I started this blog back in 2005-2006 to share and swap ideas about the job hunt and work life, among other topics, but I rarely post on job-related topics these days (actually I rarely post at all these days, but when I do, it's not about work). This is probably because I'm now officially retired. That doesn't mean that I won't need to supplement my retirement income at some point in these tough economic times. I have worked alongside many a retiree in my career who decided to return to the workplace. But for now ... I'm just retired and enjoying it. I particularly don't miss the angst of the job hunt and the interview process because I tired of the some of the "nonsense" and even hypocrisy of it. But that's probably a topic for another post, which may or may never get written. So am I the only one who finds interviewing and job hunting frustrating? Probably not. For those of you who may feel similarly, take heart or at least have a chuckle at this little anecdote about a job interview I had in back in 2009 that has taken on a life of its own.
I started this blog in 2006 to share my job hunting journey in my fields of technology and education and to share my amateur photography passion. However since then I've strayed into other topics, including (oddly) Marilyn Monroe; a piece of Americana called the Cafe Rienzi; Belgian draft mules; antiques and furniture refinishing; artists Firma Duchene Philips, Tom Durant, and David Grosblatt; and a television series called PREY. And those are just for starters - so browse and enjoy!
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Friday, October 31, 2014
How to Monetize Your Job Interviews ;)
Labels:
instructional design,
job hunt,
Job search,
on the job
A sixties child, an idealist, and a survivor / refugee from the 20th Century! (although sometimes I really miss the 20th Century. ;) )
Thursday, October 30, 2014
How to Bring Out the Story in your Casual Photos with Photoshop Filters
I've been wanting to attempt an article for the scrap-booker or
casual photographer (folks like me, in other words) to share how I get the most
story-telling "bang" out of my casual photos. If, on your quest
toward becoming the expert photographer who always takes the perfect picture,
you're like me and can't afford really high-end camera equipment with
larger sensors, or if you just don't quite have the on-the-spot photography
skills to meet the demands of every memorable moment you encounter, you may end
up with a lot of bad, so-so average, and merely "okay" photos. (I'm
not saying, by the way, that becoming a better photographer is a bad
ambition). In fact sometimes even your really good photos may not quite
reflect the image you stored in your mind's eye when you pressed that camera
button; and if you're like me, you're always seeking ways to make your photos
look even better. But good, bad, or ugly, the photos you've already taken are
your reminders of the memorable events or scenes of beauty from your life.
They're too good to throw away, yet somehow they remain pale, distant cousins
of the actual experience - and you desperately want to breathe life back into
them. So what I want to discuss in this article are ways I've found in
Photoshop CS5 to change my so-so images into the image I hoped I would get when
I pressed the button on the camera. These techniques may also apply to
Photoshop Elements and Light Room.
Labels:
digital darkroom,
draft horses,
draft mules,
instructional design,
mules,
photo restoration,
photo retouching,
photography,
photoshop,
photoshop filters,
scrapbooking
A sixties child, an idealist, and a survivor / refugee from the 20th Century! (although sometimes I really miss the 20th Century. ;) )
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