Museum Fun

Last week we headed to Impression 5 to check out their cool exhibits and the new First Impression room designed specifically for toddlers!  It was an action-packed day that involved a quick 20 minutes on the treadmill, meeting Aunt Julie for coffee, spending 2 fabulous hours at the museum, and finally meeting up with Grandma and Grandpa for lunch.

Ladies, I hope you had as much fun as I did watching our little monkeys climb, crawl, explore and play their way through the day.  And considering the excitement and the late lunch, things were incident free!  I’ve played with a few of the pictures I snapped and have included them below for your viewing pleasure!  Enjoy!

Museum 4

Lovin’ the dimples!

Museum 2

I think he would have swum in the bubbles if I’d have let him!

Museum 5

Little Mama!

Museum 7

One of the several toys that ended up in the “to be cleaned” bucket during our visit!

Museum 10

Museum 13

Museum 12

Once he found the fish he was all set!

Museum 6

Museum 3

Museum 8

“Look at the splash I can make!”

Museum 9

Museum 1

Fun feature to keep kids busy in the lobby…that is if my kid didn’t try to steal two of the marbles!

Museum 11

I absolutely L-O-V-E this shot!  When he makes me so crazy, I want to remember the sweet look on his adorable face at this moment!  It takes my breath away!

While Seneca was there, she and Great Aunt Julie got lots of time to snuggle.  I really wanted this to be a day for Calder – to let him run around, be loud, climb in, on and through everything he wanted…and have my full attention.  It was so very well worth every second!

————

On a completely unrelated note…I have a question for any and all of my readers.  When I put lots of shots in a post such as today’s, is it easier/better to have my two cents written above the shot or below it?  Trivial, I know, but I can’t ever decide which way to go.  Your help is appreciated! 🙂

Meet Sam…

Sam

He looks harmless, right?  According to a certain toddler living in our home, he’s a pretty scary dude.  Even after repeated “introductions” wherein we point out his eyes, nose, mouth, and hair and even give him kisses, Calder remains rather uncertain of this scarecrow.

At one point I simply said the word “scarecrow” which incited the same scared response.  Arms pulled back and high on his chest, backpeddling and raised eyebrows.  Now, we call him “Sam” which he seems to be less afraid of. 

So, I’m guessing that if this freaks him out, taking him trick-or-treating would likely be tragic.  This might be a good year to stay home and hand out candy instead.

A few random questions

So I have virtual post-it notes on my desktop where I can jot down little to-do lists or things to remember. Lately the list for blog-related or photography questions has grown rather lengthy. In an attempt to find answers (and feel the sense of accomplishment that comes with deleting to-do list items) this will be a compilation of those things that have been rolling around in my mind.

For the record, I’m using a Canon Rebel XT and have only recently begun using PS CS3 for post-processing.  To see examples of some of my frustrations, feel free to peruse my Flickr photostream too.

BLURRY IMAGES

I am slowly learning how to capture better images, which makes the job of post-processing that much easier (though that too is still tricky at times). While I understand the concept and interplay between shutter speed, ISO and aperture, I still have a hard time making the mechanics of all three work together in a way that produces the image I see in my mind’s eye.

One question I have is about lenses. I almost always (ok, always) use my 50mm fixed lens, and I think part of my reasoning behind doing so is that I was told somewhere along the line that that lens is good for portrait-type shots. The person explained it as having the subject in sharp focus, but the background blurred. Isn’t that simply depth of field? Can’t that be achieved with any lens? I’m hoping to use my kit lens (18mm-55mm) a little more to see if I can’t play around and build my camera knowledge.

After taking a one-night class at the store where I purchased my camera, I began shooting in manual, almost exclusively. I find I’d be happy with the tiny image on the display, but dissatisfied by the blur (camera shake?) when I downloaded the images. I guess I’m looking for that crispness and definition that I see in so many other images on various blogs I read. Any suggestions to help me improve my practice?  I often find that I try to salvage bad shots with post-processing, which more often than not reduces what little integrity the original image had.  These highly processed shots then, result in poor prints, and so on.

MIISPLACED FOCAL POINTS

There are times when I want to take a picture where the subjects are equidistant from the center of the frame. I’ve tried adjusting my focal points, but often end up with images that focus on the point between the subjects instead. There are certain situations that don’t allow the time to adjust these focal points while also adusting other settings to capture the shot.

Aug 9 155

Drivin'

(I know there are several issues with this one…again, blur is the main one I notice)

Is there a way to set the focal points to an “auto” setting? Would I want to turn them off? There are times when I want everything in focus, which I know is also an aperture issue. Am I totally confusing the issues here?

FLASH

I think I’ve read about reducing the “strength” of your flash. It would allow you to use the built-in flash, but without washing out the image so much. I thought I figured out how to do it at one point, but it seems that the result wasn’t much different. Any suggestions?

FEEDS/READERS

I read most of my blogs through my Google reader. A few, I’ve noticed make updates or changes to certain posts, and they show up in my reader (not as “new” or “unread” but when I click the post there is new content). I know how to edit posts through wordpress, and I always save my changes, which means the post on my blog is correct or updated. How do I get that corrected version to “re-publish” through my feeds?

Many of my photography questions are fueled by a slight case of anxiety as I prepare to take my first “official” shoot for some friends next week. I’ve already given several disclaimers and hope to get at least a handful of decent images for them to choose from. I’m also, just diving into the world of printing the images so that they look as good (or better) in the print form as they do on my screen.

Thanks for listening today and I really appreciate the help!

Hmmm…

 400

The number of times kids laugh each day

15

The daily chuckle count for adults

A simple thought right?  I can’t tell you how many times this has crossed my mind since Monday when I read my October issue.  It’s been a hectic week – good, but hectic.  And even though there were a handful of times when I thought I was losing my mind, I managed to keep it together and sneak in a few giggles with Calder too!

Here’s a look at some belly laughs from last year.  

(Any tips for embedding You Tube videos in WordPress – the obvious “Embed” code didn’t work!).  Got it now – thanks Alissa!  As if that isn’t funny enough, check out a few of these to tickle your funny bone!

Better yet, share some of your favorite funny moments – pictures, video or otherwise!

Just wondering…

Yummy Snacks

Does anyone else keep a list of possible blogging topics interspersed with grocery items or household chores?  I know, I should probably keep separate lists, but really that would

  1. make too much sense and
  2. require multiple post-its which could result in the loss of any and/or all of them!

I know I’ve writtenabout the “have to’s” and “want to’s” and at the time I was a little overwhelmed and looking back disappointed.  Now, I’m still overwhelmed, but curious.  There are some days, like yesterday when all I do is sit and savor every small moment of my time off and say “Who cares!” when it comes to laundry and dishes and all those other things that have to be done.  Then, I swing to the complete opposite end of the spectrum and go on power-cleaning kicks and insane reorganization and realize that Calder has just pushed his way between me and the cabinet I was trying to clean for a reason – he needs attention to.  And how about hubby?  How often to we have time alone?

So, I’m trying to think of the rest of my time at home as a dress rehearsal for the big show, which takes the stage in December.  I know that once I’m back to work my Parentingmagazines are unlikely to be read in a timely manner.  The books I’d like to read might take a while, and the thousands of writing ideas (for blogging or otherwise) may get only as far as the jotted note in my journal. 

Yet I’d like to try.  I’d like to do my best to eek (is that really how to spell it?) the most out of each day, each hour, each precious minute.  When I read this article it got me thinking.  While I have a penchant for photography, reading, writing, and blogging (with or without the time to actually post, and even less time to comment on others’ blogs – so sorry!), I don’t always manage my time well enough to do each of these things. 

I’m thinking about when I go back to work and how I’ll have even less (sigh) time to write, read, comment, etc.  I’m trying to get into a routine of writing out my posts for the week and publishing them via time stamp.  Does anyone else do something similar?  What are the habits and practices that have worked for you?  Which ones didn’t?  I know many of you have children, full time jobs, and several other involvements – so how do you find the time to do it all? 

On a slightly different note, I find myself stuck in the same “tone” in many of my posts.  I’m still fairly new to this process and I wonder if this will change with time and experience.  Can the writing I do here stretch me as a writer too?  How do the roles of audience and purpose factor into the equation?  I’d love to hear from someone…anyone!