One of my most viewed of 2009.
Taken All Around Houston Texas on Friday Night, August 14, 2009.
Reflecting Pool at Herman Park. This was a 59 second exposure of the Reflecting pool. I love how the light just POPS!! It is, in my opinion, right at the edge of being over exposed. I used the 18-70mm Kit lens and the wireless shutter release in BULB mode. I use a very low ISO for this long exposure.
Exposure: 59
Aperture: f/5.6
Focal Length: 18 mm
ISO Speed: 100
Most of my music[s] are of the cinematic nature. If you need something, please contact me so we can partner on a project. I have many varied musical influences that include The KLF, Pink Floyd, Skinny Puppy, and Front 242, as well as Classic Rock. I mix music as much for self-expression and keeping my mind sharp because it’s simply etched into My soul. Much Love!! Contact: DjRenigade@proton.me
Friday, January 01, 2010
Herman Park 1.6
Night Sky November 17, 2009
One of my most viewed of 2009.
It was taken using the Sony 18-70mm Lens and made using the program called Startrails. I took 64 different photos that were 45 seconds long at ISO800. The focal length was 18mm at f/3.5 from 10.39pm to 11.09pm CST facing the North Western Sky. I used the Opetka Programmable Wired Shutter Release to accomplish this photography set . This photo is the equivalent of a 48 minuet timed exposure.
The purple tint in the upper corners is due to the CCD Sensor heating up for the use of the equipment. There is noting that i can do about that. I am going to try another technique to see if i can eliminate it.
DSC06171: Work 2.4
One of my most viewed of 2009.
I think that this photo is perhaps even better than the Work 2.7 photo. The color and lighting is brilliant on this photo. The bright arc is not overpowering any of the photo and you can see the orange glow of the lights in the metal shot reflecting on the metal to the left of the weld. The orange glow on the inside of the pipe si from the hot metal penetrating the pipe and welding it together.
Exposure: 0.067 sec (1/15)
Aperture: f/5.6
Focal Length: 60 mm
ISO Speed: 400
Thursday, December 31, 2009
New Years Eve!!
It has been a very interesting year for all of us. Some tears as well as laughs were heard and shed. My wish for 2010 is for it to be a better year than 2009 was for all of us. Sure, it has been good in some aspects, for one, my Photography has been taken to a new level, my life has made some interesting turns and I have meet some great people. I moved back to Texas to help family and re-find myself so I can be a better person.
You never know what will come you way when one door closes and another unexpected door opens. Embrace the challenges that come in 2010 and lets have fun doing it together. Look for more bigger and better things from me in 2010 to appear on this very site.
Until then, my friends, have a very safe New Years Eve and if you party, do it responsibly. Please come home alive…
RMStringer
**************
Published Photographer...
Monday, December 28, 2009
Evening Lake...
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Sunday, December 27, 2009
Cloud Horse
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Friday, December 25, 2009
Christmas Sunset...
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Convergence...
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Merry Christmas Everyone!!
If you want to Purchase a photo, please EMAIL me.
RMStringer [at] Gmail.com
To Look At My Full Line Of Photography,
Please go to Flickr/RMStringer
Thursday, December 24, 2009
Cold Merry Christmas!
?RMS¿
Nuclear Evening...
Lake Sam Rayburn Sunset December 9, 2009. Taken at the Twine Dikes Park boat ramp using the Quantaray 70-300mm Tele-Macro lens. I used different Metering Modes for this set.
I love how the water looks like metal or something other than what it is. The clouds almost look like a bomb exploded in the distance and we are seeing the aftermath...
Exposure:0.001 sec (1/1250)
Aperture:f/4.0
Focal Length:70 mm
ISO Speed:200
Wednesday, December 23, 2009
Photography Show!!
If you want to Purchase a photo, please EMAIL me.
RMStringer [at] Gmail.com
To Look At My Full Line Of Photography,
Please go to Flickr/RMStringer
Tuesday, December 22, 2009
From Forrest Jones
1. disengaging their minds; sabotaging their mental activities; providing a low-quality programme of public education in mathematics, systems design and economics, and discouraging technical creativity.
2. engaging their emotions, increasing their self indulgence and their indulgence in emotional and physical activities by:
a) unrelenting emotional affrontations and attacks (mental and emotional rape) by way of a constant barrage of sex, violence, and wars in the media - especially the TV and the newspapers.
b) giving them what they desire - in excess - “junk food for thought” - and depriving them of what they really need.
c) rewriting history and law and subjecting the public to the deviant creation, thus being able to shift their thinking from personal needs to highly fabricated outside priorities. These preclude their interest in, and discovery of, the silent weapons of social automation technology.
The general rule is that there is profit in confusion; the more confusion, the more profit. Therefore the best approach is to create problems and then offer solutions.In summary:
Media: Keep the adult public attention diverted away from the real social issues, and captivated by matters of no real importance.
Schools: Keep the young public ignorant of real mathematics, real economics, real law, and real history.
Entertainment: Keep the public entertainment below a sixth grade level.
Work: Keep the public busy, busy, busy, with no time to think; back on the farm with the other animals.”
If you want to Purchase a photo, please EMAIL me.
RMStringer [at] Gmail.com
To Look At My Full Line Of Photography,
Please go to Flickr/RMStringer
Monday, December 21, 2009
Old Home 1.0
Taken on HWY 59 North just south of Goodrich Texas. Old and abandoned farm house taken in 16:9 Aspect Ration using the Sony 18-70mm Lens.
The old place on the side of the road, left to fall down and damaged from a storm. No longer of any use to anyone...
Exposure: 0.001 sec (1/800)
Aperture: f/5.6
Focal Length: 18 mm
ISO Speed: 200
Old Home 1.5
Taken on HWY 59 North just south of Goodrich Texas. Old and abandoned farm house taken in 16:9 Aspect Ration using the Sony 18-70mm Lens.
Wanting to look in through the broken glass. Look at the uneven wood and how the house has decayed through no use.
Exposure:0.001 sec (1/1600)
Aperture:f/5.6
Focal Length:70 mm
ISO Speed:200
Gentel Shadows...
Taken with the Sony 18-70mm Lens close to Lake Sam Rayburn Dam on RR 255.
I love the shadows cast on the dieing grass seen in this photo. The colors of Fall are ever depicted here with shorter days and cooler temps...
Exposure:0.002 sec (1/640)
Aperture:f/5.0
Focal Length:18 mm
ISO Speed:200
Old Home 1.9
Taken on HWY 59 North just south of Goodrich Texas. Old and abandoned farm house taken in 16:9 Aspect Ration using the Sony 18-70mm Lens.
Looking at a lost life. Who lived here and where are they now to leave stuff like this in the floor. The home is is very bad shape. I could not stop myself from getting some photos of it today...
Exposure:0.05 sec (1/20)
Aperture:f/5.6
Focal Length:18 mm
ISO Speed:200
Looking South.
?RMS¿
Clean Kitty!
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Old House
?RMS¿
Mack: Christmas
Thanks to Mack Hall for letting me print this.
The Arts of Christmas
Christmas is pretty. Of all the holidays, both religious and secular, Christmas inspires more and better attempts at literary, visual, and musical art than all the others. Easter, the premiere Christian holy day, ends its somber Lenten anticipation with beautiful music celebrating the Resurrection, but in popular culture is almost ignored. Independence Day is red, white, blue, explosions, and John Philip Sousa, which are okay, but no one spends four weeks in preparation for the Fourth. The religious holidays of All Souls and All Saints have been perverted into the ghastly Halloween, and Thanksgiving barely makes a nod at the Pilgrim fathers before dismembering a turkey and then yelling at a footer match on television.
But with Christmas comes art.
Arnold Friberg, who painted one of the most famous versions of Washington at prayer, wisely said that art which has to be explained is not art at all.
And so it is with Christmas. A Christmas tree needs no explanation, not even to an infant – it simply is, with its colored lights and angels and glass globes and "Baby's First Christmas" ornament. Adults argue whether Christmas trees are pagan in origin (they probably are), and certainly the aforementioned Pilgrim fathers banned Christmas trees (and Christmas itself) as Romish corruptions, but a child in his wisdom delights in trees.
Christmas music, too, never requires National Public Radio gaseous exhalations invoking such Charlie Brown teacher-isms as "fusion," "inculturation," and "textual analysis." Handel's glorious music is as clear to an atonal simpleton like me as it is to James Levine of the New York Phil. Fr. Franz Gruber's simple and sublime "Stille Nacht" and Gene Autry's jolly "Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer" as a contract piece for Montgomery Ward both have their places in the canon, one to honor the birth of the Savior and the other to honor the cash-register.
Any time a Hallmark Christmas movie is broadcast an angel rips its wings off, but there is a lengthy catalogue of great Christmas films, including Holiday Inn, The Bishop's Wife, The Shop Around the Corner, Miracle on 34th Street, and Christmas in Connecticut. John Wayne's Three Godfathers, with its themes of sacrifice and redemption, is laden with Christmas allusions. Every year Linus Van Pelt in A Charlie Brown Christmas reads to us the infancy narrative from St. Luke, and he doesn't need a voice-over narrator to explain it all to us.
And, hey, don't shoot your eye out.
In the 13th century St. Francis of Assisi set up the first Nativity scene, forever giving serious sculptors and even more serious manufacturers a subject for artistic endeavors of varying quality. Perhaps the best Nativity scenes are the cheap ones the children can play with. Since World War II this Catholic tradition has become popular with other Christian faithful, just in time for public displays to be shut down by some local courts, who understand it very well.
Happily there was no Martha Stewart at Bethlehem to instruct Mary on decorating the Stable just so. If Christmas begins with a stable, as St. Luke and Linus remind us, need it continue in a museum-display living room on the cover of Southern Living? One does not imagine the Blessed Mother apologizing to the shepherds because "the stable is a mess."
Nativity scenes remain simple, which is a small miracle. In churches one sees other Christian symbols, including statues and crucifixes, which appear to have been beaten out of scrap metal by a disturbed chimpanzee with a sledge hammer. Church committees are often deceived into paying good money for debris when a disciple of Billy Mays saliva-sprays them with polysyllabic adjectives explaining what his purported art means. As with the emperor's new clothes, few people have the courage to say "I DO know something about art, and this ain't it, pal."
But art has left the humble Stable alone, not fitting it out with rocket pods or even running water, and a little child can place the Infant Jesus in His manger between Mary and Joseph, set the camels here – or maybe there? – and the ox and the shepherds where she feels they need to be, not where a decorator with a color chart and the rule of three says they must be. Little children pretty much know how Christmas should be, and their play is the best art of all.
Merry Christmas, everyone.
Sunday, December 20, 2009
Looking North: Vacancy...
Taken with the Sony 18-70mm Lens close to Lake Sam Rayburn Dam on RR 255.
This is a little sitting hut overlooking a low bluff overlooking the lake. A cold Front had blown through the area and you can see the "white caps" on the water looking north. I love the muted late afternoon sun and sky in this photo. It looks and feels like Fall...
Exposure: 0.002 sec (1/640)
Aperture: f/5.0
Focal Length: 30 mm
ISO Speed: 200
Laurel and the Electric Circus 1.0
Laurel and the Electric Circus at Solley's Disco December 19, 2009. Taken using the Sony 18-70mm and theSony HVL-F58AM Flash with an Omni-Bounce 580 Diffuser.
Laurel and the Electric Circus 1.3
Laurel and the Electric Circus at Solley's Disco December 19, 2009. Taken using the Sony 18-70mm and theSony HVL-F58AM Flash with an Omni-Bounce 580 Diffuser.
Laurel and the Electric Circus 1.10
Laurel and the Electric Circus at Solley's Disco December 19, 2009. Taken using the Sony 18-70mm and theSony HVL-F58AM Flash with an Omni-Bounce 580 Diffuser.
Laurel and the Electric Circus 1.12
Laurel and the Electric Circus at Solley's Disco December 19, 2009. Taken using the Sony 18-70mm and theSony HVL-F58AM Flash with an Omni-Bounce 580 Diffuser.
Laurel and the Electric Circus 1.29
Laurel and the Electric Circus live at Solley's Disco December 18, 2009. Taken using the Quantaray 70-300mm Tele-Macro and the Sony HVL-F58AM Flash with an Omni-Bounce 580 Diffuser.
Laurel and the Electric Circus 1.25
Laurel and the Electric Circus live at Solley's Disco December 18, 2009. Taken using the Quantaray 70-300mm Tele-Macro and the Sony HVL-F58AM Flash with an Omni-Bounce 580 Diffuser.
Laurel and the Electric Circus 1.23
Laurel and the Electric Circus live at Solley's Disco December 18, 2009. Taken using the Quantaray 70-300mm Tele-Macro and the Sony HVL-F58AM Flash with an Omni-Bounce 580 Diffuser.
Laurel and the Electric Circus 1.31
Laurel and the Electric Circus live at Solley's Disco December 18, 2009. Taken using the Quantaray 70-300mm Tele-Macro and the Sony HVL-F58AM Flash with an Omni-Bounce 580 Diffuser.
Laurel and the Electric Circus 1.44
Laurel and the Electric Circus at Solley's Disco December 19, 2009. Taken using the Sony 18-70mm and theSony HVL-F58AM Flash with an Omni-Bounce 580 Diffuser.
Laura and the Electric Circus
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Saturday, December 19, 2009
Wednesday, December 16, 2009
50mm f/1.7 1.2
Orchid bloom this summer.
Exposure: 0.002 sec (1/500)
Aperture: f/1.7
Focal Length: 50 mm
ISO Speed: 200
Kitty Bokeh
This is Ghost, she is coming to live with me in Texas this weekend...
Christmas 2008
She was sitting on the bookcase looking out of the patio door. I love the tree in the background out of focus and the reflection of the lights from the tree to the right of her.
Exposure: 0.033 sec (1/30)
Aperture: f/1.7
Focal Length: 50 mm
ISO Speed: 200
Welding with Minolta 50mm f/1.7 Prime
Taken using the Minolta 50mm f/1.7 Prime lens at work the other day. He is using a MIG welding rig to weld on aluminum. I love how the light is very soft and not harsh, illuminating his shirt
Exposure: 0.008 sec (1/125)
Aperture: f/6.3
Focal Length: 50 mm
ISO Speed: 200
Monday, December 14, 2009
Wounded Hearts Band
Wounded Hearts Band live at Solley's Disco Friday ,12.11.2009 Photos taken with the Sony 18-70mm Lens and the Sony HVL-F58Am Flash using an Omni-Bounce 580 diffuser.
Wounded Hearts Band
Wounded Hearts Band live at Solley's Disco Friday ,12.11.2009 Photos taken with the Sony 18-70mm Lens and the Sony HVL-F58Am Flash using an Omni-Bounce 580 diffuser.
Wounded Hearts Band
Wounded Hearts Band live at Solley's Disco Friday ,12.11.2009 Photos taken with the Sony 18-70mm Lens and the Sony HVL-F58Am Flash using an Omni-Bounce 580 diffuser.
Wounded Hearts Band
Wounded Hearts Band live at Solley's Disco Friday ,12.11.2009 Photos taken with the Sony 18-70mm Lens and the Sony HVL-F58Am Flash using an Omni-Bounce 580 diffuser.
Wounded Hearts Band
Wounded Hearts Band live at Solley's Disco Friday ,12.11.2009 Photos taken with the Sony 18-70mm Lens and the Sony HVL-F58Am Flash using an Omni-Bounce 580 diffuser.
Wounded Hearts Band
Wounded Hearts Band live at Solley's Disco Friday ,12.11.2009 Photos taken with the Sony 18-70mm Lens and the Sony HVL-F58Am Flash using an Omni-Bounce 580 diffuser.
Natchitoches LA Christmas Festival of Lights 1.74
Saturday, December 5
83rd Annual Christmas Festival, Louisiana’s premiere holiday event.
The Festival of Lights begins November 21 and lasts into the New Year. The Natchitoches (Nack-a-tish) Christmas Festival has been held on the first weekend in December since 1927. Website address is www.christmasfestival.com/ The photos were taken on the Keyser Ave bridge over the Cane River using the Sony 18-70mm Lens was used with The Opteka wired remote.
Natchitoches LA Christmas Festival of Lights 1.73
Saturday, December 5
83rd Annual Christmas Festival, Louisiana’s premiere holiday event.
The Festival of Lights begins November 21 and lasts into the New Year. The Natchitoches (Nack-a-tish) Christmas Festival has been held on the first weekend in December since 1927. Website address is www.christmasfestival.com/ The photos were taken on the Keyser Ave bridge over the Cane River using the Sony 18-70mm Lens was used with The Opteka wired remote.
Natchitoches LA Christmas Festival of Lights 1.42
Saturday, December 5
83rd Annual Christmas Festival, Louisiana’s premiere holiday event.
The Festival of Lights begins November 21 and lasts into the New Year. The Natchitoches (Nack-a-tish) Christmas Festival has been held on the first weekend in December since 1927. Website address is www.christmasfestival.com/ The photos were taken on the Keyser Ave bridge over the Cane River using the Sony 18-70mm Lens was used with The Opteka wired remote.
Natchitoches LA Christmas Festival of Lights 1.35
Saturday, December 5
83rd Annual Christmas Festival, Louisiana’s premiere holiday event.
The Festival of Lights begins November 21 and lasts into the New Year. The Natchitoches (Nack-a-tish) Christmas Festival has been held on the first weekend in December since 1927. Website address is www.christmasfestival.com/ The photos were taken on the Keyser Ave bridge over the Cane River using the Sony 18-70mm Lens was used with The Opteka wired remote.
Natchitoches LA Christmas Festival of Lights 1.32
Saturday, December 5
83rd Annual Christmas Festival, Louisiana’s premiere holiday event.
The Festival of Lights begins November 21 and lasts into the New Year. The Natchitoches (Nack-a-tish) Christmas Festival has been held on the first weekend in December since 1927. Website address is www.christmasfestival.com/ The photos were taken on the Keyser Ave bridge over the Cane River using the Sony 18-70mm Lens was used with The Opteka wired remote.
DSC00983
Lake Sam Rayburn Sunset December 9, 2009. Taken at the Twine Dikes Park boat ramp using the Quantaray 70-300mm Tele-Macro lens. I used different Metering Modes for this set.
DSC00986
Lake Sam Rayburn Sunset December 9, 2009. Taken at the Twine Dikes Park boat ramp using the Quantaray 70-300mm Tele-Macro lens. I used different Metering Modes for this set.
Sunday, December 13, 2009
Soundswaves
?RMS¿
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Saturday, December 12, 2009
Ambient Massive - There Is Grace In Their Feelings
. Instruments used were: Kurzweil 2000vx Microfreak' Maschine 2 Wavestate Deepmind 12 Virus Ti2 Monotron and various VSTi synths. Releas...
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DSC00210 , originally uploaded by RMStringer . Phillip Glyn and Ridding High at Solley's Disco Saturday night 1-2-2010. Taken with the S...
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I will be starting with Wachovia on Thursday. I will be working from 9 - 6 for the first several weeks...YAHOOOOO !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
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If you want to Purchase any of my musics, Please go to https://djrenigade.bandcamp.com/ Dj Renigade is founder of RenigadeCineTrax and the ...