I guess it is all in what you are looking at in the picture.  Some saw
the wide expanse of water and could imagine standing in the boat
looking out and other saw...someone zonked out in a not too flattering
position.  Fortunately it is not a close family relation.

Bruce


Wednesday, July 28, 2004, 3:36:26 PM, you wrote:

KW> Heh, heh, heh...
KW> I wasn't going to say anything, Ann, but since you already have, I'll chime
KW> in with my comments...
KW> Hardly a lady-like pose, I must say.

KW> If it was your daugher, likely she's already killed you! Two years ago you
KW> say? Okay, she's never seen it. Keep it that way!  <g>
KW> If it was your wife, what year do you get to pull the blankets off the couch
KW> again... Or, hasn't she seen it either?  KITW...
KW> If it was a friend, or a friend's lady, I'd not show it to any of them, either.

KW> Above all, don't tell the subject it just went out on an international
KW> camera list...

KW>     Whew.

KW> keith whaley

KW> Ann Sanfedele wrote:

>> Bruce Dayton wrote:
>> 
>>>This image was taken a couple of years ago while we were traversing a
>>>portion of Lake Powell in southern Utah.  I was standing there driving the
>>>boat and saw this perspective.  I had to shoot one handed while still
>>>steering the boat.
>>>
>>>www.daytonphoto.com/PAW/0093-05.htm
>>>
>>>Taken with a PZ-1p, F 17-28 fisheye zoom, Konica Impressa 50
>>>
>>>Enjoy,
>>>
>>>Bruce

>> Geez, Bruce - is that girl on the left still
>> talking to you?
>> 
>> I'm sort of in favor of saving fish eye lenses for
>> fish - certainly   not friends.
>> 
>> Although on the whole it captures the horror of
>> the man made lake -
>> to me, one of the saddest places in the southwest
>> (whether it be Powell or Mead)
>> 
>> Hope you take this in good fun mode - but I'm out
>> of here tomorrow night
>> so I'll never know if this started a anything :)
>> 
>> annsan



Reply via email to