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<p class="MsoBodyText"><span style="font-weight: 400"><font COLOR="#008080" SIZE="+1" 
face="Arial">
<marquee behavior="slide" bgcolor="#FFFFFF" border="0" loop="1" width="338" 
height="26">Apogee Photo Magazine </marquee></font></span></p>

<div class="dynamic-style-1">
	<div class="DIVDefaultParaStyle">
		<p class="Msoh1">
		<span class="dynamic-style-7"><font color="#000000">D</font></span><span class="dynamic-style-8"><font color="#000000">igital
		</font></span><span class="dynamic-style-7"><font color="#000000">T</font></span><span class="dynamic-style-8"><font color="#000000">ime: </font></span><span class="dynamic-style-10"><font color="#000000">
		<br>
		Take 
		a Clickin’
		and Keep on Tickin’</font></span></div>
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		<p class="Msobyline">
		<span class="dynamic-style-12"><font color="#000000"><br>
		<img border="0" src="image1.jpg" width="230" height="247" align="right">Text/Images </font>
		</span><span class="dynamic-style-13"><font color="#000000">Jim Austin 
		M.A.</font></span><span class="dynamic-style-14"><font color="#000000">
		</font></span></p>
		<p class="Msobyline">&nbsp;</div>
	<p class="MsoBodyText"><i><b>
	<span class="dynamic-style-2"><font color="#000000">“Creativity occurs in 
	the moment, and in the moment we are timeless.”</font></span></b></i><span class="dynamic-style-3"><font color="#000000"><i><b> 
	~ Julia Cameron</b></i><br>
	<br></font></span><span class="dynamic-style-4"><font color="#000000">Theoretical physicist Stephen Hawking announced his book,
	</font></span><span class="dynamic-style-5"><font color="#000000"><u><i><b>A Brief History of Time,</b></i></u>
	</font></span><span class="dynamic-style-4"><font color="#000000">in the 
	town of Cambridge in 1988</font></span><span class="dynamic-style-3"><font color="#000000">, 
	just underneath the sundial clock shown above. Hawking’s work changed how we 
	see time, proposing that at the birth of our universe, conventional time did 
	not apply. </font></span></p>
	<p class="MsoBodyText">&nbsp;</p>
	<p class="MsoBodyText"><span class="dynamic-style-3"><font color="#000000">Digital photography is full of time paradoxes. When I took a digital camera 
	to Cambridge, England, and stood on the King’s bridge at midnight, cathedral 
	clocks everywhere struck the hour. What is the paradox? Time, as measured by 
	clocks, seems linear and logical. But those of you who have read
	<a href="http://www.apogeephoto.com/oct2004/jaustin10_2004.html">my article 
	about time and tide</a> and have experienced time’s illusions, recognize that time is always present 
	in the art of digital imaging. We’ll explore four ways photographers 
	experience time.<br><br>Clocks package time. They give the illusion that it is specific, exact, and 
	the same everywhere. As photographers living in an information age, we 
	delude ourselves that measures of time are precise. It is just the opposite. 
	Ever since English writer H. G. Wells wrote his novel <b><u><i>The Time Machine</i></u></b> 
	in which the main character George traveled to the year 802,701, we’ve been 
	inspired to break free of linear time. <br><br>Einstein took the driver’s seat in H. G. Well’s time machine when he 
	proposed that time is relative. He showed us that Newton was mistaken.&nbsp; Time 
	is not the same everywhere. Einstein and Hawking suggest that time depends 
	on motion. The earth’s rotation causes time to dilate and speed up or slow 
	down for clocks traveling on planes moving with or against the rotation of 
	the earth. Time dilation is a fact. So, what we, as novice photographers, 
	were taught about time may be only the beginning. There are many kinds of 
	time that, in the language of <i><u><b>The Little Prince</b></u>,</i> are essential but 
	invisible to the eye. When we photograph, our eyes fish for images in the 
	rapids of split seconds and catch some of them in pools of timelessness. 
	Clock time is only a ripple on time’s surface.<br><br>As beginning photographers, we learned about time exposure and something 
	called a “decisive moment.” When you keep the camera’s shutter open for a 
	long time, that’s a time exposure. A peak action picture requires 
	split-second timing. </font></span></p>
	<p class="MsoBodyText">&nbsp;</p>
	<p class="MsoBodyText"><span class="dynamic-style-3"><font color="#000000">
	<img border="0" src="image2.jpg" width="340" height="319" align="left" hspace="10"></font></span></div>
<p class="MsoBodyText"><span class="dynamic-style-3"><font color="#000000">Photographer Henri 
Cartier-Bresson is credited with the term &quot;decisive moment&quot;--although his own 
title in French was &quot;<i>images a la sauvette</i>&quot; or &quot;images on the sly&quot; (he 
thought the term “decisive moment” ridiculous)--for a single moment when 
subject, time and place come together for meaningful images. We’ll call these 
two examples of shutter speed and peak action <b><font size="4">&quot;</font></b></font></span><span class="dynamic-style-6"><font color="#000000"><b><font size="4">Time 
1: Clock Time,&quot;</font></b> </font></span><span class="dynamic-style-3">
<font color="#000000">because they relate to time on the clock.</font></span><span class="dynamic-style-6"><font color="#000000">
<br>
<br>
</font></span><span class="dynamic-style-3"><font color="#000000">For example, 
time seems to have stopped in this picture of a girl doing a &quot;Mary Poppins,&quot; 
suspended above a street in Cambridge, England. Earlier, she was playfully 
leaping with a friend as they walked along. I smiled and asked her for one more 
jump, just for fun, then opened the shutter a split second before she reached 
the top of her leap. (Sports action and high-speed nature photography also 
require anticipation of peak moments. ) <br>
<br>
</font></span><b><span class="dynamic-style-15"><font color="#000000">TIP:</font></span></b><span class="dynamic-style-3"><font color="#000000"><b>
</b>Digital cameras offer an excellent tool to develop anticipatory skills. Once you 
have a memory chip, you can take thousands of pictures, and missed moments won’t 
cost you anything. You can make time exposures, drag the shutter and use flash, 
or make high-speed pictures. When you photograph with your digital, try as many 
different Clock Time exposures as you can. Shoot in the dark with a long 
exposure. Seek out bright sunlight and try a 1/2000th- of-a-second shutter 
speed. Practice seeing peak moments even when you don’t have your camera with 
you. </font></span></p>
<p class="MsoBodyText">&nbsp;</p>
<p class="MsoBodyText"><i><b><span class="dynamic-style-2">
<font color="#000000">“Time is not a line, but 
a series of now points.” </font></span><span class="dynamic-style-3">
<font color="#000000">~ Taisen Deshimaru</font></span></b></i><span class="dynamic-style-16"><font color="#000000"><i><b>
</b></i>
</font></span></p>
<p class="MsoBodyText">&nbsp;</p>
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		<img border="0" src="image3.jpg" width="127" height="145"><img border="0" src="image4.jpg" width="121" height="144"></font></span></td>
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		<img border="0" src="image5.jpg" width="225" height="311"></td>
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<p class="Msoh3"><span class="dynamic-style-6"><font color="#000000">Time 2: Double Time. </font></span></p>
<p class="MsoBodyText">&nbsp;</p>
<p class="MsoBodyText"><span class="dynamic-style-3">
<font color="#000000">You can overlap two pictures taken at two different times, 
using Adobe Photoshop CS2®. We’ll call this &quot;double time.&quot; You take two now 
points, put them together in Photoshop, and create a new now point. Photoshop’s 
layers make this possible. For instance, two pictures of punting on the river 
Cam in Cambridge were each placed on their own layer, blended, and then 
combined. The still water underneath the row of punts was hidden with a mask on 
a second layer.</font></span><span class="dynamic-style-17"><font color="#000000"> 
The larger image above shows the result.<br>
</font></span><span class="dynamic-style-18"><font color="#000000"><br>
<b>Tip:</b></font></span><span class="dynamic-style-17"><font color="#000000"> </font>
</span><span class="dynamic-style-3"><font color="#000000">Be sure to make the 
shadow direction and intensity of one image match that of the other picture. 
Make sure all the images from different times are part of a single, unified 
concept. For a good example of double time and multiple layers, look at the 
lifetime work of film photographer and darkroom master Jerry Uelsmann. </font>
</span><span class="dynamic-style-16"><font color="#000000"><br>
&nbsp;</font></span></p>
<p class="MsoBodyText"><span class="dynamic-style-3"><font color="#000000">Practicing double time, 
digital photographers can combine a black-and-white photograph from the 1880’s 
with one taken yesterday. There is no law that says an image has to come from a 
single moment in time. As you can see, double time can apply to any number of 
layers. Photoshop CS offers us more layers than most of us will ever use. </font>
</span></p>
<p class="MsoBodyText">&nbsp;</p>
<p class="MsoBodyText">&nbsp;</p>
<div class="DIVDefaultParaStyle">
	<p class="Msoh3">
	<span class="dynamic-style-6"><font color="#000000">Time 3: Melting Time</font></span><span class="dynamic-style-3"><font color="#000000">
	</font></span></p>
	<p class="MsoBodyText">&nbsp;</p>
	<p class="MsoBodyText"><i><b><span class="dynamic-style-2"><font color="#000000">“Why do 
	‘slow down’ and ‘slow up’ mean the same thing? Why is the third hand on the 
	watch called the second hand?”</font></span></b></i><span class="dynamic-style-3"><font color="#000000"><i><b> 
	~ George Carlin </b></i> <br>
	&nbsp;</font></span></div>
<div class="DIVNormal">
	<p class="MsoBodyText"><span class="dynamic-style-15"><font color="#000000">
	<img border="0" src="image6.jpg" width="307" height="289" align="left" hspace="10"></font></span><i><b><span class="dynamic-style-2"><font color="#000000">”Time flies like the 
	wind. Fruit flies like bananas. “ ~ Groucho Marx </font></span></b></i></div>
<div class="DIVDefaultParaStyle">
	<p class="MsoBodyText">
	<span class="dynamic-style-3"><font color="#000000"><br>
	When time melts, our personal time sense--normally a solid, stable part of 
	our day--dissolves. Salvador Dali, master of the melting moment, knew that 
	his portrait subjects would grow to look more like his paintings of them. 
	Dali understood that memory doesn’t follow linear time. Instead, it warps 
	time like a black hole warps space. Recall his melting clocks in his most 
	famous painting, &quot;The Persistence of Memory.&quot;&nbsp; Dali was not referring to 
	camera time or software, but to inner states of consciousness that tell us 
	time is an eternity, warped, like a movie scene, slo-mo, and frozen. Making 
	digital pictures, we are aware of time, but the camera experience is so fast 
	that projected reality slows down--or slows up, as George Carlin joked. <br>
	<br>
	</font></span><b><span class="dynamic-style-15"><font color="#000000">TIP:</font></span></b><span class="dynamic-style-3"><font color="#000000"> 
	Since everyone makes melting clocks with ®Photoshop CS using <b>FILTER &gt; LIQUIFY</b>, try for more subtle changes. For King’s College Cathedral from the 
	roof of St. Mary’s, I used <b>Filter &gt; Stylize &gt;</b> Wind to melt the cathedral. I 
	rotated the image 90 degrees to the right, adding a Wind Blast, and then 
	rotated it back. </font></span></p>
	<p class="MsoBodyText">&nbsp;</div>
<div class="DIVDefaultParaStyle">
	<p class="Msoh3"><span class="dynamic-style-6"><font color="#000000">
	<img border="0" src="image7.jpg" width="152" height="120" align="right">Time 4: Timelessness</font></span></p>
	<p class="MsoBodyText">&nbsp;</p>
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			<p class="MsoBodyText"><i><b>
	<span class="dynamic-style-2"><font color="#000000">“We have taken in 
	images... they are afloat within us... as they come out in different 
	combinations, images made in different points in time also become, in a 
	sense, timeless.”</font></span><span class="dynamic-style-3"><font color="#000000"> 
	~ Edmund Teske</font></span></b></i></p>
			<p class="MsoBodyText">&nbsp;</td>
		</tr>
		<tr>
			<td>
			<p class="MsoBodyText"><i><b><span class="dynamic-style-2"><font color="#000000">“I strayed 
	out of thought and time, and I wandered far on roads that I will not 
	tell…each day was as long as a life-age of the earth.”</font></span><span class="dynamic-style-6"><font color="#000000">
	</font></span><span class="dynamic-style-3"><font color="#000000">~ Gandalf, 
	Lord of the Rings</font></span></b></i></td>
		</tr>
	</table>
	<p class="MsoBodyText"><span class="dynamic-style-3"><font color="#000000">You have 
	felt timelessness when you knew that the photograph you just took was “right 
	on” or that you “nailed it.” This sense of rightness is confirmed when you 
	see the image on the screen or light table, but it was there from the moment 
	you took the picture. Of all the pictures on the memory chip, one or two 
	just felt right and are vividly remembered. Because you were so deeply into 
	taking the picture, and your awareness was with the scene--your “eyes on the 
	road” so to speak, you were not aware of the sand flowing through the 
	hourglass. Like Gandalf, your consciousness strayed out of thought and time.
	<br><br>I believe that this sense of timelessness is the essence of digital imaging. 
	For me, the experience of being time-free is vital, for it gives hope to 
	each day. <br><br>Clock time, double time, melting time, and timelessness follow a spectrum 
	from specific to the infinite and indescribable. From the sundial to the 
	hourglass to the pocket watch, we have tried to put time in a bottle. Like 
	the shadow of a sundial on a cloudy day, time’s passage is often invisible, 
	yet essential. <br><br></font></span><b><span class="dynamic-style-19">
	<font color="#000000">TIP:</font></span></b><span class="dynamic-style-3"><font color="#000000"><b>
	</b>If you find that your pictures are repeating or you are in a dry spell, 
	change your time concepts. Carry your camera everywhere, even to the grocery 
	store. Start from where you are standing. Give yourself time to see and 
	photograph the same scene over many years. Make pictures of each &quot;now&quot; 
	moment as if it were the last one you will see. Give yourself, in your mind, 
	an open period of time, and allow it to pass without a photography goal or 
	deadline. Let yourself observe one subject for a long time. Don’t wait; the 
	time will never be just right. <br>&nbsp;</font></span></div>
<blockquote>
	<p class="MsoBodyText"><i><span class="dynamic-style-20">
	<font color="#000000">
	<img border="0" src="image8.jpg" width="125" height="112" align="left" hspace="10"></font></span></i></p>
	<p class="MsoBodyText">&nbsp;</p>
	<p class="MsoBodyText"><i><span class="dynamic-style-20">
	<font color="#000000">James Austin is a 
digital photography teacher, consultant, and writer. He founded the Digital 
Thinking school of photography. His book on spiritual digital imagery, </font>
	</span><u><b><span class="dynamic-style-21"><font color="#000000">Dancing with Light</font></span></b></u><span class="dynamic-style-20"><font color="#000000">, 
is due out in 2005. An Adobe Certified Expert, he has written articles for 
Apogee and his website is <a target="_blank" href="http://www.jimages.com">www.jimages.com</a></font></span></i></p>
	<p class="MsoBodyText"><i><span class="dynamic-style-16">
	<font color="#000000"><br>&nbsp;</font></span></i></p>
</blockquote>

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