Hi, I'm Lucinda
The photo was taken with my new Canon EOS 450D (with a tamron 18-200mm lense), by me in the mirror. It's a little overexposed, but at my age, that's not necessarily a bad thing.
Bare Bones Bio:
I was born in Louisiana, USA in 1956, youngest of four girls. In 1967 we all moved to New Jersey when my father was transferred. I've always loved to read and soon gravitated towards Sci Fi, Fantasy, and nonfiction (mostly English History). The last was influenced by watching Masterpiece Theatre. I had the opportunity to go to the UK and Greece on 10 day Easter trips through my high school, which instilled in me an itch to travel. After one year of college,(I learned a lot, but unfortunately not much from my professors and text books) I joined the Air Force and went to Japan and England. I married a fellow GI (Bill), in England, got out of the Air Force (Bill stayed in)and went back to the States. Bill and I then lived in Rancho Cordova, California (where we had our first son, Charles),
Biloxi, Mississippi (where we had our second son, James), Oxfordshire, UK (For me, thank you Bill), and San Antonio, Texas (where we live now). Bill is retired from the Air Force and drives a Big Rig for J. B. Hunt. I am an office manager for a carwash. Charles and James graduated last May from University of Texas at San Antonio and Texas A&M at College Station respectively. Yeah!!!
Interests:
Reading - Mostly nonfiction history, though I have widened the field somewhat. I also like journals and diaries and have been reading "The Diary of Samuel Pepys" on and off for a while now. I'm currently on Vol. VII 1666. (I haven't gotten to the great fire yet). My fiction tends to run to fantasy, Douglas Adams, Terry Pratchett, and Neil Gaiman to name a few.
Music - I grew up on rock, folk, musicals, classical, and Gilbert and Sullivan. I still love all that and have added jazz, blues, bluegrass, celtic and a little country. I don't play any instruments and can't sing (the singing talent in our family seemed to lessen with each new sister and I'm the baby of the bunch), but I'm an enthusiastic listener.
Art (Drawing, Photography and Oil Painting) - One of the regular pastimes of my sisters and I growing up was paper dolls. We used typing paper to make swimsuit clad paper dolls with pattern book heads. Then we spent countless hours drawing and coloring clothes for them. Depending on the current story, they could be clothes from Regency England, Colonial America, or Star Trek. I also drew faces from the hairdo magazines and was happy if they looked fairly human. I now draw and have recently taken up oil painting. I'm a definite amateur at photography. I've taken pictures since the mid 70s when I went to Japan, but they are mostly of my travels, kids and cats. I've got a lot to go through to see which ones are worth posting. I bought my first digital camera last April (09) for my birthday (I ordered it in April, received it in May, for my birthday in June. (I don't believe in being too literal about such things) I bought PhotoShop in June. I've still got a lot to learn on both, but it's a lot of fun.
Other - My sister Gail and I love The Teaching Company lectures. We both buy history, I occasionally buy literature and she occasionally buys math and science and we watch each other's. I'm also a tad fond of cats.
I could gush, and probably have, about all the talent I see on RR. I find myself using the words wow and beautiful far too much. I guess I should pull out the Thesaurus.ÂÂ
Hover over top left image to zoom.
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Comments (22)
jayfar
A lovely hazy shot where the imagination takes over.
Madbat
Well, there's whatcha call an puddle of indeterminate deepness!
durleybeachbum
Strange and quite lovely!
dochtersions
Breathtaking, Lucinda <3
flavia49
impressive image!!!
helanker
A beautiful simplicity. I like it.
jendellas
Great capture!!!!
mgtcs
This is a superlative shot my friend, amazing atmosphere, fabulous vision, thank you for sharing!
beachzz
great shot!!
magnus073
This is a powerful photo Lucinda when you consider all that has gone on since this all began. I enjoyed the history you provided from Wiki as well as your own involving your family ;) Of course you know I am dying to see that pic now of you and Leslie wet up to your knees
MagikUnicorn
GREAT SHOT
drifterlee
Very cool shot!
alessimarco
It's sad to see how easily we can destroy something that has been around for 300 million years! Great capture!
emmecielle
Great capture! :)
unstart
Wonderful shot!!
alanwilliams
just the suggestion of definitive lines is very intriguing
sandra46
STUNNING SHOT, REALLY IMPRESSIVE!
clbsmiley
This is a very unique picture. A Wow image. :) I am glad you liked the seagulls.
annie5
WOW! Awesome capture! Thanks for sharing :)
npauling
An excellent capture and you can see the oil spill creeping over the sea. It is great that a photo can bring back all the memories of childhood.
goodoleboy
Egad, has it been six months already? A superb overhead capture of pure, unadulterated crude oil, with nary a ripple, in this splendid photo, Lucinda! BTW. don't see you much around these Rendo parts any longer.
anahata.c
I know I'm skipping all over, Lucinda, and it's no reflection on your most recent shots---not at all (I love all your pieces)---I'm just trying to get back to things I've seen but haven't commented on yet. This was striking because it was a beautiful, murky, mysterious, and heaving shot of something which, from the air, had great visual mystery & beauty. But from the ground, of course, it was a devastation. It's hard to enjoy the look of this photo, knowing what it is; but still, if we step away from the disaster and just see it as a visual, it's quite mysterious & beautiful. There are actually lots of layers there, deep layers (from the horrible oil), and you caught lots of subtle glimpses into the impenetrable parts as well as the more penetrable parts. Plus it's wonderful to see the light go from bright on top to dark on the bottom, it moves like a painting from light to dark. A beautiful shot of a horrible event, and so you've given us art & reportage all at once. More thoughtful work from you, Lucinda. I hope your visit was (or still is) fine. I'll be back again soon, it's always a pleasure to come to your gallery once more...