Thursday, January 26, 2012

View from the Bridge

General contractors Slayden and Sundt have been on-site and construction has been underway for a couple of months now at the Sellwood Bridge. Here's a photo from this morning, Thursday Jan. 26th, taken from the bridge looking down at the barge which sits near the west side of the Willamette River.  The huge crane on the barge was being used to shift a pile of the wooden structures that are used to create walkways among the tall brown pipes standing in the water.  In this photo, a worker guides one of the walkway pieces as the crane lowers it onto a pile of several more pieces.

Friday, January 20, 2012

Sellwood Bridge Before Re-Construction (Slideshow)



These are several photos from my slideshow on the history of the Sellwood Bridge.  Click on this LINK to see the whole slideshow, photographed just before the construction crews arrived in December 2011.  (It will open in youtube on another webpage.)  The slideshow includes narration by Sharon Wood Wortman, Portland's Bridge Lady and author of The Portland Bridge Book.  (Click here for Sharon's website.)

Wednesday, January 18, 2012

Sound Engineering Principles, Lesson 1

"Sound engineering principles" could be a reference to my civil engineering background, but here I'm actually talking about "sound engineering", that is, working with audio recordings.  In Lesson 1 here, check out an example of audio editing, and what a difference it makes in a recording of an interview.
What is Audio Editing?
Let's face it, a lot of people say a lot of stuff that you're not interested in.  Let me re-phrase that.  If you're taking the time to listen to a recording of someone speaking, you want to hear the most natural-sounding, yet clear and concise version possible, of what they have to say.  So if someone naturally tends to say "um" and "ah" frequently, how do you get a recording of that person's voice to sound clear and concise?  Audio editing, of course.  Load a digital recording into an audio editing program and cut out the parts that you don't want to hear.

Click on the (very light gray) link below to listen to a short example from a life history interview that I recorded.  Prior to editing, you'll hear how the speaker often says "um".  When I edited the recording, I removed a lot of that.  Notice how that makes the segment much easier to listen to.

Monday, January 16, 2012

Out In the Cold

The day I took this photo, it was about 10 degrees outside, in January of 2007, in Westwood, MA.  I had just started a monthly contract with S.P.S. New England, Inc. taking construction documentation photos for a highway interchange project.  I hardly noticed the cold weather that day because I was out doing something I enjoy - taking pictures of machines, dirt, concrete structures, bright orange barrels, etc.  And I actually enjoyed the challenge of trying to find the required number of photos on-site, considering there wasn't a lot to see right at the beginning of the project.

Saturday, January 14, 2012

A Long History of Photographing Bridges

For years I've been fascinated by construction sights and bridges, and I do mean construction "sights" because that's been a frequent subject of my photography.  I'm originally from Massachusetts, where I spent a lot of time in the city of Lowell.  The Merrimack River flows through Lowell, and six bridges cross it.  This is a photo of the walkway on the Rourke Bridge, also sometimes referred to as "the temporary bridge".  It's been around since the 1980's - not so temporary after all. 


In 2008, I received a Cultural Grant from the city of Lowell for a project called Lowell Bridges, for which I photographed the six Merrimack River bridges and coordinated a design assignment for a drafting class at nearby Tyngsborough Regional Technical High School.  My efforts culminated in a photo show at a National Park facility in Lowell, where I also exhibited the plan drawings created by the high school class.  This isn't one of the shots from that show, but it is one of my favorites of this particular bridge.