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* Wednesday C&C "No Theme" Thread #940 / Revived #160 on 2026 04 22 *

RoelHendrickx
April 22, 2026
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  • link
    RoelHendrickx
    Members 1408 posts
    April 27, 2026, 5:03 p.m. April 27, 2026, 5:03 p.m.
    link
    @Kumsal has written:
    @MikeFewster has written:

    Hydra
    Hydra.jpg

    A good photo.
    The downward-sloping line from the upper right to the lower left leads the eye to a distant island or coast, which isn't particularly interesting.
    Could this part be cropped out?

    I disagree.
    The far distant island or other shore provides balance.
    And certainly we need the full width of the open patch of sky. If you crop too closely to the tip of the harbour town, the connection with the sea gets lost.

    Woodsider79 likes this.

    favorite 1

  • link
    RoelHendrickx
    Members 1408 posts
    April 27, 2026, 5:08 p.m. April 27, 2026, 5:08 p.m.
    link
    @PeteS has written:

    Meet at the Beach

    H2271350.jpg

    Great use of telephoto compression.

    In an odd way, this photo reminds me of a visit to Blankenese, a small town north of Hamburg on the Elbe.
    We were there many years ago, having had a good bike ride north on our folding bikes, and enjoying a drink at a beach bar.
    People were sitting on that river beach, relaxing and playing in the sand.
    And suddenly a HUGE container ship sailed past, inwards toward the Hamburg Harbour.

    I am getting that sense of strangeness here too, but that sense is augmented by the direction of the ship, coming towards us and the "unsuspecting" beach people.

    Not to get into politics, but I am also getting a Persian Gulf vibe. The lives of innocent people living on the coast, upturned by a big threat.

  • link
    RoelHendrickx
    Members 1408 posts
    April 27, 2026, 5:09 p.m. April 27, 2026, 5:09 p.m.
    link
    @MikeFewster has written:
    @RoelHendrickx has written:
    @Fireplace33 has written:
    @ChrisOly has written:
    @RoelHendrickx has written:

    LIBERATION in EPERNAY

    roelh.zenfolio.com/img/s/v-10/p1380622550-6.jpg

    Action shot with historic vehicle and a great background. There is enough interest in various components of this capture to make it memorable.

    Yes, ...
    Strange pose though. Was he getting out normally and just caught in that momemtarily awkward position or was he trying to do something special?

    Glad that you caught that.
    He was indeed struggling awkwardly to get out of that vintage (reenactment type) jeep that seemed to have no opening doors.
    I'm glad (and I think he was too) that he did not end up flat on his face on the asphalt.
    Hence my slightly ironic title.

    Is that an Egyptian obelisk? Add in a very French building and the WW2 connection plus the title with the bubbly connection.
    Time rolls along. The transitions from one era to another can be awkward.
    I'm reminded of a common scene on the streets of Vietnam. Tourists, western and Vietnamese in jeep like vehicles (and the tourists often had put on military "helmets" for the occasion, being driven around on sigtseeing trips. I tried a few shots of this but never managed one that conveyed the irony I felt it deserved.

    Not an Egyptian obelisk. That would not be as straight.
    It is a 20th century commemorative pillar for the (military) victims of war.

  • link
    MikeFewster
    Members 2518 posts
    April 27, 2026, 9:33 p.m. April 27, 2026, 9:33 p.m.
    link
    @RoelHendrickx has written:
    @MikeFewster has written:
    @RoelHendrickx has written:
    @Fireplace33 has written:
    @ChrisOly has written:
    @RoelHendrickx has written:

    LIBERATION in EPERNAY

    roelh.zenfolio.com/img/s/v-10/p1380622550-6.jpg

    Action shot with historic vehicle and a great background. There is enough interest in various components of this capture to make it memorable.

    Yes, ...
    Strange pose though. Was he getting out normally and just caught in that momemtarily awkward position or was he trying to do something special?

    Glad that you caught that.
    He was indeed struggling awkwardly to get out of that vintage (reenactment type) jeep that seemed to have no opening doors.
    I'm glad (and I think he was too) that he did not end up flat on his face on the asphalt.
    Hence my slightly ironic title.

    Is that an Egyptian obelisk? Add in a very French building and the WW2 connection plus the title with the bubbly connection.
    Time rolls along. The transitions from one era to another can be awkward.
    I'm reminded of a common scene on the streets of Vietnam. Tourists, western and Vietnamese in jeep like vehicles (and the tourists often had put on military "helmets" for the occasion, being driven around on sigtseeing trips. I tried a few shots of this but never managed one that conveyed the irony I felt it deserved.

    Not an Egyptian obelisk. That would not be as straight.
    It is a 20th century commemorative pillar for the (military) victims of war.

    @RoelHendrickx has written:
    @MikeFewster has written:

    Hydra
    Hydra.jpg

    Really love this brooding, low key landscape, with the harbour town in darkness and a spotlight on the structure on the pier (a small lighthouse?)
    I am not often in favour of cloning or erasing, but I would be tempted to clone out the double flagmast. It connects the earth with the sky and I think I would prefer to see that brightest patch of sky more empty, with just the pointed (lighthouse?) piercing the bright sky.

    @RoelHendrickx has written:
    @MikeFewster has written:

    Hydra
    Hydra.jpg

    Really love this brooding, low key landscape, with the harbour town in darkness and a spotlight on the structure on the pier (a small lighthouse?)
    I am not often in favour of cloning or erasing, but I would be tempted to clone out the double flagmast. It connects the earth with the sky and I think I would prefer to see that brightest patch of sky more empty, with just the pointed (lighthouse?) piercing the bright sky.

    The kindness of strangers.
    What isn't showing.
    I'm standing on the tip of the opposite jaw to the harbour of Hydra. Much earlier I'd set off on a walk from our room through the old town and over indistinct tracks and the hills behind me. I got lost in a maze of little tracks and gullies There are no cars allowed on Hydra, apart from the harbour. Could I head for the ocean and then follow the coast road back into town. The theory was fine but it turned into a much longer walk than anticipated. As I reached the coast, an unanticipated storm built up. A race began to get back to the town. I made it back around the point as the deluge deluged and took refuge in a small taverna that's behind me here. I sat it out. No money in my pockets. The owners took pity on me and offered me a free and hugely appreciated coffee.

    Woodsider79 likes this.

    favorite 1

  • link
    Kumsal
    Members 603 posts
    April 28, 2026, 1:15 a.m. April 28, 2026, 1:15 a.m.
    link
    @RoelHendrickx has written:
    @Kumsal has written:

    Cute

    A street cat in Kadıköy – Istanbul.

    L1000892.jpg

    Cats are not my people.
    This one has striking eyes though, and that makes me look twice.

    The foreground makes me wonder: where you hiding or crouching in tall grass to catch the feline?
    (I am definitely NOT saying that those few stray leaves of grass are a problem.
    In fact the opposite: they create a sense of immersion: we are there with the photographer.)

    I approached the cat very slowly and crouched down about a meter away.
    The cat ignored me and looked away.
    When I took the first photo, the sound of leaf shutter caught its attention.
    Then this shot followed.

  • link
    minniev
    Members 2656 posts
    April 28, 2026, 1:19 a.m. April 28, 2026, 1:19 a.m.
    link
    @RoelHendrickx has written:

    LIBERATION in EPERNAY

    Our children took us for a weekend in the Champagne region.
    We stayed in a cosy appartment in the center of Epernay.

    I was up earliest and made the boulangerie run for our breakfast.

    The Place de la Republique is a roundabout from which the "Avenue de Champagne" leads east.
    In the center is a monument for the fallen of WWI (and maybe also WWII).
    I encountered this scene there and was just quick enough to whip out my phone.

    roelh.zenfolio.com/img/s/v-10/p1380622550-6.jpg

    The composition is wonderful with that bold leading line feeding onto a half hidden circle and the nice architectural pieces behind, an easy photo to find our path through. The guy coming out of the jeep is an interesting foreground subject to display in front of all that. He's making an awkward exit from an interesting vehicle and you caught him at the precise "decisive moment". Well done.

  • link
    minniev
    Members 2656 posts
    April 28, 2026, 1:21 a.m. April 28, 2026, 1:21 a.m.
    link
    @Kumsal has written:

    Cute

    A street cat in Kadıköy – Istanbul.

    L1000892.jpg

    You find the loveliest cats to share here. This one's a real beauty. I want to pick her up and cuddle her.

  • link
    minniev
    Members 2656 posts
    April 28, 2026, 1:35 a.m. April 28, 2026, 1:35 a.m.
    link
    @Fireplace33 has written:

    Thinking about landscape paintings from the romantic period

    On a hike last weekend up along the Austrian Riedingtal valley, I found this scene somewhere near the bottom.
    It reminded me somewhat of those old style romantic paintings of natural landscapes, so I guess that guided these two shots and their initial processing.

    DSC_2846 smaller.JPG

    DSC_2865 smaller.JPG

    Of course, it's now possible to go further and add an "oil painting" type processing as well.
    Maybe like this, but I'm not an expert at this, and there would certainly be other and probably much better versions than mine, feel free to try if you like.

    DSC_2865 d oil painting smaller.JPG

    Wonderful set of nature photos. I am always torn between capturing the powerful force of such strong water features as this, as you did in the first, or slowing-shuttering for the romantic look of the second. Both are valid, and you've done both well. The first renders a more appealing sky (is there perhaps more to retrieve in the raw file?) so I'm leaning towards that shot.

    And for this reason, the paint-version of the second seems more appealing than the straight photo, as the lack of color fits the palette in a painterly way. I am curious how you achieved this. There are many ways to go about it now, but also some of the softwares to create such things are no longer available. If I can find some time this week amidst a slew of medical appointments, I'd like to try a couple of methods on your lovely image.

    Edit: I tried to go a little further than you did in the painting business, using Jixipix. I want to try the Impressionist brushes on it but that takes a little more time than I have tonight.
    Untitled-1.jpg

    Untitled-1.jpg

    JPG, 1.7 MB, uploaded by minniev on April 28, 2026.

  • link
    minniev
    Members 2656 posts
    April 28, 2026, 1:36 a.m. April 28, 2026, 1:36 a.m.
    link
    @Sagittarius has written:

    First waterlilies this year

    Gibbs Gardens 20260419 - 1399.jpg

    Gibbs Gardens 20260419 - 1401.jpg

    Beautiful specimens. Such rich colors! I like the first best, because of the tiny spider. Good captures.

  • link
    minniev
    Members 2656 posts
    April 28, 2026, 1:40 a.m. April 28, 2026, 1:40 a.m.
    link
    @ChrisOly has written:

    boat - rusting

    bf11a5966f354b3d83281d7e7d4c75e4.jpg

    Ah, my first thought was the tail or flipper of a sea animal!

    Nice demonstration of balance in composition for a pleasing abstract. The narrow range of focus works OK here, but I hope you tried some with more depth of field too, since you had a lot of spare shutter speed to work with. Some with more DOF would be interesting too.

  • link
    minniev
    Members 2656 posts
    April 28, 2026, 1:45 a.m. April 28, 2026, 1:45 a.m.
    link
    @MikeFewster has written:

    Hydra
    Hydra.jpg

    What an interesting image! I presume Hydra is the name of the city, but it can also serve as a reference the storm that's about to dump a bunch of water on the place, as it enters from Stage Left. The rich blues are pleasing and the contrasting yellows of the lights along the shore add interest. The diagonal sweep of the composition makes the image easy to read. Well done.

  • link
    minniev
    Members 2656 posts
    April 28, 2026, 1:50 a.m. April 28, 2026, 1:50 a.m.
    link
    @PeteS has written:

    Meet at the Beach

    H2271350.jpg

    This is kinda surreal. The boat is too big; the ladies, who are not in traditional beachwear, seem unconcerned about the monster that appears to be bearing down on them. Indeed, the boat is almost anthropomorphic, with glaring eyes and formidable eyebrows above a gaping mouth half hidden by the sea. I may have nightmares about this one.

  • link
    RoelHendrickx
    Members 1408 posts
    April 28, 2026, 8:47 a.m. April 28, 2026, 8:47 a.m.
    link
    @minniev has written:
    @MikeFewster has written:

    Hydra
    Hydra.jpg

    What an interesting image! I presume Hydra is the name of the city, but it can also serve as a reference the storm that's about to dump a bunch of water on the place, as it enters from Stage Left. The rich blues are pleasing and the contrasting yellows of the lights along the shore add interest. The diagonal sweep of the composition makes the image easy to read. Well done.

    I tried to find Hydra with Google Maps but could not immediately find it.
    I am wondering exactly where this is.
    Maybe it is a city with a similar name, but Mike "mythologized" it...

  • link
    Sagittarius
    Members 932 posts
    April 28, 2026, 12:25 p.m. April 28, 2026, 12:25 p.m.
    link
    @RoelHendrickx has written:
    @minniev has written:
    @MikeFewster has written:

    Hydra
    Hydra.jpg

    What an interesting image! I presume Hydra is the name of the city, but it can also serve as a reference the storm that's about to dump a bunch of water on the place, as it enters from Stage Left. The rich blues are pleasing and the contrasting yellows of the lights along the shore add interest. The diagonal sweep of the composition makes the image easy to read. Well done.

    I tried to find Hydra with Google Maps but could not immediately find it.
    I am wondering exactly where this is.
    Maybe it is a city with a similar name, but Mike "mythologized" it...

    Hydra is an island in Greece.
    www.google.com/search?q=hydra+greece&client=tablet-android-samsung-rvo1&hs=g7mp&sca_esv=8973cab98d98f2bf&ei=wKXwaaWJIP6_p84P3s7rqQo&biw=1095&bih=566&gs_ssp=eJzj4tDP1TfISoo3NWD04smoTClKVEgvSk1NTgUAWAIHmA&oq=Hydra&gs_lp=Egxnd3Mtd2l6LXNlcnAiBUh5ZHJhKgIIBzIKEAAYgAQYigUYQzIIEC4YsQMYgAQyChAuGIAEGIoFGEMyChAAGIAEGIoFGEMyChAAGIAEGIoFGEMyCxAuGIMBGLEDGIAEMgoQABiABBiKBRhDMg0QLhhDGLEDGIAEGIoFMgoQABiABBiKBRhDMggQABiABBixA0iK4QFQziNY-2lwBHgBkAEAmAGOAaAB3AGqAQMxLjG4AQHIAQD4AQGYAgOgAvgBwgIHEAAYgAQYCsICDBAuGIAEGAoYCxixA8ICBhAAGAcYHsICBRAAGIAEwgIPEC4YgAQYChgLGLEDGIMBmAMAiAYBkgcDMi4xoAeqJ7IHAzEuMbgH8gHCBwUyLTEuMsgHFoAIAQ&sclient=gws-wiz-serp

  • link
    RoelHendrickx
    Members 1408 posts
    April 28, 2026, 4:23 p.m. April 28, 2026, 4:23 p.m.
    link
    @Sagittarius has written:
    @RoelHendrickx has written:
    @minniev has written:
    @MikeFewster has written:

    Hydra
    Hydra.jpg

    What an interesting image! I presume Hydra is the name of the city, but it can also serve as a reference the storm that's about to dump a bunch of water on the place, as it enters from Stage Left. The rich blues are pleasing and the contrasting yellows of the lights along the shore add interest. The diagonal sweep of the composition makes the image easy to read. Well done.

    I tried to find Hydra with Google Maps but could not immediately find it.
    I am wondering exactly where this is.
    Maybe it is a city with a similar name, but Mike "mythologized" it...

    Hydra is an island in Greece.
    www.google.com/search?q=hydra+greece&client=tablet-android-samsung-rvo1&hs=g7mp&sca_esv=8973cab98d98f2bf&ei=wKXwaaWJIP6_p84P3s7rqQo&biw=1095&bih=566&gs_ssp=eJzj4tDP1TfISoo3NWD04smoTClKVEgvSk1NTgUAWAIHmA&oq=Hydra&gs_lp=Egxnd3Mtd2l6LXNlcnAiBUh5ZHJhKgIIBzIKEAAYgAQYigUYQzIIEC4YsQMYgAQyChAuGIAEGIoFGEMyChAAGIAEGIoFGEMyChAAGIAEGIoFGEMyCxAuGIMBGLEDGIAEMgoQABiABBiKBRhDMg0QLhhDGLEDGIAEGIoFMgoQABiABBiKBRhDMggQABiABBixA0iK4QFQziNY-2lwBHgBkAEAmAGOAaAB3AGqAQMxLjG4AQHIAQD4AQGYAgOgAvgBwgIHEAAYgAQYCsICDBAuGIAEGAoYCxixA8ICBhAAGAcYHsICBRAAGIAEwgIPEC4YgAQYChgLGLEDGIMBmAMAiAYBkgcDMi4xoAeqJ7IHAzEuMbgH8gHCBwUyLTEuMsgHFoAIAQ&sclient=gws-wiz-serp

    Thank you, I see now. On my Google Maps version it is spelled "Idra" or with the greek script.

  • link
    MikeFewster
    Members 2518 posts
    April 28, 2026, 10:34 p.m. April 28, 2026, 10:34 p.m.
    link
    @RoelHendrickx has written:
    @Sagittarius has written:
    @RoelHendrickx has written:
    @minniev has written:
    @MikeFewster has written:

    Hydra
    Hydra.jpg

    What an interesting image! I presume Hydra is the name of the city, but it can also serve as a reference the storm that's about to dump a bunch of water on the place, as it enters from Stage Left. The rich blues are pleasing and the contrasting yellows of the lights along the shore add interest. The diagonal sweep of the composition makes the image easy to read. Well done.

    I tried to find Hydra with Google Maps but could not immediately find it.
    I am wondering exactly where this is.
    Maybe it is a city with a similar name, but Mike "mythologized" it...

    Hydra is an island in Greece.
    www.google.com/search?q=hydra+greece&client=tablet-android-samsung-rvo1&hs=g7mp&sca_esv=8973cab98d98f2bf&ei=wKXwaaWJIP6_p84P3s7rqQo&biw=1095&bih=566&gs_ssp=eJzj4tDP1TfISoo3NWD04smoTClKVEgvSk1NTgUAWAIHmA&oq=Hydra&gs_lp=Egxnd3Mtd2l6LXNlcnAiBUh5ZHJhKgIIBzIKEAAYgAQYigUYQzIIEC4YsQMYgAQyChAuGIAEGIoFGEMyChAAGIAEGIoFGEMyChAAGIAEGIoFGEMyCxAuGIMBGLEDGIAEMgoQABiABBiKBRhDMg0QLhhDGLEDGIAEGIoFMgoQABiABBiKBRhDMggQABiABBixA0iK4QFQziNY-2lwBHgBkAEAmAGOAaAB3AGqAQMxLjG4AQHIAQD4AQGYAgOgAvgBwgIHEAAYgAQYCsICDBAuGIAEGAoYCxixA8ICBhAAGAcYHsICBRAAGIAEwgIPEC4YgAQYChgLGLEDGIMBmAMAiAYBkgcDMi4xoAeqJ7IHAzEuMbgH8gHCBwUyLTEuMsgHFoAIAQ&sclient=gws-wiz-serp

    Thank you, I see now. On my Google Maps version it is spelled "Idra" or with the greek script.

    We were there for all the reasons given in Roel's link. It is quite close by ferry to Athens. We had a short stay in Greece. last year and Hydra was reachable.
    Plus one more thing that is significant for Australians of my generation with art/literary interests. Two Australian writers of legendary status. George Johnston and Charmain Clift lived on Hydra in the late 50s, early 60s. Their writing probably gave the travel bug to an Australian generation. They are still worth reading. Clift had an affair with the young Leonard Cohen. Their relationship with him features in the tv series "So long Marianne" He later described them as "inspirational."
    Here's an article about them, Cohen and Hydra.
    www.smh.com.au/culture/books/it-was-my-dream-to-run-away-to-a-greek-island-and-write-a-book-this-year-i-did-it-20230918-p5e5iw.html
    In Australian art/literary circles Johnston and Clift are still much discussed. It's a complex mix of Australia, distance and relationships to the world and other cultures, hippiness and male/female relationships. I consider Johnston's "My Brother Jack" as essential reading for understanding Australia in the period from WW1 to the 1950s. It's an Australia that has now gone however the country still likes to think it exists.

  • link
    Kumsal
    Members 603 posts
    April 29, 2026, 9:48 a.m. April 29, 2026, 9:48 a.m.
    link
    @MikeFewster has written:
    @RoelHendrickx has written:
    @Sagittarius has written:
    @RoelHendrickx has written:
    @minniev has written:
    @MikeFewster has written:

    Hydra
    Hydra.jpg

    What an interesting image! I presume Hydra is the name of the city, but it can also serve as a reference the storm that's about to dump a bunch of water on the place, as it enters from Stage Left. The rich blues are pleasing and the contrasting yellows of the lights along the shore add interest. The diagonal sweep of the composition makes the image easy to read. Well done.

    I tried to find Hydra with Google Maps but could not immediately find it.
    I am wondering exactly where this is.
    Maybe it is a city with a similar name, but Mike "mythologized" it...

    Hydra is an island in Greece.
    www.google.com/search?q=hydra+greece&client=tablet-android-samsung-rvo1&hs=g7mp&sca_esv=8973cab98d98f2bf&ei=wKXwaaWJIP6_p84P3s7rqQo&biw=1095&bih=566&gs_ssp=eJzj4tDP1TfISoo3NWD04smoTClKVEgvSk1NTgUAWAIHmA&oq=Hydra&gs_lp=Egxnd3Mtd2l6LXNlcnAiBUh5ZHJhKgIIBzIKEAAYgAQYigUYQzIIEC4YsQMYgAQyChAuGIAEGIoFGEMyChAAGIAEGIoFGEMyChAAGIAEGIoFGEMyCxAuGIMBGLEDGIAEMgoQABiABBiKBRhDMg0QLhhDGLEDGIAEGIoFMgoQABiABBiKBRhDMggQABiABBixA0iK4QFQziNY-2lwBHgBkAEAmAGOAaAB3AGqAQMxLjG4AQHIAQD4AQGYAgOgAvgBwgIHEAAYgAQYCsICDBAuGIAEGAoYCxixA8ICBhAAGAcYHsICBRAAGIAEwgIPEC4YgAQYChgLGLEDGIMBmAMAiAYBkgcDMi4xoAeqJ7IHAzEuMbgH8gHCBwUyLTEuMsgHFoAIAQ&sclient=gws-wiz-serp

    Thank you, I see now. On my Google Maps version it is spelled "Idra" or with the greek script.

    We were there for all the reasons given in Roel's link. It is quite close by ferry to Athens. We had a short stay in Greece. last year and Hydra was reachable.
    Plus one more thing that is significant for Australians of my generation with art/literary interests. Two Australian writers of legendary status. George Johnston and Charmain Clift lived on Hydra in the late 50s, early 60s. Their writing probably gave the travel bug to an Australian generation. They are still worth reading. Clift had an affair with the young Leonard Cohen. Their relationship with him features in the tv series "So long Marianne" He later described them as "inspirational."
    Here's an article about them, Cohen and Hydra.
    www.smh.com.au/culture/books/it-was-my-dream-to-run-away-to-a-greek-island-and-write-a-book-this-year-i-did-it-20230918-p5e5iw.html
    In Australian art/literary circles Johnston and Clift are still much discussed. It's a complex mix of Australia, distance and relationships to the world and other cultures, hippiness and male/female relationships. I consider Johnston's "My Brother Jack" as essential reading for understanding Australia in the period from WW1 to the 1950s. It's an Australia that has now gone however the country still likes to think it exists.

    Marianne is from Norway. Much later, in her old age, she even attended a Cohen concert. According to Wikipedia:
    "The song was inspired by Marianne Jensen, born Marianne Ihlen, whom Cohen met on the Greek island of Hydra in 1960. She had recently been left by her husband, the Norwegian writer Axel Jensen, leaving her and their six-month-old son alone on the island. The two hit it off, and Cohen ultimately took her from Hydra back to her home in Oslo, Norway. He later invited her and her son to live with him in Montreal, an offer which she accepted. The two lived together throughout the 1960s, traveling between New York, Montreal, and Hydra."

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