A Few More Images from Italy

This evening when I opened Lightroom to review more of my images from Italy, it opened to the Venice images and two caught my eye. The first image was taken along one of the canals where several gondoliers had “parked” their gondolas and were discussing the value of the dollar and how it is measured in exchange rates, treasury notes and the amount of dollars held by foreign  countries, or was it whose gondola was bigger.

The second image that caught my eye was of a window in Venice (below). The windows and doors of Italy caught my attention over and over again. We do not have windows and doors like that here. A couple examples follow. The doors were in Cortona.

That’s all for this evening. More tomorrow.
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Great Spangled Fritillary Butterfly

I am taking a break from processing images from Italy this evening and instead have focused my attention on images that I shot this Sunday of a Great Spangled Fritillary butterfly (Speryeria Cybele). I have seen this type of butterfly many times, but they were either very skittish when approached or in poor condition. This one was perfect and seemed to enjoy posing for me. I was able to get fairly close, and even had time to switch from my Nikkor 28-300mm lens to my Nikkor 105mm macro lens.

(Nikon D700, 105mm, f8, 1/200, ISO 200)

The Great Spangled Fritillary is a large (wingspan 2 1/2 to 4 inches), bright orange butterfly that has a pale band and large silver spots or “spangles” on the underside of its wings. It is the most common fritillary in northern Virginia and is typically found is large open meadows.

(Nikon D700, 105mm, f8, 1/500, ISO 200)

(Nikon D700, 105mm, f8, 1/500, ISO 200)

(Nikon D700, 300mm, f9, 1/320, ISO 200)

(Nikon D700, 300mm, f9, 1/320, ISO 200)

Tomorrow–back to the Italy images.

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Burano the Colorful Island

While in Venice, we visited the Island of Burano, which is located 4.3 miles from Venice in the Venetian Lagoon. Burano is a small island with a population of 2,800 and is known for its brightly painted houses and shops and its artists. The colors of the houses follow a specific system originating from the golden age of its development; if someone wishes to paint their home, they must send a request to the government, who responds with the permitted colors for that lot.

Burano is also known for its lace. However, it was not the lace that attracted me to the island. It was the colorful buildings. A typical canal and pedestrian street was captured in the below photo. (Nikon D700, 28mm, f14, 1/250, ISO 200)

Many of the buildings on Burano, as well as in Venice and throughout Italy, had very photographic windows–photographic for many reasons, such as colors, flowers, shape or age. The windows in Burano were simpler, but still photographic! Below are two examples. (First photo: Nikon D700, 98mm, f11, 1/320, ISO 200; second photo: D700, 122mm, f9, 1/500, ISO 200)

You can click on the above photos to see them in more detail.

Eventually, I will add these and more photos from Burano to my Website. Burano was candy to my eyes.

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Positano in the Evening

For those of you who have been following my blog, or that recently traveled through Italy with me, you know that I shot many photographs while touring Venice, Tuscany, Positano and Rome. Yesterday, I uploaded 167 of the photos that I shot with my iPhone to a gallery on my Website. Those photos “tell the story” of the tour–from Venezia to Roma. Italy is gorgeous, and there is a photo opportunity almost everywhere. However, there is a significant difference between a “photo opportunity” and having the right light and other conditions to capture the beauty of Italy’s endless breathtaking landscapes, cities and sites.

A really good photograph captures both the moment and the light. Most of my iPhone photographs captured the “moment,” but not necessarily how the sun or the evening lights were lighting the landscape/scene. Although I also captured the “moment” in many of my Nikon photos, in some, I was also able to capture the beauty of the “light” or how the light illuminated what I was seeing.

Since my iPhone photos told the story of the tour, I have decided to post an article each evening for the next week or two with one photograph that I shot with my Nikon camera that provides more than the moment, but also the light, and better depicts the breathtaking beauty of Italy. Below is one of those images. It was shot on one of the evenings in Positano after most people had ended the night. The dark, course sand on the beach and the boats, buildings and one of the town’s churches were lit by the evening lights of the small town nestled into the side of a mountain. I went out with my Nikon camera and tripod, while most slept, and captured the very quiet evening, which was quite a contrast to the daytime when the town and beach were busy with tourists and locals. (Click on the image to see it in full scene, and then click on it again to zoom in.)

(Nikon D700, Nikkor 28-300mm VR at 28mm, f16, 0.15 sec., ISO 200)

The above image was not selected because it was the most spectacular photograph and should be the first, but only because it happened to be the first image that caught my eye while quickly perusing my Italy directories tonight. Subsequent images and accompanying articles will also be selected in the same manor–that is, randomly.

I am very interested in your feedback and comments, which can be provided below. Hope you experience some of the beauty that I did through my photographs. Ciao.

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Venice, Tuscany, Positano and Rome

As most of you know, Angela and our two daughters traveled with me to Italy where we joined a small tour group of wonderful people in Venice.

The group was led by Sybil Haynes of Dolce Vita Adventures. It was a fantastic tour, and Sybil did a great job of planning and keeping us on schedule, well fed with fantastic food and wine, and entertained. From a photographer’s perspective, it was perfect–there is hardly a place in Italy that is not photographic and there was plenty of time throughout the tour to capture what we were experiencing.

After spending several days in Venice, we traveled to Cortona (a Medieval town in Tuscany), Positano on the Amalfi Coast, and then to Rome. We were in Italy for 16 days and loved every minute of it. From each of the three primary locations, we visited many other cities and sites to include: Siena, Florence, Naples, Pompeii, Ravello, Amalfi and Capri.

When we were there, I took thousands of photographs with my Nikon D700 and iPhone, which takes amazing photographs and videos for a cellphone. I started processing my Nikon images, but have made little progress so far. Yesterday, I decided to focus on the iPhone photographs and have now uploaded them to a separate gallery on my Website at: http://stabone,com/p910353529.  When viewing the photos, I recommend using the slideshow capability–click on the Slideshow button in the upper right corner on the Web page.

Although the quality of the iPhone photos is very good, the Nikon images are much better. I will be processing them during the week and will be periodically uploading them to other galleries arranged by city on my Website.

The link to gallery with the iPhone photos: http://stabone,com/p910353529

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