Papuan Sunset by Mangiwau aka Michael Thirnbeck – Top Orange Gallery

by Yancey Grantham

During the last part of July, 2008, Manam volcano, in Papua New Guinea sent low-level plumes 2.4 km (8,000 ft) into the sky where the volcanic ash drifted WNW.1

As observed by photographer Michael Thirnbeck, “After the sun went over the horizon there was this special orange glow in the clouds. I suspect the strong colours were partially due to the effect of volcanic ash emitted into the sky from erupting Manam volcano to the east in neighboring Papua New Guinea.”

Michael took advantage of the orange ash glow and photographed the surreal clouds. I asked him how many pictures he took during this shoot. “It was such a spectacular sunset that I took around 150 photos during the sunset period. So I still have to check if there are any other good shots.”

Now that is some serious bracketing. I regularly ask artists how many pictures they took of a subject and I usually get about a dozen. This is more like it, over 150 photos means it will be harder to find the best ones but it also means there is more of a chance of getting great shots.

Michael described what was going on around him when he took the picture.

I was standing in a small elevated clearing beside the one and only road in the area. I had come to this remote part of Papua province to pay my respects to a recently deceased tribal leader in Usku village, about 130km south of Jayapura. I was by myself just enjoying the sunset with camera in hand.

I have in the past attempted to get sunset photos from this location, whenever I happen to be in this area. And I’d noticed small flocks of birds, including cockatoos, would fly from a swampy lowland area to an adjacent area of jungle-clad foothills around the same time shortly after the sun set over the horizon. So I knew they were coming and prepared accordingly. Also I’d read about ropen sightings in nearby parts of PNG – so I’m always on the lookout for ropens.

It looks like this time the beautiful pictures were a result of patience, observation, and being prepared.

Michael uses a Canon EOS 40D. Below are the specs from this photograph.

Camera: Canon EOS 40D
Exposure: 0.003 sec (1/400)
Aperture: f/7.1
Focal Length: 250 mm
ISO Speed: 400

I asked Michael how he was able to get the birds silhouette so crisp with focus. He said, “The birds were a way off – I tried to focus on a tree canopy that was just below the birds flight path.”

I’ve used a technique similar to this before. You point the camera at something that it can focus on then slightly press the shutter button. On my camera, this locks in the settings and you can then move the camera around (while still keeping your finger slightly depressed on the shutter) until you are ready to take the shot you want. I am sure in the better cameras you can lock in the settings for taking multiple pictures. I can’t see Michael pointing at the trees then shooting the sky 150 times. :-)

Besides taking pictures of the sky, Michael has a real talent for taking portrait shots. If you look through his photostream you will see what I mean. I wish someone could take my picture and have it look as good as some of his portrait shots. He seams to be able to capture more than just images when he takes pictures of people.

Michael told me what he liked about taking photographs. “Thanks for the nice comment. I like taking photographs to record my interaction with people and places and to capture any aura of fun I promulgate.”

I think that is the key there when Michael said, “my interaction.” In Michael’s photographs we are interacting too because his subjects welcome us in to being more than just observers.

Michael’s profile on flickrMichael’s photostream on flickr

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  1. Retrieved from Volcano World Website: http://volcanoworld.wordpress.com/2008/07/31/manam-papua-new-guinea-4/ []

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Orange Popsicles are not Weird, Purple Popsicle Declaired Weird @matt_legrand: @simbateman

by Yancey Grantham

Matt has chosen the orange popsicle because he does not want the purple tongue of the purple popsicle.

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Bubbly by recycledairplane aka Chris McIntosh with Nikon D80 Camera

by Yancey Grantham

Bubbly by Chris McIntosh

Yancey Comments:
The bubble of air, slides up the peddle tickling the flower making it laugh which juggles, releasing the bubble. Then another bubble starts sliding up the peddle…

Camera: Nikon D80
0.067 sec (1/15)
Aperture: f/16
Focal Length: 65 mm
ISO Speed: 100

Visit recycledairplane’s Photostream.
This photo is protected and used under the Creative Commons license.

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Orange Toenails, Orange Gas, and Crumbs from the Orange Bundt Cake – This Day’s Orange – August 14, 2008

by Yancey Grantham

Orange toe nails painted to cheer you up, we are driving orange cars or green cars that run on Orange scraps and fighting over the crumbs of the Orange Bundt Cake. It’s all being recorded on the Orange Flip.

Orange Picture of the Day

Calendula Raindrops by Audrey
by Audrey
Audrey’s Photostream
This photo is protected and used under the Creative Commons license.
 

Orange in Blogs

Orange You Glad? by goodfruit
Look! I got Orange Toes-ies with a flower on them and matching yarn!
I just thought, what the heck, let’s do something different.

For me, Orange is Very Different.

Orange in News

Making ethanol ‘lemonade’ out of bruised peaches and orange scraps by Sara Goodman for Earth News
By Sara Goodman. Climatewire: The self-proclaimed “Tastier Peach State,” otherwise known as South Carolina, may be on the cusp of taking its luscious, plentiful resource and putting a form of it into your car’s gas tank. …

Orange Product

Flip Video Ultra Series Camcorder, 60 Minutes (Orange)

Technical Details

* Simple to use, pocket-sized camcorder with one-touch recording and digital zoom
* Holds 60 minutes of full VGA-quality video on 2GB of built-in memory; no tapes or additional memory cards required
* Convenient USB arm plugs directly into your computer for easy viewing and sharing
* Built-in software lets you easily e-mail videos, upload to YouTube and AOL, and capture still photos from video
* Watch videos instantly on TV with included cable

Orange Recipe

Orange Bundt Cake by The Canadian Baker

Here’s another Bundt cake that I made recently. This orange cake may share the same shape as my previous cake but it is quite different in a couple ways.

Firstly, the preparation …

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Orange Road in Middletown, Connecticut, USA – Google Steet View – Orange Place – Orange Street

by Yancey Grantham


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Orange Road in Middletown Connecticut is only about 700 feet long. Click the arrow in the Google Street View and travel down Orange Road. Play I spy and spot something orange. There is something orange a little bit down the road.

The area is just East of Wadsworth Falls State Park and it is South of West Long Hill.

From Highway 17 also called S Main St, go West on Brush Hill Road. Turn North on Long Hill Road until it runs into Wesleyan Hills Road where you will need to turn left or West. Wesleyan Hills Road turns into Long Hill Road. Turn left or West onto Daniels St. Orange Rd is the only left or South turn about an eighth of a mile down Daniels.

Towns close to here include:

  • Long Hill
  • Bretton Heights
  • Middletown
  • Middlefield
  • Lakeridge Heights


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Orange Chicken Recipes – Video Cooking Steps – Orange Food

by Yancey Grantham

Orange Chicken, when done right, can be a fantastic flavorful way to prepare this dinner meal. Orange Chicken is a very popular dish with lots of variations on the recipe.

A popular fast food chain called Panda Express has an Orange Chicken recipe and if you search on “panda express orange chicken recipe” you will find this recipe is posted on over 1,000 web sites. I noted as I looked around that this variation was not rated that highly.

Allrecipes.com has this version of Asian Orange Chicken that has garnered 4 1/2 stars out of 5 with over 300 people voting. It’s important to read what others have experience when using a recipe. Many times the commenter will mention ideas that help to make the recipe better. Jeannette on Allrecipes.com added:

Great orange flavor – tastes similar to Applebees Crispy Orange Chicken. The following changes should improve texture… After frying chicken keep warm on baking sheet in oven. Reduce cornstarch to 2 tsp. and dissolve in 1 Tbsp. water before wisking into boiling sauce. Transfer chicken to serving platter and pour sauce over all. Don’t heat chicken in sauce or crispy coating will flake off into sauce. Broccoli, sweet peppers, carrots, snow peas, and/or scallions would be nice – may need extra sauce if adding veggies.

Blog Chef has a nice recipe that you can tell has his personal touch. It is not the same copied recipe that you see on so many sites. He suggests using Peanut Oil if you are cooking in a wok. I personally just use the oil in a large deep sided pan. Bobby of Blog Chef does a great job of making the recipe exciting and easy to follow. Bobby of Blog Chef’s recipe for Orange Chicken.

Sometimes a video helps, especially if you are new to cooking. Below you can enjoy the preparation of Orange Chicken with this video cooking class. Chinese Orange Chicken Recipe Video Recipe Video from mel4576 at iFood.TV.

powered by ifood.tv

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Orange Street, Indianapolis, Indiana, USA – Orange Place – Street

by Yancey Grantham


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Orange St in Indianapolis has been photographed by the Google Street View Van. In this challenge, click the West arrow on Orange St. and see how far you can go. Don’t run into the people walking on your right. ;-)

Orange St. is North of Beech Grove and West of Crossroad Temple. It is one block South of East Prospect Street. South Sherman Drive is the biggest road that intersects with it.

Never more than 2000 feet from railroads, Orange St is nearly surrounded.

Look closely at the map and you will see that there are several pieces of Orange Street in Indianapolis. It picks up again to the East on the other side of East Southeastern Avenue. It stops again but starts again to the East of South Emerson Avenue. Here, it is a block North of Terrace Avenue.

Orange Street in Indianapolis, Indiana is runs East/West with several less than 10 block spans. View the Satellite to see the nice homes along this Orange St.


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Strange Denizens of the Forest by Promethean aka Anthony Ricchi – Top Orange Gallery

by Yancey Grantham

Orange in nature, bright fungi in the woods, picture proof with “Orange Denizens of the Forest.”

The photographer, Anthony Ricchi is drawn to all bright colors and it was the mushroom’s orange intensity that attracted his attention.

This bright orange mushroom is believed to be Hygrocybe miniata which was first suggested by Rick Sanderson who said “Could possibly be Vermilion Waxycap (Hygrocybe miniata) which is edible, but without information on locality, habitat, gill-structure, spore print etc. ID is pretty iffy. Nice photo.”

While Anthony enjoys forest fresh fungi he cautiously did not eat our little orange friends.

Nothing excites my palette like the rich, distinctive flavor of mushrooms. Though I will eat most any edible mushrooms, it’s always fun to cook up freshly-gathered forest mushrooms, provided, of course, that the collector truly “knows their fungus.”

Even if Anthony had carried a field guide it would have still been best to leave this one off the culinary platter. The features that make this mushroom different from others like is are microscopic making it a fungi not suggested for eating unless you really know your Vermilion Waxycap.1

We had a little interview about this picture:

Yancey: What attracted you to take this photograph?
Anthony: What attracted me to these mushrooms was their vivid and unearthly color.

Yancey: Were you using a macro setting?
Anthony: Absolutely I was using a macro lens. No serious nature photographer should go into the field without one in their camera bag.

Yancey: Do you often crawl around on the forest floor?
Anthony: Yup. Too often I’m the guy coming out of the woods with the dirty knees and the camera.

Yancey: Was this hand held or tripod?
Anthony: Hand-held; though usually I work with a tripod.

Yancey: What do you like about this photo?
Anthony: I like that it doesn’t hold back on its orangeness.

Yancey: That is why it’s a great photo for the Top Orange Blog’s Gallery. Thanks for allowing us to show it.
Anthony: It’s my pleasure.

Camera: Canon EOS Digital Rebel XTi
Exposure: 0.005 sec (1/200)
Aperture: f/7.1
Focal Length: 100mm

Visit Anthony Ricchi’s flickr page to see his other works of photographic art.

If you enjoyed this artist interview, please leave a comment below.
Click here for more Yancey interviews.

  1. Kuo, M. (2007, January). Hygrocybe miniata. Retrieved from the MushroomExpert.Com Web site: http://www.mushroomexpert.com/hygrocybe_miniata.html []

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In Your Eye, Flamingo – Los Angeles Zoo by Ron Dubin – Top Orange Gallery

by Yancey Grantham

While working on the structure of the Top Orange Blog, I looked at other blogs that used the same theme. It was during one of these excursions when I ran face first into Ron Dubin’s Flamingo. I approached carefully; Ron, not the Flamingo, and asked if I could use his Flamingo picture in the Top Orange Blog’s Welcome page. That is how we caught the Flamingo.

Ron caught this picture of the Flamingo using his trusted Canon camera set at:
f/8
1/400s
ISO 100 at 200mm

It was a harsh noon day sun but Ron was within 25 feet of the Flamingos who were comfortable around humans because they live at the zoo. I asked Ron how often he goes to the zoo. “Rarely. This was my first trip to a zoo in a very, very long time. I’m not a big fan of zoos in general. I enjoy wildlife more when the subject has a chance to run or fly away. :)

Ron knows what it is like to photograph Flamingos in the wild. He photographed Flamingos in Bolivia during 2007 for the Minister of Tourism. Ron said that photographing the Flamingos in their natural environment made him aware of their beauty and grace.

Ron’s Pictures of Flamingo’s in Bolivia

Flamingos in the Shadow of a Chilean Volcano – Laguna Saquewa, Bolivia

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Four Flamingos – Laguna Colorada, Bolivia


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Two Flamingos – Laguna Colorada, Bolivia by Ron Dubin


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Flamingo Reflections – Laguna Saquewa, Bolivia

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Flamingo Flock In Flight – Laguna Saquewa, Bolivia

The pictures of the Flamingos in Bolivia inspire the nature lover in me. However, I’m glad Ron was able to get the closeup of the Flamingo at the Zoo. The orange in the photo is very rich. Ron likes “the fact that the light really burnished the color and (the color) jumps right out at you.”

When asked what he liked about this picture Ron replied “I like the lines, I like the yellow in flamingo’s eye (but that’s another blog.) :)

We’ll look forward to seeing more of Ron’s photography, possibly in the Top Yellow Blog, but until then, you can see more of Ron’s photography including his stunning pictures of Bolivia on his blog. Visit Ron Dubin Photography.

If you enjoyed this artist interview, please leave a comment below.
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Welcome to the Top Orange Blog!

by Yancey Grantham

Welcome to the Top Orange Blog where we will be talking about and looking at all things orange. Orange is the color of curiosity, fearlessness, luxury, restlessness, strength and youth. People who like orange are often fun-loving, flamboyant and enjoy socializing.

Color or Colour of Orange

A lot of yellow and a little red mixed together will make orange. Orange is between yellow and red on the visible spectrum. Azure or greenish blue is the complementary color of orange.

Orange Trees

The color orange is named after the fruit of the Orange Tree. In the Top Orange Blog we will pay tribute to the orange tree and explore it’s origins, uses, and growing techniques.

Orange time of Year

Orange is associated with the seasons in many parts of the world. Orange and harvest time are a common theme. Orange is one of the colors of Halloween during which kids have a custom of carving orange pumpkins. As the year goes by, we will address the importance of orange in celebrations.

Beta-Carotene

Why are carrots and other fruits and vegetables orange? The answer is the naturally occurring pigment beta-carotene, which is full of vitamin A. In carrots, the darker the orange, the more beta-carotene it has. Beta-carotene is an antioxidant that boosts immunity and helps protect the skin against damage. It is also known to prevent cancer, promote cell communication and oh ya, it helps you see better, go beta-carotene orange! There are thousands of other carotenes out there but our favorite is the beta-carotene.

Orange Business

We will look at orange companies like Orange at orange.co.uk, an internet provider in the United Kingdom. They have an orange logo, orange themed web site, orange colored ads, even an “Orange Day” activity. On “Orange Wednesday” if you subscribe to their service, they will give you two cinema tickets for the price of one. They have totally embraced orange.

Merigold Flowers and Nature

We’ll look at orange flowers including the wonderfully orange merigold. Originally from Central America, merigolds were “discovered” by Portuguese during the 16th century. We will learn about orange butterflies, ladybugs and the orange stink bug. We might even check out some Volkswagen orange bugs.

To the right is the photograph entitled, “In Your Eye, Flamingo.” In a future post, we’ll meet the artist, Ron Dubin, and learn his opinions on this orange creature photograph.

Orange Land

There are eight Orange Counties in the United States. Each one has many orange groups and companies. We will explore Orange Counties in California, Florida, Indiana, New York, North Carolina, Texas, Vermont and Virgina. We will watch the 2002 movie staring Jack Black and Colin Hanks called, “Orange County”. We might even watch the TV show called “The O.C.” where the O. and the C. stand for Orange County.

Australia has a city called Orange and it is in the state of New South Wales. France has a town called Orange that has been around from 35 BC. Orange in France was named during the Roman times.

International Orange

We fight wars with other nations and nobody is getting along with everybody ever. Is there anything we can agree on? How about the color for safety? It’s named International Orange and is used for safety reasons. You can see it the world over in safety situations like highway signs, on airports and on emergency vehicles. International Orange is also a spa in San Francisco and the name of a 2004 rock and roll band.

We are going to be orangragous, orangetastic, and on orange alert for everything orange at the Top Orange Blog.

Yancey Grantham and
The Orange Team at Top Orange Blog

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