2011 Archive

Our customers are rock stars!

MarcusPanel-Print-A


This business is only as good as the customers and we have the best customers.

Case in point; the busier we get, the less attention web administration seems to get. But it is too important to ignore for very long. This morning I was determined to bring the Video/News section of this web site current (go check it out). This involves the painful task of writing press releases, proofing them and then re-writing them. I know it isn't as bad as breaking rocks for a living, but it is still a job that I do not look forward to.

At some point you need to include testimonials to add some credibility to the releases. And this is when I am reminded how good my customers are.

Thank you Jeff Marcus. You have been a steadfast supporter for many years and we appreciate it. Now go support Jeff at his web site White Light Photography. This is good stuff.

2011 Flyway Film Festival

FFF-2011


The Flyway Film Festival is one of our favorite events each year. It is an uninhibited creative endeavor over three days in October. Each year it has grown in size and scale and this year promises to be especially exciting.

First, the Flyway Film folks received a generous grant from the Wisconsin Department of Tourism that will really boost marketing efforts. This extra money will be used to widen the circle of marketing.

Second, the festival graphic is noteworthy for the artist. Gaylord Shanilec created the original etching of the three pelicans that are used in the poster. Gaylord is unquestionably talented, pelicans are indigenous to this area and it is just an exceptional image of this region. Totally appropriate.

And finally, a very limited edition of signed fine-art are available for purchase, which will be used to help fund the festival. We printed the limited edition prints on a Hahnemuehle textured 100% cotton paper that should last for hundreds of years.

October 23-25. Can't wait.

1st Half of 2011...

Corn

The end of June signals the end of the first half of the year. Last year was a good year and so far this year is ahead of last year. The business mix has changed over the years and we have been fortunate to be well positioned to leverage the change.

Red Wing Digital has been a significant time and money investment up until this point. There are still a few issues that need to be worked out, but the product inventory is now in place and the details regarding product design have been finalized. The orders have been increasing at a nice and realistic rate. Packaging and shipping issues are being addressed now and we are always looking for more production space.

This is our 10th year of business and we have been tracking business patterns since the very beginning. Invariable the second half is quite a bit busier than the first half, for a number of reasons.

The bottom line is that we owe everything to our loyal customers. Thanks again.

Reading outside weather

Read outside


This year spring was about 16-18 days later than normal. It was an especially long winter with a heavy snowpack and it was a very slow warm-up this year.

Normally the reaction would be that a late spring works against the economy. Crops are planted later and the overall growing season will be shorter.

But the benefit of a late spring is that postponed projects and
maintenance issues can be addressed and then when spring finally does arrive, we can sit in the sun and read a book.

Red Wing Digital is officially launched!

Boat houses

It took longer than hoped and it cost more than it should, but Red Wing Digital was finally launched today.

Red Wing Digital is a targeted business that provides products for fine-art and passionate photographers. The initial product is the Panel Print, with more products to follow. What is unique about this web site is the point-and-click selection of the products and the print-on-demand nature of the interface.

The most exciting part of the web site will be the guest contributors. Guests will contribute inside tips for their specific photography niche, with the goal that the web site will become a portal for photographers who are always trying to advance their skills. So far, this will include:

Stacy Bengs (Stacy Bengs Photographer) discussing sports photography and photojournalism,
Barbara O'Brien (Barbara O'Brien Photography), a talented animal photographer,
Clare Polencheck (Off the Cuff Photography), an especially skilled portrait photographer.

It is a privilege to work with such talented and creative individuals and this will be a lot of fun.

The above Panel Print is 'Red Wing Boathouses' by Dr. Jack Alexander and is on display at Red Wing Fairview Hospital.

Visit the new site at RedWingDigital.com.


Hole in the Wall

Hole-in-Wall-1

My niece is a soon-to-be-famous film maker. She recently won a grant from the IFP Minnesota Center for Media Arts that enabled her to film and produce her original screenplay called "Hole in the Wall". It is a short film about intergenerational tension between a father and a son.

I had the privilege of shooting still set photography on the movie set. Exteriors were shot the first day and interiors were shot the second day. The interiors were in a totally dilapidated house in Minneapolis with extremely small rooms. I shot with an extremely wide lens and mostly from the hip to try and capture the tightness of the set and also to minimize camera intrusion.

It was a fascinating and tedious process. Everything was captured with real film, which is in itself a true challenge. A single overhead jetliner can ruin a shot. And you never know if there was a light leak with the film until after it is processed.

My niece Mandy is on the left of the top photo and she is reviewing a shot set-up. The bottom photo is the primary room in which the father confronts the son.

Hole-in-Wall-2

Barge season begins...

barge


The ice on the Mississippi River has broken up enough to allow for barge traffic to begin moving upstream. This is significant in this area because it officially signals the end of the winter weather.

We had a significant blizzard in December and we never had a mid-winter melt. This means the snow accumulated all winter and we eventually had the fourth snowiest winter on record.

This creates flooding concerns up and down the Mississippi River, but just as the days starting getting longer, we sunk into a prolonged period of weather that hovered around the 32 degree mark. This slowed the melting substantially and the river crested to just below the flood point. Another crest is expected in about three weeks when the run-off from up north reaches this area.

This photo is taken from the Eisenhower Bridge.

Writer's block...

snow-mountain


A rule of thumb in the creativity industry is that if you hit a creative mental roadblock, run as fast and hard as you can into the nearest wall. This head-on collision will reset your entire mental wiring and you will either have cured the writer's block, or you won't even know writer's block is anymore.

Or, look out your window and write what you see.

I have a small mountain of snow immediately outside my work window. It has been larger and was actually completely removed at one point. It will probably just melt in place for the rest of the year. It won't be pretty, melting snow usually isn't.

But it is a hopeful sign of spring. This winter was typically atypical. We had several significant snow falls and a couple of serious deep freezes. We will have flooding and it will be a messy spring.

And the weather forecast today is for more snow.

Happy birthday...

Dad. :)

-25 Fahrenheit

Very cold-sm


Back in early December 2010 there was a blog entry that discussed the love-hate-love relationship with the Minnesota Winter (The paradox of the Minnesota winter...).

This morning the temperature dipped to -25 degrees Fahrenheit. That falls squarely in the "hate" category, although it does have a certain scientific curiosity.

Weather this cold has some very unique properties. You can take a cup of coffee and launch the coffee in the air and it will freeze before it hits the ground. Also, because the air is so dense, all kinds of ground effects occur with exhausts fumes. Animals continue about their business and almost seem unaware of how cold it is. However, the dog didn't care for it. It was impossible to keep the car warm.

This photo was taken at 6:30 in the morning. It was the only bank that had a working clock/thermometer, as the cold weather made the other electronic signs fail.

But outside of the science, weather this cold kind of sucks.


Wolf Moon over Downtown Red Wing



Wolf Moon-1

This is a photo I try to capture every year. It is the largest and brightest full moon of the year and is called the Wolf Moon.

Last year I missed the opportunity, but the year that (2009) I captured it, but about 5 minutes after it was at its most dramatic (Full Moon over Barn Bluff).

This year I suddenly remembered it was Wolf Moon time and I jumped in my car and drove all over town trying to find an interesting perspective. I pretty much ended up where I shot this moon 2 years ago. You have to be quick becasue this moon rises very quickly.

Shot in RAW, 47mm, 1/200 second at f2.8 hand held.