Tag Archives: Canon G11

Caffeine receptacles

I like coffee, she likes tea. Actually, I like tea too, but a strong mug of coffee rocks my boat. The Cezanne is my home mug of choice. Hers is the Van Gogh “Sunflowers” mug which was in action, and conspicuously missing, when I shot this. The dark brown cup at the top left is my daily fave–it goes to work with me every day and been in the car when I shot all of the “commute” photos.

Petaluma Bridge

BTW, on my monitor, the color rendition of these cups is spot on. The little G11 is quite good at capturing “as is.”

Canon G11 caffeinated at the homestead.

Brazen tweaking

Sometimes a blown out shot can become an act of resistance. Crank up the saturation and see what happens. I like what happened to the palm that’s catty corner from my house. Brazilian headdress? Oh là là!

Petaluma Bridge

FTR, this is the first shot saved in RAW mode that I’ve posted. I’m now recording all images to RAW and JPEG. Must be the years of compressing images for the web that kept me from saving a digital “negative.”

Canon G11 collecting the pixels.

Unknown quest

The end of our first leg of the journey was Seattle. We hadn’t been there in quite a few years so when we stepped off the train I had no idea what the glowing blue arch overhead was. I thought, “Wow, that’s cool…”, and pulled out the G11 to take a few shots. Turns out its Quest Field, but at the moment it was simply the unknown blue arch.

Quest Field blue arch

Canon G11 on the quest in Seattle.

100th post

I’ve been in a funk since I got back from the Canada trip. The same old same old isn’t inspiring me to get out there and shoot. Which, I guess, begs the question: what do people do when they have nothing else to talk about? Here’s a weather report from my backyard.

Petaluma dark and stormy

Canon G11 focusing on the weather.

Lunenburg panorama

While touring the Lunenburg, Nova Scotia area we stopped on the opposite side of the harbor to enjoy the view of the town. The sky was a very monotone gray (you get what you get when traveling), but still the town looked amazingly colorful. I snapped a few fully zoomed in hand held shots for the record. After looking carefully at the shots I realized I could “stitch” them together into a panorama. I did the stitching manually in Photoshop and was amazed how well the photos lined up. I guess I make a good human tripod! 😉

This is the left most shot (the red structure is the Fisheries Museum of the Atlantic).

Lunenburg Nova Scotia panorama

View the full panorama (stretch your browser window to expand the image).

Canon G11 stitching a scene.