Quarterly Look Back - 3rd Quarter 2024 by Todd Henson

Looking back at the third quarter of 2024

I try to think of something new or interesting to say in these intros each quarter, and every so often I think I manage to find something. But most times it does end up sounding very similar to previous intros. And I think that’s where we are this quarter. But I hope that doesn’t dissuade you from checking out the various sections below, to see a sampling of the photography I’ve shared, the books I’ve read, the movies I’ve watched, the music I’ve listened to, and any other little ramblings about life. I’m hoping something will catch your eye.

And now on to the look back.

Photography

For a while now I’ve felt that I haven’t created quite the range of blog content I once did, that the posts I wrote were primarily Mostly Photos and Field Notes Updates. So this quarter I made a concerted effort to expand it, and I think I was successful, even adding a new category of post on Architecture. I will try to keep creating a range of content, but let me know if you enjoy the range or if you prefer a more narrow focus.

Architecture

Saint James’ Episcopal Church, Warrenton, Virginia

Before & After

Before & After: Overcast Blues on Aquia Creek

Mostly Photos

Mockingbird in C8

White and Blue Balloon Flowers on a Hot Summer Day

Polypore and Feather Moss Galore

Random Thoughts

The Beauty of a Gravel Road

Reviews

Book Finds – July 2024

Backroads Buildings: In Search of the Vernacular by Steve Gross & Susan Daley

Techniques

Color Fringing Fungus: An Example of Chromatic Aberration

Trip Report

A Rainy Spring Drive Over the Blue Ridge Mountains

The Burial Ground at George Washington Birthplace National Monument

Lakota Ranch in Remington, Virginia

Reading

I’ve had a good quarter of reading. I read more books this quarter than the previous two, and more overall pages, as well. Thankfully, the average rating I’ve given the books has hovered just over 4 out of 5 throughout the year. I love when I enjoy the majority of what I read. I feel like I had a decent mix of older books with more recent releases. I also mixed in non-fiction and photography with my more common genres of science fiction, fantasy and mystery/thriller.

Below are the books I read, and further below you’ll find a short description of some of my favorites of the quarter. Have you read any of these? Are you curious about any of them?

The books I consumed this quarter (paper, ebook, and audio).

Here’s the full list of books: The Sounds of Life: How Digital Technology is Bringing Us Closer to the Worlds of Animals and Plants by Karen Bakker, All This and More by Peng Shepherd, The Perfumist of Paris (The Jaipur Trilogy 3) by Alka Joshi, Season of Storms (The Witcher) by Andrzej Sapkowski, The Dispossessed: An Ambiguous Utopia (Hainish Cycle) by Ursula K. Le Guin, A Middle-earth Traveler: Sketches from Bag End to Mordor by John Howe, Murder in Mesopotamia (Hercule Poirot) by Agatha Christie, The Most Secret War: Army Signals Intelligence in Vietnam by James L. Gilbert, Mrs. Frisby and the Rats of NIMH by Robert C. O’Brien, White Mountain Trails by Winthrop Packard, Backroads Buildings - In Search of the Vernacular by Steve Gross & Susan Daley, The Rule: How I Beat the Odds in the Markets and in Life - and How You Can Too by Larry Hite, The Veiled Throne (Dandelion Dynasty 3) by Ken Liu, The Maid by Nita Prose, One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest by Ken Kesey, System Collapse (The Murderbot Diaries 7) by Martha Wells, Dr No (James Bond) by Ian Fleming, The Night Guest by Hildur Knútsdóttir.

And of those, my favorites were:

The Maid by Nita Prose

This was a perfectly timed feel good read for me, so it’s possible some of my enjoyment stemmed from it being the right book at the right time. It tells of Molly, a maid who may be a little different from some of us, and how she gets caught up in some nefarious goings-on at the hotel she works at. Some great characters in this story. Can’t wait to read the next book.

A Middle-earth Traveler: Sketches from Bag End to Mordor by John Howe

A fantastic book for any hardcore fan of J.R.R. Tolkien’s work and of John Howe’s artwork. It features lots of artwork, both from printed materials and that used during the making of the movies. A wonderful way to look back at that world in all its various forms.

Mrs. Frisby and the Rats of NIMH by Robert C. O’Brien

I first read this book when very young and in school. It is one of the few that really stuck with me, so when I saw it published as an audiobook I decided to do a reread, and what a wonderful read it was. It felt fresh, it had been so long since I first read it. And I felt similar feelings as I did the first time, a sense of loss, happiness, hope and mystery.

One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest by Ken Kesey

One of those many books that folks often read in school but I somehow missed. What a wild ride between sanity and insanity, between caring treatment and tyrannical malice. A fascinating study of multiple characters, sad at times, funny at others. I’m very glad I finally read this one.

Movies & Anime

Films I watched this quarter.

It’s been a mixed bag of movies this quarter. On a low note and to start the quarter off, Breach, starring Bruce Willis, wasn’t worth the time. It felt like a low-budget made-for-TV movie with poor writing and poor acting.

Leave No Trace, on the other hand, though perhaps also a lower budget film, had a powerful story showing the love between a father and daughter trying to survive on their own terms and the difficulties of life catching up to them. I really enjoyed this one.

Meg 2: The Trench, The Darkest Minds, and Space Milkshake were all fairly average and what you might expect. Meg 2 was a Jason Statham followup to The Meg. Pretty much enough said. The Darkest Minds was a dystopian YA film about youths with special powers trying to find their way in the world. Mostly enjoyable, if fairly predictable. And Space Milkshake was just ridiculous, as the name would imply, and as they appeared to try to make it. I do think this may have been a made-for-TV film and stars several folks known for their TV roles. Ridiculous, but I do enjoy this sort of ridiculous.

Fallen, starring Denzel Washington back in 1998, was a rewatch, and one I very much enjoyed all over again, even though this time around I knew the premise. This is one where if you’re curious to see it you may be better off not reading anything about it, just give it a try, see if it works for you.

Marvelous and the Black Hole was a touching story of a young girl trying to deal with the death of her mother and the changes that happened afterwards with her family and life. She becomes angry, very angry, and lashes out at everyone, until she meets someone who slowly over time begins to change everything for her.

And I’ve continued watching episodes of the 2003 anime series, Planetes, about future space crews whose job it is to clean up all the accumulating debris in orbit to avoid collisions and damage to functioning satellites and stations. I’m really enjoying this series and I’m almost finished with it.

Music

This quarter two of the songs I’m sharing are more folksy than rock and are from German Bands. But there’s also a song from an American songwriter/guitarist and a Japanese vocalist. I hope you enjoy the selection.

Versengold - The Devil is a Barmaid

What a fun folksy song, this time sung in English instead of German (their first in English). Apparently the band lost a bet with their friends from Kissin’ Dynamite and now they’ve written a cover for their song, The Devil is a Woman.

Dämmerland x Saltatio Mortis - Verlorene Träume

And here’s a second song with German songwriters and performers, this time singing in German. I’ve been on a bit of a Saltatio Mortis kick lately, so I was drawn to this melodic collaboration.

Marty Friedman - The Perfect World (featuring +α/あるふぁきゅん。)

And to close things out here’s a rock song from a few years back. I’ve been meaning to showcase this song since it first came out and now it’s finally popped to the top of my list. I love Marty Friedman’s guitar work and song writing and I think the singer adds a lot to this one. This is my kind of rock song. Also check out a live collaboration between Ichika Nito & Marty Friedman from my 2023 4th Quarter Look Back

And if you’re curious to see if I’ve purchased any music lately you can check out my collection in bandcamp.

 

Life

Last quarter I mentioned how my interests can be a bit scattershot and there are so many I sometimes struggle to keep up with them. It’s not unusual for some to wither away as I just don’t manage to make enough time for them. But they’re always still there in the background just waiting for their chance.

I’d begun learning guitar during the pandemic lockdowns, and though I never really learned to play through an entire song I did learn a number of chords and enjoyed just strumming and feeling those vibrations on my chest. But it’s been a while since I’ve picked up my guitar.

Recently my father and I visited a good friend who plays a number of different instruments, and he let me try out his Taylor GS Mini, a beautiful little guitar with a lot of personality. Sitting with the guitar in my lap I realized I’d forgotten how to play many of the chords I once knew. But as I randomly strummed strings they slowly came back to me and between strumming random noise I’d occasionally make a semi-pleasing set of tones. And this surfaced two feelings within me. The first was: I’d love to get myself one of these GS Mini’s! And of course the second was: Why don’t I start pulling out my own guitar and get back on track learning new skills and maybe learn how to carry a tune one of these days? So that’s what I hope to do this next quarter, start back up a regular practice of pulling out the guitar and practicing. Time will tell how well I follow through.

What about you? Do you have any goals for the remainder of the year, things you’ve maybe been consistently working towards already, or that you’ve been meaning to? Maybe there’s still time to get started if you haven’t already. Let’s give it a try and see.

Thanks much for reading, and have a great final quarter of 2024!


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The Beauty of a Gravel Road by Todd Henson

Following a gravel road

There can be a real beauty to following a gravel road over hills and through the trees with sunlight filtering through in patches of light separated by darker stripes along the length of the road. The trees and hills sometimes obscure what lies just ahead, creating that wonderful sense of mystery that pulls on one’s soul to keep driving or walking, keep moving forward, just to see what lies over the next hill or around the next turn. We become modern-day explorers discovering a new land.

What lies ahead?


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Saint James’ Episcopal Church, Warrenton, Virginia by Todd Henson

Saint James’ Episcopal Church in Warrenton, Virginia

I haven’t photographed a lot of architecture, though I very much appreciate a beautiful building, and churches often make for very beautiful buildings. In this case my father and I happened to be in Warrenton, Virginia, and stumbled upon Saint James’ Episcopal Church.

History of Saint James’ Church

St. James’ is part of Hamilton Parish which was first established in 1730. St. James’, itself, was first constructed in 1816 in a different location and built of a wooden framework. The old church was sold in 1846 and rebuilt from brick in 1853 at the current location. A fire consumed the church in 1910, though it was quickly rebuilt with the current stucco and brick in the style of an English parish church, and services resumed in 1912. 

Photographing Saint James’ Church

Photographing a church like this can be a challenge for a number of reasons. This one is located on a small street and the building isn’t too far from the street, so there isn’t a lot of room to compose a photograph. I used a wide angle lens at 16 mm to get as much of the buildings in as possible. As you can see this resulted in power lines running in front of the buildings. If I’d stood under the power lines my lens wouldn’t have been wide enough to capture the scene and there would have been an enormous amount of geometric distortion.

Using a wide angle lens up close leads to several types of geometric distortion. Wide angle lenses tend to be very rounded and this causes straight lines to curve and angle, especially if the camera isn’t held level but instead angled up to try to get all of the building in the frame. They make lenses specifically to deal with these issues, called tilt-shift lenses, but I don’t currently own any and they have limitations of their own.

So I did the best I could to capture as much of the church and yard as possible. When I imported the images into Lightroom I had to decide whether and how to correct for any distortions. For the main photo at the top of this post I decided to both apply the lens-specific profile corrections that account for the specific distortions of my model of lens, and I also decided to use the Transform feature of Lightroom to further correct the image by trying to make horizontal lines horizontal and vertical lines vertical. This does end up cropping in more of the image so I did lose some of the edges. Click on the image below to flip between the corrected and uncorrected versions of the photo to see the differences.

Angled View of Saint James’ Church

Finally, I wanted to try an angled view to better capture the depth of the church. Of course, this created even more distortion because I was much closer to the building. In this case I chose to only apply lens-specific profile corrections to try to keep straight lines straight, but I didn’t apply any additional corrections of the Transform feature.

Angled view of Saint James’ Church

Click on the image below to flip between the corrected and uncorrected versions of the angled view of the church. These were just lens-specific profile corrections, not Transform corrections.

I still have a lot to learn about photographing buildings in tight spaces, but I look forward to the continued practice. One idea I have is to try using my fisheye lens in some situations and compare that to the more normal wide angle views. Of course, using a fisheye will introduce even more distortions, but we’ll see how well they can be compensated for in Lightroom.

Leave a comment below and let me know what you think of my attempts at photographing Saint James’ Episcopal Church.


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