
We had Atlanta Journal Constitution columns Kyle Wingfield on campus to talk to students and faculty. Some good observations about the issues the AJC is facing but, as with so many, he’s not sure what the answers are.

We had Atlanta Journal Constitution columns Kyle Wingfield on campus to talk to students and faculty. Some good observations about the issues the AJC is facing but, as with so many, he’s not sure what the answers are.

It feels like it has been raining here forever, makes you want to turn it into letters. G is for Go Away.

Earlier this year, I switched over from the Micro 4/3 system to a simple, fixed lens Fuji X100T. The simplicity of its controls, the lack of interchangeable or zoomable lenses, it has brought me back to forcing myself to move. Add in a sensor that just knocks my socks off and I’ve been perfectly content to use it as my walkabout camera.
But later this month I’ll be wandering the streets of Chicago, chaperoning 70 high school kids and doing my duty as official photographer. The little Fuji works great for some things, but I was looking at needing the flexibility of the big Canon bodies and lenses. Unless … I stumbled across a stupid deal on a Fuji body with a pair of zoom lenses. Same sensor, same circuitry as my walkabout but with optional glass.
I’ve had the kit on my desk for a week but haven’t really taken it out. The rain cleared a bit this afternoon so I walked the back 40 to start learning it.






The last Friday night out with the marching band. It poured just before we boarded the buses, but they played in just a heavy mist.

Fall has been eclectic here. Not a lot of color, but a lot of relentless rain that has made the little color we’ve had muted.
Late in the day, as the skies opened up again, I did a visit with some high school kids. The state of their school, which is being remodeled, is just sad. How did we let our educational institutions get to this point?



Someone’s not having a good day.

We brought Roger May, creator of the Looking at Appalachia project, to town for a few days. Seemed like the time for an impromptu field trip to the Georgia Museum of Art to look at the Raymond Smith exhibition. Well worth your time to study these images, there’s a lot that resonates in them.