian noblewoman who wanted to be thought of as one, but who?

Posted in Lomography Sprocket Rocket, MIami Tagged , , , , , , , , .