Archive for November, 2009

Strange man seen prancing with dry cleaning.

It’s a truism that Wisconsin is weird. And it doesn’t get much weirder than this.

klinkeman

1 Comment

Hot Dog

Madison Wisconsin might be just the kind of place where you’d find a hot dog on the railroad tracks. At least it might just be the kind of place where you’d find some nutjob out taking a photograph of a hot dog on a railroad track. Or under a car tire.

hot-dog

No Comments

Facebook Connections

The Tadsen Photography website is now fully linked to the Tadsen Photography fan page on Facebook. Facebook is quickly becoming a sort of virtual town square and gathering place for nearly every everyone. Tadsen Photography spends quite a bit of time on Facebook and hopes that if you are not a member that you will sign up soon. The front page of the website now has a Facebook link that connects directly to the Tadsen Photography fan page, and the “Links” page now has a very fancy Facebook interface called a “fan box.” If you are on Facebook and haven’t become a fan of Tadsen Photography, please take a moment to do so. If you are not on Facebook, well, what are you waiting for? facebook

, , , ,

No Comments

Photographing the President

It isn’t often the the President of the United States comes to Madison, Wisconsin. As a matter of fact it was apparently Harry Truman who last did so. So when I heard that Barack Obama was going to be at Wright Middle School here I called in all my favors and got press access to the event. Previously I’d photographed the President in Green Bay and knew that I wanted to be able to get tighter pictures of him this time, so I rented and enormously expensive 600mm lens from Calumet in Chicago.  The lens arrived early on the morning of the President’s appearance.

Lens in tow, a fellow photographer and I had sweaty palms as we moved past all the police barracades up to the Secret Service checkpoint. There was always this sense that maybe we would not get it somehow. But we succeeded. Once inside there was a terrible crush in the press section, which was way in the back of the gymnasium on some low risers. Everybody had an idea of what territory they were going to stake out and, in order to hold that territory one had to literally stand in place for two hours.

Once the president arrived it was go-time, a frenzy of attempting to shoot at the exact right moment, keeping the autofocus rectangle on the bridge of the President’s nose, recomposing and then firing off volleys of shots. The buffer on my camera soon filled up as my camera isn’t really optimized for sports shooting, and I would have to wait for the images to write to the card. Despite all of the visual and technical machinations occupying my mind I was able to listen to the speech, which I found to be articulate, intelligent and moving.  I am very much a fan of our President.

Barack Obama

IMG_1092obama1IMG_1596

Me with the venerable Canon 600mm f/4 IS L

Me with the venerable Canon 600mm f/4 IS L

, , , , , ,

1 Comment