Tuesday, December 31, 2024

 Ending 2024 with the Best Of-s




It seems that each year about this time, most media sources provide us with a review of the best of-s that serve as highlights from the previous year.  Since this is a photography blog, I would like to share a single photo that I feel is my best of 2024.

My process for doing this was to review those photos that I chose to frame and print this past year.  Like most photographers, I print only a very small percentage of my photos. 

The photo chosen for this week was taken on a subzero day this past January 2024.  January in northern Illinois is an austere period characterized by bleak landscapes which are bathed in grays and whites.  However, the warm sky colors in the background seemed to speak the promise of better days to come.   Better days to come is my wish for you in 2025.







Monday, December 23, 2024

 Our Anticipation is Ending


 

The days of "It's Beginning to look a lot like Christmas." are rapidly drawing to a close. We stand at the the threshold of Christmas Eve ready or not.  I am pleased to have chosen this project and I suspect that it may continue into the next Christmas season. The photos that I have taken had the effect of allowing me to reduce holiday stress and wasted motion which permitted me to look at Christmas through my own eyes and not through the eyes of others who are leading the rush to tell us what Christmas should look like.


According to the Christian tradition of Advent (the days leading up to Christmas) is a period of anticipation.  Anticipation is much more than simply waiting.  Within the last week. I have waited in long lines of shoppers, waited for the dentist's drill to prepare me for a crown, and waited to celebrate with loved ones and family members.  My time of anticipation was filled with boredom, dread, and excitement and joy.  By itself, anticipation does not capture the spirit of the holiday.  Elements of longing, mystery, and bonding blend with our anticipation to provide the seasoning for our individual Christmas experience.  Because we are all anticipating something different for the holiday, is the reason Christmas is capable of producing such varied of responses. 

I found that many of the photos I  took were taken with my cell  phone because Christmas seems  to appear in little frames  spontaneously. "You better watch out" couldn't be better  advice for capturing the photos for this project.  There are so many more sides of Christmas that I didn't explore. 

Like cropping a photo, there is only so much you can fit into a frame before it becomes a meaningless blur.  I am grateful that my project allowed me to examine those individual puzzle pieces of our Christmas preparations that when they all come together they give a sense of completeness and contentment.  

Merry Christmas!

  






 

Wednesday, December 18, 2024

 Accepting the Cookies



If you browse the web, you are very familiar with the term cookies.  The cookies are those little bots webmasters place in our browser to make our website experience friendly.  Mainly, they want us to find what we are seeking and many more things they would like us to buy or read.  Some cookies also can be used for pernicious purposes.

Since it's less than ten days until Christmas I wish to consider the traditional cookies from my childhood days.  The kind of cookie that didn't track me, but the kind that attracted me with their tantalizing taste and smell.  Perhaps, some of the current computer terminology was lifted from those simpler times because I believe my mom could track me when I pilfered the cookies she left to cool on the countertop.  

My photo for the week came to me from my good friend Tom, a fellow grumpy old photographer, a weekly coffee buddy, and a proud first time grandpa.  When I saw this photo, I asked for his permssion to use it in this holiday series that I have named, "Its Beginning to Look a Lot Like Christmas".  (For more on what this photo series is about, check out last week's blog.)  

When I saw this photo, I clearly saw a love story in it -- a love that will transcend this batch of Christmas cookies and the small bits of raw dough consumed in their making.  I liked the way that grandma and grandson are nearly embraced with her face so near his face as if she were sharing a secret.  Her hands are important supporting details within this love story. Grandma's older hands, dusted with flour, placed atop of her grandchild's small hands to teach the nuances of rolling cookie dough while likely limiting the amount of raw sugar dough he consumed.  Mothers and grandmothers possess this common magical charm in their ability to multi-task in such ways.

The Christmas season is a time where we can experience many different kinds of joy.  There is joy in attending a Christmas parade, a holiday light display or a symphony performance where our senses are ignited and explode into a shout of joy that screams wow.  This kind of joy requires a minimum personal investment.

There are also quiet joyful  moments that culminate in a softer wow that warms the heart and inspires both gratitude and contentment. These personal moments usually require a personal investment and can often appear spontaneously.  Best of all, these are the moments we carry for weeks afterward and often for the rest of our lives.  

In these days when "It's Beginning to Look a Lot Like Christmas", my wish for you is that you experience both kinds of joy.  Make time to accept and cherish those cookies which leave you feeling like Christmas throughout the year.








 






 

Monday, December 9, 2024

 Farmall of Us To You...


As Christmas approaches, I am making it a point to photograph scenes that make me think about the preparations we make to celebrate the holiday.  It's a bit of street photography blended with a Hallmark flavor.  

I am enjoying the experience because it is similar to peeking at your Chrismas presents before December 25th. Like gifts from childhood days, they are hidden among ordinary everyday scenes and sometimes in strange settings.  I am looking for the traditional Christmas stuff, but I am seeking to sample all the joys, colors, moments of quiet contemplation, confusion, and irony which are all part of Christmas.  In the Christmas carole "Joy To The World"  the phrase "prepare Him room" appears and I never gave it much thought since the Christmas star and the visit of the wise men bearing gifts seemed to present a more intriguing picture. However, "preparing Him room" is my way of finding peace by resisting the rush and distractions of the season and seeking to find joy in the present not giving way to the glitz of parties, shopping and getting. 

The photo that I chose this week was found in the countryside near me.  This rusted 1947 Farmall tractor was sitting out beside a farm house while it was being decorated with Christmas lights by the farmer and his daughter.  They were experiencing the joy of creating something beautiful with someone dear.  Their task was special because it honored the Christmas tradition while strengthening their loving relationship.   Only at Christmastime can those ordinary pieces be reimagined and embellished "to prepare room" for the spirit of Christmas to return.