Photo of the Day: 6 October 2015

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Happy Tuesday Everyone!

Today is the one-month anniversary of Shoestring Filter! For today, I decided to continue with another photograph taken in Old San Juan, Puerto Rico. I love visiting Puerto Rico not only because I get to see my extended family, but it is just such a vibrant and lively place that every time I go, I experience something new. Sometimes it’ll be a new flavor of piraguas, sometimes it’s an engaging conversation with a shop owner in Old Town; the possibilities are endless.

– Hazel

Photo © 2015 Hazel Arroyo

Photo of the Day: 5 October 2015

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Happy Monday Everyone!

Today’s vibrant photo was taken in Old San Juan, Puerto Rico. Old San Juan perfectly exemplifies the spirit and culture of Puerto Rico: vibrant, joyful, and inclusive. Unknown to most, Puerto Rican culture is a melting pot of Taíno, European, African, Caribbean, and American cultures and traditions. From the food we eat to the music we play, there are elements of each culture infused into our costumbres. While I have lived my entire life on the mainland of the United States, Puerto Rican culture is alive and well in my home and in my blood. I will always be proud of my boricuas.

– Hazel

Photo © 2015 Hazel Arroyo

Photo of the Day: 4 October 2015

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Happy Sunday Everyone!

Today camouflaged in the center of the image, we have a snake that was taken at Iroquois National Wildlife Refuge in Basom, New York. My best friend and I had been looking to get away from Buffalo for a few hours and just take in some fresh air during midterms, so we decided to get out to Iroquois. We were just on our way out on one of the trails and my friend caught sight of this little guy. It was a great ending to a nice little hike.

– Hazel

Photo © 2015 Hazel Arroyo

Photo of the Day (3 October 2015)

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Happy Saturday Everyone!

This morning we have a Pied-Billed Grebe in non-breeding plumage. The Pied-Billed Grebe’s loud vocalization makes it sound very similar to the Yellow-Billed Cuckoo, despite their wildly different behaviors and habitats. Pied-Billed Grebes very rarely fly – when in danger, they actually dive up to 20 feet underwater. Have a great weekend everyone!

– Hazel

Photo © 2015 Bryan Arroyo

Photo of the Day (2 October 2015)

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Happy Friday Everyone!

This picture shows a different side to The Burren in County Claire Ireland. This beautiful sandy beach is located in Fanore in County Claire. I had never seen anything like it before in my life. The sand is a mixture of black and brown sand. Just down the way, there is a grassy hill with more of the limestone that is common in The Burren. I could sit there all day watching the waves come in and be perfectly content. Have a great end to the week everyone!

– Hazel

Photo © 2015 Hazel Arroyo

Photo of the Day (1 October 2015)

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Happy Thursday Everyone!

This morning we revisit the Everglades with a picture of an American Crocodile. Contrary to popular belief, the American Crocodile is not very aggressive and attacks from them are rare. It is like any other animal, when it feels threatened it will attack. Reasonable precautions and distance keep us in harmony with this and many other species that share our living space.

– Hazel

Photo © 2015 Bryan Arroyo

Leamaneh Castle and Máire Rúa

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I took this picture at the Cliffs of Moher when I went to Ireland. The Cliffs are located in and area of County Claire known as The Burren. The Burren is an area that has limestone embedded in the ground making for a bare and vast, yet immensely beautiful landscape. There are several castles throughout the surrounding area but the story of one in particular was told to me several times by the locals.

Leamaneh (Lemeneagh) Castle is located between Corofin and Kilfenora. In 1639, Conor O’Brien, the man who owned the castle at the time, married a woman by the name of Máire ní Mahon. Máire had bright red hair and was commonly known as Máire Rúa (translates to ‘red Mary’). Máire Rúa had already been married once before but her husband had died while they were still young, leaving her with a substantial estate and fortune, which allowed her and her next husband, Conor to build a mansion on to the tower house of Leamaneh Castle. During this time, Máire came into a beautiful white horse and famously wouldn’t allow anyone else to ride it. (I promise this will come into play later, so remember it). When Cromwell’s armies came from England during the Cromwellian War of Ireland, Conor fought on the side of the Royalists and was mortally wounded. His comrades carried him as he was dying back to Leamaneh castle and called for Máire to let them in. Believing Conor to be dead already, she is alleged to have told them ‘dead men have no place here’. When they finally convinced her that Conor was still alive, she let them in and tended to her husband, but he still succumbed to his wounds and died that night. Realizing that the Leamaneh would be taken away because Conor had fought against Cromwall, she got dressed in her finest gown (and according to the locals, put her best Wonderbra on) and rode to Cromwall’s men. She then entered and announced that she would marry any Cromwallian officer who would have her hand. She then married Cornet John Cooper and was then able to keep Leamaneh Castle and its estate. Apparently, Máire wasn’t exactly fond of Cooper and had only wanted to keep the estate. One day she called Cooper to meet her at the stables and offered him a ride on her horse, a ride that Cooper gladly accepted. Once Cooper and the horse had ridden a ways off, Máire whistled a fierce whistle and suddenly the horse took off galloping. Legend then has it that the horse ran off the edge of The Cliffs of Moher, with Cooper still on it. With Cooper out of the way, Máire and her children then lived at Leamaneh and the estate was passed down through generations until the house fell into ruin in the 18th century.

– Hazel

Photo © 2015 Hazel Arroyo

Photo of the Day (30 September 2015)

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Happy Wednesday Everyone!

This morning we have ornate trays that were stacked at the Buddhist temple, Wat Benchamabophit Dusitvanaram in Bangkok, Thailand. Wat Benchamabophit is also known as the Marble Temple and is well known for its ornate architecture and fixtures. There are so many beautiful areas in this temple that I’m sure this will not be the last photo that we share from Wat Benchamabophit. Have a great day everyone!

– Hazel

Photo © 2015 Bryan Arroyo

Photo of the Day (29 September 2015)

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Happy Tuesday Everyone!

Today we have a Snowy Egret (Egretta thula) from Bombay Hook National Wildlife Refuge in Smyrna, Delaware. In the past, the plumage of the Snowy Egret was highly sought after for use in hats and the populations dwindled quickly to dangerous levels. It all turned around for the Snowy Egret in 1918 when they became protected under the Migratory Bird Treaty Act of 1918. They have since rebounded the population to a ‘Least Concern’ conservation status.

– Hazel

Photo © 2015 Bryan Arroyo

6 Ways to Free Yourself from Photographer’s Block

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At one point or another, we’ve all gotten into a creative rut. Sometimes it just feels like you’ve run out of things to photograph. Sometimes you just don’t feel like taking pictures anymore. I’m willing to bet that deep down, we know it’s not true but we just don’t know what to do next. We feel lost in the creative doldrums. Here are some of the ways that I try to avoid getting stuck with photographer’s block:

1. Start with what is closest to you.

Take pictures of things around your house, apartment, room, backyard, street, park across the street, etc. Take pictures of anything and everything. If you’ve already done this, make it more challenging for yourself; make it so that you obscure what the subject is.

2. Focus in on a specific element.

Follow some sort of theme whether it is looking for a specific type of texture, or a pattern, or a color. Try it in a variety of scenarios and locations and see how you can carry the element from photo to photo.

3. Experiment with your camera and/or photoshop. 

Have you never touched the ISO settings? Don’t know what changing your white balance will do? Start playing around with it. Learn about what it does and then find situations to test out the full spectrum of the function. Have you never used like 80% of the functions available in photoshop? Try them all out and play around with your favorites. Maybe you like using some of the artistic filters or playing around with hues; if you don’t try, you’ll never find out.

4. Try out new equipment.

Find a camera store or service that allows for camera equipment rentals. Try out a niche piece of equipment like a fish-eye lens, or filters, or a macro lens with a tripod and give it a go. I would recommend researching before going, not only to know how the equipment works before receiving it to save you time, but also make sure that if you are doing something like renting out a lens, you rent one that is compatible with your camera body.

5. Change the venue.

Check out all of the photos that you have taken in the last year. Now see where they all register geographically. Have you been photographing 10 square miles for a year? Maybe it’s time to try somewhere new. That’s not to say that you need to fly halfway around the world (although it would probably be amazing). Maybe it’s a matter of going to an area of town you’ve never photographed before. Or maybe there’s a mountain with great hiking trails an hour’s drive away. Change it up.

6. Try a different photography style. 

Do you consider yourself a nature photographer? Try your hand at street photography. Have you only taken pictures of people? Try taking some wildlife or still-life photographs. You never know what styles you might enjoy working with, and who knows, maybe the eye that you have developed doing one type of photography can make for an interesting take on a different genre of photography.

Happy Photographing!

– Hazel

Photo © 2015 Hazel Arroyo