I got interested in photography in the 9th grade, 1980, the year I lived in Carlsbad, New Mexico. That was the first year I went to a school that had classes for "Gifted Kids." I think that's what they called them. Before AP college course classes in high school started, schools made some hard classes to keep the smart kids from getting so bored. So, I somehow decided taking high school senior level physics as a 9th grader was a good idea. I sucked at it. I squeaked out a B-C average, I think, but it was hard.
On the bright side, a couple weeks of the class was dedicated to shooting photos, so we could learn about light, and how images are made on film and then transferred onto photo paper. All of that is physics related. Then we actually developed black & white photos. That was cool. We had to go shoot some photos as homework. Our teacher, whose name I forget, told us there were two main ways to learn to shoot better photos. One was to pay $100 or so and take a photography course at the local community college or somewhere. The other way was to learn some basics (Rule of thirds, using foreground, basic composition ideas), and then to spend $100 on film, and just try to make every photo a little bit better than the last one. That idea stuck with me. While I couldn't shoot tons of photos in those days of expensive film, I did get to work making the most of my Kodak 110 Instamatic. I've been interested in shooting photos ever since, which is about 40 years now.
Now, with the internet and social media, everyone takes tons of photos, and most of them still suck. But between my zines, magazines, and blogs, I've had a bunch published here and there, and have captured really cool shots now and then. So here are the shots from my little photo snapping adventure through the lower part of the art park area, at the Newport Beach Civic Center. It parallels Avocado street, and is located at 100 Civic Center Drive, Newport Beach, California. It's about a block or two south of Fashion Island Mall.
Straight rails along the crooked path of life...
I just looked this place up on Google Maps, to get the address for the Civic Center. The rabbit circle in this photo is actually called "Bunnyhenge." Seriously. You can actually find it by searching "Bunnyhenge" on Google maps.
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