Category Archives: A few things…

General comments and information on current projects

Lakeland Students Build a Kickstarter Project

 

Two of my photography students have started a project on Kickstarter.com to seek funding of a photo documentary project. They would like to photograph about a dozen small towns in Ohio that just happen to be named for major cities in Europe.

The idea for the project came about when the two students, Jaeryn Flanik and Kesley Lynch, were unable to participate in the international photo course that Lakeland offers each summer because of the high cost of the program. I pointed out to them that, while taking a trip to Europe certainly would be a valuable experience, excellent photography can be done anywhere and that documenting life in the small towns of Ohio could be a very interesting and socially important project. They soon realized that a collection of images coming from this idea could be the basis for an exhibition and a book that could be published in traditional printed form and also as an e-book that could be viewed on tablet devices and computers.

Thus the Kickstarter project was conceived. Please take a look at this on Kickstarter.com and, if the idea sounds good to you, you might want to support their project with a small donation. The students also have a Facebook Page for the project where you can view many more of the photographs that have been done so far. I do think this is a worthwhile project and have confidence that Jaeryn and Kesley can produce some interesting and valuable work. Please check it out and consider making a donation to fund the project. This kind of “crowdsource” funding may be the future of support for the arts. It’s great to see Lakeland students taking the initiative to create a project like this. Your support would be greatly appreciated.

Panoramic Photography

 

 

This coming Fall Semester I will again be teaching a course in panoramic photography. The course is structured around the making of multi-exposure panoramas which can be done with any camera provided one has access to software that can stitch individual digital frames together into a continuous image. This is a fun course to teach in large part because the students have so much fun working on the assignments. I seldom have the problem of having to push students into creating more images. Often I get buried in multiple variations and disparate subject matter so that it can be a challenge to get the student to concentrate on composition and to develop an intellectual point of view in their work.

The class has never failed to produce some exciting imagery. Sign up now. Enrollment is limited.

Ernie

Retrieved from an animal shelter along with his brother, Laddie,  by the Northeast Ohio Collie Rescue Society, Ernie and Laddie were infamous for their destructive mischief. None-the-less we adopted Ernie into our home in Oct. 2002 and soon became skilled at replacing window glass (he always forgot to open the window before trying to jump through!). Over time, he became a great family dog who fearlessly fulfilled his role as protector of the flock. Died yesterday. We miss him greatly.

New York trip

Carol and I drove to New York City to visit our son, Nathan, last weekend. We took a tour of his ceramics studios and visited the Occupy Wall Street demonstration in Zucatti Park. The winter storm that hit the east coast rolled in on Saturday morning with high winds and a miserable mix of rain, snow and sleet that left several inches of slush which made walking an adventure.

All in all, though, it was an enjoyable weekend with Nathan and Scott and we were able to toss some symbolic support to the Occupy Movement.

Massey-Ferguson

Yesterday, White’s Farm Supply delivered our new Massey-Ferguson tractor. What a beast it is! Along with the tractor we have a front-end loader, a snow blade, and a 66-inch rototiller. I’ve been asked why we invested in this machine since we’ve lived on our 10-acre property here for almost eight years without a large tractor. Well, if you’ve seen our driveway, you can image that it might be a real chore to clear it of snow and ice in the winter here in the snowbelt. Using our little John Deere lawn tractor with a 44-inch blade to do this has at times taken up to 6 hours to make the driveway passable—and then the county snowplow will come by and close the last 10 feet with about 18 inches of ice, snow and road crud.

When a little sunshine or warm temperatures follow a major snowfall, the foot or so of snow that has built up on the barn roof will come sliding down and leave a 3-foot pile of snow that’s 10 feet wide and forty feet long lying in front of the barn. This blocks access to the barn (where Carol parks her car) and prevents use of the turn-around loop. Needless to say, the John Deere is no match for the job of clearing this pile. So the combination of the 72-inch snow blade and the front-end loader on the new tractor will handle this task safely and in a reasonable length of time.

There are also many tasks around the property that we simply have had to ignore because there was no practical way of getting them accomplished. The previous owner cleared many trees and left the stumps in place which are obstacles to almost anything we would want to do in the yard. Some of those are going to be gone in short order. We also need to remove several trees each year that fall from high winds or excessive snow loads. Up to now we’ve had to pull these out with a hand-powered winch—a laborious and very time-consuming task that you don’t want to have to do on a hot summer day. So we do hope to catch up to some of these tasks that have been put off or simply ignored for a long time.

But a more important reason for having this equipment comes from our involvement with Hiram Farm—a not-for-profit organization that has established an employment and therapeutic program for people with autism. Hiram Farm is located on a 120-acre organic farm in Hiram, Ohio. The land is leased from the Trust of the late Al Couch who was one of the first organic farmers in the nation. You can get the full story of Hiram Farm at the Hiram Farm website.

One of their most pressing needs right now is to develop the capability to use more of the land to produce income for the organization through farming. The program at Hiram Farm is now supported almost entirely by donations and Medicaid reimbursements. While it has been remarkably successful up to now in starting and expanding the program, this is not a funding model that will work over the long haul. They currently have no equipment available to do more than till about one acre for planting vegetables which they sell at a road-side stand. We intend to make this tractor available for Hiram Farm to use to expand their farming operation and, hopefully, develop the farming activities into a significant revenue stream. So it will be spending an extended period of time at Hiram Farm tilling the garden for a fall cover crop and, next spring, perhaps putting in a hay crop or whatever they decide to do.