Category Archives: June 2009

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Like I stated on Flickr, I had some relatively high hopes for The Number 13 during this month. Yet all of the opportunities I took wound up being pretty miserable. No. That’s not completely accurate.

They seemed good at the time they were shot. They seemed okay on the small LCD on the back of my Canon 40D. However, once home and uploaded to the iMac they were awful. I was about to type “..they seemed awful,” but that wouldn’t have been accurate. They were simply awful. Sometimes it was a failure from a technical standpoint, but more often than not it was a creative failure. One of my favs was where I had taken photos of the individual numerals that make up 13: the one and three. I then brought them together in Photoshop as separate frames, which I thought was a clever idea, but the failure always came in how the numbers looked together; next to each other. None of these ever had any uumph to them, if you will. They just laid there being boring (no offence PSB).

I had really pretty much given up on obtaining any other pictures for this month’s theme when suddenly the heavens rained down upon me an opportunity as I discussed on Flickr. I must have been some sight to anyone driving by as I sped along the little road in Moraine, trying to catch up and pass the train car in question. Of course, the situation was made worse by my need to find a suitable place to pull over whereby I could escape my car and snap a picture as the train car moved past. This was no small feat considering the lack of spots to pull off the road.

Once again, Chuff and his trains have had me speeding around some part of Dayton in hopes of getting a good shot!

When I hear the number 13, the first thing that comes to mind is luck, bad luck, lord knows I’ve had enough of that this year so that can bugger off.
So I went for something else……ALUMINIUM, the Atomic number being 13.
Tricky bugger to photograph, being shiny and all but am quite pleased with the result.

Well, I’m now thoroughly miffed!

I wasn’t thoroughly miffed mind you… not until a few moments ago. When I came onto the group blog to check the precise wording of the title for this month’s theme.

Y’see, I hadn’t actually found out what the theme was by checking the blog. Oh no. Darren had told me.
But knowing what he’s like I thought I’d best just check before uploading my contribution.

Which is when I became miffed. For the bloody toerag who’d posted the theme on the “this month’s theme” page had added a remark that’s damn well anticipated my pic. Hence the miffedness.

Anyway…

My pic this month is a bit of a crappy shot in terms of… well… pretty much everything really.
However, all its crappiness is well compensated by the fact that its rich in deep significance, symbolism, and… er… meaning! [Heh heh]

It all started with Darren telling me that this month’s theme was “13″.

“Bloody hell”, thinks I, “Chuff’s done it again!” His previous choice (“Street Antiquity”) had me really scratching my head, and this one just about topped that.
So, I simply have to interject a quick “Congratulations” to Chuff for compelling me to think. Something I try to avoid as much as possible but, let’s face it, that’s what the project’s supposed to be all about. So well done Chuff.

Anyway, I quickly rejected all the obvious things like a pic of the actual number etc…

But then I kept coming back to it. The number that is.

So then I began thinking in terms of the number, and pictured in my mind an image of maybe a calendar page of a big 13.
Elaborating on that I thought “Hmm… what about a Friday 13 calendar page?”.

Which led me to think of superstitions. Have that as the background maybe? Slightly out of focus. With, in the foreground, other symbols of superstition… a black cat; a horseshoe; maybe even a cracked mirror.

So I ran with that idea in my mind for a little while, but then rejected it simply on the basis that it would simply be yet another “set piece” made up of props… and I’m now getting bored with doing that type of shot for the project.

“What I need” thinks I, “is something real“.

But I was still stuck on the superstition interpretation, and so began to wonder what I could “say” about that in visual terms.

Well, here’s what my shot “says” about it…

There are “big” superstitions, and “little” superstitions.

Little ones like not stepping on the cracks between paving slabs, or not walking underneath ladders.
And big ones like those promulgated by so many of the formal religions.
And some things that we don’t even think of as superstitions yet which, to all intents and purposes, nevertheless still are.

Yet they all share one thing in common…

They all serve to limit us, to imprison us in a cage of our own making.
Which is a great shame. For beyond the bars of that cage is a great big world just waiting for us to throw off our shackles and go and play in.

So in my pic we have the bars of this cage (13 of course, just to reinforce the theme!) with the great big world beyond depicted, naturally, by a playground. A kids’ one of course… cos we’re all just big kids at heart.

Monthly theme shot - June 2009 _G105926

I’m fascinated with time and the devices by which we attempt to measure it. I’ve often wondered who was the first human (or human-like) entity to recognize that the Earth had a cycle, which we currently designate as a year. How long did it take them to recognize the rhythm of the year? Were they able to share this information and was it accepted by others?

Regardless, my fascination with both time and time-measuring devices is well known and documented. Odd though that the idea for this picture did not come to me sooner than it did.

13, Part I

13, Part I

Unlike our European counterparts (and for all I know our counterparts all around the globe) or members of the military, I have no particular excuse or reason for why I elect to tell time in the 24-hour format. I guess it’s because I find it to be more precise: 24-hours in a day, so why not call each one accordingly? This whole a.m. and p.m. thing just seems goofy.

Now, of course, I have to work on my next image for this month’s theme. Now where exactly did I leave behind that laser pointer???

13

My favorite thing about this photo is the shadow between the dice.