Photography is the documentation of life, once that shutter has clicked, the moment has passed and history is made. Some may be familiar with project 365, a simple concept, take a photograph everyday for 365 days. This blog is an extension of the project; the goal is to keep photographing every day, who knows how long? It is an excellent archive to look back on, see how things change. Change can be subtle, such as different coloured flowers being planted each year to a changing landscape with buildings being demolished and new ones built. This blog archives life’s diversity and my encounters.

Tuesday, October 28, 2014

2014 Week 43 Photos

2014 Week 43 Photos
By Corey Lablans Photography


(21th week, Year 2 – 511 days)

2014 10 20 – Students walk alongside Stauffer Library on University Avenue on a rainy fall day.
(Nikon D300 w 50 f1.8 @50mm f4 1/250th I.S.O. 400) 

2014 10 21 – A student walks in front of a transport truck parked beside Dunning Auditorium off University Avenue. Meyers Transport is an Ontario trucking company with over 85 years of service.
(Nikon D300 w 50 f1.8 @50mm f3.2 1/500th I.S.O. 800) 

2014 10 22 – A construction workers is seen in one of the empty windows of the new residence being built on Leonard Field. The second of the two new residence buildings is located at the corner of Stewart and Albert Street.
(Nikon D300 w 70-200 f2.8 @200mm f8 1/320th I.S.O. 400) 

2014 10 23 – A silver maple hangs amongst a tree during its final days as winter approaches. This maple sometimes is referred to as a “water maples,” because it can be found along waterways and in wetlands.
(Nikon D300 w 50 f1.8 @50mm f3.5 1/3200th I.S.O. 200) 

2014 10 24 – The stars are seen in the background behind the camping cabins at the Herkimer Diamond KOA Resort. The village of Herkimer is named after Nicholas Herkimer, the son of German settler Johan Jost Herchheimer. They both settled in Kingston, Ontario in 1784 after the American Revolution.
(Nikon D300 w 17-35 f2.8 @22mm f5.6 25sec. I.S.O. 400)

2014 10 25 – A mother looks for Herkimer Diamonds along the dolostone ledge at the KOA Herkimer Diamond Mine, mine #1. They are not real diamonds; they are double terminated quartz crystals that grow in pockets, with a diamond shape.
(Nikon D300 w 70-200 f2.8 @160mm f3.5 1/3200th I.S.O. 400)

2014 10 26 – A member of the Kingston Lapidary and Mineral Club hammers away at the Cambrian dolostone near Middleville, New York hoping to find Herkimer Diamonds.
(Nikon D300 w 70-200 f2.8 @70mm f3.5 1/500th I.S.O. 400)
THANK YOU
Corey Lablans
cldailyphotos@gmail.com

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