Back in September of last year, I wrote: “There’s a visual effect that I’ve only seen here in rainy green B.C. and has so far eluded all my cameras. It works like this: On a grey day, as dusk gathers, something you’d think would be unremarkable, like a fern against old wood, or these autumnpearleaves, can make you look twice or three times, colour reaching deep into your machineries of vision. I think it’s of the mind rather than the eyes, but haven’t abandoned hope for lucky light on a dark day with camera in hand.” This one gets halfway there.

Bright autumn leaves on green grass in dull light

Of course, in all that talk about minds and eyes, I hadn’t fully considered PhotoShop, but nonetheless I claim this one has photointegrity.


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Around November 29, 2004: The Cherry-Tomato Challenge · Lustre-Lustrous · Solaris 72 · Corporate Blogging? · Bot Droppings

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I work at Sun Microsystems. The opinions expressed here are my own, and neither Sun nor any other party necessarily agrees with them.