Tag: swings

  • Keep Swinging

    Keep Swinging

    Fiery sunset photograph backlights park swings.
    Keep Swinging — 14mm | f/8 | ISO 100 | EXP 1/5

    Another exposure from last Saturday’s exemplar sunset. At the time of this shoot the Cleveland Indians and Chicago Cubs were midway through a World Series for the ages. Two legacy ball clubs met in the Fall Classic, each seeking to end championship droughts that run so deep the scorched earth of their past seems to predate the respective clubs storied existence. Cleveland last won it all in 1948, and for the Cubs you have to go all the way back to 1908—you know, before the planet was embroiled in its first world war. Despite both teams fielding plenty of championship caliber ball clubs over subsequent decades neither could ever seem to escape the bowels of their own history—the likes of which makes you take serious the voodoo of a cursed destiny. It’s a nasty business, goats be damned. For a fan of neither team, this made the 2016 matchup all the more special—one of these clubs was going to break the hex and send long entrenched narratives to the editor’s waste bin. I would be entertained without the agony/elation precipice these two passionate fanbases precariously stood upon. As a Yankees fan on firmer ground I was all in for the Cubs, though I would have been equally satisfied had Cleveland claimed the prize.

    And so it went. Cleveland stormed out to a 3–1 series lead, firmly secure in their already established home field advantage. A lights out bullpen spearheaded by Terry Francona’s willingness to deploy the near unhittable Andrew Miller in the fireman role, backed a Herculean effort from Cy Young winner, Corey Kluber. Kluber, more throw back than modern day starter, was more than willing to pitch until his arm fell off this postseason. Shades of CC Sabathia down the stretch for the Brewers in 2008. My hat tips for you, sir. In the end, though, it was the Cubs’ time. Storming back to bring the Series to an elimination game seven, the two teams met for one last trial before fate and in the process produced an all time game seven experience. Despite an inspired Cleveland comeback, and Rajai Davis’ unlikely late game home run heroics, the Cubs were able to make history and set fire to a narrative that has shrouded a great franchise for far too long.

    Interested in buying? Purchase

  • The Child King’s Throne of Wonder

    Wide angle sepia photograph of two swings over the sand at Surf City Sunset Park
    The Child King’s Throne of Wonder — 14mm | f/2.8 | ISO 100 | EXP 1/100

    Swing, child

    Go.

    Pump.

    Fly.

    Picture taking has been sparse lately, and while I was hoping to catch a sunset last night it was obvious upon arrival at Surf City Sunset Park the sky was a bust. Jonesing to shoot for the first time in weeks, I first fixed my 50mm and made a few exposures of objects about the park, playing with shallow depth of field. I soon switched over to my 14mm and used the lens in a way I rarely have. I switched it to auto focus for the first time in at least a year, set my aperture to a wide open f/2.8 and got as close to the front swing as I could—in the handheld shot above my lens glass was no more than three inches from the front right corner of the swing itself.

    At the end of the day the question is simple: who doesn’t remember the swings of their youth and smile?