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You are here: Home / Archives for Claudia

Flowers, Bees & My Recommendation for Photo Editing

July 6, 2014 at 8:22 am by Claudia

coneflower-beginnings

The coneflower that is about-to-be. It’s there, but the petals haven’t fully grown yet.

I love coneflowers and I have plenty of them in the gardens. They are easy to grow, long lasting and, to me, the quintessential flower for a cottage garden.

And they re-seed. What could be better?

Gosh, the landscape around here is such a lush green. Days and days of rain will do that. So, though the rain was a pain in the tush, the payoff is pretty spectacular.

Lawn mowing yesterday. Lawn mowing today. Weed pulling today. Weed pulling yesterday.

Are you getting a picture of my weekend?

bee in day lily

Such a tiny little bee. I stood there for several minutes, watching him alight on the stamens, then move further inside the lily, then back to the stamens.

Taking photos of flowers and birds and bees and bugs takes patience. I’m not always the most patient person, indeed, at times, I am unbelievably impatient, but I am patient about photos of flora and fauna. If I had started doing all this earlier in life, I could easily imagine myself as a National Geographic-type photographer, setting up my camera and tripod at some location, then waiting and waiting for the perfect shot. I would love that.

By the way, the single best investment I have made, besides my camera, is Adobe Photoshop Lightroom – or simply Lightroom. It goes on sale a couple of times a year and I happened to purchase it at one of those times, encouraged by my friend Dawn of Creative Cain Cabin.

Yes, PicMonkey is free but it doesn’t hold a candle to what Lightroom can do. Not even close. Photoshop has a steep learning curve and is more expensive than Lightroom. That learning curve, along with the cost, often puts people off.  But Lightroom is more affordable and, once you figure it out, easy to use. I can see a distinct difference in the pre-Lightroom and post-Lightroom photos on this blog.

Of course, you still have to know your camera and its settings. You have to be willing to take it off Auto and use it on Manual. But all of that comes with practice.

I use PicMonkey for fonts, but that’s about it. I don’t do a lot of fonts on my photos anyway, it’s not my thing. I did, however, create this watermark in Lightroom.

If you have a blog and are serious about your photos, if you don’t have a blog and are serious about your photos, if you don’t want to invest several hundred dollars in Photoshop but you do want something better than the limitations of a free photo editing application, Lightroom is for you.

This might sound like a commercial, but truly, it comes from the heart. I have thanked Dawn again and again for pointing me in the direction of Lightroom. It’s that good.

Anyway, I’ll try to keep an eye out for the next time Lightroom is on sale, so I can tell you about it.

bee in day lily closest

Boy, do I love this shot.

By the way, dear friends, the new book blog will be up and running tomorrow. Well, it’s actually up and running now, but I’m not going to reveal the name until Monday. I’m excited about it. Of course, it will evolve over time, but the basic underpinnings are there. I worked on it yesterday between bouts of mowing.

I do hope you will like it!

Happy Sunday.

ClaudiaSignature140X93

 

Tagged With: LightroomFiled Under: bees, blog, blogging, camera, flowers 19 Comments

On the Edge

July 5, 2014 at 9:39 am by Claudia

Oh my.

The sun is out.

We’ve had 3 days of torrential rain, thunderstorms and wind. I was getting ready to build an ark.

But lo and behold, there is such a thing as the sun. Thank goodness.

Don has a gig today which involves performing on the Village Green in Woodstock, so no rain is a good thing.

Thank you for all the anniversary wishes. We had a lovely day together. It was low-key; we told stories about our first meeting on that fateful day twenty years ago. In honor of our anniversary, a friend of ours posted the video of a song by James Taylor called “On the Fourth of July” which so perfectly told our story that I cried. I immediately downloaded it and listened to it over and over. It was a day of gratitude for the miracle that drew us together on that particular Fourth of July. Of gratitude for the well wishes of so many of our friends; on this blog and on Facebook, friends from our childhood, from our work in the arts, from our families, from our ever-expanding world.

I’m so profoundly grateful.

I thought you might like another look at the plants and flowers that grow on the edge of our property. Some of them are blooming at the moment. I don’t know the names of most of them. Yet.

saturday-milkweed flowers

The milkweed flowers are about ready to burst open.

saturday-wild honeysuckle berries

Berries on the wild honeysuckle.

saturday-wild sort of daisies

I don’t know the name of this plant, but the daisy-like flowers are very sweet – maybe some sort of wild aster. Do you see the little bug flying toward the blossoms?

saturday-wild plant1

This plant grows on the edge of the property behind the kitchen and up in the back forty. It’s about four feet tall and those little yellow flowers are beginning to appear. Anyone know the name of this one? It intrigues me.

saturday-wild plant2

saturday-purple flowers

I love a dash of purple in the garden.

Today? All that rain means the lawn needs mowing. And the garden beds need weeding. And I want to work on the book blog. I’ve picked a name for it and have designed a simple header.

I hope you’re having a lovely weekend, my friends.

Happy Saturday.

ClaudiaSignature140X93

Filed Under: anniversary, flowers 39 Comments

20

July 4, 2014 at 8:37 am by Claudia

In 1993, I was still living and working in Boston, but it was time for a change. Encouraged by my friend Rick, I had applied for a teaching position in the University of San Diego/Old Globe Theatre MFA Professional Actor Training Program. Interviews for jobs such as these can be exhausting. You fly somewhere, spend a day teaching a class in front of the Search Committee, have countless interviews, have lunch/dinner, meet a lot of people, smile so much that your teeth ache, and fly back home. All with in 24 – 48 hours.

Thus, I was found jetting off to California (I had never been there before) for a job interview. I knew a couple of people who worked at the Globe and one of them, Kathy McGrath, was in the current show running at the theater. I had some free time, so I went to the matinee. There was a guy in the cast who was a wonderful actor and I distinctly remember looking at his photo in the program and reading his bio.

I got the job, by the way.

Fast forward to a year later, in 1994. I had successfully managed the first year of teaching in a whole new environment. I had just been through the tragic murder of one of my beloved students. I was coaching one of the summer productions for the Globe, a play called Wonderful Tennessee by Brian Friel. The Globe used to host an event called “Company Call” where everyone involved in the current productions met in the theater, along with staff and management. It was a great way to get to know each other. During this particular Company Call, three people were made Associate Artists, an honor bestowed on artists who had forged a long relationship with the theater. I recognized one of the honorees. It was the same guy I had seen onstage the previous year. His speech was funny and self-deprecating and I found him intriguing. He was playing Malvolio in Twelfth Night, which was currently in rehearsal.

A week or so later, Kathy had her annual Fourth of July bash at her home by the beach. I had been serving on Jury Duty and was grateful for a day off from a tedious and contentious trial. Rick and I headed out to the beach. Lots of people from the theater were there. (In those days, the Globe was like one big family.)

I knew most everyone and I spent a lot of time with the cast of Wonderful Tennessee, most of them actors who had worked off and on at the Globe for years. Every time I came back into the living room of Kathy’s house, a guy kept catching my eye and smiling at me. This happened several times.

It was that guy I had seen in the play. That guy who had just been made an Associate Artist. Oh, I knew his name. He was Don Sparks.

I am by nature a friendly person who is fundamentally shy. I was never the kind of girl who went up to a man and initiated a flirtation. Too shy for that. But something made me go up to this guy. After all, he’d been putting an enormous amount of effort into catching my eye. And he seemed like a nice guy.

So I bit the bullet, walked up to him and introduced myself. We sat on the sofa and talked to each other. Our conversation centered around the fact that we couldn’t believe we were in our forties.

I was a wee bit smitten.

So, it turns out, was Don. In fact, he uses the word ‘lust’ to describe his feelings on that Fourth of July.

Later in the evening, we all went to the beach to watch the fireworks and, though we were sitting far apart from each other, he managed to catch my eye again. He smiled. He’s got a great smile.

I guess you can say we saw fireworks on the day we met.

Within a few weeks (we were both busy with our respective productions) we went on our first date. Four years later, we were married.

20years

20 years.

Pretty good for a guy who had been married before and wasn’t sure if he wanted to be married again.

Pretty good for a girl who had dodged any sort of commitment for years and didn’t think she could sustain a long relationship, let alone marry someone.

Happy 20th, my love.

ClaudiaSignature140X93

Filed Under: anniversary, Don, life 69 Comments

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Welcome!

Welcome!

I live in a little cottage in the country with my husband. It's a sweet place, sheltered by old trees and surrounded by gardens. The inside is full of the things we love. I love to write, I love my camera, I love creating, I love gardening. My decorating style is eclectic; full of vintage and a bit of whimsy.

I've worked in the theater for more years than I can count. I'm currently a voice, speech, dialect and text coach freelancing on Broadway, off Broadway, and in regional theater.

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