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Photography Collection From All Over The World
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Residents near and far are invited to bring their lawn chairs, blankets and telescopes and join Pottawattamie Conservation on Saturday at 8 p.m. for the Perseids Shower Night Sky Event at Hitchcock Nature Center.
The Perseids meteor shower is considered the best meteor shower of the year, often with 50 to 100 meteors falling per hour during its peak in mid-August.
Hitchcock Nature Center, 27792 Ski Hill Loop in Honey Creek, offers a good location for viewing the shower and other celestial bodies because of its distance from city lights and large rolling hills that offer obstructed views of the night sky.
The Omaha Astronomical Society will be present at the park with telescopes that offer visitors close-up views of the night sky’s celestial bodies.
This event is free with a $5 per vehicle park entry fee or Pottawattamie Conservation Foundation membership.
Vehicles will be allowed into the park, spaces permitting, until 10 p.m. All vehicles will need to exit the park by midnight.
The Perseids Shower Night Sky Event is dependent on weather and cloud cover. Those planning on attending should check pottconservation.com or the Hitchcock Nature Center Facebook page for any changes or cancellations before they head out.
Our best Omaha staff photos & videos of August 2023
From left: Rep. Adrian Smith, R-Neb Sen. Pete Ricketts, R-Neb Rep. Mike Flood, R-Neb listen to Sen.Deb Fischer, R-Neb speak at the Federal Legislative Summit at the Strategic Air Command & Aerospace Museum on Tuesday, Aug. 8, 2023.
From left: Nebraska freshman Bergen Reilly, Caroline Jurevicius, Laney Choboy, and Andi Jackson all react to a photo that Nebraska Director of Photography Scott Bruhn just took of them on team picture day at the Bob Devaney on Monday, Aug. 7, 2023.
Special Teams Coordinator Ed Foley watches the team during practice at Memorial Stadium in Lincoln on Tuesday.
Players’ silhouettes during practice at Memorial Stadium in Lincoln on Tuesday.
Dancers from the New Legacy Souljaz perform during the Native Omaha Days Parade in Omaha on Saturday.
Chris Beck, 5, plays Connect 4 during the Family Fun Day in Omaha on Saturday.
Father Steven Boes prepares to end the new Boys Town Education Center after the ribbon-cutting ceremony on Thursday, Aug. 3, 2023.
Father Steven Boes speaks before the ribbon cutting of the new Boys Town Education Center on Thursday, Aug. 3, 2023.
Water shoots out of a storm drain on Saddle Creek Road near Pacific Street during a morning downpour on Wednesday, Aug. 2, 2023.
Heavy rains caused traffic barrels to float onto a storm drain on Saddle Creek Road north of Farnam Street on Wednesday, Aug. 2, 2023.
Paul Elbert, 2, of Council Bluffs, plays in the rain near a Pottawattamie County Sheriff’s Office vehicle during the 40th annual National Night Out get-together at Tom Hanafan River’s Edge Park in Council Bluffs on Tuesday. National Night Out is community-building event meant to promote positive relationships between police and neighbors.
Adonis Marcial Rodriguez, 20, trains with posters from Terence ‘Bud’ Crawford’s past fights hanging over him at B&B Sports Academy near 30th and Sprague Streets in Omaha on Monday. After victory in a fight on Saturday night, Omaha-native and co-founder of the gym, Crawford is the undisputed welterweight champion boxer.

Kendall Reed and Cole Lange place their lanterns in the pond during the Water Lantern Festival on the Gene Leahy Mall in Omaha on Saturday.

Connor Raastad, 12, shows Nebraska defensive lineman Ty Robinson (99) how to put on Connor’s corn hat during fan day at the Hawks Championship Center in Lincoln on Sunday.
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Mesmerising branches and spirals of ice — reminiscent of abstract artwork — are often one of the perks of an ice-cold morning.
With temperatures plunging across the country, many have taken to social media to share photos of the breathtaking natural displays, including Matt Worrall in Western Australia who discovered an ice pattern resembling etched silver on his car roof in Donnybrook.
“I’ve never seen anything like it,” he said. “It was amazing.”
“It was parked under the jacaranda tree and I was just wondering if it was done by the wind or the leaves of the jacaranda. I couldn’t work it out.”
So what’s behind the works of art, courtesy of Mother Nature?
In its simplest form, the intricate patterns are the result of tiny imperfections on a surface, such as scratches, specks of dust, salt, or even residue from washer fluid, according to Bureau of Meteorology forecaster Jessica Lingard.
These imperfections disrupt the even pattern of the ice crystals, causing them to branch out in a variety of different directions.
Ms Lingard said different environmental conditions also had a role to play in how the ice crystals formed, and whether they looked like plates, columns, or dendrites.
“Small changes in humidity, temperature or wind speed or direction will change how the frost, ice, looks as it freezes,” she said.
She said the clarity of the pattern, and whether it appeared clear and glass-like, or more dull in appearance, depended upon whether it was frost or ice.
“Frost occurs when water condenses out of the air directly onto a surface,” Ms Lingard said.
“Ice crystals form when liquid water freezes.”
In the case of the striking, glassy display on Mr Worrall’s car roof, Ms Lingard said it was ice.
“So [to achieve this] the temperature of the air would have dropped slowly overnight, allowing moisture to condense out of air first, which subsequently froze,” she said.
She said it was likely to have frozen quickly, causing the feather-like patterns to “knit” together.
With a large part of Australia currently experiencing a mid-winter rain hiatus of clear skies and light winds, the chance of seeing the unique patterns over the next two days is high.
Parts of southern Queensland, including Warwick and Applethorpe, on Tuesday experienced their coldest July morning since 2019 when temperatures dropped to -5 degrees Celsius.
Parts of inland New South Wales, such as Glen Inness, fell to -6.8C.
The icy pool of air moved over the country in the wake of a cold front.
While temperatures are not expected to fall quite as far, BOM was forecasting widespread frost and sub-zero temperatures to continue on Wednesday morning across parts of eastern Australia, extending from the interior of south-east Qld, through eastern NSW and into north-east Victoria, as well as WA’s Goldfields and Wheatbelt regions.
The frost is forecast to clear from WA on Thursday, remaining through the same regions of NSW, Vic, and Qld and becoming confined to NSW by Friday.
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SUMMIT Space fans of all ages received a lesson in Astronomy and Astrophotography Tuesday afternoon at the Boyd County Midland Branch Public Library.
The lesson, headed by Ashland city commissioner Josh Blanton, included an interactive talk about galaxies, black holes, planetary orbits, telescopes and how to photograph sky and space phenomenon.
The visit was part of a wide variety of summer programs offered for teens and “tweens” sponsored by the library.
During the exhibit, titled “Explore the Universe with Josh,” Blanton said in the midst of the pandemic, he had the extra time to nurture his childhood infatuation with telescopes — leading to his new hobby of astrophotography.
Blanton said recent technology developments is revolutionizing astronomy, making far away things clearer and easier to observe for the average person with just their cell phones.
With the use of apps, one can map the sky above them to notify which planets are in transit and viewable sometimes with the naked eye.
Discussing light movement, gravitational pull and planetary tilts and rotations, Blanton displayed a variety of self-shot photos — or data —that depicted comets, the Andromeda Galaxy and Aurora borealis (northern lights).
Blanton said the Andromeda Galaxy is our solar system’s neighbor, set to eventually merge with the Milky Way Galaxy in about 4.5 million years.
Taking advantage of the darkest areas in the region, Blanton is able to utilize his camera’s long exposure to pull in as much light as possible in order to gain clear data of each phenomena — including a close-up shot of the Andromeda Galaxy from over 2.5 million lightyears away.
Blanton told the group telescopes behave as a time machine, as it takes so long for light to travel the insane distances to reach what the camera lens can pick up.
For those in the crowd eager for a career in space, Blanton mentioned a couple notables that got their start in Ashland.
Susie Martinez, now an engineer for Blue Origin, started her educational journey at Ashland Community and Technical College before going on to further her education, eventually earning an internship with NASA.
Les Johnson, also a native of Ashland, is a physicist for NASA’s space propulsion program, dedicating his time and career to developing a way for humans to travel lightyears away.
Johnson is also a notable sci-fi author, recently vising Ashland for a talk at Highlands Museum and Discovery Center and book signings downtown.
At the end of the discussion, Blanton guided both children and adults outside in an attempt to view the moon with the instruction to check out the Ashland Area Astronomy and Astrophotography Facebook page.
For a full calendar of happenings at the Boyd County Public Library this month, visit www.thebookplace.org.
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We talked last month about the importance of waiting to improve the photographs you capture and how the best images are often in the future waiting to be captured.
Now this raises the question, what are you waiting for?
Waiting for light
Years ago, when I was just beginning to catch a passion for panoramic images, I saw a great sunset coming.
It was one of those spring evenings with heavy overcast and rain showers along the Blue Mountains and clear skies far to the west.
It was the kind of evening where you just know there is a good, good chance for that sun to break out beneath the cloud cover and bathe them in glorious golden light.
And with the showers, there was a chance for a rainbow bonus!
Now, if you wait at home for the light to be perfect, you’ll be stuck with gorgeous skies and ugly power lines, trees and the neighbors’ roofs.
Or a ticket for racing 100 mph to get somewhere worthy of the light.
Three panoramics of the old Tertulia vineyards (now Patterson Cellars), south of Walla Walla. When I first arrived (top) I was prepared to wait for something magical. About 12 minutes later the clouds had darkened, but the setting sun was only lighting the vineyard (center). Finally, after a total wait of about 35 minutes, the light was what I’d hoped for and MORE (bottom).
Better to head out to the perfect spot and realize your predicted outcome. Hopefully.
I much prefer eastern skies sunsets for their more subtle beauty, so I headed out to one of the many vineyards where I have permission to shoot (the old Tertulia property) and got into position with a specific composition in mind. And then I waited.
The wait was worth it.
On the roof of my old Blazer, I sat, prayed and enjoyed the changing light. You can see the results in the three panoramics pictured here.
Waiting for the fugitive moment
This wait is less definable than the one for light. The moment is just that “something” that makes a photograph.
One of the fathers of true photojournalism, Henri Cartier-Bresson says, “composition must be one of our constant preoccupations, but at the moment of shooting it can stem only from our intuition, for we are out to capture the fugitive moment, and all the interrelationships involved are on the move.”
I like that – the fugitive moment. It can be as subtle as the gleam in the eye, or as bold as a cowboy hurtling through the arena space from the back of a bull.
I chose to illustrate the fugitive moment with two shots from this past Guitar Festival.
I chose a position stage-side and had a composition locked in, but for things to come together within that frame, I had to wait.
Since I was focused on the headliner and his guitar player, I needed something from both at the same moment. My knees held out, and I got the shot.
I initially thought the photo of Sugaray Rayford performing at the 2023 Walla Walla Guitar Festival (top) was the one – the expression of the guitarist, the logo on the screen and the attitude of the star. But waiting, I was able to get both performers at peak action with levels and dynamics (bottom). In Photography, something better is often just a 1/250th of a second away, but more likely many minutes or even hours.
Waiting for what you need
There are times when I know exactly what I want from a shoot. Sometimes it can be achieved by perfect framing.
Often, most often, it is achieved by waiting for exactly what I need.
At a recent high school track meet I could completely see the shot I wanted from the long jump event: a jumper soaring above the bleachers on her way to the pit.
Composing it was easy, low angle with the camera on the ground and a 24mm lens pointed slightly up. (After all these years I didn’t need to look through the viewfinder.)
Then it was a matter of waiting… and hoping. Not all young jumpers have the kind of legs-high form the shot required. Mya Adams did, and I had the shot.
In this case, the perfect shot I envisioned wasn’t required. The editors would have been happy with less, but I needed it.
Practice patience and waiting. Often the wait is not only worth it but can be a reward within itself.
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Ansel Adams created some of the definitive photographs of the Western American landscape long before climate change threatened to obliterate it forever. Born in San Francisco in 1902, Adams is best remembered for his lush black-and-white pictures of the Yosemite Valley and the Southwest, as well as for his role as an educator who influenced generations of photographers after him.
Now, the de Young — the site of Adams’s first exhibition in 1932 — hosts “Ansel Adams in Our Time,” a major retrospective organized in partnership with the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, examining the artist’s legacy in relationship with the work of 23 contemporary environmental photographers breaking new ground in the genre.
While the exhibition is full of iconic Adams shots, like “Clearing Winter Storm,” c. 1937, or “Moon and Half Dome,” 1960, both made in Yosemite National Park and many deep cuts, the artist’s work is only a jumping off point.
Richard Misrach’s “Golden Gate Bridge” series, shot from the back porch of his home in the Berkeley Hills, responds directly to Adams’s “The Golden Gate Before the Bridge,” 1932, a breathtaking view of the mouth of the Bay between the Presidio and Marin Headlands – sans bridge. Mark Klett implements collage to converse with Adams and other seminal landscape photographers. The titular view of “View from the handrail at Glacier Point overlook, connecting views from Ansel Adams to Carleton Watkins,” 2003, photographed in color by Klett, is overlaid with collage elements snipped from Adams and Watkins’s earlier black-and-white pictures.
By returning to the source, both artists play to photography’s chronological promise, revealing how much – and how little – has changed.
Others are more concerned with interrogating the act of looking itself, challenging the ubiquity of the White male gaze. Catherine Opie’s landscapes, like “Untitled #1 (Yellowstone Valley),” 2015, respond to and contradict Adams in almost every way: colorful and completely out of focus. Binh Danh’s daguerreotypes of Yosemite, a printing process using a highly copper surface, mirror the viewer in the image.
Both Opie and Dahn’s pictures raise the question of how who looks changes what they see, placing the viewer inside the landscapes they photograph. In fact, the traditional absence of humans from many landscape photographers’ work, including Adams’s, presents a bit of cognitive dissonance: The human footprint is increasingly present in nature, from population growth to climate change, while the particular absence of people in Western landscapes carries colonialist connotations. What you don’t see is just as important as what you do.
Some photographers of Adams’s era attempted more ethnographic projects, like Adam Clark Vroman’s 19th-century playing card sets, illustrated with photographs of Native Americans and sold as souvenirs. Contrast that with Will Wilson’s contemporary portraits of Native Americans like “Nakotah LaRance,” 2012, a young man carrying a portable video game system and a comic book, or Wilson’s own self-portrait “How the West is One,” 2014. Wilson’s diptych represents the artist on both sides: on one, Wilson is dressed in Indigenous cultural garb; on the other, he’s dressed like a cowboy, each staring gravely into his reflection’s eyes. Here, we get a clear view of what’s missing from the supposedly objective presentation of the hauntingly empty landscape.
While Adams’s vision of the West became ubiquitous, it was itself far from objective. Credited with several advancements on the technical side of photography, he studiously crafted many of his images post-production, often combining multiple negatives and using all the darkroom trickery available to him to create impossibly breathtaking views. These technological experimentations were cutting edge at the time, and his work continues to be at home in the company of similarly daring experimenters.
Chris McCaw and Meghann Riepenhoff both play fast and loose with the negative, accentuating the illustrative — even painterly — quality photography can possess. McCaw, who builds his own giant cameras, outfitted with periscope lenses, makes long-exposure photographs in which the trajectory of the sun burns its way across paper negatives over time. Riepenhoff’s pieces are contact prints made by exposing photo-sensitive paper to various natural phenomena, like ice, in addition to light. It’s a level of integration with nature Adams never achieved, embedding nature into their work in an inversion of human’s impact on their
environment.
In one of his rare, urban landscapes, “Housing Development, San Bruno Mountains, San Francisco,” 1966, Adams turns his own lens on the direct impact of development, a zigzag of prefab homes tearing through the hillside. Compared to Adams’s earlier nature shots, this feels like a slap in the face, forcing the viewer to confront the degradation of the landscape. There’s a way in which all of Adams’s photos could be considered depictions of humanity’s impact on the land, and the continued impact on the land is fully displayed by his contemporary counterparts.
Mitch Epstein approaches environmentalism through absurdism. In “Altamont Pass Wind Farm, California,” 2007, the arid wind farm serves as a backdrop for a group of golfers playing on the green course that abuts it. “Signal Hill, Long Beach, California,” 2007, offers a scene of an oil pump wedged between homes in a suburban neighborhood, showcasing the intersection of industrial greed, urban sprawl and willful ignorance. Laura McPhee’s diptych “Early Spring (Peeling Bark in Rain),” 2008, is a view into a dense forest of burned trees, the soot-black bark of each trunk peeling away to uncover new growth beneath. It’s a heartbreaking record of wildfire damage, with a hint of a promising future.
The beauty of the natural world has grown bittersweet. Every picture in the exhibition is gorgeous, sublime enough to teach the Hudson River School a lesson, but they’re hard to look at without recalling recent and increasing environmental travesties in the Bay Area and beyond.
By avoiding the sort of didactics often present in climate activism, Adams and company remind us what we have to lose by showing us why we love it, doing so without sacrificing any of the complex dynamics present in humanity’s relationship to the land. These pictures aren’t for posterity: they’re a reminder that time is running out.
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