John & Anne Wiley

2013/01/08

Mesa, Slough, Hill

Filed under: Flying,Happiness,Has Photos,Nature,People,Random,SB Region — John @ 09:18

More Mesa looked great in the evening light of late December, so I thought you might enjoy a pic of the soft light in light orange haze from control burns.

 

2484 More Mesa Soft

2484 More Mesa Soft

On another recent flight I liked this reflected sky on the Goleta Slough in context with the coastline toward Hope Ranch.

2490 Gentle Goleta Blue

2490 Gentle Goleta Blue

One more pic in this eclectic collection, is a small hill above Cathedral Oaks. Flying this area introduces us to many examples of interesting homes and gardens. I like the round house lower center in particular, and the one next door with a turret.

2514 Hillock Homes

2514 Hillock Homes

2013/01/06

Happy Valley

Having savored a relaxed flight over the hills to Santa Ynez, I’m in a happy valley today. Well, you might call it a welcome rut. Not just the soaring joy of seeing this riot of fresh green among lingering Fall colors.

2547 Happy Valleys

2547 Happy Valleys

Another part of my happy rut is more experimenting with 3D. Now maybe you didn’t like the one I shared before, or weren’t able to ever see it in 3D, or are concerned about eye strain. Well, close one eye because here are two more. First this cool old barn next to the airport and winery, with grand old oaks in attendance.

2560 Barn-O-Rama

2560 Barn-O-Rama

I’ve spiked it a bit, because I like how it enhances my enjoyment of the dimensionality. If that’s too overdone even when you only look at half of it, here’s a more natural one. Reminds me of scenes in the View-Master some well-off kids had. So maybe I’m enjoying finally having one of my own, with photos taken from beneath the broad wings of Tripp.

5053 Hills, Cachuma, Beyond

5053 Hills, Cachuma, Beyond

In case you’re still reading, couldn’t get the 3D effect with my prior method, and want to try again, I found another trick. Pick a spot in one of the photos, maybe the barn or the lake, and look at it while you cross your eyes like we all did as kids. When you cross them too far you’ll see more than three copies of the image, and too little gets you back to two copies. Go back and forth crossing more and less until you can hold three copies of the image while looking at your target point. I find that after a moment my eyes “lock” and then I can look around that center image without losing the 3D effect. Again, it’s easier if the image is smaller on the screen so you could zoom out if you’re having trouble. But I made these images a bit bigger, so if you click to see the largest versions this cross-eye method might enable you to see it in 3D more easily than the other method. Anyway, I hope you’ve at least enjoyed my fascination with this, and I’ll try to resist sharing any more unless someone requests them – even tho I’ll probably keep playing with them for a while before leaving my happy rut.  🙂

2013/01/04

Dimensions

I got fascinated by a photo Neal Graffy posted on Edhat recently, when I realized it’s one of those old 3-D photos that people looked at with a special viewer that looks like offspring of binoculars and slide projector. I found a way to see the 3-D effect without that device, and posted it on my Photo Page. Here’s a smaller version.

Antique 3D Picnic

Antique 3D Picnic

On my Photo Page I described a method to see the 3-D effect. What I like about this is the extra dimensions. Not just the 3-D effect that adds so much to the sense of being there. Nor the extra detail gained when I could tell several people are reaching, and the top-left is the distant SB ridge line, and those are baskets hanging from the branch at the right. Most of all I liked the sense of looking back into the dimension of time.

No surprise then that it got me thinking more about 3-D photos and how to view them. Today I found an easier way to view them than what I’d outlined before. I made a pair of “binoculars” out of my hands rolled up next to each other so that each tube points at the half of the photo on that side. Much easier than just staring at the pic cross-eyed! Then I found an even easier way, and decided to try making my own 3-D photo in color with better resolution:

2254 3-D Memory

2254 3-D Memory

Here’s my easier (and less ridiculous looking) way to see it:

1. Close your left eye and hold one finger a few inches from the screen so that it blocks the left half of the smaller image on top. Moving your finger closer and further from the screen, you can adjust it until the right image is all visible but most or all of the left one is blocked.
2. Switch eyes (close right and open left) and repeat, until switching eyes without moving your finger makes first one and then the other side visible while the opposite side is blocked.
3. Open both eyes as you hold your finger steady, focus on a single point (the chimney works well) and allow your eyes to cross slightly so that you see two images come together (two chimneys move toward each other and become a single chimney). Then look around the photo, and you may notice 3D effects like the tree in front of the car at the bottom, and depth of the swimming pool.

Once you’ve managed to merge the images, do the same thing with the larger version at the bottom of the photo, using your thumb. If you like it, click to see the largest version and try it with two fingers.

This home is the first one Anne’s family lived in when they moved to California, though of course it looked much different back then. So again, this photo takes us back into the dimension of Time. Maybe I’ll try this with some aerial landscapes and other scenes, now that I’ve figured out how to do it. This could add another dimension to my photos. 🙂

2013/01/01

’12 Final Minutes Aloft

Our final minutes aloft of 2012 brought a delightful and refreshing variety of scenes into our hearts. Taking off, this familiar view past UCSB to the islands immediately launched us into bliss.

2393 UC Launch

2393 UC Launch

Somehow the shapes and colors of this view bring instant relaxation and delight, even viewing this tiny impression of the remarkable scene we were immersed in. Moments later as we turned North to climb over the front country mountains of the Santa Ynez range, the luscious green hills made our hearts soar with the joys of Spring.

2395 Green Hills of Home

2395 Green Hills of Home

After we’d lifted effortlessly over Painted Cave and climbed across Santa Ynez Valley, snowy peaks of the San Rafael and Sierra Madre brought us to this wintry wonderland.

2420 Wintry Wonderland

2420 Wintry Wonderland

Turning homeward we descended past East Camino Cielo where snow lingers on that much lower slope in the shadows of the North slope.

2448 Snow Over Sun

2448 Snow Over Sun

The sun lit a hazy glow from agricultural burns in the region, giving a bluish glow to this scene that encompasses the snowy ridge and the nearby harbor where people are wading in the sea. Such a short flight ably demonstrates the breadth of delights within easy reach of our community. A wonderful way to invest our final minutes aloft in this year that has brought us so many wonderful moments. May your coming Lucky ’13 overflow with Love, Friendship and warm memories.

 

2012/12/30

City Sandwich

Flying from SB to SD for family holiday, we passed hilltop mansions between the LA and SD megalopoli that form a double-decker city sandwich. Like this little Hobbiton on the mountains near Topanga Canyon.

2203 Hobbit Hill

2203 Hobbit Hill

I love the creativity of homes like these, and often wonder how many people will ever see them other than those flying “low and slow” in small planes like Tripp. We also get different views of LA, like this “clear day” one just above the layer of smog blown back to the hills.

2207 LA Layers

2207 LA Layers

Looking down thru the layer in Santa Monica everything is vaguely brownish, and the stark snowy peaks shine out above it in the far distance. Downtown LA seems very much in peril of being swallowed alive at the right edge of the layer. Not long after as we pass La Jolla approaching SD, more fanciful mansions catch my eye.

2217 Life on the Edge

2217 Life on the Edge

Here on the edge of another major population center, on the edge of an eroding bluff over the sea perch more whimsical shapes. For me they evoke thoughts of beauty, peace and wealth mingled with images of fire, flood and quake. If we could afford to build there, would we? If so, would we try to mitigate the risks that so readily spring to mind or would we grow comfortable with the reality that life is fleeting and impermanent?

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