See, this is what happens when two nerds get married and have little boys.

Sunday, December 31, 2006

We've had lots of exciting events recently; Denise's sister Amanda was married last week, and our friends Rob & Kathryn had their baby boy this week. So, I've been taking a lot of pictures. I took about 4GB of photos (RAW format, about 400 photos) at the reception last night. It's difficult to do good candids though; poor uncontrolled lighting, people moving, etc. I would eventually like a 50mm f1.7 lens; there's no zoom, but they're amazing in lower light, do a great job with the blurred background that makes portraits great, and pretty cheap as far as lenses go. But until then, I turn up the ISO to 800 and put up with a lot of noise. Here's a few from this week:

Lichfield Family



































































Adam & Amanda Walsh Wedding
























Wednesday, December 20, 2006

Coolest picture of the night


I love macro!

James got me some macro filters for Christmas. This is a shot of one of the ornaments on our tree. It's a crystally snowflake kinda thing that's about two or three inches across. Next project: Adam and Amanda's rings.

Tuesday, December 19, 2006

Early Christmas present for Denise


I gave Denise one of her Christmas presents early, so she can use it at Amanda's wedding on Friday. It's a series of magnifying filters for our camera, so she can start doing the "macro" type shots she's been wanting to do on Amanda's ring, dress, flowers, etc. We'll have some good pics in the days to come, but she did snap a picture of my fingertip.

Monday, December 18, 2006

Random

I was just looking at Cara's blog, and through various linkages (thanks Ashley!) found the Which American Accent do You Have? quiz.

Ah! A quiz after my own heart:). It's actually fairly accurate from a linguistics point of view, although I'm anxious to put in a full blown Utah accent, and see what it comes up with. A Utah accent is a completely different beast, as Utah was settled heavily by western European immigrants. Hence things like 'feel' sounding like 'fill', and 'fill' sounding... well, not like your normal English, but 'fell' is as close as I can get. We actually discussed this in one of my linguistics classes-- turns out that the stereotypical Utah accent is composed of vowel lowering, where some/most vowels become the next lowest, physiological speaking. We didn't even get into calling spaghetti 'eye-talian' food. That, my friends, is a whole 'nother post (as is the evolution of the pronunciation "'nother").

I started reading Wheelock's Latin today. Serious nerdiness, but Willex calls. Besides, who but me really wants to know that I'm reading Wheelock's?

word of the day: loquacious. As in: this post is overly loquacious:)

Saturday, December 16, 2006

Will Pictures

Long week! First, there was the 8 hours overtime (which will be nothing compared to how much work + school will take up a month from now, but it still feels tiring). Then, Will AND Denise were both sick with a nasty stomach flu for half the week. Denise is fine, though Will is still a bit sick.

We're about to send off more Will pictures to grandma, so I figured I'd post some here. Yep, there's a lot, so I'll post the small versions (click to expand). I'm also out of time, so I won't put it in a table either. Friends & Family: the uploaded pictures really are highly compressed and aren't as crisp as the originals... email me if you want any "full size" images.











Thursday, December 07, 2006

There are days...

when I make no sense. I've been DYING for a bit of time to myself for about a week... and here's Will gone to bed early and I don't know what to do with myself! He's been in bed for an hour and half (about an hour earlier than he usually goes down), and I'm bored stiff:). I've had to learn to work so hard since he was born that I'm not sure what to do with a whole two hours of free time. I'm not sure if that's really weird, or really good. Working hard is not my strong suit...
I do believe I'm going to go work on my scarf.
Oh, word of the day: malediction. 2 bonus points to anyone who can tell me where the quote "deep, subterranean... malediction" comes from!

Tuesday, November 28, 2006

Thanksgiving pictures

I'll let Denise fill in this weekend's details later, but here are some pictures in the meantime.

First, there's a brownie batter mix fight between Amanda and Adam (who are now officially getting married on Dec 22nd). It looks like Amanda lost.







Our camera has burst mode, so Denise just sat back and took a gazillion pictures -- about one a second with the flash. We now have a flipbook of the Great Brownie War of 2006, as well as about 60 photos of me drinking milk and her Mom doing dishes. This is what her Mom has to say about it:



We have a whole series of pictures of the tree going up, but it would take a lot of space, so here's just the finished product. For those who might be interested... it's a long 30 sec exposure with all the house lights off.


Adam took a cool 2 sec exposure of a nightlight:

We enjoyed being able to take pictures of Will using our new camera -- the flash is smart enough to not blind/redeye/washout his entire face.



There's also a couple neato photos of the roaring fire:


Blogger doesn't let me put the full 10 megapixel glory online, so here's an enlarged section of the image to give you an idea how much detail there is in these photos (click to expand). Blogger also compresses the images pretty bad, so there's a LOT more clarity in the original (email me, and I'll send you the whole original file :D). There are so many possible pictures in here with a bit of creative cropping!

Monday, November 27, 2006

Thanksgiving, etc.

Thanksgiving was great! Mom's cooking is fabulous as always, and her kitchen was immaculate. That is so not fair. I can't make a casserole without messing up my kitchen, let alone Thanksgiving dinner. But I digress. We stayed at Mom and Dad's for 4 days (Wednesday night through Sunday morning), along with my sister Amanda and her fiance (!!) Adam. They weren't affianced officially until VERY early Sunday morning... and they're getting married in three weeks. We can pull it off-- it'll just be interesting. I'm so happy for them!
James and I bought the mother of all cameras. It takes some of the coolest pictures! I'll post a bunch tomorrow.

Monday, November 20, 2006

Of politics and motherhood

Most people know that I'm a politics junkie.
With that preamble, I was reading an article about a bill that Chuck Rangel is planning on presenting in Congress after the Democrats take control of both chambers in January (not to imply that this bill is a Democratic thing, just to say that I think he's hedging his bets). The bill proposes to reinstate the draft.
Now, most people know that all men must register for the draft when they turn eighteen. Or at least that was how it was when I turned eighteen. Registration is already well accepted. But here's the catch to Rangel's bill: he wants to draft (not just register for the draft, but actually draft) all men AND women between the ages of eighteen and twenty-four. According to Rangel, if the military isn't your cup of tea, you can work in hospitals or schools.
I find this proposition insulting and demeaning on multitudes of levels.
First, where does Rangel get off thinking he can tell me what to do with my life in peacetime? I can see the need for government "interference" in people's lives in wartime-- rationing, drafting, etc. But I fail to see why this congressman thinks that he should be able to dictate the terms of anyone's life during peacetime.
Second, and more personally, why does this man think he can tell me that I may not stay home with my children? Granted, I'm twenty-five. Rangel's bill doesn't affect me. But if it had been law, and had my first child survived, it would have. The government should not be able to dictate a woman's choice to care for her children.

Okay, end of rant.

Proud accomplishment of the Week

I've been looking into something called HDR imaging recently; the idea is that you can take a picture at multiple exposures and combine the images to have a lot more detail than your monitor is capable of displaying, process the image, and then map it back to a format your monitor can display. Perhaps you've tried to take a picture indoors, but all the windows are overexposed -- or an outdoors shot where the sky is overexposed, but the rest of the scenery isn't. HDR imaging fixes those kind of problems, and also makes for some very interesting artistic possibilities. The Cambridge Photography Gallery has some very nice examples. Programs that help you do that are not cheap though (Photoshop CS2 comes to mind). I started thinking about it though, and figured I could probably design a program myself that would do it. I spent an hour awake in the middle of the night last week thinking about it, and finally decided to try on Friday. It only took me an hour or so, which isn't bad considering I haven't really done anything in c# before and just decided to give it a try. I used images from another site that offers a $99 HDR program, Photomatix, and while my images don't look the same, they do look pretty decent.

The first shot is one with a well exposed sky & clouds, but underexposed ground:


The next shot has a well exposed ground, but an over exposed sky:


My final result (with a bit of saturation enhancement, which I was just too lazy to code in at the moment):



For those of you who may be interested, I'll even tell you the secret of my marvelous invention! It's late and Will just went back to sleep, so I don't have time to clean up the jargon though.

I started with the over exposed image, and at a certain brightness threshold, began to blend in a part of the underexposed image. So when the clouds started to get "too bright" I'd blend in a bit of the other image. Perhaps the idea was flawed, or I shouldn't have stayed in the RGB colorspace, but I ended up with a funny result:



Ewww! It was pretty obvious there was a bug. One theory: I was just blending in the RGB values of the other image and producing a non-invertable response curve like the one below.



I played with a few threshold values... and when I removed the threshold and started blending immediately, I got a good result. So instead of waiting until part of the image was REALLY bright, I started blending the two immediately, with more blending the brighter the image got.

I was a bit disappointed when I looked over my code and realized that I hadn't really created a true HDR imaging program. My algorithm actually translates into a simple alpha mask (a grayscale negative of the over exposed image used as a transparency mask for the underexposed image does exactly the same thing).

I may clean up the code and post the program on blogger later (or host it on my FTP server if blogger won't let me post it).

Sunday, November 19, 2006

Thursday, November 09, 2006

Pictures!







These are some of my favorite pictures of Will so far. I don't know why the top one is so blue-- call it a Picasso-- but I still like it. I especially like the bottom two.

Monday, November 06, 2006

Update Part II

Hmmm. I had a whole bunch of things planned for these updates, but a full night of sleep (!) and breakfast (!!) seem to have driven them out of my mind. No, Will didn't sleep throught the night, but he now goes 6-8 hours between feedings at night. The trick is getting him to go to sleep after the first night-time feeding. Still though, I think I got 7 or 8 hours of sleep last night. LOVELY.
James blessed Will in church yesterday. It was wonderful-- Will just grinned the whole time, and I don't remember any of the other babies in the chapel crying. The first thing out of James' mouth had to do with "inquisitiveness and understanding"-- definitely James' baby.
Is anybody sick of Willex updates? I hope not; he's fun to write about. But anyway, James and I have stuff too, so here goes.
James is going to start grad school in January. He was taking a class this semester before the whole meth lab fiasco, but.... So he's happily working, and buying a phone for a separate business line (YES!!). He's also ogling digital SLR cameras. His favorite thus far is the Sony a100-- which costs $750!
I have two goals: Learn to cook dinner on a regular basis (WAY harder than you'd think with a baby), and lose my Will-pudge by December, when my sister may or may not be getting married... Ack! Will calls. Gotta go!

Saturday, November 04, 2006

Sorry, sorry

Hey, Will is two and a half months old, and I'm not superwoman, so it's okay that I haven't updated in forever, right?
...
Right???
Okay, sorry:(
Anyway, this is going to be a multi-part update, so here's part one.
William Alexander Stevenson will be officially blessed with that very professional-sounding name tomorrow at 1:00. But you can't call him that all the time. The only person I can think of who actually calls him William is my grandmother. So here are all his other names (as James said, "We give you a name because you need a better one than the ones you get called now!"):
(The) Willex
Wilhelm
Wilson (ala WILSOOOOONNNN!!! from "Cast Away")
Blackjack
and The Plug-inator

I realize that these are going to take explanation. First I will begin by stating that all of the except The Plug-inator are my Dad's invention. Blackjack is the most recent-- Dad figures, hey he was born on the 21st, so why not? The rest are fairly self-explanatory, except The Plug-inator.
That was James' idea. Will is ardently fond of his pacifier. We can't quite bring ourselves to call his pacifier a binkie for some reason, so it has become, rather pragmatically, The Plug. James and I even came up with the following (it needs work, but we thought it was funny):
One Plug to rule the Will
One Mom to find it
One Dad to bring it in
And in the Willex plug it

Tolkein had no idea.

Anyway, that's it for tonight. Will is sleeping (YES!!!), so there'll be more updates tomorrow, including pictures. 'Night!

Wednesday, August 30, 2006

Sickness & Sanctuary in Mt. Pleasant

We've been at Denise's parent's house down in Mt. Pleasant, UT (about an hour south of Provo). They've been able to watch will a bunch and give us some recovery time. I went back to work last wednesday, and I couldnt' have done that without their help. It's back to Orem tonight for me though; I need to finish packing our house before we move on Saturday.

Denise either got an infection or caught what I had two weeks ago, because she had a fever of 101.5 last night. Again, I don't know what we'd do without her family helping. She will stay here and hopefully recover while I pack.

Tuesday, August 22, 2006

1st Pictures




It's Official!

We're sitting here giving Will his first introduction to soundtracks-- he looks like he's conducting. We just finished John Williams and we've moved on to Danny Elfman. William Alexander Stevenson was born on August 21st (an entire week late) at 1:51 in the morning.

He is perfect.

Friday, August 18, 2006

Here goes...

I suppose this is more of a test entry than anything (I was getting sick of having a blog with nothing on it). So-- welcome to our blog! (This is Denise typing.) James is sick with the mother of all colds, I'm STILL pregnant (four days overdue and counting), and about every 2 hours or so we get another phone call asking if I've had the baby yet:). That is the only news-- James has been too out of it and I've been too whale-shaped to do anything. So, sorry to those of you were hoping for better news (we were too!), and we'll post when Junior finally decides to make his appearance. Talk to you later!