
The cold weather came. It won’t leave. As I write this the temperature outside is 24 degrees. We should warm up sometime tomorrow.
Luckily, the rain stopped falling. The sun is shining through broken clouds. Clouds hold warmth in, so you know what this means. Colder still.
Yesterday was the saddest, coldest, wettest Mardi Gras ever. Sure, some people came out. They masked both ways. They wore their protective masks. They wore their Mardi Gras costumes. We call that masking too.
Of course, today is Ash Wednesday. The day when Catholics go to church and have an ash cross drawn on their foreheads. It’s the beginning of 40 days of sacrifice called Lent. I wonder how this is going to work out in the era of distancing and masking. If I were a better Catholic than I am, I’d just go and find out.
That’s a whole other story.
So.
This is a current picture. The first in ten days. I was excited to make it, even if it almost killed me. Oh well. Sometimes you have to decide if the pleasure is worth all the pain.
Making photographs is my one great pleasure. Note the word “great.” I do plenty of other things that bring me pleasure. But, photograph is the main thing.
Let’s see what you think. What is your biggest source of pleasure? What are the minor ones?
Stay safe. Stay strong. Stay mighty. Wear your mask. Wash your hands. Keep your distance. Look after each other. Enjoy all the weather.
Rain. You’d think that in Southeast Louisiana we’d know how to drive in wet conditions.
Oh no.
Most drivers are bad enough during the best of times. When the roads get wet, they forget what little they know about driving.
This is not a rant about local drivers. It’s the long way of saying that when I make a picture on a larger sized street I’m taking my life in my hands. Working on an interstate highway is much easier.
It’s also a way of saying that, both of my hands are on the steering wheel. I’ve talked about this previously.
I make sure the camera, or in this case, the phone is set on auto everything. I brace the camera, on the steering wheel. The only part of my hand that leaves the steering wheel is one finger or thumb. I just hope that the lens sees as I want it to.
The lens was close, but not quite there. If you look hard enough at the bottom of the picture you can see a bit of the dashboard. It’s part of the picture so I left it in.
I’ve been softening backgrounds in post production. I like it because it helps to enhance the subject by not being sharp.
I also like gauzy clouds.
That’s it.
Oh, this is not in New Orleans. I made this picture in Kenner after coming home from a CoVid-19 test.
No worries. My doctor wants his patients to take the test three days before the procedure.
If you recall, I took another test last week. But, the procedure was postponed because of… a CoVid-19 scare.
In many ways, that’s photographer’s luck. If I didn’t have the test I wouldn’t have been in a position to make this picture.
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