Cosmos Photos

Monday, July 16, 2012
Cosmos Honey Bee
A Honey Bee on a cosmos flower at a beautiful spot in Carmel Valley.

Friday, October 10, 2008
Variegated Cosmos
Today we spent some time in San Luis Obispo. I was looking forward to taking some shots around the Mission San Luis Obispo, but when we got there I was a little disappointed. Half of the tiles were off the roof and it was surrounded by scafolding. But that's ok. We wandered around and enjoyed the beautiful day (it's finally cool!). And we took the opportunity to take in the little details of the mission grounds. This was in the garden in the back.

Sunday, December 10, 2006
Cosmos Sunset
I like the angle of the flower in this one. Kind of like it is turning to watch the sun set.

Wednesday, February 22, 2006
Cosmos Texture
So, I'm pretty sure I took this one it looks like the kind of photo I would take but to be fair my wife :-D and I were trading the camera back and forth that day and I just scanned the roll. Either way, its a beautiful image and it is an interesting contrast to the Cosmos I took recently with a Digital camera.

Saturday, December 17, 2005
Cosmos
So before I took the digital camera back (Canon EOS 20D) I thought
I would really see how it compared to my trusty
AE-1 and Velvia. I took it through some of
my favorite situations, unfortunately
it was a hazy day so the lighting
was not the greatest. Then again, if it was perfect
conditions that wouldn't make for a very interesting test would it?
This is the result of my flower close-up test,
I'm pretty happy with it! And, of course,
I already know it preforms nicely in low light
with a moving subject.
I did, however, find a couple of weaknesses.
Velvia is much more forgiving in high contrast
environments, especially right into the sun.
(Yes yes, I know, "don't take pictures into the sun".
but that's something they just tell amateur photographers
so they don't get frustrated) :-D
I do, however believe I would be able to overcome this limitation
to a certain extent with a little more practice with the camera's
finer controls.
The really interesting thing I found was the reloads. I liked not
having to reload film, and I was dreaming about 4 Gig CF cards.
Then the reality hit me. It is
not the Card that runs out first, its the battery! I could not fill
up the one gig card without killing the battery (and that's without
the built-in flash). The only saving grace was the fact that
the battery charged quickly. I assume it is the auto-focus
that killed it so fast, and I can do without that in many situations
so it is not a deal breaker. But this is an important bit of information
for anyone trying to prepare for a long shoot, you have to invest in as many
batteries as CF cards.
Lastly, I love the saturation of Velvia. But that is more
personal preference. I would imagine that I may be able to
compensate a bit for this too with enough experience with the camera.
But I felt like my landscape and architecture shots were a little
flat.
In the end, I am convinced this would be a worthy tool
to add to my bag of tricks. I loved using it, and I
believe it has some real strengths. But, as with everything, you have to
choose the right tool for the job and in many situations that is still gonna be my AE-1.
(BTW Cosmos is from the Greek "Kosmos" meaning ornament.)