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Version 2.0 of the T-Shirt design.  Changed some of the spacing…

Version 2.0 of the T-Shirt design.  Changed some of the spacing and sizing of letters and added the top to the Tardis.  This should be a much cleaner version.  Also, PNG with transparent BG!

Just submitted this gem to TeeFury.  Not sure if they will run…

Just submitted this gem to TeeFury.  Not sure if they will run it or not.  May make a few just for myself though.

Glowing Pockets

Was playing around with my off camera flash while at pool the other day:

Glowing Pockets

4+ years of Fandom

For many years I have held a secret. Something that many of my friends would gasp about and possibly revoke my Geek card. It’s been no secret that I am a huge Sci-Fi fan. I own more props, costumes, wall art, toys, etc. than most people (except other geeks like me), but there is something that I had never done that causes most geeks to shiver down to their internal power core.

I had never watched Doctor Who.

Sure, I knew what a TARDIS was, and I was familiar with most of the mythos due to most of my friends being huge fans, but I had never actually seen a single episode. So while browsing through Netflix streaming the other day I noticed that all of the new series (2005-current) was available. I had heard from various friends that if I were to start somewhere, that the 2005 stuff was the way to go. I realize that some purists would say that I should encounter all incarnations of the Doctor, but we are talking baby steps here people!

This is not to say that I won’t go back and watch some early stuff. Since undertaking this task of cramming 6 years of TV into my head, I have already watched 1 story line of the 4th Doctor, and 1 from the 5th, but this is about the newer series that I am going full steam ahead with. That’s not even a joke. A week and a half ago we started with the Christopher Eccleston episodes and have been watching every night, and most of the weekends to catch up to the current Matt Smith seasons. Both Sarah and I have become incredibly addicted to the series.

You may think that this is a good thing, right? Lots of people enjoy The Doctor! Problem is that when I dive into a series like this, I dive into the deep end and keep swimming down. Because of this, I have been stuffing, not only the TV information, but (currently) 4+ years of Who Fandom into my noggin. Catching up on props, T-shirts, costumes, videos, etc.. It’s almost maddening, but I love it so much! I am even now drafting plans for the building of a full scale TARDIS. I have the tools and the space, and I love woodworking, so why not?

So what about the shows? Well, I agree with all of those who told me to start with the 2005 series. The pacing on them are much more up to date with current shows. I went back and watched a few of the older shows and it just seems so much slower and wooden. I will work my way through them slowly but I really love the new format. As far as Doctors go, I really feel bad for Christopher Eccleston. He was a great Doctor and should have been given more time. it was pretty clear that they used him to springboard off of and show that the regeneration of the Doctor is still ongoing. CE was also a great tie in to the older shows as he took that campy brit humor and ran with it (and holy cow, the hair!). We have just finished up with Season 4 and the end of the David Tennent run. I liked DT as a Doctor and he certainly added a lot of the genius ramble to the character, but I think that CE will remain as “My Doctor”.

Which brings us to where we are now. We watched the first episode of season 5, the Matt Smith Doctor. It is way too early to decide my feelings on him. He certainly has that campy but modern feeling down. Time will tell. In the meantime, look for progress posts on the various builds I am doing and well as follow along as I dive deeper into a fandom that spans almost 50 years!

Geek-Grad

The CannonWhen you are young, your parents always curse tell you “I hope you end up with a kid who is just like you!”  Being the annoying kid who was doing horrible in English class and only wanted to play video games and collect transformers and M.A.S.K. toys, personally I thought “Sweet! Having a kid with all my same interests would rock!”  While I had a few of the same interests as my parents, I never really felt that I could connect with them on that real geek level.  I was into Science Fiction, my dad was into History.  I was fascinated by electronically created music, my dad had a 300 record collection of every classical piece every inked (Quilled?).  Although, there were a few things that we could geek out about. We both loved fantasy based stories like Lord Of the Rings.  My dad would indulge in playing lesser board games like Mouse Trap or Boggle and in return he would teach me Chess (or at least attempt to) or Backgammon.  I always vowed that if I had a kid, I would try and share interests as best as possible, to both foster the interests in common, and learn about the ones we didn’t share.  Ok, so maybe in my kid tone that came out like “I’m gonna treat my kid a ton better” but the thought was there.
 
Early on in my “adult” life, it happened.  I managed to spawn a new life into the world.  Sad to say, it was too early and I wasn’t entirely prepared for it, but then, who is really?  to remedy this I set out to better myself by enlisting in the USAF, but ended up missing a lot of important time in the process.  For my son’s early years it was very rough.  I was overseas defending the US’s right to cheap Japanese and Korean food, while my son was learning some of the hard lessons in life on his own.  He ended up filling the shoes I left behind, living with my parents for many years and feeling some of the same disconnects I felt.  Then it was time.  I had finally gotten to a stable place in my life and he in his.  Sure, we both missed out on some of the early bonding that you can’t get just from in-frequent visits, but we would make up for it.

In 2005 I skipped attending a DragonCon so I could pick up Andrew and all of his stuff for him to live with me permanently.  He was 13 and we had a lot of catching up to do.  I was only marginally prepared to be a full time single dad at this point (again, who is ever ready for something like that).  There was so much to figure out but I had lots of help in friends and family to provide support.  I can think of quite a few phone calls to my parents that consisted of the phrases “Why is he doing ______???” and “How can I get him to do______???”.  The benefit in being a single dad meant that the distractions that pulled at me in life could easily incorporate him.  If I picked up a new game, did it have co-op?  If I went to a convention, are there kid-friendly things for him?  I could now finally include him on the geeky things I enjoyed!  

There was a fear for a while, just before he arrived and while I was setting up his new computer in his room, “What if he doesn’t like the things I like?”  He was very into Baseball and little league, and I was not the most sports-centric person.  When he arrived we spoke a lot about what he liked and didn’t.  We got him involved in the local team’s Little League, and in turn I came to enjoy baseball a little more.  I learned to track the scores and calculate averages (who knew there was so much math and science in sports!).  In return, Andrew got into table top gaming, and sci-fi conventions.  It wasn’t long until he was asking to try on my Biker Scout armor, even it it did hang on him like a rag and make him look like a bobble head.

SuperboyFor the last 6 years we enjoyed countless games, ventured through many conventions, including at least 4 DragonCon’s, and shared in every geeky thing that we could find and introduce to each other.  I have seen him grow from Pokemon Cards to Magic cards, Board games to D&D. He is now a full DM for his gaming group. (Is it weird that it makes me as proud as a Quarterback’s Dad?)  We have done costumes together such as Batman and NightWing, Biker Scouts, and even had bit roles in the web series Trenches.  Non geek-type things included Baseball, Civil Air Patrol which led into ROTC, and even a brief attempt at learning guitar.  FYI, people with stupid fingers shouldn’t learn guitar (me, not him, he was actually getting pretty good).

I did what all GeekDad’s should do and educated him on the classics.  Even though he grew up with the Prequels, he came to appreciate the originals first and for-most.  He endured all of the Trek movies in order, and even spent an entire weekend being subjected to the Evil Dead series nearly back to back.  He can tell you the difference between a Hyperdrive and a Dilithium drive system, and can name all of the members of the fellowship.  If given the chance he will even calculate the THAC0 of swinging a frying pan while wearing Jeans and a T-Shirt!

So now I have an 18 year old son.  He has Graduated High School, and is preparing to venture off into the world to find his own destiny.  I have done my best to guide him on his geeky ways and teach him of mine.   It’s hard to imagine that in a few short months the house will be down to just myself and Sarah, who doesn’t share the same passion for fart jokes.

It’s been a long road, that wasn’t as long as it should have been, but in the end, I am extremely proud of my my Geek son, and while it may be a while down the road, I hope to all that is geeky that he ends up with a kid just like him.

Pick Up Here

Grabbed me some Fojol Bros.

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for lunch:

Pick Up Here

Photography A la..Mode

In the last year I have been playing around with the different modes of whichever camera I am using.  It started with the simple point and shoots I could pick up.  First thing is always to dive into the menu and learn about every type of mode the camera has to offer.  Most of them are pretty simple with you Portrait, Macro, Sunset, etc.  All the typical modes that every user will usually just ignore and leave their camera on Auto.  (kind of makes you shudder, doesn’t it.)  

Once I ventured back into the SLR world, I picked up a D3000 (and thusly my current D5100) to brush off the photography skill dust.  I noticed that the D3000 had a bunch of the same Modes on the dial, the only difference were the 4 special ones: M, A, S, P.  Catching up on my reading I learned what these were and how to embrace them for what they can do.  A friend of mine heard that I finally got back into DLSR’s and warned me that if I ever used anything other than M that he may disown me.  While I understood his intent, I really wanted to learn about all of the modes, even the more Auto-like ones.  

First thing I learned is that the Auto specific mode is great.  It takes great pictures and it good for something just point and shoot.  It doesn’t allow you the freedom to tweak your pictures in that way that the photographers eye can catch though.  Most camera’s have this mode, along with all of your other scene specific modes listed above on the Point and shoot style camera’s.  I like to call these “Guest modes”.  I am sure most of us have had to deal with this before. You are at a once in a lifetime event, you want a picture that has YOU in it (unlike all your other pictures) so you need someone to take the shoot for you.  You could A: give a strange the complete dissertation on lighting, shutter speeds, and aperture, B: Hand them the user manual for your camera and wait the 4+ hours for them to memorize it like you did, or C: flip the Camera into Auto, let them push the button and enjoy that picture of you and Lou Ferigno where he is holding you over his head like a twig. (Lou is actually a really nice guy.)

Now, Auto modes aside, that still leaves your M, A, S, P modes.  For those not in the know they are as follows:

M: Manual.  You control the Horizontal and the Vertical….Ok actually you control every aspect from ISO to Shutter and everything in between.
A: Aperture priority.  You control the Aperture setting and allow the camera to adjust the Shutter speed.  Fun fact here is that you really are controlling everything else.  You want that specific Depth of field (DOF) that a F/1.4 will give you but you are in a spot where the light keeps changing.  Slip into A mode and let the camera adjust the Shutter. You still control ISO
S: Shutter priority.  This is identical to A but you are controlling the shutter speed and letting the camera work the aperture.  This is ideal if you want a specific speed on your shot and not worried about your DOF. same here, you still control ISO
P: Program mode. This mode is damn handy some times. With P mode your camera will control the Shutter and Aperture, but you can adjust on the fly.  You are still setting the exposure levels and ISO but all of the speed and DOF are handled by the camera.  You may thing this is a lot like Auto mode, but you would be mistaken.  You are still in control of your lighting and even the speed (to an extent).  By adjusting P mode you can change your levels dynamically to tune your shot.  The best uses of P mode are those tourist type spots where you are moving around, want to grab a quick shot of something and don’t have the time to adjust each setting.    I will occasionally use P at a convention if I just want a quick shot of a Costume or booth and can’t have the person sit for 30+ seconds to adjust for lighting.  P mode is not a sin!!

Now, if you ask me where my camera is set to right now, I’ll tell you it’s in M.  Probably a good 85% of the time I will remain in M because most of the shots I take, I want the most control over them. Aside from that, I am not afraid to venture into other modes, and even the dreaded Auto, is allowed on my camera….just as long as someone else is using it.

Silo Shoot

Just uploaded a few shots from the Missile Silo shoot to Flickr and thought I would share.  You can see all of the shots on my websites gallery.

Attended a Model shoot with a friend. I was mostly there taking behind the scenes shots of the shoot. Location was an abandoned NIKE missle facility in MD:

Behind the Lens

This was a 10 second long exposure of Paul helping the Model into her “outfit”:

Strapping In

I couldn’t help but snag a good artistic shot of the model. This is using my SB-600 Speedlight angled to reflect off the wall to the left of the model:

Hooked

Inside the Bag

This week I got the chance to tag along on a photo shoot with a buddy of mine in an abandoned NIKE missile bunker.  It was pretty adventurous, but sounded like fun.  He had a model that was coming up for this and we aimed to make it as professional as possible.  Paul was the primary photographer on scene with his Assistant/Apprentice, Andy helping out.  I was on hand more for the behind the scenes shots to document the shoot itself.  Overall it was a blast!  I uploaded the Behind the scenes shots to my gallery and you can find the model shoots over at Paul’s Flickr stream.

This got me thinking about what all I am carrying in my portable kit and why.  So I thought I would break it down for anyone who may be interested:

 

Some of the things to draw attention to here:

      • The iPad: I mostly use this for very quick spot processing and shot review and looking up any info.  I can also do instant uploads  of shots if I need to send them out ASAP (depending on Signal on my 4G Thunderbolts tether).  The app I use the most for processing is Filterstorm.
      • The SB-600 is my Speedlight.  It’s a low end light but I am working to get some remote triggers for off camera lighting.
      • The combo of the GorillaPod and the Pistol Head tripod mount makes for a small easy to aim pose-able mini tripod that is great of remote locations.

The item that I catch the most grief for is the one that brings it all together.  You may have noticed that all of my gear is Nikon based, yet I have a Canon bag.  When I was shopping around for a backpack that would carry everything and not break the bank, the Canon one kept coming up.  It has protective compartments for everything and is small and light.  Sure it’s misleading sometimes but it gets the job done.

So there you have it.  All of my gear laid out for all to see.  now that I have shown you mine, how about you show me yours!

Photos of Charlie

So yesterday was an extremely difficult day for me.  After 12 years of Companionship, 5 of those was battling kidney disease, we had to put my cat Charlie to sleep.  It was a long hard battle for him.  Every few months he would get a little sick and we would run through the usual checklist of things to help him get better.  Sadly this last week we reached the end of the checklist and it was not looking well.  

We knew this day was coming and unfortunately there is not much you can do to mentally prepare yourself for how hard of a decision that is.  In the end, we knew that he was uncomfortable, Charlie was good about letting us know that, and we wanted to do best for him.

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We picked a good spot next to one of the oak trees in the back yard and Andrew dug out a very impressive hole.  I think it was his best way of coping with it.  Yesterday evening we laid him to rest and there is a large boulder on top of his site.  Charlie always wanted to be an outside cat and loved to climb trees.  

To help lighten the mood a little here are some fun facts about Charlie.

  • He has outlasted 3 of my serious relationships
  • He outlasted at least 3 cars we have owned
  • Longer than 4 of my computers
  • He has lived in 7 different places and 3 different states
  • I have owned him longer than most of my friends have had children
  • He would fight tooth and nail to get at Chicken Wings
  • He loved to lay across shoulders, but only facing to the left
  • Daddy’s lap was the best place to sit, regardless of what Daddy was doing
  • The day I got rid of my CRT Monitor, he sat on my desk and pouted at me because he couldn’t lay across my LCD.
  • When we picked out Charlie from the Denver Dumb Friends League, he was the loudest cat in the shelter.
  • Charlie loved to have conversations with people.  If you talked to him, he would talk back.

And with this I present that last two photos of Charlie:

Charlie's Face

Charlie looking out the window