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.

Saturday, October 10, 2015

2015 Week 40 Photos

2015 Week 40 Photographs
By Corey Lablans Photography
(18th Week, Year 3 – 854 days – 1 missed) 

2015 09 28 – Queen’s University students attend an information meeting about the Queen’s chapter of the Society of Economic Geologist (SEG). The society establish in 1919, as a group from the Geological Society of America who were interested in economic geology.

(Nikon D7000 w 50 f1.8 @50mm f2.4 1/100th I.S.O. 800) 

2015 09 29 – A student makes her way across 5th Field Company Lane as it downpours. Approximately 22.8 mm of rain came down as a cold front swept through changing the temperate from the 20’s to the lower teens.

(Nikon D7000 w 50 f1.8 @50mm f3.2 1/1600th I.S.O. 800) 

2015 09 30 – A students is handed a BeaverTail, a fried dough pastry. There are a wide variety of different BeaverTails now from the basic with cinnamon sugar to fancier ones like Oreo and Score.

(Nikon D7000 w 50 f1.8 @50mm f3.5 1/640th I.S.O. 250)


2015 10 01 – Students make their way along the path between Kingston Hall and Nixon Field with Theological Hall in the background.

(Nikon D7000 w 50 f1.8 @50mm f3.5 1/2500th I.S.O. 200)


2015 10 02 – Alf, Johnathan and I stayed in the 3rd cabin at the Herkimer Diamond KOA Resort in Herkimer, New York. Across the road is the Herkimer Diamond mine where you can collect double terminated quartz crystals.

(Nikon D300 w 17-35 f2.8 @35mm f2.8 1/160th I.S.O. 800) 

2015 10 03 – Wedges are in place as a gentleman works on splitting dolostone at the Herkimer Diamond Mine in Herkimer, New York. Located above the wedges is a Herkimer Diamond, a double terminated quartz crystal.

(Nikon D300 w 17-35 f2.8 @30mm f2.8 1/1600th I.S.O. 400) 

2015 10 04 – A couple work at removing large pieces of dolostone (similar to limestone) from the “bench rock,” a section that contains some of the best Herkimer Diamonds.

(Nikon D300 w 50 f1.8 @50mm f2.8 1/4000th I.S.O. 200)

THANK  YOU
Corey Lablans
cldailyphotos@gmail.com

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