Morning Coffee and a Mimosa to Start the Day

Continuing the Kitchen Macro Challenge at Fine Art America

My participation in the “7 Day Kitchen Macro Images” challenge continues with my own “breakfast” theme interpretation of that challenge. Of course we start breakfast with a beverage, either hot or cold. My first images were of a pot of tea being brewed for my wife. Next up is coffee and a breakfast cocktail.

Brewing a Hot Cup of Coffee

The coffee at our home is normally from a K-Cup of a good blend and produced by a Keurig-style coffee maker. I do like one full cup to start the day – just the way it comes out of the bean – no sugar or cream(er).

On occasion we will also enjoy a breakfast cocktail, a Mimosa to be more exact. That gives us our dose of Vitamin C in the Orange Juice. Grape juice, too, right? LOL

The Champagne and OJ should be from the refrigerator. The glass should also be chilled. Here is a narrow Champagne-flute-style glass with a single ice cube chilling the rim. The image has been “adjusted” to bring out the shapes and edges with the dark background. It might even be considered to be an abstract. Regardless, the end result, the Mimosa, was just fine. Maybe even perfect.

Ice Chilling a Mimosa Glass

The following links will let you browse larger images and see the choices of wall art and home décor products on which they are available.

Link: Brewing Coffee With Expressionism

Link: Ice Cube in a Mimosa Glass

Brewing a Pot of Tea as Part of a Challenge at FAA

A pot of hot tea is a great way to begin the day – even with camera in hand.

Being a fairly active member of the art Discussions (forum) at Fine Art America I have been involved in several “Art Challenges” over the last year. These involve posting one new piece of art based on a theme, one piece per day for a set number of days. The Forum Moderator, Abbie (a talented painter and photographer), creates these challenges along with the help of another uniquely talented artist, Donna. These challenges help us, as artist-participants, focus for a period of time on a particular theme, which encourages new creativity. We all get to see how colleagues interpret the theme, creating a win-win activity for all involved.

The current challenge is “7 Day Kitchen Macro Images” and has about 30 guinea pigs, er – participants, creating close-up images of things in/around a kitchen. I started off with my morning kitchen routine of making a pot of tea for my wife and a cup of coffee for me. My only change in routine was to have my camera in hand affixed with a macro (close-up) lens. My first image was of the fire used to heat the teapot full of water.

Blue Flams heating the Tea Pot
An Expressionism view of blue gas flames heating a pot of water to make tea.

Yesterday, day #1 of the Challenge, I heated the water for a pot of tea – so today (day #2) I added in the tea bag. The teabag was easier to photograph than the gas flame because I didn’t have to put the camera right on the stove near the burners.

Tea Bag as a Charcoal Sketch
A traditional tea bag hanging by its string and presented as a simulated charcoal sketch.

I was able to hang the tea bag by its string and photograph it with a shallow depth of field to blur out the background, which is actually a brown wicker-back chair near a window. A tea bag, by itself, is rather plain so I edited this into a simulated charcoal sketch presentation.

Link: Blue Flames Heating Up the Teapot Expressionism

Link: Tea Bag Rendered in Charcoal

Tomorrow I will need to photograph a cup of coffee as it is being brewed. 🙂

Visit my FAA gallery at Bill Swartwout Photography.

First Flight and First Photo with the Mini SE

I managed to fly, perform basic maneuvers and land with no problems.

Enough snow melted so I could find some grassy areas and the wind died down – so I figured it was time to overcome my nerves and fly this thing. A long, long time ago I flew Radio Control airplanes and helicopters – and remember a lot of happenings (crashes?). This drone is much easier to control than what I remembered from the past. Much easier!

So, here is my first photograph (that looks like anything other than a test shot). I was 50 meters ( 165 feet) above our back yard and facing southeast toward Ocean City, Maryland. The high-rise buildings of Condo Row (just right of center) are about five miles away.

Drone View of Ocean City Skyline 750x300

The water in the foreground of the Ocean City Skyline is Assawoman Bay and the water on the horizon is the Atlantic Ocean. This look quite impressive as a semi-panorama 4,000 pixels wide by 1,600 high.

I did not want to put the drone on the grass for launch so I made a makeshift takeoff/landing pad from a piece of heavy cardboard reinforced with Styrofoam strips. I may waterproof and paint the cardboard to make a more permanent landing pad. Of course, if I paint an “H” in the center it may become my Heliport.

I first tried a short flight in a sheltered area on one side of our home. I did the “Auto takeoff” and hovered a bit right in front of me to check the drone over. I didn’t see anything out of the ordinary so I explored the controls. I went up and down a little and yawed left and right with the left stick. As I gained a bit of confidence I tried the right stick and propelled the aircraft forward, backward and to the each side. Next I took a short flight out and back and then proceeded to “Auto land” my new airship.

For a second flight I moved to the back yard where I had more “space” and figured I would expand my reach, so to speak, a bit higher and further. I hovered in place to make sure the drone could handle the slight breeze. It did, so I ascended to 50 meters (165 feet) and yawed in a circle a couple of times – all the while changing my gaze from the screen to the drone. I was impressed with what I could see and took a few pictures. The most interesting one, in the fading light, was the one posted above – the skyline of Ocean City, Maryland.

The batteries are charging now, as I type this, for my next adventure into the sky. So, of course, there is more snow in the forecast for tomorrow morning and I can hear the wind howling right now. I may have to practice continued patience – but I do not want to “push” anything until I am well experienced.