Baden bei Wein (Baths near Vienna) is a spa town, first developed by the Romans. The mineral springs, casinos, wooded hills, restaurants, hotels, homes and cultural activities make it a luxurious retreat from the city. I was particularly interested in the outdoor show of international photographers. Not far away, the royalty of the country of Liechtenstein have a summer castle.
“„Stift Heiligenkreuz“, which means the „Abbey of Heiligenkreuz“, is a beautiful and living Cistercian monastery, close to Vienna, the capital of Austria. Stift Heiligenkreuz is the second-oldest Cistercian monastery in the world and the oldest continuously active and inhabited one”… It was founded in 1133 by St. Leopold III of the House of Babenberg. Leopold’s son, Otto, had been sent to Paris for an international education. Otto came in contact with Cistercian monks and soon decided to enter a Cistercian monastery. When Otto visited his father in Austria he asked him to build a similar monastery for Lower Austria.” per the stift-heiligenkreuz.org website.
Located in Heiligenkreuz (Holy Cross) in the Wienerwald (the wooded hills outside of Vienna), the abbey is inspiring and our guide was full of hope and love.
Vienna, or Wien, in its native language of German, is an amazing hub of culture: contemporary and medieval, Gothic and Jugendstil (Art Nouveau), all shown off in the inner city. The most frustrating part was to be so close to so much beauty and history and not have enough time to take it all in. The landmarks are all so well photographed that sometimes I just wanted to share the local flavor.
Budapest, Hungary is the first city in Europe we visited this summer. The cities of Buda and Óbuda on the west side and Pest on the east side of the Danube united in 1873. Like a jewel, the area has been coveted by many groups, starting with the Celts in 1 AD, followed by the Romans, Hungarians, Mongols, Hapsburgs, Germans and Russians. After its liberation from the Soviet Block, major building and renovation have taken place. Sandstone facades, blackened by burning soft coal, have been cleaned or replaced. Budapest has beautiful architecture, both historical and contemporary. It has a wealthy and cultured history and continues as one of the top 100 cities in the world in terms of per capita GDP. Throughout our tour I was impressed by how the cities preserve their historical beauty and embrace remarkable contemporary architecture.
I love to see fireworks, but I don’t like loud noises and traffic jams. Last night we had a treat of seeing them from about a mile away at our friends’ home. I experimented with a technique called live composite. The camera makes a base shot then only adds incremental light. This way I could capture multiple bursts without overexposing the surrounding scene. In some cases the subsequent bursts were in the same place, so the light built up in that concentrated area. Other times the bursts were in different places that made magical compositions, in my humble opinion.
A friend gave me a bromeliad pup a few years ago. It has grown, blossomed and created more pups. I keep them in pots in the garden under trees to give them mid-day shade. One has created an efflorescence, so I brought it into the lanai and posed it for a few photos. I used a technique called focus bracketing. I put the camera on a tripod, waited for the breeze to die down, and took about five shots with each one focusing farther away. I experimented with how much change to make on each shot, to keep the background out of focus. Then I ran them through a Photoshop program to stack and mask them based on what is in focus and make a composite. It increases the depth of field, which is especially helpful on closeups. They remind me of feather dusters and fireworks.
A lime-green ball held under water and released, pops out of the water in an unpredictable direction trailing a splash of pool water. Chasing it with a camera with a long lens at a fast setting sometimes gives a fun shot.
Anoles abound in our garden. Most of those I see are brown. The brown ones came from Cuba. Occasionally I see a bright green one. This one appeared inside the screened lanai. I caught him/her, got my camera ready, then had him taken out off the jar and placed on a red-orange bromeliad, thinking it would make a nice contrast. I expected the green anole to run away, but it obliged me by posing for photos over a few minutes. What started out as bright green skin became yellow and orange, blending better with the background colors. I made a sequence so you can see the full length of its tail as well as close up on it beautiful skin.
My montages are composite images from my own photos. Some are made to look natural and others are made to defy nature and bring together elements that I like together even though they are not naturally occurring. They are musings from my imagination. The blending options and degrees of transparency make it possible for me to experiment with variations on a theme with very different moods. If you share your email with me, future posts will arrive in your email box. I have just had printed a 40″ x 48″ canvas from one of my montages. The clarity is marvelous. If you would like a print made from any of my full-size images, let me know!
I look out my studio window onto flowers, ponds and nature area. We are keeping watch on a pair of sandhill cranes who are tending eggs on a nest of sticks on the littoral shelf of one of the ponds. Once the rains come the nest area will be flooded. Wild flowers and our tended flowers are blooming in the warming sun.