Symmetry Be Damned
Thursday, July 17, 2025
 | Hosta 'Snake Eyes' 17 July 2025 |
I believe that asymmetry is a snobbish look at visual reality. Ancient civilizations seemed to be obsessed
with its opposite. In most cases so has Detroit. It was the Rambler American that
had a touch of asymmetry as its passenger door was larger than the driver’s.
I have written before on the subject. The link is below. The Beauty of Asymmetry Nature Abhors Asymmetry
My friends of the American Hosta Society eschew asymmetry
and when hosta leaves are entered in leaf shows judges eliminate those that are
not symmetrical. That changed (a tad) when Hosta ‘Strip Tease’ was introduced.
Check a scan in the above link.
My smaller Hosta ‘Snake Eyes’ may be a sport of Strip Tease.
While I was scanning the leaf and flowers I thought about
my large collection (I bought them for reasons not just to have a museum) of
cameras and came to understand that the only asymmetrical ones are my Nikons
and my Leica III-F. I do not believe that their asymmetry in any way affected
their operation. Now with phone photography taking over the world selfies and portraits usually feature faces that are lit the same on both sides. Rembrandt used what is called Rembrandt Lighting which is the result of painting someone close to a window. In lighting people with chubby faces you light the side of the face that is further away from the camera. The closest side is darkened. This is called narrow lighting. I have a photographer friend who shoots headshots. A few months ago he told me, "Alex my subjects want me to light both sides of their faces equally as if I were using a phone." So asymmetry is now a past in portraiture.
With No Compunction
 | Hosta 'Joseph' 17 July 2025 |
Because Rosemary was a Master Gardener, we were members of
garden societies and our Kerrisdale garden had appeared in Better Homes and
Gardens we had frequent visitors to our garden.
Now in my little Kitsilano pad and garden, and with Rosemary
gone, few show up for garden visits. There is one advantage to that. It means I
can cut whatever flower or flowers I want for scanning with no compunction.
Hosta 'Joseph’ and ordinary dark green hosta is wonderfully
floriferous. I cut all the flowering scapes (hosta lingo for stems) so I could
scan them. Why? Americans have a rather offensive statement about dogs licking
their …. They say, ‘Because they can.”
After years of scanning plants ( I began in 2002) I am
always surprised at the beauty of the resulting scan. I can almost predict what
it will look like. But surprise is still there.
I do these scans in complete isolation. I am compelled to do
them, anyway. Thanks to my ophthalmologist I see very well and I am able to
remove all the dust spots on my monitor. The process is fun in my airy oficina.
When I am scanning I don’t feel as much melancholy for my
Rosemary as she is almost with me. Because she was appreciative of the little
details of her (our) garden she taught me to notice those little things. Most
of the members of the American Hosta Society (I am a member) think the host
flowers are insignificant. This scan and the many more I have made through the
years say they are wrong.
A Failure?
 | Audrey Hepburn - Late 80s in Vancouver |
In this century, because people can, there is a preponderance
of double portraits mostly of
actresses that sometimes are underlined, “Remember her? This is what she looks
like now. You will gag.”
For me in
that century films were a pleasant escape from reality. I adored Gregory Peck
and Grace Kelly. They were in my memory looking at their peak.
So when I
faced Audrey Hepburn sometime in the late 80s I made two mistakes. One was to
ask her about her former husband Mel Ferrer. She frowned. I then asked her if
she had ever had a film partner that was shorter than she was (Hepburn was
quite tall when she faced my camera). She said, “Humphrey Bogart in Sabrina.”
My second
mistake was that since I did now want to break my memory of how she had been I
did not get close with my Mamiya RB-67. Imagine if I had taken a tight portrait
of what she looked like then with my heavy duty lights?
And so I
can assert that I failed and my only excuse is that I was trying to be
well-mannered.
Two Centuries Combined
Wednesday, July 16, 2025
 | Kira - February 25, 2024 |
Yesterday after I scanned a white dahlia from my garden I
looked up in Google the story of the origins of the plant. I was completely
dazzled by the fact that it was a plant that was indigenous to the Aztecs in
Mexico. I wrote that had I told myself in the last century that I was going to
research dahlias at the Vancouver Public Library I would have been too lazy in
the end to go. The White Dahlia
What I keep explaining and writing in many of my blogs is
that combining the technology of the 20th century with that of this
one will result in astounding results. With many of my photo peers I seem to be
trying to sell a sick horse. I am ignored.
Today I want to show the photographs I took of a lovely but
mature woman friend of mine called Kira. She posed for me in my little
Kitsilano studio on February 25, 2024.
In my little studio I have on the opposite of my middle grey
wall a large mirror. I turned my camera in that direction and photographer her
in what I saw in the mirror. I used slow shutters and during the exposure I
tended to move my camera downwards. In these photographs I am seen on the
right.
I also decided to shoot b+w film in my medium format Mamiya
RB-67. In the pictures here you can see it on the tripod on the left.
A few days later once The Lab had processed my film I chose
one negative. While I was scanning it I
was also pulling it gently towards. I have cropped what might have offended the
folks of the “Community Standards”.
I cannot understand why living in a city where we have
The Lab (they even process the Ektachrome I like to shoot), Beau Photo (they
have the latest lighting equipment which can be bought or rented and a large
refrigerator with film that you might not even know exists) and Kerrisdale
Cameras with experience experts like Jeff Gin at the North Van store, we do not
have more avid photographers. The Lab Beau Photo Jeff Gin
A Double Delight
 | Rosa 'Double Delight - 16 July 2025 |
Because my mother was a busy high school teacher in both
Argentina and in Mexico I was educated and mentored by my grandmother, María de
los Dolores Reyes de Irureta Goyena. I was saved of many chinelazos (whippings
in which my mother used a Filipino/Chinese slipper called a chinela) because my
Abue argued that I was an artist like she was and I was to be allowed some
artistic licence.
I have a
distinct memory of being taken to an art opening in Mexico City by my
grandmother. It was a show by a young Filipino artist. We faced a large
painting of a Mexican huarache. After staring at it she told the artist, “Why
did you paint something that is so ugly?” His answer was memorable, “Ah, the
beauty of ugliness!”
That was a
lesson that I have never forgotten in a world where objects and even partners
are traded (upgraded?).
The Asahi
Pentax S-3 in my scan I purchased used in 1962 at Foto Rudiger in Mexico City
on Avenida Venustiano Carranza. I could not afford the lovely Leicas being sold
nearby at Foto Lipkau.
This camera
and my Pentacon-F (purchased new in Austin in 1958 from Adorama in NYCity) were
the cameras I used from Buenos Aires to Mexico until Rosemary told me in 1975
we were moving to Vancouver. They served me well until the late 70s. When I went to Mexico City in October 2023 I took the Pentax as I wanted to take it back to its former home. The link to the blog about it below. The Blue Agave
A few
months ago before the fabulous local camera repair man, Horst Wenzel died he
repaired the shutter button of the Pentax that had fallen out. It works
perfectly.
Of late I
have been going against the grain of my fellow rosarians from the Vancouver
Rose Society (I began as a member with Rosemary in 1991) by appreciating the beauty
of spent blooms and scanning them. For my fellow rosarians, roses have to be
admired at their absolute peak of perfection.
I love the
worn out black paint of my Pentax that exposes the brass underneath. My Rosa ‘Double
Delight’ is lovely just as it is now.
Both the
Pentax and the rose are definitely a double delight.
Thank
you Abue for teaching me to admire what is not perfect. And I must add an unusual feature of my Pentax. In 1977 I lost my Canadian SIN Card (Social Insurance Card). At the time the RCMP (Royal Canadian Mounted Police) made available a tool to inscribe in metal our SIN number on our expensive appliances to prevent theft. I inscribe my SIN on the bottom plate of my Pentax. When people from the government call me and ask me for my SIN number I tell them, to their surprise, "Let me get my camera and I will give you my number."
Hypnotic White
Tuesday, July 15, 2025
 | Dahlia hybrida 'Hypnotic White' 15 July 2025 | Noticing little things A spent dahlia & my existential angst
Dahlia (UK: /ˈdeɪliə/ DAY-lee-ə,
US: /ˈdæljə, ˈdɑːljə, ˈdeɪljə/ DA(H)L-yə,
DAYL-yə)[3] is a genus of
bushy, tuberous, herbaceous perennial plants native to Mexico and Central
America. Dahlias are members of the Asteraceae (synonym name: Compositae)
family of dicotyledonous plants, its relatives include the sunflower, daisy,
chrysanthemum, and zinnia. There are 49 species of dahlia, with flowers in
almost every hue (except blue), with hybrids commonly grown as garden plants.
Dahlias were known only to the Aztecs and other southern
North American peoples until the Spanish conquest, after which the plants were
brought to Europe. The tubers of some varieties are of medicinal and
dietary value to humans because, in common with species of Inula and many other
flowering plants, they use inulin, a polymer of the fruit sugar, fructose
instead of starch as a storage polysaccharide. Wikipedia
One of the, I believe wonders of the 21st
century is the ability to find out quickly and well information that at one
time was only available at a public library. Hence there is that Wikiepedia
information on the dahlia. How I was to know it was a plant that the Aztecs new
well?
In our garden Rosemary and I had few dahlias. The only
one that survived our move is the one you see in the scan here.
I scanned it and I believe that the results are
breathtaking and elegant. Even though I may have at least 3000 scans since I
began in 2002, I cannot tire at the beauty of my scanographs.
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