Sunday, 8 September 2013

Dried Tomatoes

A different topic to normal in this weeks blog.

On my Daily journal I have posted some pictures of some tomatoes I have been drying and a couple of people have asked about the recipe so I decided to post it here.




It really couldn't be more simple, just get as many tomatoes you want to use, the first time I did this I only used about 2 kgs of tomatoes, the second time I got as many tomatoes as possible onto 3 shelves in the oven as the processes takes just as long for a small amount as for a large amount.

I have used quite big tomatoes as they do shrink in the drying, I guess smaller tomatoes would work just as well and would take less time.

Cut the tomatoes in half and put a generous pinch of salt and sugar in equal proportions onto each half. (i just mix the sugar and salt 50/50 in a small bowl beforehand)  The recipe I started with said to leave the tomatoes cut side down on a wire rack for an hour to drain but not much juice drained out so I now skip this step.

Put the tomatoes cut side up on a baking tray or oven shelf and sprinkle with a chopped up mixture of your your favorite fresh herbs, I use basil, thyme, rosemary and a bay leaf. Season with some fresh black pepper and drizzle generously with olive oil. Put in the oven at about 85 - 90C for 4 hours or so. Normally I start this in the evening and after the 4 hours just turn the oven off and leave the tomatoes in the warm oven overnight. 

In the morning the tomatoes are cool and I gently squeeze them over a bowl to get some of the liquid out of them. (sometimes you have to stab through the cut side with a knife to let the juice squeeze out) to Keep the liquid as you can use it as a base for pasta sauce.

Put the oven back on and continue to dry the tomatoes for another 2 or 3 hours. Just keep going until you reach the stage of dryness you like.

I like them still moist, but you can continue until they are really quite dry.

Pack the tomatoes into a kilner type jar while still warm ( I also warm the jars) and fill the jar with olive oil until the tomatoes are completely covered.

Use in any recipe that uses dried tomatoes or add to any tomato sauce for an intense tomato flavor.

Sunday, 11 August 2013

Back on track



It has been some time since I have updated this blog,  I have started writing many times only to stop before I had really finished, it then sits there for a few weeks and then its out of date of course.

Hopefully this is the first of getting back on track with weekly updates, I have continued with my daily photo journal which you can see here.

http://www.blipfoto.com/Bizonderimage or just click here

It has taken me some time to get my motivation back in order after the sudden death of my young colleague in April. 

In the meantime one other of my team members  has also become seriously ill,  
I realize more and more how lucky I am every time I write this blog, or take and upload a photo, or go for a walk or out on my bike, that I have made it this far with no really serious medical issues for myself or my wife or children.

Work has been crazily busy in the last months with a lot of traveling, and does not look to slow down any time soon .

This heavy work schedule left me feeling very tired, but I did not think too much about this, just thought it was part of getting old.

Then in a recent medical at work I found out that sometime during the last year my thyroid has stopped working properly.  This gives similar symptoms to being very tired, and also explains to some extent my low motivation of recent months.   I am now started on hormone replacement drugs which hopefully will get me back to my old self, or even better, in the next few weeks or months.

It also impacts your attention span and short term memory so now I have the perfect explanation for all those things I forget to do. (including keeping this up to date)

The specialist endocrinologist who is working with me through a series of blood test and drug dose adjustments really summed the whole thing up very nicely when she said - " I am sorry that you are ill, but this is not the worst thing to have ! "

All this has made me more thoughtful and conscious of how fragile we all really are, and how much we should make the best of our time.

Sorry if this is a rather downbeat start to the update but I read an article recently on CNN ( credit to Phil Hansen ) which made the point that " within this wired culture, we risk becoming edited versions of ourselves, we may tweet messages like " just got a Pepsi, new bottle design. Sweet ! " but we don't say " I am sad and alone. I had no one to talk to so I went to the store to chat with the clerk while buying a Pepsi" 

You can certainly see this on Facebook, where you see more photos of pets or what people are having for dinner, than any real information about whats going on in their lives. 

In the last months I spent a few days in Northern Ireland, photographing as we walked part of the Causeway Coastal Path including the Giant's Causeway, actually is was more trudging along than walking as my new drugs started their work, the weather was really wet on one of our days, testing our waterproof clothes to the limit ( and beyond in some cases). I was a bit worried when I had to pour the water OUT of my waterproof camera bag, but it seems to have survived OK.

We also visited the Dark Hedges near Ballymoney, this is claimed to be the most photographed natural spot in Northern Ireland.

Now back at work with the memory of our holiday already fading away, although the Netherlands has enjoyed the same heatwave as the UK, so nice to sit outside, and we have put the Barbecue to good use.

I have spent the last day updating my photo website so rather than adding photos in the blog this time, can I invite you to take a look at the website.  You can find it at  www.bizonderimage.com or just click here 












   

 

Tuesday, 9 April 2013

Sad Week

I was on holiday last week but it was far from the relaxing week I anticipated, work was very intrusive with lots of calls and mails which I had to respond to, but far more significant was the call I received early in the week to say that a young colleague in my team had been suddenly taken ill and had died early that morning.

Very hard to understand how something so tragic could happen so suddenly.

This event totally dominated my thinking and behaviour during the week.

In my photojournal post for 2 April I wrote



Today has been a very sad and emotional day. I learned early today that a young colleague in my team had been taken ill and died this morning. Sudden, unexpected and absolutely tragic.


I have spent some time deciding if I should post today and if I did, what could I use that could in any way represent my feelings and immense sadness.

When I got the news I was already out walking so faced the dilemma of whether to turn back or continue. There is no right answer.

Todays image shows a view into the distance, a reminder that none of us knows really whats to come, we think we can see ahead, we plan for the future, but the unexpected is always just around the corner.

I have tears in my eyes as I am writing this and the only thought I can leave with you is to forget the small things and live every day to make today the best day of your life so far.



Despite this sadness life does go on for everyone else, so I spend time walking, photographing and reflecting on life, particularly the balance between work and personal life.
Why would i continue to work when I could spend my time walking and photographing in the landscape

My question is whether what is now a pleasure, at least partly because its different from what I can do most of the time, would become less interesting if I could do it all the time?

In the photograph, taken in the early morning on a cold bright day, you can see just see ice on the surface of the lake, standing on the shore you could see the ice being blown to one end of the lake by the slight breeze, and listen to the crunching noise as it slowly piled up on the shore of the lake.

A fleeting moment, with just an hours more sun most of the ice was gone, the lake surface was rippled by the breeze as the lake and the land around started to warm, a totally different scene.




This second shot, taken on a different day shows a colder view with the broken ice clear in the foreground.



Each morning we were woken by the sound of a bird knocking against the window. Again and again this little bird flew at the glass trying to get inside the building. I think this is a house martin, trying to get inside to build a nest with some shelter from the weather. Day after day this bird tried to get inside.



On returning from the UK To our home in the Netherlands I immediately left again for a few days meeting and team building in the Swiss Alps ski resort at Les Closets, another strange week as today we fly back for the funeral of my young colleague.




Love begins with a smile, grows with a kiss, ends with a tear. When you were born, you were crying and everyone around you was smiling. Live your life so that when you die, you're the one smiling and everyone around you is crying.

Monday, 1 April 2013

Not Quite Spring


Its Easter Weekend, the beginning of April, its really cold outside and there are still patches of snow on the ground.

I have spent the weekend in the UK lake district walking and photographing in the hills and lakes around Grasmere.

Today it was sunny and bright but the other days were rather grey and cloudy, which overall I don't find very inspiring to photograph. I prefer to photograph in 'bad' weather, generally i find this provides the most interesting light and sky.

Of course there are always some interesting shots - like the shot below of Alcock Tarn with the tarn completely frozen, and the snow lying on the hills beyond.




This is a shot at ground level on the bank of the tarn showing last years grass stems poking above the snow drift





And this vista which shows the view on the climb from Grasmere up to Alcock Tarn






In a completely different style below I have a couple of iPhone shots, minimalist sky dominating the image with a strip of the landscape at the bottom. I really like this type of shot, but other people who have looked at don't always agree. What do you think ?







Sunday, 24 March 2013

How long are your shoelaces ?

How long are your shoelaces

When I put my shoes (trainers) on this morning I noticed that one of the laces was looking a bit thin and ready to break. I was going out shopping so easy to get a new pair, but how long did I need - the ends of the laces were already frayed so I did not want to take the laces out to measure them so of course I asked the internet - thinking I would just get some average lengths or similar - Instead a found a web site which can tell you everything you could ever need to know about laces - and some more as well. you can see it here -  Shoelace website

Not just what length you need but also more ways of lacing your shoes than I knew existed


So after a bit of calculation off I went to the shop -
and typically found they did have any suitable laces anyway !
  














Yesterday I visited the Hand Made exhibition at the Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen in Rotterdam
This was a great exhibition with a wide range of objects on display, from hundreds of years ago right up to today.


 These were some of my favorites, on the left a knitted or crocheted pair of people, and on the right a imitation of a under sea coral made from pottery and woven steel wire.    












There is also a live demonstration of crafts which changes each week, yesterday there was a person painting trays and things in what I think of as canal boat style, and a demonstration of taxidermy.  This did not sound too attractive but in fact it looked more like making cuddly toys out of animal skins rather than putting their cleaned bones back together

 

You can have a look at the museum web site Here

Panorama of the week 

I was on a business trip to Sweden this week and to get back I went on the train from Malmo in Sweden to Copenhagen Airport in Denmark. 

The Öresund Bridge is a double-track railway and dual carriageway bridge-tunnel across the Øresund strait between Scania (southernmost Sweden) and Denmark.

The bridge runs nearly 8 km (5 miles) from the Swedish coast to the artificial island of Peberholm, which lies in the middle of the strait. The remainder of the link is by a 4 km (2.5 mile) tunnel from Peberholm to the Danish island of Amager.

The Øresund Bridge is the longest combined road and rail bridge in Europe, and connects two major metropolitan areas: Copenhagen, the Danish capital city, and the major Swedish city of Malmö. It connects the road and rail networks of Scandinavia with those of Central and Western Europe.






















When you are on the bridge you cannot see much but the sea and horizon in the distance and the steel work of the bridge flashing past the window. Using my iPhone to try and take a panorama produced the image below which is a chopped up version of the bridge which gives a modern art or abstract image.




Monday, 18 March 2013

Still Life - controlling light (and more dust)

Still life and vintage

I really love still life pictures and increasingly so in black and white, or with a vintage sepia like atmosphere.

I have tried making some for myself using fruit, vegetables and other objects I have found around my house.

I also  have seen some still life photographs set up to look like old paintings - you can see some great examples if you click here

(although these make my early attempts look quite simple - but something to aim for in the future)

Pears

Woodworking tools
Pewter jug with lemons
Pewter jug with apples and wine

Only 1 new panorama this week, and this time with a camera not an iphone
Top image is mimicking Fuji Velvia film, the lower image is a more vinatge style again - I am always amazed by how easily these effects can be applied in modern post processing, and even more amazed by how they change the whole atmosphere of the photograph


Modern house in the Dutch landscape





The Dust Demons

Last week I described how I managed to get a blob of something on my sensor, and while I succesfully cleaned that off, I ended up with a smear across the sensor. I ordered some visible dust smear away solution from the internet, next day delivery - but days passed by and nothing showed up. The order details just said approved so eventually I called the customer service line - the smear away cleaner was out of stock (despite that the web site still said they had it available), they could not get any more so that part of the order was cancelled, the othet item - a dust brush - was also out of stock but don't worry they will send it when one eventually arrives.  Not very impressive.

As the web site still said that they had some in their nearby shop so on Saturday I called in to see if tis was really true, but no they did not have any, and also said they could not get any more - I must have looked very dissappointed because the shop guy went and had a look in their workshop and came back with a nearly full bottle that he gave me for free - very impressive service now. 

I bought some cleaning swabs and came home and presto the smear dissapeared with just one swipe across the sensor.  So finally back in business without any tell tale blobs in my shots - but a lesson learned in keeping dust and the camera as far apart as possible.

Cleaning the sensor itself was very easy - in my opinion nothing to be worried about so long as you are careful.

Would be interested to know if anyone else has had a try at sensor cleaning  
  



Saturday, 9 March 2013

iPhone Panormas and Dusty Demons


I was working in Finland for a few days this week, unfortunately no real time for photographing the beautiful scenery, maybe this was just as well, there is still a lot of snow around which is great to photograph, but the temperature was -15C so not very comfortable to be outside for very long.

We did have a 90 minute car ride from the airport and I spent some time trying to take photographs through the car window using my iPhone.  Then I started using the panorama feature on the phone.

The usual way to use this is to set up the phone, press the start button and then slowly move the phone to take in the panorama you want, doing it from the car offers an alternative technique where you simply hold the phone still as the scenery moves along past you.

For photographs where you have only the distant scenery this gives a pretty nice picture from a distance looks pretty neat in fact, but if anything more close by pops into the picture - like a passing car or truck - this gives a different effect entirely, you can see what I mean in the examples below - (tip have a look at the cars in the pictures and you will see the effect I mean)





  

This last picture was made in the more conventional way of standing still and moving the phone
 


This week I realised that the marks I could sometimes see on the photographs taken with my little Sony NEX camera were caused by dust on the sensor.  You can only see this on the sensor using a strong magnifying glass.  I expected just one or two specs of dust, it actually looked like someone had emptied their vacuum cleaner on to it.

Dust marks in the senor= marks on the photo

No problem I thought, just blow it off with a blower brush.  This did not seem to have much effect so I tried with my little can of camera cleaner compressed air.

I had seen a guy in the camera shop do this, just check first on the back of your hand that its not too powerful and then in you go.

All went well for about one second then a big blob of water (?) came out of the compressed air can and landed - yes you've guessed it - right on the sensor.

So now not only has the sensor got dust on it - now it looks like a my car windscreen in summer - that is as if a fly has been squashed on it.




Senor after cleaning (Really the desert in Morocco)
So onto the internet and order a cleaning kit, which promptly arrives the next day.  Looks simple enough - has a little swabbing tool and some cleaning fluid.  Set it all up and manage to clean the gunk off the sensor.  Problem solved - until I decided one last swipe just to finish off - and suddenly I have a big smear of oil (?) from something at the edge of the sensor.

Back on the internet and order some extra special smear cleaning fluid - promised for delivery next day but so far I am still waiting .... so more to follow next week 




Sunday, 3 March 2013

Again and Again


You may remember that since the beginning of 2013 I have been taking and uploading a photograph each day to the Blipfoto journal website ( See Blipfoto )

This means that everyday I have to find and take a photograph, some days this is very difficult, particularly if I am busy at work, or travelling on business, other days it is easy and I end up with a choice of possibilities.

The other realization I have made in this process is that I return to and photograph the same locations again and agian, and it is remarkable how the the whole mood and atmosphere of a shot can be altered by the lighting conditions, and also just how short your memory can be of how the waether chnage sin just a few days or weeks.

The two images below are a good illustration, the top image was taken on a bright day (10 Feb) the lower image just 2 weeks later on the 24th February when winter had temporarily returned.




Another return location is one of my ' favorite' trees near Grasmere - I have this tree in many of its clothes and disguises.

The top version shows the tree and a lot of background with the mist still boiling off the lake, and for me looks a bit busy and messy.

The middle misty version isolates the tree from the background giving a more atmospheric feel.

The last example includes the lake and two fishermen in a small red boat giving yet a different feel to the image



 


Having photos which I cannot choose to use in my daily journal is also forcing me to consider why one image ' makes it' and others are left out.

Sometimes its a clear choice, sometimes very close, and its not always the best most in focus picture that I choose, sometimes its just the right mood for the moment.

Left below is an image I did not use, while the right shot is an iPhone image that I took in Amsterdam walking back from a restaurant, which I thought captured the mood of the city just after midnight and which did go in my journal. 



Tuesday, 19 February 2013

Metallic Lambda Prints


A couple of weekends ago I visited the Art Warehouse - part of a week of special art displays in Rotterdam, in layers of (supposed) sophistication starting with Art Rotterdam in the cruise terminal, Raw art and then the Art Warehouse in the old port warehouses.


This year I did not visit the main Art Rotterdam exhibition, in recent years I have found this too unusual ( allegedly avant-garde) for my taste.
Many of the items in this exhibition I find impossible to like or understand, as well as wondering who can afford to pay thousands of Euros for a piece of art which looks to me like it was made by a careless 2 year old, as well as wondering who would have the nerve to put these items in the exhibition in the first place.
Even in the Warehouse there was one wall hanging maybe 3 meters by 2 meters high, which looked as though it was made from old cardboard boxes which had been torn up, glued together and painted brown.   Maybe its just my lack of artistic understanding but for a few thousand Euros I just don't get it.

I do like that you sometimes find some very high quality work displayed in a new way.

Which was why I was looking at some very high gloss images displayed in the Art Warehouse which were described on the name plates as metallic lambda aluminum dibond prints.  The pictures looked great but I did not know what this print system involved.

Back home and checking on the internet I found some confusing descriptions but this seems the most complete,

- Lambda printing, or LightJet printing, produces the highest quality photographic prints available for large format printing display graphics from digital artwork. Whether the prints are onto photographic paper, film or Duratrans, Lambda printing gives sharp photographic images, continuous tone and high-impact color photographic prints. Lambda is the name and common reference to the process, equipment and product which has taken over from the traditional photographic process.

Lambda printing gives the highest resolution display graphics on the market today for high-impact trade show and retail displays or essentially anywhere that the highest quality and resolution is required. Using continuous tone digital technology, photographic display graphics are produced by transferring images directly from computer generated digital files to reflective or backlit photographic materials without the need of a negative. Within the equipment, there are three lasers, red, green and blue, which are merged into a single beam that simultaneously exposes the photographic material, producing the image in a single pass. The photographic material is then processed in the same manner as traditional photography by developing the photographic material in a "wet" film processor. By using the lasers, the total image is crisp and precise edge to edge, with no distortion. All of this means that the quality of a Lambda print will be much better in terms of clarity, sharpness and in color saturation than other large format printing processes.

In simple terms you seem to end up with a very high quality photographic print bonded between 2 sheets of high gloss plexiglass or a sheet of aluminum and plexiglass. This creates an extremely high gloss looking picture, and needs a very complicated looking machine to make.

Not every image would look good printed this way but for some subjects it clearly adds a very sophisticated finish. These were all big pictures of more than 1 metre wide so already quite striking and selling for high amounts in the 5 to 10 thousand Euros each.

The most interesting thing was that a lot of these of photographs were not of real subjects , that is you could not just take these with a camera, rather they were composed of many cut outs of other images, built together in many layers in a kind of a digital collage. Sometimes you could tell this in the image immediately, in others the manipulation only became apparent after you had been looking for sometime, very cleverly done because once you saw it -  then the technique was suddenly apparent all over the image, leaving me surprised that I had not seen it straight away.

I took a few sneaky pictures with my iPhone when the security staff where looking the other way, but although the pictures are ok they are not able to bring out the detail and depth of the originals. I include some website images and links so you can go and look yourself at some better versions and some more of their images


Ysabel Lemay

These were truly stunning images giving a depth of image and subtly which is impossible to describe in words, made from multiple layers of image these appeared absolutely true to life but as you looked you could see things which could not possibly be there in a simple photograph

Copyright Ysabel Lemay



Joseph Klibansky.

In these images the technique is more apparent - but only once you spot what's going on - looks like its a typical if rather busy street scene somewhere in Asia, but as you look closely you realize that the plants on the front of  the building are actually pictures of houseplants over-layed on the front of the building.
Paradise of Light 2012
Copyright Joseph Klibansky

Christian Voight
Christian's pictures were more real life subjects (at least I think so !)  shown in a different way, the depth of feel and color in these images is amazing. The sample image is a shop / market stall in the middle east but if you look on his web site there are some really fantastic images of sand dunes in the dessert - take a look and just try and imagine these printed 2 meters wide



responsive lightbox
Copyright Christian Voight



I am now looking for a print shop where I can have one or two of my brighter images printed in this style.

Footnote - I have used some images whose copyright is owned by others to illustrate my admiration of their work, and in the hope that you will also like it and go and look at their websites
  

Saturday, 26 January 2013

Blipfoto and cold weather

A few days ago I had to close down my little local exhibition, my photos have now been replaced by some oil paintings by a local artist.

No sales during the exhibition though it seems there were quite a lot of viewers, maybe the price is too high but there is not much left out of my pricing once you include the cost of making and framing the print, and excluding any time element.

The cold weather continues in the Netherlands, snow on the ground all week which has created some nice photo opportunities.

I have been using these shots on Blipfoto, my daily photo journal. I started this on the first of January so I have now 26 photos on this site, seemed easy to just take a photo every day but it is sometimes really difficult to find both the time, well more the right moment, and the right shot.  The website checks the dates in the photo information from your camera, so you have to take the photo on the correct day.

I want to try and only add good quality images so i build a good looking record of where I went and what I did throughout the year.

So far I have a mix of photos from my Sony camera and my iPhone -  you can see the whole set at..
http://www.blipfoto.com/Bizonderimage

Some of the photos caused severe freezing of my hands, I cannot quite work the camera with my gloves on, and at one point my hands were so cold I could no longer push the button on the camera.







I also have a few shots which did not make the cut for Blipfoto this week.

Ducks at the Marina
Sunrise Panorama

Heron in the garden in the snow



  

Sunday, 20 January 2013

Looking ahead 2013

Here I am back from an extended blog break as a result of Christmas and a very busy work schedule at the start of the year.

This year I decided not to make any New Year Resolutions, in the past I had all the usual plans, lose weight, get fit, exercise very day, eat less and more healthily, drink less and so it goes on. I would start the year with grandiose improvement plans which would have all stopped or failed within a few weeks, sometimes leaving me a bit depressed by my apparent lack of will power.

It seems I meet exactly the remark of one of the characters in the Oscar Wilde comedy play Lady Windermere's Fan, " I can resist anything except temptation"

By the way when I was checking exactly where this saying came from i discovered a lot of other good quotes from this play
- you can read them at  -
http://www.goodreads.com/work/quotes/1897835-lady-windermere-s-fan  

At least so far I have stuck to my "no resolution" almost exactly.

Anyone who has been following my blog will recall that a few months ago I started a collection of photographs taken out of my Hotel room window whenever I was travelling. As my job takes me all over Europe I have lots of opportunities for this collection.

Well this year I have taken this a step further by joining a website called Blipfoto, which allows you to upload just one single photograph each day, with the aim to have a photograph each day. This has two impacts, both to create a record of the year but also to make you think all the time what your photograph can be today, so you end up always looking for things to photograph.

Yesterdays photo is below and if you are interested you can find the others at....http://www.blipfoto.com/Bizonderimage


 It was incredibly cold and quite windy when I took this photo, the display in my car said -5C but AccuWeather on my iPad gave a 'realfeel" temperature of -15C, taking one of my gloves off to adjust the camera settings left me with very very cold and painful fingers in just a few moments. 

Of course I took a few photos during my Christmas break, I have one I particularly like taken at Alcock Tarn just above Grasmere in the UK Lake District.

I like it because I think it shows the true nature of the Lake District, nice view across the Tarn with Lake Windermere in the background, raining but with the sun trying to break through, family out walking stopping to check the map.
 


It also makes an interesting black and white photograph showing how this same image has been created again and again over the years