Reception in Manhasset
Saturday, May 29th, 2004 | 23:55Last week, we had the last of the wedding receptions that we had spread out over six months. This was primarily for East Coast family and family friends who … Continue reading »
Last week, we had the last of the wedding receptions that we had spread out over six months. This was primarily for East Coast family and family friends who … Continue reading »
Here’s the slide show we put together for 6-month/for-family wedding reception/Grace’s graduation party lunch thing. There are a lot of pictures: There’s currently some Epson ad talking about the longevity … Continue reading »
Electronics are delicate. The Sony I bought a year and a half ago is starting to fritz out after being carried around in my bookbag for months and after … Continue reading »
I think I saw the reference on BoingBoing, but Luminous Landscape has a very nice series of photography tutorials online. The site belongs to a landscape photographer who works … Continue reading »
This MetaFilter post points to a BBC pop-tech column giving a few reasons why digital makes people into better photographers. Out of five reasons, only two sort of touch … Continue reading »
Gothamist has a nice link to Charles Cushman’s photos of New York City from the 1940s. The neat thing about these photos is that they’re in color, which gives … Continue reading »
Grace and I got married on November 24, 2003, in Sacramento, California. Just to get the photo’s out of the way, since that’s what you all are here to see, click … Continue reading »
Some early photos (exactly one gross, in fact) from Itai’s epic journey through the South Seas. (I was going to put them on his server, but I didn’t want to muck … Continue reading »
There’s a discussion over at the Fred Miranda forums on archival CD-Rs. I’m up to about 600MB of pictures from my Sony, and I should probably put a copy … Continue reading »
I found the Shadow Illuminator through Metafilter. From the comments to the Metafilter posting, the Shadow Illuminator apparently implements a simple to use web-based contrast mask: quite possible in Photoshop, and … Continue reading »