Easter Moon, Setting

Although it was daylight when I let the dogs out Monday morning around 6:00 a.m., the moon was still large and bright, as if it was reluctant to leave the sky.  I took several photos, each of which turned out quite different from the other.  The first two pictures here were definite fails, but I kind of liked them anyway.

Oops, accidental flash:

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This one looks like it was taken from inside a briar patch:

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Not perfect either, but a better match with my naked eye’s perspective:

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Although this moon looks full to me, the official full moon and the “blood moon” total lunar eclipse happened two days earlier (April 4).  You can watch the entire eclipse in this YouTube clip, apparently drawn from the Griffith Observatory stream.  The eclipse’s duration is about 75 minutes, with “blood” red coloration appearing on both sides of the moon’s complete blackout halfway through (at about the 36:15 minute mark).

 

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Milwaukee City Hall – Morning Reflection

Taken with my iPhone about 8:15 a.m. at the corner of Broadway and State, from inside a vestigial entryway of the old Blatz Brewing Bottle House (now MSOE’s Campus Center) so I could avoid lens flare in a spot sheltered from the low-angled glare of morning sun.  The scattered white spots are snowflakes.  Kind of an odd pairing, don’t you think?  Hard, bright sunshine with random glitters of snow.

Milwaukee City Hall - Morning Reflection

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Two views of City Hall

From the front, a photo I really liked—except I cut off the bell tower’s tippy-top and the flag.

Milwaukee's City Hall

From two blocks away, several days later (and by accident, as what I really “saw” was the cool, low-angled view up at the windows).  There’s that tippy-top and its flag! 😄

Milwaukee's City Hall reflected

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Laura Ingalls Wilder Week: The Autobiography

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M&I / BMO

This is the kind of thing my grandparents used to do: refer to places by their names from 50 years earlier.  Now I do it, too.  No doubt someday my kids will, too.

The building below is the Marshall & Ilsley Bank, or as Milwaukeeans have always called it, “M&I.”  Samuel Marshall and Charles Ilsley were real people who actually lived in Milwaukee, the city where they did business.  Today this bank is a subsidiary of Canadian-owned BMO Financial Group, known in Canada as the Bank of Montreal.  Or, as they like to style themselves “Be Mo.”  (Don’t you think “Bank of Montreal” should shorten to an acronym of “BOM” or “BOMO” instead of “BMO”?  Then we could call them “Bom” or “Bo Mo” instead of what sounds like a slogan encouraging us to “Be More” by availing ourselves of their services.  But I digress . . . )

When an appointment yesterday afternoon took my daughter and me past this building, she mentioned how cool the lines on this building looked running up toward the sky.  (Yep, she takes after me, I guess 🙂 )

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Wham! Pow! Ooof!

Fun article the other day in the Wall Street Journal—or, as they like to style themselves: The Wall Street Journal. (← with a period at the end, I have no idea why)—about all the over-the-top villains in the old “Batman” television series (which is now available on Blu-Ray and DVD).

“Batman” ran in the late 1960s, and I loved it as a child. Thought it was just incredibly dramatic action/thriller material!

The episodes ran back-to-back on two consecutive weeknights, always ending the first episode with a cliffhanger featuring Batman and Robin ensnared in the villain-du-jour’s trap, e.g., dangling from a rope over a vat of steaming, dangerous liquid. As the dynamic duo slowly dropped lower and lower toward their doom, the narrator’s voiceover intoned dramatically, “Is this the end for our caped crusaders?  Tune in tomorrow!  Same ‘Bat’ time!  Same ‘Bat’ channel!”

My neighbor, Karen, and I would discuss Batman’s perilous situation on the walk to school the next morning, worried that this time might actually be the end of our heroes and anxiously awaiting that evening’s episode to find out how it was resolved.

Not until years later, when I saw the show in reruns as an adult, did I realize that “Batman” was actually total tongue-in-cheek camp.

At which point I loved it even more 🙂

If you fondly remember . . .

  • Burgess Meredith’s “Penguin”
  • Cesar Romero’s “Joker”
  • Julie Newmar’s (and Eartha Kitt’s) “Catwoman”
  • and Frank Gorshin’s “Riddler”

. . . you can  follow this link to “The Rogues Gallery of Gotham” and relive the fun!

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Grohmann Museum Statues (Again)

Ever since noticing the Grohmann Museum statues’ reflection in the office building across the street last week, I’ve been sort of obsessed with them.  Maybe not literally, but I’ve definitely begun looking up at them A LOT (and whipping out my iPhone) whenever I approach the building.  The other day I even went up to the rooftop garden, which is closed for the season, so I could take pictures through the glass windows.  Here are some of my results.

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Grohmann statues

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The two guys in this last photo are the ones whose reflection inspired all this picture taking in the first place.

It seems like I’ve been posting nothing but photographs on my blog recently—sorry about that if you stop by regularly and would rather read text!  I guess I’m just in a “visual” frame of mind lately 🙂

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Urban Sunset, March

Taken with my iPhone  as I returned to my office last night after teaching an early evening class.  (Despite the fact that downtown Milwaukee is built on a swamp and thus wages a constant battle against sinking, this building isn’t really tilted!  It’s just a weird thing that my iPhone does with perspective 🙂 )

Urban Sunset, March

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Melting ice at Red Arrow skating rink

Last week Friday the temperature was 0º on our back porch thermometer when I let the dogs out first thing in the morning.  Today the high is supposed to hit 63º.  Quite a change, (to which my sinuses can attest 🙂 ).  Standing water and glimpses of cement through the ice at the rink in Milwaukee’s Red Arrow park greeted me when I made a Starbucks run earlier this morning.  A welcome sign that this winter is just about over!

melting ice at Red Arrow park

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Reflections on “Man at Work”

These  giant (9-foot) statues line the Grohmann Museum’s rooftop sculpture garden.

Grohmann statues

Bronze statue atop Grohmann Museum, via Urban Milwaukee Dial, “One Piece at a Time: A Thousand Little Pieces,” by Judith Ann Moriarty, August 19, 2011 (http://urbanmilwaukeedial.com/2011/08/19/one-piece-at-a-time-a-thousand-little-pieces/)

“Rooftop Sculpture Garden” (from msoe.edu)

As I was walking into my building this morning, I saw this reflection in the windows of the office building across the street.  When I saw the statues’ silhouettes in the glass, I decided to take a picture.

Grohmann Museum rooftop sculptures

Then after dropping stuff off upstairs in my office, I ran to get coffee.  By the time I got back, the sun had emerged from behind a cloud.  What a difference a change in lighting makes in a photograph!

Grohmann rooftop sculptures

Coming into the building again much later in the day, around 4:15 pm, I noticed the sun hitting the statutes from the opposite angle.  I think of the three photos, this late afternoon one is my favorite.  It’s only an iPhone picture, but now I can look at the image whenever I like.  And if I ever decide to try for a better photograph, I can bring my good camera downtown on a similar afternoon.

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