jewelweed: (Default)
jewelweed ([personal profile] jewelweed) wrote2008-06-15 10:17 pm

Okay, I am sort of new to digital cameras....

I am not at all sure how to sharpen this image, but this is a start.

Below are some snaps taken on Crane's Beach this weekend where I lounged and ate strawberries with [profile] martha_m
The self-portraits were basically me pointing the camera at myself blindly and clicking.  I need to find a better method--this one resulted in me having to delete dozens of shots of my shoulder (I kept a few since they made my shoulders look cute).

Picture taking advice is welcome!

Me on the beach, wearing a hatInscription in the sand

[identity profile] trillian-stars.livejournal.com 2008-06-17 02:40 pm (UTC)(link)
I too love large, floppy sunhats!

And I have the Milford biography of Millay. I find biographies of poets somewhat problematic, because I'd so much rather see them through their poetry, without having them dissected through a 21st century biographer's gaze. Millay's poetry gives one such a living, breathing image of who she was, it's hard to see some of the mystery and beauty of her life removed. Generally, I love biographies... particularly of the old stage actors of the 19th and early 20th centuries.

Kyle gave me Milford's biography of Zelda, which I'm really looking forward to reading. Have you read it?

[identity profile] hotel-jewelweed.livejournal.com 2008-06-17 03:17 pm (UTC)(link)
I read it quite a long time ago and would love to reread it.

Old stage actors of the 19th and early 20th centuries? Let me know what you have found that is good. I would love to find good biographies of Sarah Bernhardt, Lily Langtry, Ellen Terry, etc.

If you like Colette (somehow I suspect you do...), you might like Secrets of the Flesh by Judith Thurman. I feel though as you do about Millay's biographies when it comes to Colette-- nobody writes better about her than she does herself. Who needs anything else? Still, Thurman's book is quite good.