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Billy Newman Photo Podcast

Billy Newman Photo Podcast

Billy Newman

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Billy Newman Photo Podcast | 262 Fishing The River

vendredi 7 avril 2023Durée 31:39

Show notes for the Billy Newman Photo Podcast.Communicate directly with Billy Newman at the link below. 

wnp.app

Make a sustaining financial donation,  Visit the Support Page here.

If you’re looking to discuss photography assignment work or a podcast interview, please drop me an email. Send Billy Newman an email here.

If you want to see my photography, my current photo portfolio is here.

If you want to read a free PDF eBook written by Billy Newman about film photography: 

you can download Working With Film here

If you get value out of the content I produce, consider making a sustainable value-for-value financial contribution, Visit the Support Page here.

You can find my latest photo books on Amazon here

View links at wnp.app

Instagram  https://www.instagram.com/billynewman/

Website Billy Newman Photo https://billynewmanphoto.com/

About  https://billynewmanphoto.com/about/

YouTube  https://www.youtube.com/billynewmanphoto

Facebook Page  https://www.facebook.com/billynewmanphotos/

Twitter  https://twitter.com/billynewman

Communicate directly with Billy Newman at the link below. 

wnp.app

Make a sustaining financial donation,  Visit the Support Page here.

If you’re looking to discuss photography assignment work or a podcast interview, please drop me an email. Send Billy Newman an email here.

If you want to see my photography, my current photo portfolio is here.

If you want to read a free PDF eBook written by Billy Newman about film photography: 

you can download Working With Film here

If you get value out of the content I produce, consider making a sustainable value-for-value financial contribution, Visit the Support Page here.

You can find my latest photo books on Amazon here

View links at wnp.app

Instagram  https://www.instagram.com/billynewman/

Website Billy Newman Photo https://billynewmanphoto.com/

About  https://billynewmanphoto.com/about/

YouTube  https://www.youtube.com/billynewmanphoto

Facebook Page  https://www.facebook.com/billynewmanphotos/

Twitter  https://twitter.com/billynewman


0:14 Hello, and thank you very much for listening to this episode of The Billy Newman photo podcast. I was just talking about terminal stuff and SSH in another podcast just a little bit ago. And I guess what I was gonna say is, how much about the channel? Do you know? Do you know any terminal tips? I was gonna try one out today, talking about it, it might be kind of tough. I’m sure that’s what you’re interested in listening to on your Alexa right now. Wait, I mean echo. Sorry. I was gonna mention the commands if you go to your Mac, or you go to a Unix system, as it were you open up a terminal. A couple of things you can run, it’s probably going to run bash, I figure like I’m some expert, but I think that’s the Bourne again, shall I think it’s kind of one of the more modern, sort of basic default shells that seems to run. If you run Linux, I don’t know got up. Yeah. And you probably know a lot more about it than I do already. So you know, you’re on your terminal tip for the moment, especially if you’re on a Macintosh, I guess it doesn’t work on a Windows machine, because that runs DOS, right? It’s not a Unix-based system shoot. But if you’re on a Mac, and you want to get into your terminal, and you want to move around just a little bit to sort of seeing what it’s like, I guess two commands that would get you started would be the ls command in the Bourne shell. So the bash shell. the ls command is like the list command. So when you type in LS, and then return, what you’re going to have to happen is it’s going to list the contents of the directory that you’re currently in, in text and command line. Oh, man, it’s pretty exciting. You’re gonna be excited when you see it for the first time. If you want to see some other things, I guess what you try, this is a bonus one, this is a big one, too, is CD, this current directory command. So if you want to, I guess move directories from what directory you’re at now, your root directory, let’s say and you want to move up to your pictures directory that you see when you type in LS, you’re going to type in cd space, pictures, and then you’re going to hit return and that’s going to move you to the directory of pictures then when you type in LS, you’re going to get a list of the contents of the directory in pictures. Wow, pretty amazing. You moved a directory in Unix and you found out on this flash briefing.

2:30 You can see more of my work at Billy Newman photo calm, you can check out some of my photo books on Amazon. I think if you look at Billy Newman under the author’s section there and see some of the photo books on film on the desert, on surrealism on camping, you cool stuff over there. I think like October, September, October and November I really like maybe one of my favorite outdoors seasons and this probably kind of set up that way for a lot of people that have like a tradition of going out on hunting trips through October or you know like going out on opening day or something like that in Oregon, I think it’s October 1 maybe in other states it’s in a part of September so I think it’s kind of kind of been tuned and tied to the hunting season in like the American cultural lore for probably 100 years or eight years or so as it’s kind of kind of been a part of the American mythologies but it’s cool though I like going out in the fall it’s really one of the best times to go camping it’s when you get to kind of take or make use of all the equipment and stuff that you’ve sort of procured over time and and that’s when you kind of also get to use some of the skills and stuff you’ve been trying to scout out or train on to kind of see how they work and the application of them you know in the summertime when it’s really nice out it’s cool to go out and camp and I’ve always had a really great time doing that but like the hot weather camping Oh, no, it’s it’s it demands a little less, I guess it’s kind of obvious, but the environment is sort of something that you don’t have to contend with as much. And in the deep winter, the environment is probably too much to contend with. So there’s a cool kind of pocket that I like, as like an ideal, but a cool kind of weather pocket or environmental pocket between I guess like parts of the fall until November when it kind of gets too deep into it. And then parts of the spring as we’re coming up into the summertime, where you can kind of feel like you’re getting to do a little bit more fires. So kind of a no, right? over the winter, it’s springtime to do that. But at least in late fall like in November or these like northern Oregon areas. After you start getting like a layer of snow or a significant amount of rain and the fire. The emergency level drops back down to the green. There’s a lot of open burning that you can do on campsites that you sit at the public land and stuff. So I think that’s always kind of a fun part of life. The winter like late fall camping stuff is when you get to set up like a bigger fire gather some wood gather some big logs to be kind of like your fuel for the evening it’s kind of fun and it’s sort of like that more I don’t know primal kind of connective to to like the real kind of Route camping stuff but as it goes for a lot of the year like in the summertime like hot weather stuff you kind of like doing it around water or you know it’s like we would we would do stuff you know you do rafting or something so it’s kind of like enjoying the day you don’t have to layer you don’t have to wear like a dry suit or you know a bunch of different I don’t know warming layers you have to kind of be conscious of so I think that’s kind of where you start getting into more of that now I think like now like river trips and stuff you know they sort of shift from like the recreational summer tourism whitewater stuff they get between I guess like may and Labor Day and now as you get kind of further into September and now deep and October you have people I guess coming down just kind of strictly for some of the fishing season stuff so you get like instead of RAF’s, you’ll have a bunch of drift boats come down, like fishing boats and stuff, guided tours and stuff for some of the lower river stuff or just people out on there. That kind of set up and prepped for a fishing trip. But it’s cool. Yeah, a lot of enthusiasm around some of the fishing stuff during this time of year. I want to get out and do some fishing stuff. I got my fishing license earlier this year, and I’ve gotten it a couple of times this far, but I need to really, I guess commit a little more and kind of set it up the right way. I think I’m always kind of doing a couple of too many things here like I’m trying to like set a camera up to record footage, and then throw some casts and let the line set and then you wait for an hour or so but maybe if it’s a non-optimal time or you kind of have to something else and move on and stuff so I haven’t caught a lot of stuff that was a keeper worthy. I picked up a couple of things out of the lake and it was like a

6:52 cheap little tiny game or a little like tiny Sunfish or Rafe, what is it? Yeah, I think it’s Sunfish like these

6:57 like the kind of like bluegill. Not a lot, you know, sheep a little better than a minute. But yeah, I want to try and get into doing some more fall fishing stuff through now until like the end of the year. And I think there are a couple of good seasons that kind of come on through November but I think it’d be cool I’m gonna try and try and jump into that a little faster. I think there’s also some kind of controlled like stocked ponds that are nearby where I’m at, I think they stocked them with trout through the winter and I’m interested in trying out a couple of those places they seem like they’re you know, just to kind of the numbers that they talk about it’s like I mean that’s kind of cool for that kind of thing for stock fishing kind of thing but I’ve been trying to get a little bit more into like what I can harvest what I can prospect what I can kind of gather from natural resource areas that are around me and I think it’s been kind of fun to do is I guess sort of a hobby. So along with like the photos that are trying to do while I’m out, I’ve tried to like us and like get a fishing license so I can do some fishing stuff on the side or pick up a little bit of information about what kind of rockhounding I can do in that sort of area or what kind of like foraging stuff I can do or what kind of like wood gathering opportunities to have so I’ve been trying to do some of that stuff a little bit more often like I don’t know to email me if there’s some other cool stuff I can do but yeah it’s been cool I’ve been trying to like now in the fall go out to do some Sion trail picking. So if I can find some spots that are good for it it’s a lot of stuff like the kind of near the coast or coastal range in Oregon probably I don’t know what like Florence to a story probably a lot into Washington too that I just have no clue about but that I think the crow’s foot foothills of the mountains they’re kind of get the moisture and they have the right type of like temperature range for them to grow during this time of year. It’s interesting though how those grow patterns go I don’t understand I don’t understand like mushrooms and how those mushroom rings work or how they like their populations work but yeah, it’s really interesting how they grow, and just like certain patches like where they are there’ll be more of those. But where they’re not there won’t be it’s kind of it’s just weird going around to find an end but we find one you’ll find more around in that area. If it’s been like a good climate for it for a while though, a lot of October still has been just a little we’ve gotten a little rain here and there and I’m glad there’s like systems moving through but it’s really kind of been dry enough still that some of the forest floors aren’t quite moist enough yet to start bringing it on the fungus growth that we need to get like a good crop of edible mushrooms out of it so we can see how it goes and I guess there’s gonna be a window of it sometimes like the years are better for it or worse for it and I will kind of see how it goes through the rest of the year. Sometimes like as soon as you snap into November, you get a week or two weeks or three weeks in November and those are really pretty Pretty good weeks, but as soon as you get a few days with sort of where you get like a strong frost or freeze overnight that messes with the growth of those mushrooms and if you get him consecutively for like three days out that’ll knock out anything for one of them you know the mushrooms that grow so fast if you have a, you have a freeze A hard freeze on Monday because then it warms up Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday, Thursday you’ll be able to get like he wouldn’t even notice you know, you’ll be able to get a good crop of new newly grown mushrooms out of you know that same area, so it just kind of depends on like how it goes. But as soon as you start getting like a set of hard freezes, man, it just seems like I’ve gone out and seen like a bunch of them that had been thrown in and now they’re just like mushy and you know, they just got a deep freeze. They frosted over and now it’s like a dead plant and it’s just kind of turned to mush. And that man those mushrooms turned to mush real fast. It’s really weird. I was looking at a ring that’s grown in our yard. It’s just toadstools, you know, like, I’ll pay like the, I don’t know, just buy like an apple tree. It’s cool that they come on, but they come on, and like I think kind of late September is when they start to pop up this ring out there. And then there are some other areas that I’ve noticed around town too. It seems like it’s just like a certain time of year and boom, here’s all this soon as the conditions getting that right. But yeah, right where those are, they come up and then they last about I don’t know, maybe five days a week or so it’s been a week and a half now and but they start to decay and they start to kind of fall over fall apart. And it’s interesting to see how the grass responds to grass a lot around it. Looks like it’s been fertilized heavily. But yeah, it just boom pops up bright, dark green grass, about three inches, or maybe three, I don’t know, maybe twice as tall as the rest of the grass around it. So yeah, it seems like those little toadstool mushrooms for the lawn

11:46 pretty well. But yeah, I think there’s like another growth of them coming on now, which is kind of interesting. Like they come on in a couple of phases, but some fresh ones are coming up in the ring area around it. And then those, those are kind of last for a couple of days and then wilt out over again too. But it’s cool. checking out some mushrooms and stuff around here. But yeah, I’ve been trying to go out and sort of see what I can forage around for which has been kind of fun. I’m not sure what other stuff there is I hear there’s what is it elderberry here about that being looked for and I remember now this is another one I remember seeing a person in a strange circumstance I was driving on a forest road out in the mountains here pretty deep in the mountains and didn’t see any cars ran didn’t or didn’t pass a car they drive up you know, you see a car and you’re like, oh, there’s probably person around with that car. And then after we pass this like we didn’t see a car either, but we were driving, and then there was a like a shorter man with a hat and he had two big racks of these like branches maybe about as long as like your elbow to your fingertip or so but these long like thin branches with these big broad green leaves on it. And it’d be maybe 24 inches or so. And they’re all on these stacks. And then they would there’d be like a kind of a plywood thing or I don’t know what it was maybe newspapers of the paper but then it was like more stacked on top of that and then another layer more stacked on top of that they just had this big bundle of sticks with these big broad green leaves on it. And he was standing there on the edge of the road that we were at and we drove by and then we drove down the rest of this road and the other we never saw it a car he was staying in but this guy was out here collecting these green sticks and leaves so I’m not sure what that is it looked like elderberry. I’ve never really identified it exactly and it’s something that grows up here and I know people will try and forage for it but I’m not sure what for or how it works now that I know they do it I want to do it to sort of have a shot trial thing came on I think like a lot of people never really even heard of that. Or a lot of like the mushroom picking stuff like Morales morels got popular stuff but I think it’s like the kind of because it kind of people sort of found out that you can go look for it and people are going looking for it or that it’s really expensive you think like wow it’s 15 bucks to look for it or 15 bucks to buy a pound of mastering the Shawn trout mushrooms in the store well if it’s that expensive it must be good and if it’s that good then I just want to go look for the sort of what it seems like a little bit but it’s cool going out looking for mushrooms and stuff outside I hear people talking about like like picking Morales and I guess those grow I guess as Miss grow in a different environment, like a different terrain or, or whatever it is I hear about a more like tour like in the east or like the Midwest. So I’m not sure but I know like there are different relationships of like the tree to the type of soil and the type of like environment that it’s in all kind of plays a part into like what mushroom is going to grow? Is it a micro raizel relationship I might have talked about last time but I don’t really understand how that works but I don’t see what allows there to be like a Morel versus good spot for a short trail to grow or a portabello or what is one of those regular white ones just as crimini just regular ones that we eat and stuff so I’m not really sure what kind of like allows you to farm some but not farm others and that’s a big one he can’t effectively farm morel mushrooms I guess you can you can harvest them in an area that is set up as an optimal environment that’s about as good as they’ve had it like they found like where they’re growing and the time of year that they grow well and they try to optimize for that so they can go through and harvest more of it out of it but they haven’t been able to take I suppose like an area that didn’t have the correct environment for it and then sort of artificially grow more than the landscape would kind of bear naturally I don’t think they figured that out and I don’t really understand that like how there’s some that you can kind of figure out a little bit but like it’s just like the complications between the relationships for some of them gets so complex that it’s like difficult to recreate I guess there are biologists that work on that of like how to get or what is it? Uh, yeah so biology is a type of biologist that studies mushrooms right mycologist mycology think it’s my ecology and I’m an ecologist for study and machines but I also think there’s like agriculture

16:29 interests think there’s like a food industry interest in trying to generate mushrooms of different varieties so that they’re like a commercially available product. So I think they’re trying to like work those things out. So sometimes it’s mycologist at that level trying to study it and figure that out, but I think sometimes it’s like holding different companies and groups and teams of people trying to sort of service sort of figure out ways to sort out those problems with growing and harvesting some mushrooms and stuff you know, I was hearing about this other thing too where if you get a bunch of mushrooms and you’re not quite sure what they are, there’s a lot there’s I guess a few different ways or there’s a couple of problems where it’s difficult to identify certain types of mushrooms there are some mushrooms that have never the shot goes I don’t know anything about it. So I guess I should leave it with that there’s a lot of them that are poisonous I guess it’s sort of like the cautionary point of it like people talk about mushroom picking a lot but there’s a lot of mushrooms that are pretty dangerous or that are just gonna likely make you sick so if you don’t have much expertise in it, it’s kind of difficult to go out and do that easily you know, because you’re just gonna gather some stuff that may look like it or may look almost exactly like it but there’s sort of some nuance to detail that makes it a different mushrooms or different mushroom species that is you know, not good for you or at least not edible. There’s a lot of there is a difference between like the neurotoxic mushrooms that will I think to kill you or get you sick and like sick like a neurotoxin way but then I think there’s like a number of them that are just an edible in a way where they’ll I guess one from a range make you very sick to eat. Or they’ll make you just kind of like mildly unhappy with what you ate. But generally like I prefer not to eat a lot of that stuff. Or like if it seems like it’s a bad or like an unknown I’d rather like not to eat just sort of an unknown mushroom a lot of them I guess you can eat or there’s a number of them that are like, maybe not preferred but are edible, but sort of may make you get an upset stomach. I was kind of confused about that, like, Well, why would you eat it’s like, oh, you can eat it. It’ll make you sick. But yeah, you can eat. It’s like, well, what isn’t that what

18:45 why wouldn’t you like that? I mean, it’s a thing. I mean, it makes me sick, right? Like, I eat rotten milk, too, right? It just makes you sick, like, so I don’t want it.

18:56 I don’t know. But I’ve heard of that as an explanation for some stuff. I also hear weird explanations for eating natural things sometimes. So But yeah, I was hearing about this thing where you can put you can put a bunch of mushrooms that you’ve got down on like a screen and then put like paper on the backside of it. And then if you cover him and let him sit for a while about that after they’re cut, they’ll end up throwing their spores. And I guess with certain mushrooms you can visually like see the spore pattern that’s dropped onto the sheet that you put on that screen. And I guess that’s how they’re able to identify some similar-shaped mushrooms like if this mushroom looks this way. And this other mushroom has a different species that look almost the same way a way that you can identify how they are different is by setting them on the screen and then getting throw of their spores. And then identifying the sport as you know one spore pattern will be like bluish or purplish or whatever, and the other spatter or the other spore pattern will be like a yellow color or something. So you’re like, Oh, well like this one, like through this kind of spore. And this one didn’t. So like now we can identify this is this specific mushroom. I thought that was weird though, like how, how to kind of figure that out. But fortunately, like that’s what’s cool about Shawn’s trials is that they’re one of the easiest ones to identify the golden shine trousers, one that like, almost looks like it. That’s a good thing to like, pull up a YouTube video to identify visually how to distinctly tell those differences, the differences apart between them, and sort of the way that the gills are fluted up the vein of the stem, and then as it kind of comes up to the mushroom top, how does that transition happen with chanterelles, it’s the gills are shallow, and they start real low on it, and then kind of sweep up the fluting of the stem up to the mushroom top and, and then with these imposter ones, I guess there’s kind of like a hard angle joint there where you see the gill line start. And then the gills kind of come out from there with like a deeper, a deeper sort of cut to the, to the gill Ridge with sort of some finer material, but those aren’t good. I think those are a little bit more white. There’s why Shawn trails to show how that goes. The difference between like the white chanterelles and the golden shun trails, I thought it was like sun exposure. Like if they were kind of bleached out from being sort of hidden under moss or something, they always seem to be like a lighter, kind of mo Yeah, just like real light color. But then I thought the ones that were out in the sunshine had to sort of defending against that and like, got like more of a color to him. But I guess they’re kind of a different set of mushroom types. Sort of I understand. But I’ve collected both of them in sort of the same areas. And if you find one it seems like you find both of them. So I’m not sure how that goes. But I’ve appreciated kind of collecting them. And it’s cool to dry them. That’s what I’ve been trying to do it’s hard to eat through all those mushrooms fresh as they are when you’re harvesting, harvesting those mushrooms all at one time. And so what I’m trying to do this year, as opposed to what I’ve done in past years, was just trying to make up a dish with all the mushrooms all that first time while they’re fresh, it’s fun to kind of go through the stuff you harvested and then like make a big pasta thing and like put a bunch of mushrooms in it. But this time, it’s just the ones that you harvested after you clean them. That’s cool. And it’s fun to put stuff like that together. But what I’m hoping to do is kind of gather up enough stuff from going out a little bit more frequently into a few different areas. And then gathering up the stuff that I’ve got and drying it out. And then having like dried mushrooms that are bagged and stored, so that I can have them kind of through the rest of the year. I’ve also read about freezing mushrooms. Have you guys heard of that? I know like or leaving, like when you thought out like it’s not the same material anymore at all. So it’s like you have to kind of put it into a sauce or something like that. So I was thinking like the cell damage that you get after freezing, it would just be way too much to use again. So I think what I’m going for is to like do it to dehydrate the mushroom, so I can like cut them or even maybe leave them attack but like, have those missions dehydrated. Which is there’s a lot of water if you like, especially like after it’s been like really wet like they just soak up that water in the forest floor. And then it’s all within that cell mass, the Shawn trail, but when you put like, take a cut of a Shawn trail that’s like a kind of a thicker hardier one, you take a cut of it, you put it on a frying pan, it’s hot, and you watch like the amount of water that it releases, but it’s like wow, that is just almost all rainwater that had come down and filled the cell walls. And now it’s being released as you start to cook up anything man, that’s a lot. No way. So that’s kind of cool.

23:43 It’s cool. Going through October doing some of this stuff. I’ve also been trying to go out and do some rock-counting stuff. It’s cool, I just gotta be jetting over I mean this is kind of the old and easy classic one but I budgeted over to the coast and kind of kept an eye on the high tide and low tide times of the day in the month but it’s cool to get out there and check out what rocks are sort of washed up on the surface in the sand on the beaches in times of low tide so it’s kind of cool going out there cruising the rock line and kind of just picking up some nice polished stones on the beach, which I’ve been kind of tried to do some Jade stuff it’s kind of cool if I like the little green ones, find some sand dollars and stuff but if I like some cool rocks out there I’ve been kind of having a good time trying to pull up some of those stones a couple of times. We’ve got I get a couple of times it’s

24:30 like court courts. I think it’s like courts rock. And then a lot of the times I noticed some of they’re kind of cool, normal. What is basalt,

24:39 normal rock stuff, or it’s got a line in it or something that’s kind of cool when you find one with like a textured feature of it you know words and there’s some seam or something in there I was like that kind of stuff to where it’s it’s kind of a combination of stuff but going out to the beach and trying to find some rocks and stuff through October and trying to kind of get out and do some more active stuff. I get into some of the camping trip stuff that I’ve done. You’re a little bit but yeah trying to go out to Eastern Oregon. And check out some stuff and sort of poke around you can check out more information at Billy Numan photo comm, you can go to Billy Newman photo.com Ford slash support. If you want to help me out and participate in the value-for-value model that we’re running this podcast with. If you receive some value out of some of the stuff that I was talking about, you’re welcome to help me out and send some value my way through the portal at Billy Newman photo comm forward slash support, you can also find more information there about Patreon and the way that I use it if you’re interested. Or if you’re more comfortable using Patreon that’s patreon.com Ford slash Billy Newman photo. I don’t know. I mean, it’s kind of fun to be checking out some stuff. What’s the other stuff I had to talk about? I think it was trying to figure out some stuff on like my Mac laptop, I’ve been trying to set it up more so that has the full set of applications and features and utilities on it that I wanted, I talked a little bit about that. I went ahead and got the I stat menus application on there. So I can look at the sensors that are in my Mac Book. The one is that the network in and out speeds that are current and the history of the network up and down speeds, I guess over the last day or seven days or you know all that information is in there, the amount of disk space where all these different pieces of information, you kind of want to know about your computer and your system and how it’s working. Have Daisy disk, which is what I’ve been using in the past a lot, it’s cool are a pretty good graphical way of sort of showing the pie chart of what’s taking up space on your hard drive. I mean, using Gemini as a deduplication application to go through and find like different versions of photos that I don’t want to keep stored anymore, which has been interesting to go through are just these just straight duplicates where you know, the photograph pulled in, it’s just the raw version twice. And there’s no difference between them other than just one file name to something like that sort of silly. So it’s taking a silly amount of space, this has been a good program to kind of find some of those programs and then eliminate them. And it’s good also to show you like compare like these two are said to be the same to me to kind of automatically go through and take them out, I don’t recommend that, it seems like it’s best to sort of go through and select a number of them and start pulling out.

27:30 It was sort of with some thought and care to it, it seemed like that made a difference to me when I did it. So it might make a difference if you tried to go to another app that I jumped on to was the magnet app, which reproduces some of the functionality started seeing a Windows seven now in Windows 10, where the windows like if you have some window up in some program and you drag it over to the left side, it’ll snap to the left side and then kind of fill that side of the screen or if you drag it straight up, it’ll fill the full screen if you bring it over the right side of that right side of the screen. snapping stuff isn’t really on the Mac, it’s always sort of been set to do these sort of multi-window painting things, but I kind of like it snapping over to the side. And it helps me have some bigger monitors to where you can kind of grab over to a side with if you have a couple of programs. So I got this program called magnet, it’s one of the top-selling paid apps. In the App Store. There are a few different competitors that people seem to be interested in, also, but I got this one, it was working great enough, it’s a little different than the way that the windows one does it but it’s fine. And it adds the functionality that I was looking for, which is great, a great benefit for me. The other one, other utility that I was picking up was pasted the paste app, which I think is kind of interesting. It’s like a clipboard app. So every computer I think, since we started getting graphical user interfaces, I think since as I recall, Windows 3.1 had a clipboard in it, but that’s when you do the copy-paste stuff if you copy or cut, copy or paste if you kind of copy something, it goes on to your clipboard and then when you paste it, it’s pulled off the clipboard and paste it into where it’s gonna go. But the computer convention for whatever reason is just set to that you can only copy or cut one item at a time. And if you cut again, a copy again, there’s no history of it or there’s no way to track back the level of things that you’ve had copied or cut if you want to paste those in so it can kind of add into some frustrations. But this clipboard utility pastes the paste app I think is set to sort of store snippets and pieces of information that you’re going to try and pull up and use repeatedly over time through like your workflow. So I was trying to figure out a way to do that I’m doing a bunch of SEO stuff like I was seeing on that website. So going through and having like, like, you know, this is a block of links. This is a block of explanation. Texas has a great meta tag This is for this. So I have all that sort of laid out. That’s a great workflow where I can just kind of pull up and sort of it’s like, it’s visually the UI is that like a command Another keyword of the poll at the bottom third of the screen and you have this history this row this like timeline of all the different times that you’ve copied something over to your clipboard, and you can go back to as far as a month or maybe even more than that, and it’ll share it with iCloud too. So if you have different computers, you can have this app on there, and you can kind of share everything on your clipboard around. It’s kind of interesting, and it’s a cool little, little useful Mac utility if you are so inclined to do copy-paste, but I don’t know, I know a lot of people seem to survive, which is what is it command community? I guess I have up until this point, but try it out. That’d be kind of fun. So thanks a lot for checking out this episode of The Billy Newman photo podcast. Hope you guys check out some stuff on Billy Newman photo.com a few new things up there some stuff on the homepage, some good links to other outbound sources, some links to books, and links to some podcasts. Like these blog posts are pretty cool. Yeah, check it out at Billy numina photo.com. Thanks a lot for listening to this episode and the back end. Thank you Next

Billy Newman Photo Podcast | 261 Light Weight Layers

vendredi 31 mars 2023Durée 33:32

Show notes for the Billy Newman Photo Podcast.Communicate directly with Billy Newman at the link below. 

wnp.app

Make a sustaining financial donation,  Visit the Support Page here.

If you’re looking to discuss photography assignment work or a podcast interview, please drop me an email. Send Billy Newman an email here.

If you want to see my photography, my current photo portfolio is here.

If you want to read a free PDF eBook written by Billy Newman about film photography: 

you can download Working With Film here

If you get value out of the content I produce, consider making a sustainable value-for-value financial contribution, Visit the Support Page here.

You can find my latest photo books on Amazon here

View links at wnp.app

Instagram  https://www.instagram.com/billynewman/

Website Billy Newman Photo https://billynewmanphoto.com/

About  https://billynewmanphoto.com/about/

YouTube  https://www.youtube.com/billynewmanphoto

Facebook Page  https://www.facebook.com/billynewmanphotos/

Twitter  https://twitter.com/billynewman

Communicate directly with Billy Newman at the link below. 

wnp.app

Make a sustaining financial donation,  Visit the Support Page here.

If you’re looking to discuss photography assignment work or a podcast interview, please drop me an email. Send Billy Newman an email here.

If you want to see my photography, my current photo portfolio is here.

If you want to read a free PDF eBook written by Billy Newman about film photography: 

you can download Working With Film here

If you get value out of the content I produce, consider making a sustainable value-for-value financial contribution, Visit the Support Page here.

You can find my latest photo books on Amazon here

View links at wnp.app

Instagram  https://www.instagram.com/billynewman/

Website Billy Newman Photo https://billynewmanphoto.com/

About  https://billynewmanphoto.com/about/

YouTube  https://www.youtube.com/billynewmanphoto

Facebook Page  https://www.facebook.com/billynewmanphotos/

Twitter  https://twitter.com/billynewman


0:14 Hello, and thank you very much for listening to this episode of The Billy Newman photo podcast. I was just talking about terminal stuff and SSH in another podcast just a little bit ago. And I guess what I was gonna say is, how much about the channel? Do you know? Do you know any terminal tips? I was gonna try one out today, talking about it, it might be kind of tough. I’m sure that’s what you’re interested in listening to on your Alexa right now. Wait, I mean echo sorry. I was gonna mention the commands if you go to your Mac, or you go to a Unix system, as it were you open up a terminal. A couple of things you can run, it’s probably going to run bash, I figure like I’m some expert, but I think that’s the Bourne again, shall I think it’s kind of one of the more modern, sort of basic default shells that seems to run. If you run Linux, I don’t know got up. Yeah. And you probably know a lot more about it than I do already. So you know, you’re on your terminal tip for the moment, especially if you’re on a Macintosh, I guess it doesn’t work on a Windows machine, because that runs DOS, right? It’s not a Unix-based system shoot. But if you’re on a Mac, and you want to get into your terminal, and you want to move around just a little bit to sort of seeing what it’s like, I guess two commands that would get you started would be the ls command in the Bourne shell. So the bash shell. the ls command is like the list command. So when you type in LS, and then return, what you’re going to have to happen is it’s going to list the contents of the directory that you’re currently in, in text and command line. Oh, man, it’s pretty exciting. You’re gonna be excited when you see it for the first time. If you want to see some other things, I guess what you try, this is a bonus one, this is a big one, too, is CD, this current directory command. So if you want to, I guess move directories from what directory you’re at now, your root directory, let’s say and you want to move up to your pictures directory that you see when you type in LS, you’re going to type in cd space, pictures, and then you’re going to hit return and that’s going to move you to the directory of pictures. Then when you type in LS, you’re going to get a list of the contents of the directory in pictures. Wow, pretty amazing. You moved a directory in Unix and you found out on this flash briefing.

2:30 You can see more of my work at Billy Newman photo calm, you can check out some of my photo books on Amazon. I think if you look at Billy Newman under the author’s section there and see some of the photo books on film on the desert, on surrealism on camping, and cool stuff over there. I think Yeah like I said, I like the October period, you know, it’s kind of a cool outdoor month for stuff and that’s kind of what I’m going to talk about too is kind of layering up stuff for October I’ve been trying to kind of build up the layers of clothes and the layers of like shelter stuff that I have for some of the outdoor travel stuff that I go out and do and I do it on a budget and I don’t have much stuff and like other people have a lot more experience of like just getting to try all these different pieces and see like the benefits or the kind of weigh out the pluses and minuses of different pieces. And so I’m sure it’s probably the case that like the best gear is always the best gear. It’s kind of interesting to sort of go through those checklists or you know, like kind of in your mind like seeing like what like how’s this work or what’s better for me for this thing or not. So I’ve been pretty happy to always have or for the last couple of years to have like a vortex range outlay and for a lot of outdoor stuff that I do in Oregon, later into the year that’s been like a real lifesaver for having just like a hard waterproof shell that I can like the trust that as like a good hood on it that I can keep me dry for most of the day. That along with I guess kind of like working inward like the puffy jacket makes a huge difference. And so I use a puffy jacket all the time. There are a few differences like sizes though and you sort of have to like look at the down fill layer to see what’s going to be best for you and like the climate that you’re going out to that it’s kind of weird it goes back and forth through me a little bit. So like out here in Oregon, where I am like west of the Cascades it’s sort of a mild climate a lot of the year and so I’m able to I think you’re kind of dealing with like above freezing temperatures. Most hours and on most days through the year I think like you know there’s some sections of the year where you get some heavy freezes but outside of those storm times it’s like pretty mild weather a lot of the time and if I’m going camping or doing something outdoors in the winter. Well, there are a couple of different types I definitely use it but really for a lot of like the three-season work I do. I use a light puffy jacket either because of North Face Thermal, or thermo ball, I think it’s like a like polyester-based one. It’s not a downfield, puffy jacket. But I’ve used that for maybe six years now. And I appreciate having that I think it’s great. That’s probably one of my most used insulating layers when I’m going out and I mean works great, really all four seasons with the kind of compared in these mild weather circumstances like I am here in Oregon like that paired with that shell, it has been enough for me to go out. And in almost every kind of weather circumstances I’ve been in when I’ve gone out and been working or like when I was working outside a lot in the rain and trying to be outside like most days through the fall and winter, it was really fine to do that with a strong or like a good GoreTex shell that keeps you dry all the way and puffy, thermo insulating layer that keeps you warm. So it’s pretty cool, but kind of comparing that and I have like this Patagonia jacket that I think has a heavier down fill rating and that has a lot of insulation to it, which is cool, warm jackets are great. And I take that out kind of deeper into the winter. But what I noticed though, is that for a lot of circumstances, like I said three season work. And while you’re working or kind of like physically kind of exerting yourself I’ve noticed like if it’s not below freezing that is too warm of a jacket to wear. And so you kind of get to pick a little bit of like where your environmental thresholds are like what kind of environment you spend a lot of time in and is it going to be above freezing temperatures below freezing temperatures, or is it going to be hot weather temperatures like where you’re working, you know, your coldest temperatures might be 50, but you’re going up towards like the 80s and 90s pretty regularly. And that’s kind of a different environment to work into. So I’ve been kind of trying to keep an eye on that. But as we’re kind of dropping into October the outfitting stuff that I’m doing is sort of away from the heat gear stuff that I would have been using where I’m in like lighter synthetic shorts and

6:59 trying to use lighter layers and stuff like in the winter you kind of get to layer up and stuff we just got to kind of fun sweater weather right so what I picked up last year I’m kind of excited to put some more use into it was a wool baselayer so I got a great wool t-shirt and I kind of appreciate trying to cut out some of the cotton material that I’m using when I’m going out and doing some more outdoor stuff and I guess it’s because back in the day cotton was a great revolution right you know it was a more breathable fabric and it would dry faster than other fabrics that they had available to them I guess is part of what was cool about it. But as I sort of understand now it’s one of the riskier types of fabric that you can wear as a base layer when you’re out in the woods for a couple of days or when you’re out camping or you know the talking TV shows about when you’re in a survival situation. And not only that but yeah when you’re out camping or if you were going to go hunting or you’re going to go on a couple of day photo trip in the woods and you’re just going to be living out of your truck and stuff. It kind of is it ends up being a little difficult to use a lot of cotton pieces especially if you’re going to get wet or if it’s cold and you don’t want to get wet but you do get wet and that’s a bummer because the cotton stuff just kind of stays wet and it gets cold when it gets wet. And a couple of those things just sort of lead to it being a little bit frustrating and I guess that’s where some of the survival complications have happened with people who are out in okay conditions they get hit with cold rain or wet snow and they’re in like an outer let you know their insulating layers but they’re like a cotton coating. Or like I guess tough, warm-insulated Carhartt jackets on hunting in that they got into some wet snow on the second morning. The Carhart wet pants got or the pants that were insulated. got wet from the tall grass and brush that they walked through and then the person became hypothermic because of their exposure to the cold that soaked through their pants that got them very cold I think they had to like ditch the band’s get into their sleeping bag it was synthetic and then they tried to like to warm them up with a hot water bottle in a sleeping bag or something like that out of the Jetboil but like it ended the trip I think they like they can’t continue that sort of stuff so it’s kinda interesting I like that kind of thing can go and I know people have probably heard anecdotes like that similarly in the past I’d hear like someone else talking about like a warm weather thing where I think they were going out on like a 42-day canoe trip Can you imagine that like going through some big river system and Labrador up in Canada. Wow, fun times popping out in Hudson Bay or something. Who knows. But they would go up there and they would talk about like all like the specific limitations on the type of fabrics that they would select to use because like if they got wet in the river or I think it was like cold weather or Who knows what kind of weather you’re going to get sort of circumstances where you go between hot and cold and Canada kayaking or canoeing down 1100 miles or something like that just big long trips like that and they would kind of be really specific about how like they won’t even have cotton boxers or cotton underwear because it’ll be the thing that ends up being a problem other people or another person, I think kind of there’s a lot of great ways to sort of work through this next problem, but I think someone argued that they did have cotton on them so that they could use it as a fire starter. If they needed a fire starter I suggest just bringing a fire starter or some other material like that, I think it would probably get you by a little better than, your cotton underwear. The best fire starter that I’ve used and heard about was

10:55 Well, I mean, yeah, like a stove or whatever. But if you’re trying to light a fire in the winter, having a plastic bag with Vaseline-dipped cotton swabs was like a pretty inert material. Just like having a backpack that doesn’t smell like kerosene or something. And it has multiple uses, you can use it cosmetically for everything’s our goodness if your lips chapp I hate it when it gets dry and cold and you go oh man, my pores can’t handle it. They were in a different environment. 5000 feet a difference in elevation a day ago, too much change and too much seasonal change. Now you get like, I don’t know just rough spots or dry spots or you use a Vaseline you get the cotton swabs for all sorts of different things, but they’re fantastic. If you light that up. It’s a great little flame ball and you can use that with a stack of your other dry materials to get a fire going. Even in pretty wet conditions especially if you’re kind of keeping your Firestarter material protected in some little party backpack, keep it dry and stuff that works out pretty well. And I think it works better than your underwear on a rafting trip. So but yeah, I’ve heard of that. Yeah, people, people try to not use that people try to like drop their leather belts. Like they won’t take a leather belt out into the woods either. I like having like a sturdy belt. Like what you see people like big leather boots or whatever it’s not because it gets washed, or waterlogged, but I guess because it’s maybe a weight thing. I think that’s what the idea was for, for maybe they’re like going backpacking use like a piece of nylon webbing as a belt at that time. or other stuff we’re like, I don’t know just little tricks and things of like how you kind of hide certain materials and other materials and stuff. But it’s weird how it goes. So I guess yeah, cotton stuff is sort of a go. They talk about using wool a lot as sort of like a preferred material to make it out of or down here like down stuff is kind of a preferred material. And then I also kind of hear similarly sided, bad things about sort of the petroleum developed products that you get from polyesters or nylons, or I guess like this polyester insulating foams, you get like those thermo ball insulating foam that would be in the pouches of another polyester material that makes up like the puffy jacket that I wear. For the Patagonia one that’s a downfield, puffy jacket. You have little goose feathers poking, poking out of it all the time, too. Yeah, I feel like you feel around the right way a little goose feather I’ll punch out the side and pull it out a little feather right there a little down feather, which is kind of trippy. But those I guess are like a better insulating system. Then like the synthetic kind of oil-based stuff and I guess the same goes for like sleeping bags too. If you want to get into like a sleeping bag to keep you warm. There’s something like the 15-degree bags that are well I don’t know and it has a couple of other features too. I guess it’s like light and it stretches down well and if you get it wet, you can get it dry again. Well, I guess it depends on like certain qualities down sometimes that kind of gets I think a little tricky. But the wall I guess you can get. You can get wet, you’ll stay warm and you can get it dry faster. And I think that’s sort of the benefit of the war on the animal that gets wet to you know like if you think of a sheep getting rained on all the time. I guess it’s sort of part of the fibers that don’t attract a lot of odor because it has to be on an animal all the time. And I guess it does well to not have to like make you cold when it gets wet. I guess that’s a big part of it. So a lot of the merino wool fabrics that have come out, or the merino wool blends that are with some little bit of spandex or some other kind of natural fiber product that they try and put in helps to kind of be a little bit more durable when they have those little blends. But mostly you want a pretty strong merino wool fabric. And that’s pretty cool if you’re getting sort of like a base layer or something like that. It’s A little bit more tuned for the outdoors it’s like wool sweaters or something that you can find but that’s not quite there cool old wool shirts you know like an old old Pendleton shirt or an old Filson shirt that’s like a lagers kind of wool button that would go into like a canvas jacket. I kind of think is cool but that’s sort of a different look and it used to be the technical gear layering and probably still you’d see if you get like I don’t know like a horse guide like a guided trip with a horse or a mule or something like that’s the pack in a bunch of stuff they probably still use gear that sort of similar to that without the kind of like the technical synthetic gear that you try and find it like Rei hiking places or something or, or wherever, whatever else similarly branded. But yeah, it’s cool trying to do some wool Merino underlayers and trying to work with those puffy jackets when they can

15:56 try to work with well I have a soft shell that gets a lot less useful than it used to be. I used to try new soft shells all the time but I just kind of go with the wool, the wool base layer, The North Face kind of wore you know like a warmer temperature-rated puffy jacket and then have the gore-tex layer over that. picked up a hat this year. That’s pretty cool like in that boots. I had a couple of different sets of boots for the October stuff before it gets really heavy in the season and before it gets like real wet or rainy. Now while I’m kind of doing some of this lighter outdoor stuff I have like a pair of heavy leather boots that are super cool for some of that deeper hiking stuff that you get into especially after it’s wet and rainy and stuff but really for a lot of the light season stuff and sort of summer spring stuff. I have these Nike s FB boots, it’s like military boots I picked them up in brown like a desert tan color. And then I also picked up a similar pair, the underarm remakes and so they’re kind of like a lighter, more athletic shoe from the base but they have like kind of tall neck that goes up to like your mid-upper ankle there. And so it’s not like a real table or like it’s not like galoshes they’re not waterproof they’re kind of vent on the sides and they dry out they’re kind of like a synthetic material that dries out pretty quick when you do get it wet but it also has like a good bit of tread and you can get them wet get them dry and wet. I think they kind of made for

17:29 an okay dry environment that’s sort of where I use them most of the time is you know hiking around for any of this kind of lighter duty forest I was nice because they’re light boots like with those other heavy leather ones like just the soles of the boots seem like they pound each you know you kind of like feel it the first couple days you getting back into the use of them during the season where you’re like man my feet are like four pounds heavier it seems like each just kind of like walking with a weight on it. So it’s nice to have one of the newer sorts of higher tech boots that don’t have the same kind of ankle support as a thicker leather boot does or they don’t have the same kind of heel support. I like to talk about like those you know thick, like like a two-inch heel or something that like one of those white boots has. Or if you get like Red Wings they have like a real deep, thick heel that you can use to kind of stomp in and cut in on some hiking stuff, and for these yeah it’s just kind of like a good sort of smooth walking boot and you get some ankle support from that that tall neck but it’s sort of fabric so that it seems like it you’re just it’s a light boot as seems like you’re ready to you know run and you can do like an athletic maneuver and these pretty well and it doesn’t seem like the boot is going to be too heavy to slow you down not right for every circumstance like if I’m going in a deeper area. It’s cool it’s nice to have like the kind of protection of a steel-toed leather boot. But like the normal s sfbs I think are not steel toe I think I think these Under Armour ones though are and then there are steel-toe versions that are out there. But that does seem to I’ve kind of run into a few circumstances where after some of the more woodsy stuff it seems like having the steel toe has helped a lot to keep my feet protected and stuff and if you hike in a lie you got to get to watch out for blisters and stuff too. One of the big things I’ve noticed to help that is like really breaking in your shoes with three weeks or more but three weeks of like pretty near full-time use to start getting them broken in or to get kind of the feel the break the crease, the kind of the fabric kind of working together in the way that it’s going to fit around your body and stuff. But yeah, it seems like it takes about three weeks to sort of get those issues broken into a spot that that ends up being comfortable for longer trips and longer where I had like a pair of chocos and this Draco’s, they were great you know that you don’t wear socks if you don’t like to buffer it with wool socks or something. But I remember I think working with those for like, three weeks or so at first your feet man. They will Rub raw. Yeah, yeah they’ll you’ll get some hot spots with the webbing on those chalk as it’s like this really kind of tough webbing but after like three weeks or so like after you kind of wear your foot into it so that it’s kind of strong enough to deal with it. And you also start breaking in the rubber of the boot or the rubber of that foot for the shoe. It’s you it’s your foot. But once you get that all kind of broken and I was able to hike for miles and miles in those and have no rub problems at all. I think I did. I think I did the whole hiking trip up to the summit of the paintbrush divide and the cascade Can you know, like the Teton’s chip I talked about sometimes Yeah, I did that whole hiking trip with the Tetons in early, mid-late September. Probably right around now. But I did that trip in the Tetons with just those black shakos that I had that had like kind of that boot shed bottom and I did great through that whole trip I did like a 42-mile trip down the lower road that was like a hiking backpacking trip so you have a background backpack on the got these little river shoes on and you’re hiking away on the trail and yeah, a lot of the times if you’re not really in shape for it man, those will just rip your feet up pretty badly and I’ve seen it affect people’s trips before you know like where their shoes just like really start to bite in on them. And it happens fast. As soon as you get like a hot spot or something it can be just a quarter mile or another mile and then like that problem has been exacerbated a lot so as soon as like gets bad boom man gets bad fat or it starts to degrade fast and then once it’s gone it’s gone on for a while you know it’s bad. And it can cause some mobility problems when you’re out there. So I think kind of to kind of deal with some of that stuff. We’re kind of breaking them in earliest at school, which is what I’ve been trying to do with some of my shoes. But yeah, trying to get outfitted for this stuff in October. It’s been kind of fun, trying to work out the layers

21:58 and stuff. You can check out more information at Billy Newman’s photo comm

22:08 you can go to Billy Newman photo.com Ford slash support if you want to help me out and participate in the value-for-value model that we’re running this podcast with. If you receive some value out of some of the stuff that I was talking about, you’re welcome to help me out and send some value my way through the portal at Billy Newman photo comm forward slash support, you can also find more information there about Patreon and the way that I use it if you’re interested or feel more comfortable using Patreon that’s patreon.com forward slash Billy Newman photo.

22:45 But the holidays were kind of an interesting time because I ended up sort of thinking a lot about what But well, what photographs are, you know, I’m getting a little bit older now. And I think there’s there’s sort of like a change in the vision that I have of the way that I kind of think about photographs or you know, what, what is their purpose? Why are we making them and in a big way, like maybe propagated by the Instagram culture or the sharing content creation culture that sort of seems to be out right now, especially for those you know, photographers or artists, I think they feel the pressure to be content producers now, and that maybe is a little bit of a different job than the photographer or the real artists, that kind of person. And so I’ve been trying to sort of think about that a little bit. And then and sort of taking a look at the trends of Instagram and my art is what I need to pursue. And a lot of the time I sort of noticed this, and even in my images, this like super sharp, super crisp, everything has to be perfect or edited or meaningful and dramatic and these images. And what I’m noticing a little bit especially as I review my older images is the photographs that I’m drawn to. They’re the photographs that represent the truth more, they’re the photographs that kind of have

24:03 I don’t know what it is really but they have a little bit more of an essence of reality. Or maybe it’s its reality, but it’s also a little bit of grit to it to like this happened it was magical. It was interesting, I liked that surrealism in the photographs that I take and I have for a long time but there’s a little bit more and I’ve always I think a lot of stuff I’ve done kind of pushed for the Unreal. And some of the stuff that I’m kind of noticing the last couple of years as I looked at like the photographs and how they change this sort of how that shifted from the Unreal of landscapes of the world. You know kind of trying to select things about landscapes You know, when they have unusual colors to them, or unusual dynamics or phenomena like clouds or weather or water or something like that makes it sort of feel like a different look or a different image than like what we’d see midday at noon if we looked at the same thing. So I think that’s still part of photography but one thing I was noticing through the holidays and reviewing a bunch of my old photographs was how much the stock value of, a photograph goes up over time, over one year, it’s a bit over a few years, it’s a bit more, but over a decade, you get, you get to see the change that happens in time, you know, I get to see, like much younger relatives. And these photographs took 15 years ago than they are now and it seems like kind of an obvious point or seems like something everyone should know. But really, there’s a huge amount of value in the photographs because they capture something at the time that it was and you get to hold on to that after their people or the moment or the event or the experience changes. Certainly, notice as I’m getting older that life does sort of change, it changes, then it’s an obvious kind of the point of fact that everybody’s sort of known about for a long time. But in my naive sense, I’ve been so focused on photography or image creation or on the product making something that’s kind of crisp and sharp and perfectly usable today. I don’t know if I was thinking so clearly about how the nostalgia factor or how the value of something you know, from a family or just sort of a small moment that’s captured this, this more real, how that escalates in value over time. And like coming at these photos, 15 years later, even like seven years later, from some of the stuff that I had, it’s really interesting to see, like, wow, like I took a ton of photos of this type of topic. But I didn’t, I didn’t take as many photographs that sort of represented my artistic experience in my life. For that humanity, I want to try and show more of that in the photographs, the humanity that kind of the way you feel about a photograph. And I think that’s so much about what a photographer is there to do is sort of being able to kind of pick and select which moments to capture and which ways you’re going to be able to share that stuff in the future that’s going to become more nostalgic, more meaningful, or just a way of kind of knowing Oh, this was part of my life. Wow, that’s cool. So I’ve been trying to think about some of those ideas around photography for the new year a little bit but along with that I’ve been going through the last like 15 years of photos and in my big super catalog that that collection of Lightroom photos I made that’s kind of trying to pull in every phone photo, every phone video every different camera I’ve had since 2002 I’m trying to get all those photos together, put them in there I think it was like 120,000 images something like that which isn’t that many photos for someone that’s been doing stuff for a long time. But I went through those and I tried to like punch those down to a lot of the Select so out of the images that I kind of want to keep from and I was trying to pull out a lot of good photos but but photos that were kind of irrelevant to me for this sort of future moving forward catalogue of stuff I want to get rid of like product photos or word photos that are hundreds and 1000s of photos even that kind of fill up space and memory in the catalog I’ll keep those definitely but those will be backed up on another hard drive but what’s active to me what’s in my library currently I want to be like the last I think I’ve talked about this for like the last two years or so photos and whole in total so I can get back to that library and edit any one of those raw files that have but for stuff that’s older than two years like 2015 and before I kind of want to pair those down a little bit so that I’m a little bit more specific and unable to get to those photos that were selects a little bit faster and then especially for older stuff like pre pre 2010 or so I want to around really have those pared down to like the the 100 photos I actually you know I need to have around two to get to for for whatever kind of stuff I need to do. But it was cool that going through the old photos and you just kind of do it in this pretty quick way you know this is a star This is a two-star kind of thing. So you kind of punch through those pretty fast and then and then I have another round to do or I’m going to try and punch it you know from one star to two stars those are going to be what I keep for a while and then from that I’m going to try to render that down to select all the three-star photos all the that’s kind of like I would take this photo and sort of put it under review and then and then my system at least is a little bit of the four-star five stars zone that’s for this is going to be published or this is going into the portfolio or as content sort of thing. So yeah, I’m gonna try and push on that stuff a bit more and get some photographs sorted for the year but is cool going through all of these old trips that we’ve done all those different places that we’ve gone to and of course I’ve seen well one thing I’ve noticed is good lord how bad at Photoshop I was. And I want to say that I’m going to put a little blame because I remember this happened at the time but I want to put a little blame on how god awful my laptop monitor was like a 2006 2007 2008 laptop monitor just had no color gamut against what we know now in like modern o l or LED Retina Display monitors like Apple puts out or like any kind of modern LED, more color accurate monitor that we have now but I was looking at it and there’s like it’s just so muddy. There are few colors that it can represent. So you have to push things a little further out of the gamut, or at least I did at the time, kind of not understanding what I was compensating to. So I look back at some of these photos and go, Oh, I would never make it this yellow and green in a modern world. So it’s kind of interesting what you know, whatever was going on, or whatever I was thinking about at the time visually, that sort of drew me to that place. But it’s interesting to see like how that changes, how your aesthetic sort of changes, and also a little bit of how your tools and calibration systems changed and sort of seeing like, wow, off was that way back, then. So all stuff that you kind of learn and you get better at and it’s interesting, at least to the benefit, you get better over time. And like a decade later, I see changes in the kind of creative or the style that I would lay out just if I started working, you know, out without actually having to try and implement a style, you know, try and lay with Oh, I’m going to make a photograph that’s black and white, and of events and personal or something, instead of trying to go out with, you know, a set intention of that which you should or could in any set of photos. But if I just go out and am shooting what I am drawn to the photographs that are capturing get in the way that I kind of perceive what they look like, and how I want to show them to people, that’s all kind of changed and evolved. And it seems like my choices in that are better than they once were. But it was interesting to just kind of seeing like, man, how many years and years and years, it takes me taking photographs before any of these photographs really got good or got to the point where they were more than snapshots or more than just kind of data collection sort of thought of myself as an archivist for a long time where we’re like the job wasn’t really to be a photographer where it was editing to select like a moment and character and sort of like nuance between things that have like an emotional pole to them, I didn’t really understand that type of composition stuff, I just sort of understood the camera mechanically functioning is a light capturing tool. And so that was like that was probably the first four years of photography was sort of thinking about it like that, like I’m capturing data of reality. And then that’s going to be processed into something else later. And it wasn’t really for years until I understood like emotional vision or you know, like having some way to kind of tie the way you feel to the way that you see something and that was interesting kind of learning about how some of those things work and it’s still such a long road and I still have you know, no, no real understanding no real experience in that by anybody that’s trained just self-taught. Little Billy out here and nowhere Willamette Valley So yeah, that’s some of the stuff about making selects.

32:40 Thanks a lot for checking out this episode of The Billy Newman photo podcast. Hope you guys check out some stuff on Billy Newman’s photo comm a few new things up there some stuff on the homepage and some good links to other outbound sources. some links to books and links to some podcasts. Like these blog posts are pretty cool. Yeah, check it out at Billy noon in a photo calm. Thanks for listening to this episode and the backend.

Billy Newman Photo Podcast | 252 Lake County

jeudi 26 janvier 2023Durée 24:29

Show notes for the Billy Newman Photo Podcast.Communicate directly with Billy Newman at the link below. 

wnp.app

Make a sustaining financial donation,  Visit the Support Page here.

If you’re looking to discuss photography assignment work or a podcast interview, please drop me an email. Send Billy Newman an email here.

If you want to see my photography, my current photo portfolio is here.

If you want to read a free PDF eBook written by Billy Newman about film photography: 

you can download Working With Film here

If you get value out of the content I produce, consider making a sustainable value-for-value financial contribution, Visit the Support Page here.

You can find my latest photo books on Amazon here

View links at wnp.app

Instagram  https://www.instagram.com/billynewman/

Website Billy Newman Photo https://billynewmanphoto.com/

About  https://billynewmanphoto.com/about/

YouTube  https://www.youtube.com/billynewmanphoto

Facebook Page  https://www.facebook.com/billynewmanphotos/

Twitter  https://twitter.com/billynewman

Communicate directly with Billy Newman at the link below. 

wnp.app

Make a sustaining financial donation,  Visit the Support Page here.

If you’re looking to discuss photography assignment work or a podcast interview, please drop me an email. Send Billy Newman an email here.

If you want to see my photography, my current photo portfolio is here.

If you want to read a free PDF eBook written by Billy Newman about film photography: 

you can download Working With Film here

If you get value out of the content I produce, consider making a sustainable value-for-value financial contribution, Visit the Support Page here.

You can find my latest photo books on Amazon here

View links at wnp.app

Instagram  https://www.instagram.com/billynewman/

Website Billy Newman Photo https://billynewmanphoto.com/

About  https://billynewmanphoto.com/about/

YouTube  https://www.youtube.com/billynewmanphoto

Facebook Page  https://www.facebook.com/billynewmanphotos/

Twitter  https://twitter.com/billynewman

0:14 Hello, and thank you very much for listening to this episode of The Billy Newman photo podcast.

0:23 Think yesterday I just recorded some of it, where I got into some more information about 360 videos and some of the interesting stuff

Billy Newman Photo Podcast | 161 Wool Down Gortex Layers For October Outdoor Work

mercredi 21 octobre 2020Durée 48:37

161 Wool Down Gortex Layers For October Outdoor Work

Picking chanterelle mushrooms near the coastal mountains. Wool base layer clothing. Puffy insulation down vs synthetic. Gortex rain shell. Layers for October outdoor travel in the northwest.

161 Wool Down Gortex Layers For October Outdoor Work

Gear that I work with 

Professional film stock I work with https://imaging.kodakalaris.com/photographers-photo-printing/film/color

I keep my camera in a Lowepro camera bag 

https://www.lowepro.com/us-en/magnum-400-aw-lp36054-pww/

When I am photographing landscape images I use a Manfrotto tripod 

https://www.manfrotto.com/us-en/057-carbon-fiber-4-section-geared-tripod-mt057c4-g/

A lot of my film portfolio was created with the Nikon N80 and Nikon F4

https://www.kenrockwell.com/nikon/f4.htm

https://www.kenrockwell.com/nikon/n80.htm

The Nikon D2H and Nikon D3 were used to create many of the digital images on this site https://www.dpreview.com/reviews/nikond3 https://www.dpreview.com/reviews/nikond2h

Two lenses I am using all the time are the 50mm f1.8 and the 17-40mm f4 

https://www.kenrockwell.com/nikon/5018daf.htm

https://www.kenrockwell.com/canon/lenses/17-40mm.htm

Some astrophotography and documentary video work was created with the Sony A7r

https://www.dpreview.com/reviews/sony-alpha-a7r

I am currently taking photographs with a Canon 5D

https://www.dpreview.com/reviews/canon-eos-5d-mark-iii

If you’re looking to discuss photography assignment work or a podcast interview, please drop me an email. Drop Billy Newman an email here.

If you want to book a wedding photography package, or a family portrait session, please visit  GoldenHourWedding.com or you can email the Golden Hour Wedding booking manager here.

If you want to look at my photography, my current portfolio is here.

If you want to purchase stock images by Billy Newman, my current Stock photo library is here.

If you want to learn more about the work Billy is doing as an Oregon outdoor travel guide, you can find resources on GoldenHourExperience.com.

If you want to listen to the Archeoastronomy research podcast created by Billy Newman, you can listen to the Night Sky Podcast here

Billy Newman Photo Podcast | 160 Black And White Photo Conversions

mercredi 14 octobre 2020Durée 32:08

160 Black And White Photo Conversions

Working with the gray mixer in Lightroom, adjusting color dynamics in grayscale. Black And White Photo Conversions. Strange gig working on video at a Permaculture farm.

If you’re looking to discuss photography assignment work or a podcast interview, please drop me an email. Drop Billy Newman an email here.

If you want to book a wedding photography package, or a family portrait session, please visit  GoldenHourWedding.com or you can email the Golden Hour Wedding booking manager here.

If you want to look at my photography, my current portfolio is here.

If you want to purchase stock images by Billy Newman, my current Stock photo library is here.

If you want to learn more about the work Billy is doing as an Oregon outdoor travel guide, you can find resources on GoldenHourExperience.com.

If you want to listen to the Archeoastronomy research podcast created by Billy Newman, you can listen to the Night Sky Podcast here.

If you want to read a free PDF eBook written by Billy Newman about film photography: you can download Working With Film here. Yours free.

Want to hear from me more often? Subscribe to the Billy Newman Photo Podcast on Apple Podcasts here.

If you get value out of the photography content I produce, consider making a sustaining value for value financial contribution, visit the Support Page here.

You can find my latest photo books all on Amazon here.

I am Billy Newman, a photographer and creative director that has served clients in the Pacific Northwest and Hawaii for 10 years. I am an author, digital publisher, and Oregon travel guide. I have worked with businesses and individuals to create a portfolio of commercial photography. The images have been placed within billboard, print, and digital campaigns including Travel Oregon, Airbnb, Chevrolet, and Guaranty RV.

My photographs often incorporate outdoor landscape environments with strong elements of light, weather, and sky. Through my work, I have published several books of photographs that further explore my connection to natural places.

Gear that I work with 

Professional film stock I work with https://imaging.kodakalaris.com/photographers-photo-printing/film/color

I keep my camera in a Lowepro camera bag 

https://www.lowepro.com/us-en/magnum-400-aw-lp36054-pww/

When I am photographing landscape image

Billy Newman Photo Podcast | 159 Film Scans From The Darkroom.com

mercredi 7 octobre 2020Durée 32:36

159 Film Scans From The Darkroom.com

Editing photos from a recent set of scans I got from The Darkroom. The 1st roll through a canon Eos film camera. Film fade.

If you’re looking to discuss photography assignment work or a podcast interview, please drop me an email. Drop Billy Newman an email here.

If you want to book a wedding photography package, or a family portrait session, please visit  GoldenHourWedding.com or you can email the Golden Hour Wedding booking manager here.

If you want to look at my photography, my current portfolio is here.

If you want to purchase stock images by Billy Newman, my current Stock photo library is here.

If you want to learn more about the work Billy is doing as an Oregon outdoor travel guide, you can find resources on GoldenHourExperience.com.

If you want to listen to the Archeoastronomy research podcast created by Billy Newman, you can listen to the Night Sky Podcast here.

If you want to read a free PDF eBook written by Billy Newman about film photography: you can download Working With Film here. Yours free.

Want to hear from me more often? Subscribe to the Billy Newman Photo Podcast on Apple Podcasts here.

If you get value out of the photography content I produce, consider making a sustaining value for value financial contribution, visit the Support Page here.

You can find my latest photo books all on Amazon here.

Gear that I work with 

Professional film stock I work with https://imaging.kodakalaris.com/photographers-photo-printing/film/color

I keep my camera in a Lowepro camera bag 

https://www.lowepro.com/us-en/magnum-400-aw-lp36054-pww/

When I am photographing landscape images I use a Manfrotto tripod 

https://www.manfrotto.com/us-en/057-carbon-fiber-4-section-geared-tripod-mt057c4-g/

A lot of my film portfolio was created with the Nikon N80 and Nikon F4

https://www.kenrockwell.com/nikon/f4.htm

https://www.kenrockwell.com/nikon/n80.htm

The Nikon D2H and Nikon D3 were used to create many of the digital images on this site h

Billy Newman Photo Podcast | 158 Early Chanterelle Season

mercredi 30 septembre 2020Durée 34:00

158 Early Chanterelle Season

Scouting for Chanterelle mushroom areas. Camping around hunting season. Photography gigs at properties damaged by the fires.

Gear that I work with 

Professional film stock I work with https://imaging.kodakalaris.com/photographers-photo-printing/film/color

I keep my camera in a Lowepro camera bag 

https://www.lowepro.com/us-en/magnum-400-aw-lp36054-pww/

When I am photographing landscape images I use a Manfrotto tripod 

https://www.manfrotto.com/us-en/057-carbon-fiber-4-section-geared-tripod-mt057c4-g/

A lot of my film portfolio was created with the Nikon N80 and Nikon F4

https://www.kenrockwell.com/nikon/f4.htm

https://www.kenrockwell.com/nikon/n80.htm

The Nikon D2H and Nikon D3 were used to create many of the digital images on this site https://www.dpreview.com/reviews/nikond3 https://www.dpreview.com/reviews/nikond2h

Two lenses I am using all the time are the 50mm f1.8 and the 17-40mm f4 

https://www.kenrockwell.com/nikon/5018daf.htm

https://www.kenrockwell.com/canon/lenses/17-40mm.htm

Some astrophotography and documentary video work was created with the Sony A7r

https://www.dpreview.com/reviews/sony-alpha-a7r

I am currently taking photographs with a Canon 5D

https://www.dpreview.com/reviews/canon-eos-5d-mark-iii

If you’re looking to discuss photography assignment work or a podcast interview, please drop me an email. Drop Billy Newman an email here.

If you want to book a wedding photography package, or a family portrait session, please visit  GoldenHourWedding.com or you can email the Golden Hour Wedding booking manager here.

If you want to look at my photography, my current portfolio is here.

If you want to purchase stock images by Billy Newman, my current Stock photo library is here.

If you want to learn more about the work Billy is doing as an Oregon outdoor travel guide, you can find resources on GoldenHourExperience.com.

If you want to listen to the Archeoastronomy research podcast created by Billy Newman, you can listen to the Night Sky Podcast here.

If you want to read a free PDF eBook written by Billy Newman about film photography: 

Billy Newman Photo Podcast | 157 First Day Of Fall

jeudi 24 septembre 2020Durée 30:15

First Day Of Fall, Smoke on the west coast, Oregon Wildfires, Working on photos and writing.

Gear that I work with 

Professional film stock I work with https://imaging.kodakalaris.com/photographers-photo-printing/film/color

I keep my camera in a Lowepro camera bag 

https://www.lowepro.com/us-en/magnum-400-aw-lp36054-pww/

When I am photographing landscape images I use a Manfrotto tripod 

https://www.manfrotto.com/us-en/057-carbon-fiber-4-section-geared-tripod-mt057c4-g/

A lot of my film portfolio was created with the Nikon N80 and Nikon F4

https://www.kenrockwell.com/nikon/f4.htm

https://www.kenrockwell.com/nikon/n80.htm

The Nikon D2H and Nikon D3 were used to create many of the digital images on this site https://www.dpreview.com/reviews/nikond3 https://www.dpreview.com/reviews/nikond2h

Two lenses I am using all the time are the 50mm f1.8 and the 17-40mm f4 

https://www.kenrockwell.com/nikon/5018daf.htm

https://www.kenrockwell.com/canon/lenses/17-40mm.htm

Some astrophotography and documentary video work was created with the Sony A7r

https://www.dpreview.com/reviews/sony-alpha-a7r

I am currently taking photographs with a Canon 5D

https://www.dpreview.com/reviews/canon-eos-5d-mark-iii

If you’re looking to discuss photography assignment work or a podcast interview, please drop me an email. Drop Billy Newman an email here.

If you want to book a wedding photography package, or a family portrait session, please visit  GoldenHourWedding.com or you can email the Golden Hour Wedding booking manager here.

If you want to look at my photography, my current portfolio is here.

If you want to purchase stock images by Billy Newman, my current Stock photo library is here.

If you want to learn more about the work Billy is doing as an Oregon outdoor travel guide, you can find resources on GoldenHourExperience.com.

If you want to listen to the Archeoastronomy research podcast created by Billy Newman, you can listen to the Night Sky Podcast here.

If you want to read a free PDF eBook written by Billy Newman about film photography: 

Billy Newman Photo Podcast | 156 Oregon Wildfires

lundi 14 septembre 2020Durée 37:14

Oregon Wildfires

Smoke across the west coast, Oregon Wildfires 1 million acres burned, Phoenix, Talent, Blue River, Vida, Lyons, Gates, Detroit, Molalla, Estacada, Lincoln City

If you’re looking to discuss photography assignment work, or  a podcast interview, please drop me an email.  Drop Billy Newman an email here.

If you want to book a wedding photography package, or a family portrait session,  please visit  GoldenHourWedding.com or you can email the Golden Hour Wedding booking manager here.

If you want to look at my photography, my current portfolio is here.

If you want to purchase stock images by Billy Newman, my current Stock photo library is here.

If you want to learn more about the work Billy is doing as an Oregon outdoor travel guide, you can find resources on GoldenHourExperience.com.

If you want to listen to the Archeoastronomy research podcast created by Billy Newman, you can listen to the Night Sky Podcast here.

If you want to read a free PDF eBook written by Billy Newman about film photography: you can download Working With Film here. Yours free.

Want to hear from me more often? Subscribe to the Billy Newman Photo Podcast on Apple Podcasts here.

If you get value out of the photography content I produce, consider making a sustaining value for value financial contribution, Visit the Support Page here.

You can find my latest photo books all on Amazon here.

Produced by Billy Newman and Marina Hansen

I am Billy Newman, a photographer and creative director that has served clients in the Pacific Northwest and Hawaii for 10 years. I am an author, digital publisher, and Oregon travel guide. I have worked with businesses and individuals to create a portfolio of commercial photography. The images have been placed within billboard, print, and digital campaigns including Travel Oregon, Airbnb, Chevrolet and Guaranty RV.

My photographs often incorporate outdoor landscape environments with strong elements of light, weather, and sky. Through my work, I have published several books of photographs that further explore my connection to natural places.

Link

Website Billy Newman Photo https://billynewmanphoto.com/

YouTube  https://www.youtube.com/billynewmanphoto

Facebook Page  https://www.facebook.com/billynewmanphotos/

Twitter  https://twitter.com/billynewman

Instagram  https://www.instagram.com/billynewman/

About   https://billynewmanphoto.com/about/

156 Billy Newman Photo podcast mixdown Oregon Wildfires

Hello, and thank you very much for

Billy Newman Photo Podcast | 155 Scouting Remote Hunting Camps

mercredi 9 septembre 2020Durée 38:16

Hunting camps on public land in the John Day river canyon. Working with a GPS to scout locations year round. Smoke in Oregon. Lightroom photo development with controller. Editing with an Xtouch compact. Over-processing a raw file. Amplified sound with a PA.

Hunting Camps

Produced by Billy Newman and Marina Hansen

Link

Website Billy Newman Photo https://billynewmanphoto.com/

YouTube  https://www.youtube.com/billynewmanphoto

Facebook Page  https://www.facebook.com/billynewmanphotos/

Twitter  https://twitter.com/billynewman

Instagram  https://www.instagram.com/billynewman/

About   https://billynewmanphoto.com/about/

If you’re looking to discuss photography assignment work, or  a podcast interview, please drop me an email.  Drop Billy Newman an email here.

If you want to book a wedding photography package, or a family portrait session,  please visit  GoldenHourWedding.com or you can email the Golden Hour Wedding booking manager here.

If you want to look at my photography, my current portfolio is here.

If you want to purchase stock images by Billy Newman, my current Stock photo library is here.

If you want to learn more about the work Billy is doing as an Oregon outdoor travel guide, you can find resources on GoldenHourExperience.com.

If you want to listen to the Archeoastronomy research podcast created by Billy Newman, you can listen to the Night Sky Podcast here.

If you want to read a free PDF eBook written by Billy Newman about film photography: you can download Working With Film here. Yours free.

Want to hear from me more often?Subscribe to the Billy Newman Photo Podcast on Apple Podcasts here.

If you get value out of the photography content I produce, consider making a sustaining value for value financial contribution, Visit the Support Page here.

You can find my latest photo books all on Amazon here.


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