Welcome to Coriolistic Anachronisms

Introducing the new jQuery sliding panel and accordion menu!

[applause]

Click on a vertical tab to the right for help and options

And enjoy your visit!
Vince

  • Utah

    HOME

    Click here to visit the main photo galleries at VMP.com or stick around and click here (or on the blog header from anywhere in the blog) to reach the Coriolistic Anachronisms home page and most recent posts.

  • Utah

    ABOUT

    My name is Vincent Mounier. I'm a photographer and designer of this site. My blog Coriolistic Anachronisms is now five years old. Find out more about the web site and me.

  • Utah

    CONTACT

    Click here to send me an email. Enthusiastic praise, technical questions, geek jokes and constructive criticism are always welcome!

  • Utah

    FAQ's

    If you have unanswered questions, why don't you check out this helpful FAQ's page. You could also email me and if your question is relevent, it might appear as a new FAQ.

  • Utah

    SHARE

    Here's a one-stop social bookmarking tool for your convenience. Please use as many of the available links, I don't mind. And don't forget to subscribe to the RSS feed.

  • Utah

    RULES OF CONDUCT AND COPYRIGHTS

    A few notes on what I hope will be a respectful visit, and my promise to play by the same rules. Basically, don't swear, don't steal, don't spam. Please.

  • Utah

    66 SQUARE FEET

    Let me Marie at 66 Square Feetintroduce you to my blogging and life soulmate. Different blogs, different views, different ideas, same passion.

  • Utah

    SITEMAP

    A graphic, user-friendly navigational overview of the entire web site, which is made of two main sections:

    • This blog and all sub-sections,
    • Vincent Mounier Photography, where the main photo galleries are located.

Stepping into the invisible world
(This is an archived post; click on blog header for current content)

Sunset has come and gone silently and the chilly night has begun extending its cloak over the lower mainland.  It’s not completely dark yet, however, and I can see perfectly well around me despite the lack of daytime color. The forest is quiet but I meet a few late silhouettes walking their dogs or coming back from a trail run. I put my MP3 player away, preferring to enjoy the ever-present roar of the river. Fall has triggered new rainfall and the volume and level of the water are definitely higher than on my last visit.

A couple heading back hurriedly towards the parking lot smile at me, and I see them from the corner of my eye exchange quizzical looks. They obviously think I must be a little crazy walking into the park at dusk with my camera and a tripod, when daylight has all but vanished. They are right, and wrong. Crazy, I am. But the light certainly hasn’t vanished. What’s vanishing is only the strong light our very weak eyes manage to see, but that’s in no way all there is.

A camera sees the world in a very different way than we do. It has the ability to « see » and record the faintest light through long exposures and as such, it becomes a window into another world, a world that we will never see for ourselves but nevertheless exists around us, every time it gets dark.

My mission today is to start recording this world, and I’ve given myself an easy assignment. Since I’m depending on buses for my way back home from Lynn Canyon and the night temperatures are already dipping close to freezing, I’ll limit my experimental exposures tonight to a few minutes, prior to absolute darkness. Stay tuned, this will be an ongoing project, and it gets more amazing as the night matures and exposure times drag on up to a few hours...

For now, all I need is a tripod, a neutral density filter (proof that there’s still too much light for this to be the real invisible world), a remote cable, mirror lock-up and patience. It has gotten dark enough for the autofocus to give up and start roaming back and forth, so I switch to manual. And yet, the nearly invisible world is there and alive, as I find out later in Adobe Lightroom.

 

 Posted at 4:15 PM in Bits and pieces: & Photoblogs:

3 Comments

Display comments as(Linear | Threaded)
  • 1 - Anonymous says:

    « XXIe siècle : le corps humain perd du terrain.
    :-) »

  • 2 - Sigrid says:

    « What the hell do you need the filter for??? »

  • 2.1 - Vince answers:

    « To blur the water even more... »

Add Comment


Enclosing asterisks marks text as bold (*word*), underscore are made via _word_.
Standard emoticons like :-) and ;-) are converted to images.

To prevent automated Bots from commentspamming, please enter the string you see in the image below in the appropriate input box. Your comment will only be submitted if the strings match. Please ensure that your browser supports and accepts cookies, or your comment cannot be verified correctly.
CAPTCHA

BBCode format allowed