Saturday, August 18, 2007

Charlie Brown

I was tidying my small pile of books today when I spotted this old favourite of mine.
I've had this from the mid 1970's, actually it's a new 1974 edition, well thumbed through and with that tan coloration you get on older books especially on less expensive paper probably because reading this as a child made me so happy.
I have a few more books of Charles M Schultz's Peanuts cartoon strip series as I loved the tv animated series and it's characters.

Saturday, August 11, 2007

Photography and this blog: The connection

 

There would never be a blog if it were not for my my interest in photography as much as the original blog host had very limited image support which was why it was I explored other hosts and moved to blogger.

After using childhood 127 film cameras, a 120 Twin Lens Reflex and brief period with a Zenith E, I settled on using a Olympus film gear that included a OM 4 advanced single lens reflex camera with marque lens, dedicated auto through the lens/manual  exposure flash and Winder 2 for remote or highly rapid picture taking that bolts on the underside improving grip and taking over from the manual film advance.

Its greatest feature was a combination of multi spot metering to set exposure better in difficult circumstances and the ability to store and adjust aperture and shutter speed settings to balance that exposure to match the way you wish to present the subject.

Currently I'm reliant on having slide or negative films processed and scanned to disc when developed which I then import to my ageing desktop computer to upload here while I look at how the digital camera market develops and what may work best for blogging which is where a digital camera would help cutting out the delays between going somewhere, finishing off the film roll and getting the processed film back.

That in its own way is why press photography moved rapidly to digital as speed makes big difference between getting copy out when it's of interest or not.

Saturday, August 4, 2007

You're Always A Girl

Being a Little Girl later on in your life  is not the easiest of concepts to explain to people principally because people associate the frame of mind of the person to their age as recorded by their chronological date of birth  deeming some interests to be either child like or heaven forbid childish.
This scares the living daylights out of a significant number of people who hold on to notions of age appropriate behaviour not least because some forms may impact on your ability to function in the world of employment.


To me this could only be true if you were functioning at an infant level - think oversized baby - needing total attention and supervision but this isn't what I'm talking about.
I think most are familiar with the idea of the 'inner child' who many psychologists say lives on in everyone. 

The difference I would say is many of our likes remain at that level, we aren't necessarily comfortable with some aspects of 'adult' living and there's little collation between that and our IQ or general functioning.

To put things into context I've held political office representing an authority, contributed to and accepted responsibility for setting budgets  and programs whilst being a 'little girl'  because I can choose when to present the little girl physically and when I can use that to the advantage of society having an immediate empathy with children to help them grow up to be well rounded individuals though my work with various bodies.