Tower Hill at Night β ep. 1
Explore Tower Hill at Night - a series that showcases stunning winter light displays and innovative plant exhibits.
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Explore Tower Hill at Night - a series that showcases stunning winter light displays and innovative plant exhibits.
The post Tower Hill at Night – ep. 1 appeared first on Dutch goes the Photo!.
Embrace Sunday Serenity as a day to relax and recharge your mind and body with autumn's beautiful hues.
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In Monday's Spectrum Exploration with Infrared Photography we see how infrared captures reveal the unseen beauty of landscapes.
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The nature of travel filled with the joy of discovery and connection. Iceland captivates me with its stunning landscapes and resilient culture. The post highlights the unique Icelandic horse.
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Today, we go for a lighthearted offering of a joyful selfie taken during a photography tour in Iceland's capital, Reykjavik.
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We look back to an older photograph that still evokes nostalgia and a sense timelessness.
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Experiencing the aurora borealis in Iceland was unforgettable, yet witnessing such phenomena from my backyard also brings joy.
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The New England Botanic Garden at Tower Hill is transformed into a dazzling display of lights and sculptures.
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We enjoy the serene experience of photographing a sunrise at Valley of Fire State Park, capturing Elephant Arch.
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Getting ready to capture Egypt’s landscapes and culture always is filled with more last minute items than I had planned
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Another playful exploration of the architectural aspects of the magnificent Harpa Concert Hall of Reykjavik
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In the coming weeks, I will be exploring Egypt, so here's a taste from last year's trip.
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The journey may be lengthy, but it's rewarded with a fantastic Chinese meal in Egypt at China Red restaurant.
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Anticipating another visit to the Grand Egyptian Museum, excited to see the difference of a year in its development.
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Today we marvel at the sailing felucca on the Nile, experiencing a rich blend of history and serenity
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Rudyard Kipling was right!
“San Francisco has only one drawback — ’tis hard to leave.”
I thought I would be here for two years, maybe. And then go back to New York. And here I am, still here. The city has given me more than I have given it. The rush of a modern gold rush. Friendships. Little chance meetings that transformed who I am as a person. People have come, people have gone.
Booms. Busts. Booms. Busts. Booms.
Still here!
Charles Moore, School of Architecture, UCLA, said that “one of the basic human requirements is the need to dwell, and one of the central human acts is the act of inhabiting, of connecting ourselves, however temporarily, with a place on the planet which belongs to us and to which we belong.”
23 years later, it looks like I have found that place. I don’t yearn to leave.
23 years ago my biggest regret was missing opening day at Yankee Stadium. Today, the Yankees are opening their season at the Giants’ stadium. Everything comes full circle.
March 25, 2026.






“One should not only photograph things for what they are, but for what else they are.” — Minor White
I have not been out in the wild making landscapes for a while now. Almost a year. However, I have found new subjects to explore. San Francisco, obviously, remains my favorite muse. California is my darling. But at home, I have been exploring how to push myself creatively. And one arena I have been exploring is fountain pens — my other lifelong hobby.
I write with them. I cherish them. I collect them. What I wasn’t doing was photograph them.
I also found that most fountain pen photography is quite boring. The sameness of it. Product shots, meant more for a sale than for enhancing the beauty of objects so lovingly created. I wanted to do something different. More abstract. More me.
As the philosopher Dōgen said: “Not to seek reality apart from appearances, nor to cling to appearances as reality.”
I am trying. In the process, learning. To find beauty in the things I use to create words, which have a beauty of their own.

Two new tools have made this possible.
My friend Kiran Karnani of Harlowe sent me a couple of small portable lights — the Sol — that attach to the iPhone via MagSafe. LEDs with the ability to change color and temperature. With two of them, you can muck about with color, with shadow, with the way light wraps around a hard object and makes it feel alive. I don’t intend to become a macro expert. But these lights give me enough control to mean what I’m doing.

The second tool is a ShortStache Shift Diopter made by PolarPro. They sent me review units in 49mm and 82mm sizes. I have been using the 49mm version in combination with my Leica Q3 43, which has a built-in macro mode. A diopter, to put it simply, is a close-up lens — a secondary optical element you screw in front of your lens. It reduces the minimum focus distance and increases magnification, letting you get closer than your lens could otherwise focus. Particularly useful for macro work. Shift diopters come in three strengths — +2, +4, +8 — each pulling you closer to the subject. (I also have a Leica ElPro e52, and will do a comparison separately.)
Shift diopters opened creative possibilities I didn’t expect. The selective focus, the way sharpness falls away at the edges — it isn’t a technical compromise. It’s an aesthetic choice. I decide what matters, and the rest becomes part of the abyss.
It is an edit. Just like writing itself.

What I am really trying to do and in the process understand is how much of my approach to landscape photography translates to pens. Can I get to the very essence of their existence — not the whole object, but the fragments that tell the story? The light catching a section of celluloid until it stops being “pen” and becomes color, curve, depth.
The most important thing I keep reminding myself: leave something unexpressed. Give the viewer room to imagine the landscape. Rather than show it all.
I want to make pen photographs that feel that way. Nothing resolved. Nothing explained.
“In all things, irregularity is intentionally preferred.” — Yoshida Kenkō, Essays in Idleness



March 30, 2026, San Francisco