Unjaded II
Sunday, June 28, 2026
 | | Hosta 'Sun Mouse' 28 June 2026 | Today I
wrote a blog about not being jaded and I featured a scan of a hosta flower and another
with a rose. The link is below. Unjaded
I want to
pursue the subject as I was struck by the strange surface of a new miniature
hosta I bought this year. It is from a series of many with the name of mouse.
I was not
too upset about cutting the flower for the scan and not know what it would have
looked once opened because there is a second unopened flower.
These plants
that people praise for their spectacular leaves should stop and look at litte
details like the multi-coloured surface of this one.
Unjaded
 | | Hosta 'Dream Queen' 27 June 2026 |
Jaded comes
from the noun "jade," which originally referred to a worn-out,
broken-down horse which was usually a mare. By the late 1500s, this evolved
into a verb meaning "to tire out or fatigue," and by the 1630s, the
adjective "jaded" was used to describe someone dulled by overexposure
or continual indulgence.
 | | Hosta 'Dream Queen' & Rosa 'Susan Williams-Ellis' 27 June 2026 |
Since 2001 I
have scanned thousands of plants and roses from my garden. And yet each scan
becomes a view of wonder every time. I can sort of predict what the scan will
look like but that’s not enough to justify my excitement when I see the result.
Because my
Rosemary was into the details of the garden she taught me to observe what
photographers now do with their macro lenses. I don’t need such a device as my
vision is still sharp.
For many
years I was a member of the American Hosta Society. Its members praised the
beauty of the variegated leave and poopooed what they said were uninspiring flowers. I begged to differ. I
see in the tall scapes (hosta term for the stem of the flowers) why hostas and
agaves are part of the very large asparagus family. But I see a beauty in the
flowers before they open and after. Sometimes the flowers are all white and
sometimes they are lilac almost purple.
This last
scan of Hosta ‘Dream Queen’ caught my eye because of its brilliant white and
its proximity to Rosa ‘Susan Williams-Ellis’. I scanned the hosta flower with
and without the rose.
Not being
jaded has something to do with being an artist. I now almost admit being one. I
cannot stop doing it. That first scan of Rosa ‘Reine Victoria’ in 2001 reminds
me that Jorge Luís Borges says that all first times are infinitely repeated.
And yes, these scans have that wonder and excitement of that long lost rose that
died. Its memory persists.
The Would Be Street & Landscape Photographer
Saturday, June 27, 2026
 | | 26 June 2026 |  | | 16 May 2026 |
On days when
it is not raining (I today was just fine in the afternoon) I ride my 3-speed
bike to Jericho Beach. Every time I take a purposely underexposed photograph
with my Fuji X-3 of a view of the city from a park on Point Grey Road at the
end of Musqueam View Street.
In the last
few years I have seen the disappearance of the kind of photography I used to do
for magazines and newspapers in that last remote century. Most of the view
photographers that I know that have not gone to retire to the Gulf Islands (God’s
Waiting Room) shoot street photographs.
A few of the
street photographers in the last century are now seen as mentors like Cartier-Bresson.
I can assert
that when I go to Buenos Aires or Mexico I immediately shoot street
photographs. But in Vancouver that is becoming more drab by the day I am not
inspired. There is one photographer who pretty well insulted me and my only
thought is that there is now a deep division between those who shoot street
photography and the very few who like me do portraits.
I wonder if
the problem is a combination of the proliferation of phones and digital cameras
with our reluctance, after that terrible pandemic to talk face to face. We live
now in the age of emoji/emoticons. We live in the age that if you want to talk
to someone on the phone, the protocol is to text first.
My thoughts
right now is if I take this Vancouver photograph every day from the same spot
am I a landscape/street photographer? In Vancouver if you take a picture of a
red fire hydrant it is of no importance but if you “document” fifty of them is
it art? There are a few photographers
here that do that (not fire hydrants). Because I have at least fifty Vancouver
views from the same spot, am I an artist?
 | | Jericho Beach -11 June 2026 |
 | | Jericho Beach -Lens Baby - 17 June 2026 |
She is a Work of Art
Friday, June 26, 2026
Because I
speak two languages, English and Spanish, I am constantly comparing words. I
would say that I have become a language studier and I follow trends
particularly that of close to extinct words and expression.
As an excuse
to post here some of the portraits I have taken of my Ukrainian friend Olena I
researched the expression “a work of art”. This expression is in little use as
it has been replaced by stunning or iconic.
I started
taking photographs in 1959 in Austin when I purchased a Pentacon-F SlR
manufactured it what was then called Russian Occupied Germany. Since then I
have taken thousands of photographs of which most are portraits. At my age of
83 I am sort of beginning to accept that I am an artist. One of the reasons is
that many of my photography peers have disappeared in the British Columbia Gulf
Islands which a friend calls God’s Waiting Room. I cannot understand how they
retire and now walk in the forests and gaze at the sea. I don’t see myself
retiring until I meet with my soon-to-happen oblivion.
While I am
not sure if I am an artist, when I look at the many photographs I have taken of
Olena I would call her a living work of art. With her in front of my camera I
cannot fail.
The story on
how we met is funny. Some years ago, around Christmas I received an email from
a man in Colombia called Alex who had found my webpage and wanted some
photography advice. Because it was Christmas I forgot to reply. Around 2016 I was
having my hair cut by Kerrisdale stylist Richard Jeha. He told me, “Alex I have
an assistant who speaks your language. I want to introduce you to her.” And so
I was introduced to Helena although she told me her name was Olena and that she
was from Ukraine. She added that she had moved from Colombia to Vancouver
recently. I told her about the man who had communicated to me from Bogotá. I
was startled by her reply, “He is my husband."

Olena has
posed for me many times and the photographs you see here I took with a new film
called Rollei Infrared Film. It is not true infrared. It has an extended range
into the red. It shares with the discontinued Kodak b+w Infrared Film in not
having what is called an anti-helation layer. This means that some of the light
that hits he in-film negative bounces off, particularly when it is
over-exposed. Because of its extended range into the red I told Olena to apply
(one of her many talents is that besides colouring hair she is a good makeup
artist) purple lipstick so that her lips would not be a deathly white.
The third
picture, a killer in my opinion I took with my Fuji X-E3 digital camera. The
blue colour of the other two photographs I added as I scanned the negatives
with my 22-year-old Photoshop-8.
My Appreciation of Little Details Because of My Rosemary
Thursday, June 25, 2026
 | | Hosta 'Abba Dabba Do' 25 June 2026 | There is not
one day these days that I do not thank my Rosemary for having brought us from
Mexico City in 1975. I think of her financial savvy which has me leaving with
no worries about where the next dollar is going to come from.I thank her
for never have prevented me from buying photographic equipment I told her I
needed or ignoring all the money I was spending in matting and framing my
photographs for shows in which I rarely sold anything.
I thank her
for having made me a gardener. In my age of 83 tending my garden gives me a
valid excuse to get up in the morning.
But most of
all I thank her for helping me notice small details in everything in my life
that would bring a rare smile to my face.
The folks of
the American Hosta Society (I gave up my membership last year) pooh-pooh the
hosta flowers and praise the variegation of their leaves. Because of Rosemary I have come to appreciate
their beauty particularly when I scan them.
Few might
know that both agaves (tequila!) and hostas are members of the very large
family of the Asparagaceae.
The hosta flower here is
from a hosta bred by Tony Avant. He had and has an excellent sense of humour.
He brought us Hosta ‘Elvis Lives’ and Hosta ‘Red Neck Heaven’. This one’s name
places the hosta in the beginning of all hosta catalogues
The Decision Maker
Wednesday, June 24, 2026
 | | My Kitsilano dining room - Mamiya RB-67- Kodak Technical Pan - 17 June 2026 | Early on,
when I married my Rosemary in Mexico City on February 8 1968, I saw her as the decision
maker of the family. In 1975 she made the decision that we should move to
Vancouver. Every day of my life since, I have thanked her in person or in my
memory.
Her most
telling decision was to move us from our little strata home in Burnaby to a
palace in Kerrisdale with a huge corner garden. We had to pay a $3500 monthly
mortgage so I was given a domingo, Spanish for an allowance.
In all those
years Rosemary made intelligent financial decisions. That all changed 13 years
ago, when I made my first important decision. Our Kerrisdale roof had to be
repaired and the bathrooms leaked. We could not afford repairs as we had
exhauster our money on buying plants for the garden and our trips abroad.
My decision
was to sell the house. She was adamant but I insisted. In the height of the
influx of immigrants we sold our house for very good cash. With that cash we
helped our two daughters. Rosemary found a good financial advisor, Cameron McClean
of BMO Nesbitt Burns.
We bought a
little duplex in Kitsilano. Rosemary was not happy. She told me, “We are going
to be forced to live in a community (it is a double duplex) with people we might
not like (she was right!).
Now as I
live day to day with my female cat Niña I have no financial worries. I went to
see Cameron McClean and asked him about my expensive interest in printing
inkjets almost every day. The inks are expensive as is the paper. Cameron, with
that stable voice of his told, “You can keep spending money if that is your
love. It will not put a dent on your investments.”
And so my
decision, my only one, keeps me relaxed knowing that when I meet my oblivion
one of my two daughters or two granddaughters will want to live in the house as
it is.
They Live Unwooed and Unrespected Fade
Tuesday, June 23, 2026
 | Rosa 'Baron Girod de L'Ain' & Rosa 'Gabriel Oak' 23 June 2026
| O, how much more doth beauty
beauteous seem
By that sweet ornament which truth
doth give.
The rose looks fair, but fairer we it
deem
For that sweet odor which doth in it
live.
The canker blooms have full as deep a
dye
As the perfumèd tincture of the roses,
Hang on such thorns, and play as
wantonly
When summer’s breath their maskèd
buds discloses;
But, for their virtue only is their
show,
They live unwooed and unrespected
fade,
Die to themselves. Sweet roses do not
so;
Of their sweet deaths are sweetest
odors made.
And so of you, beauteous and lovely youth,
When that shall vade, by verse distils your
truth.
William
Shakespeare – Sonnet 54
It is
amazing to me how some roses can be over-the-top flashy and others subtle. One
of the roses, here The Baron, has this barely noticeable white edge at the end
of the petals. The other Gabriel Oak is awfully flashy.
Whenever I
see a red rose I remember in Spanish
the Gorge Luis Borges La lluvia.
I must note here than in Spanish the title of books and poems will begin in a
capital letter but then no more. In La lluvia (The Rain) he writes “la rosa,
el curioso color del colorado.” It is almost a complete alliteration because in Spanish we
have colorado as a synonym for rojo.
Thanks to my
Rosemary, who gently forced me to attend a meeting of the Vancouver Rose Society
in 1991 and my beginning to scan roses in 2001, I had to find an excuse to put
the scans in my blogs. This I did by writing of their connection to literature.
I have in all those years been exposed to many a poem that resides in my memory.
And of course
every rose I look at immediately brings my memory of that beautiful rose that
was my Rosamaría.
Belinda Carr Goboed at the Exposure Gallery
Monday, June 22, 2026
 | | Belinda Carr | Sometime in the mid 90s there was an art gallery that
featured straight photography. It was called Exposure Gallery and it was on
Beatty Street. By straight photography I mean that the gallery had group shows
and themed shows that at the time would never have any relevance in the more
artsy galleries of our Vancouver.
The relevance of the photograph here is that I did a
joint talk with fashion photographer Chris Haylett on figure and fashion
photography lighting. I wrote about it here: Belinda Carr and Rip Georges Belinda Carr and Rip Georges All Over Again For my talk I took three b+w Polaroid negative film.
When I checked my files on Belinda Carr, the model who posed I found no
Polaroid prints. This is because I gave them to her.
That Exposure Gallery was a place where photographers
got together to chat about the photographs they took before capture came into
the lingo in the later digital age.
Unlike Gallery 881 on East Hastings, those group shows
brought us to the same place and the openings were fun. There was little
pretension as the proof of the pudding was on the wall. Key to the above photograph and much of my success as a photographer in Vancouver is that Angie at Beau Photo in the early 80s sold me a Metz focusing spotlight. I bought many metal gobos (go-betweens) and not photographer of that time had or used one. I could not resist so I sandwiched the other two Polaroids.
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