To see my original postings go to: http://bmoore3photos.blogspot.com

Friday, November 1, 2013

INSPIRE130+ photos Oct. 2013

This is a video of 130+ photos that I've done and showed at a recent photography showing along with several of my finished prints.  Some of the photos I have posted before - however, the majority are new or never before posted.  I hope you enjoy these photos and the music.  If you have a comment I would really like the feedback so that I may improve my next photo video.  For older photos you can log onto some of my other blogs on photography... ie...http://bmoore3photos.blogspot.com/  or onto YouTube at  http://www.youtube.com/user/Bmoore1945/videos.

Friday, August 23, 2013



August 23, 2013

By now the world has probably seen, heard of, or read about the horrific fire that is destroying the Sierra Mountains just to the East of where I live and where I spend a lot of time photographing and just enjoying.   The Rim Fire crossed the western boundary of Yosemite National Park yesterday between Camp Mather and Eleanor Lake and left a path of destruction along Highway 120 North of Yosemite to Groveland.  The Rim Fire (as it is called) has grown to over 105,000 acres -- or roughly 165 square miles -- it is soon going to start it's day of burning largely out of control through steep, rugged terrain. It has destroyed many structures and home and threatens an additional 2,500 homes.  Our family spent a week at Pine Mountain Lake this summer and that area is being evacuated now.  We have friends who live in the Greeley Hill - Groveland area.  I don't ever recall a fire more devastating to California that this fire and I pray for the safety of the people who live and work in this area, for those fighting the fires, and for the fire to end before much more damage is caused.  The way it looks now that is a BIG prayer...the blaze is just 2% contained and the winds are fanning the flames in all directions.  Groveland, Pine Mountain Lake, Buck Meadows,and all the little 'you just missed it' spots along the fires path will need all our support when this fire is finally killed.  It will take a lot of our support to bring this part of California back to the beauty we have know.  Please, if you get a chance to support those in the fires path... please do so.   Thank you from a neighbor in Modesto...

Monday, August 19, 2013

Nightfall shot of Half Dome
Here is a shot I took of Half Dome in Yosemite National Park this summer.  I've probably been to Yosemite a dozen times in the past couple of years and I never get tired of it.  I started going there back in the early 1960's and each time I go I see something new and different.  I don't think I'll ever tire of visiting this beautiful park.... be it in the heat of summer or the cold of winter; or the new growth in spring or the colors of fall... the park is a photographers dream come true.  You quickly understand why people say if you don't like the view... wait a while and it will change.  One visit the sky is hazy, the next a deep blue or filled with billowing clouds; and the granite rock walls will be dark and drab then burning crimson from the rising or setting sun. The valley is a never ending display of color and form and a view to stand back, drink in, and enjoy.  
Yosemite Valley looking up... Beautiful sky and clouds. 
As summer wraps up I'm again finding myself getting ready for photo competitions again.  Having time away for competing in competitions give me the time to just get out at shoot just for the fun of it (it's all fun, but during the nine months where I compete does cause me to have to focus on specific fields of photography.  During the summer months I can just hang out and take pictures of whatever floats by me.  Here is a Swallowtail butterfly from my garden.  It was very cooperative and stayed around for over ten minutes resting on my six foot tall Zinnias...
It won't be long before these butterflies will be heading south for the winter.

Tuesday, April 30, 2013

An altered view of reality and possibilities. Photography....







Have you ever wondered what different places would look like if the Earth suddenly had another flood?  Well, here are three photos I did that might give you a hint....   Yosemite Falls (in Yosemite Valley is just over 2,000 feet above sea level).   Mount Rushmore near Keystone South Dakota is just over 5,700 feet, and the last one would be a view of the full moon coming over the top of Mount Everest at 29,029 feet.

I like experimenting with photography and the many different effects I can create with my photos.  This is one of the new special effects I've been experimenting with recently.  It sure puts things into a different perspective when you take a photo of something you have seen many times and add a new feature to the photo.  Adding water really changes the view and reality of what was taken in the original photo and alters it to be something outside of what was really taking place when the photo was taken. Seeing things out side of the norm.  It tests you and allows you to just let your imagination roam.    

Saturday, April 27, 2013

A Albinoni's Adagio (by William Moore)



My love of photography can only be surpassed by my love of music.  This video combines these two pastimes of mine into a project that I’ve been working on since 1968.  Back then I was in the Navy and stationed in Sicily, Italy.  Prior to entering the service I was a music/drama major in college.  After studying voice and acting (like many music majors and drama students) I came to the realization that my choices were really limiting me in what I would be able to do in life… so I volunteered for the Navy (like my father and grand-father before him did).  I wanted to see more of the world and grow up and figure out what I really wanted in life. 

After being stationed in Sicily I continued to take voice training and being in Italy, I fell in love with Italian music.  I had been in Sicily for about a year or so when in 1968 I was spending a weekend (which I did often) in Taormina.  On that particular weekend I heard a song that was sung by an Austrian named Udo Jürgen...  The song is an adaptation of “Adagio in G minor” by Tomaso Albinoni… originally written around 1708 then tucked away in Dresden until the city was bombed in February and March of 1945 by the British and American Air Forces….   The people of Dresden had evacuated and preserved most of its cities music collection and shortly after the war a guy named Giazotto's purported discovery of a tiny manuscript fragment and recreated the long forgotten music of Albinoni.   I was sitting in a restaurant and the recently released song was played in the background.  The song rattled around in my brain for 44 years when I decided it was time to do something about wanting to sing the song.  I had purchased a 45 rpm recording of the song after hearing it that first time.

It took months of searching and finally I found someone (Rene Jocharde of Austria) who knew the song and he (through Facebook) contacted me and sent me a German version of the sheet music and then later the translation into Italian.  From there I contacted someone (Chad Pippin of Modesto) who arranged for me to make a recording of the song.  Yvonne Thompson (whom I’ve known since 1975 and who is one of the best pianist I’ve known) recreated the feel and tempo of the song.  Chad Pippin added acoustic guitar and strings to the background, and I was off to the recording studio to record what had been on my mind all these years.  By this time 45 years had passed from the time I first heard the song until I was able to make this recording at age 67.  My version of the song was for my family – however, after hearing from many people that they liked the song and wanted me to post it, I made a version mixed with photos that I’ve taken (rather than the version I did with me singing that I did for my family) and this is the result.  I enjoyed finally being able to finish this project after so many years.  I hope you enjoy the video with photos.  Thank you for taking the time to listen and view the photos.    

Tuesday, April 2, 2013






Belonging to a camera club really does help you improve the quality of your photos (especially if it is associated with the Photographic Society of America in the judging and critiquing of your work).  The photos above are my April 2013 submissions.  I really get a lot out of the judges critiques.  Each time I submit a photo I learn something new about my style of photography and how I can improve.  I belong to the Modesto Camera Club  The above photos are titled (from top to bottom): 1. Half Dome from Cooks Meadow ; 2. Rushmore ~ The Presidents; 3.  Female Yellowstone Elk; 4. Wintering Western Crow (Yosemite Valley); 5. Ever Changing Weather (Bodie, CA.); 6. Bodie Car Rusting with Lights On (Bodie Calif.).  (these photos are CR protected)....   Out of 60 total possible points I earned 57 for the above collection.  The critiques will help me improve during the next competition.  If you're thinking of improving your photos, you might consider joining a PSA approved camera club. (The larger photos received 10 out of 10 and the smaller on's 9 out of 10 (leaving room form improvement).... Something to shoot for.

Tuesday, February 19, 2013

Who Is Around The Corner In History



On one of the many trips to Europe I took this shot in Italy of an old Roman ruin.  This one structure (which I titled “Who Is Around The Corner In History”) caught my eye in not only it’s massive size and even after close to 2,000 years its detail and color, but also because of the way light reflected at every angle.  One side was in shadow and the other in a reflected defused light.  The men on the left seemed to be looking (or about to glance) at the men on the right who were in the shadows.  It reminded me of the nature of the world… those in the light trying to peek at those who live in the dark and yet that narrow edge that separated them kept them from crossing over into each others world.  The divide between good and evil, right and wrong, vision and despair.  Just so many aspects of life can be seen in this one scene and above it were masses of color deflecting the scars on the faces of the statues.  So much joy, yet so much pain all at the same time. 

But I wander a bit by being philosophical on what the photo meant to me.  This photo was shot with just a cheap old point and shoot camera that I always had with me on that trip (when I didn’t want to drag along the big DSLR).   I shot it with an Olympus Optical C4100Z with an F stop of 2.8, focal length of 10.7 mm and an exposure time of 1/320 of a second.  I was about 15 feet away from the center of this statue area with the light to my back.  No flash was used as the lighting was good enough to capture the mood.  See, even a basic point and shoot digital camera works (and that camera only had a 4.0 max mega pixel capability).  Just proves that you just shoot with what you have sometimes you are given a good photo.

From monkeys to stormy nights....


These are some of the photos I have taken on my journey around the world.  The photo above is of a mother Rhesus Monkey and her baby.  Africa you say?  No!  Right here in California at the Sierra West Wildlife Sanctuary near Santa Rosa.  There are so many sanctuaries here in California that you really don't have to go to foreign lands to see these beautiful animals in a natural environment. 

This pair was less than 30 feet away from me and I was shooting with a Sigma DG 50-500mm lens (actual mm was at 410mm) at F6.3 with an exposure time of 1/125 second.  No flash needed as the day was bright and slightly overcast. 


 
It was a dark and stormy... well; you know the rest of that story.  This photo is of the Elmore, Minnesota main water tower which sits on the only hill in this quiet little Southern Minnesota town located about 10 miles East of Blue Earth right along the Iowa state boarder.  Being the Mid-West there are days where you can go from bright sunny and no breeze to the most severe weather that is so often reported on in the news.  My mother-in-law lives in this farming community and we go back as often as we can to visit.  On this particular day the clouds rolled in like a vengeance.  Wind sheers, lighting, and rain so heavy that within a few minutes of taking this photo I could not see this water tower.  I titled this photo "The Best Place to Live Next to During a Lightning Storm"...  the title is what most people would expect... however, the people who actually live right next to the tower lost all their power when a lightning bold hit the tower and part of the strike hit their home and knocked out all their kitchen appliances... Yes... FRIED them!
 

On this photo I used a Sigma DC 18-50mm lens (actual shot take at 33mm approximately 150 feet from the water tower).  I shot the tower at F3.5 with the setting at 1/50 of a second. I was lucky that there was a light coming from a very small break in the clouds and it hit the tower just as I was taking this shot.  I guess time is everything... yes it is!