Making a Move

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Chinese chess is a popular pastime among the Vietnamese. I often see them play outside of the shopping malls, coffee houses, or in the parks.

These gents are playing a different variant, which I have never seen before. They set up the board with the pieces turn upside-down; except for the “general” piece (the most important piece), which is faced up during the entire game.

When a player moves a piece for the very first time, he will then turn its face up. Afterward, that piece will stay up until the very end. Every time a piece is uncovered, the game changes, sometimes very dramatically. The players then have to adapt, and adjust their strategies accordingly.

This adds a surprise element to the game. The advantages or disadvantages may change hands from one move to the next.

Sometimes, I think life is full of surprises and all one can do is try one’s best to make the right move; then move on.

-Quan.
March 2011.

Royal Restaurant & Banquet

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The other day, I had lunch with friends at Royal. I arrived there a little early; so I walked around the area and took a few snaps.

In recent years, Little Saigon had a face lift. Despite the recession, there seems to be a mini boom in Little Saigon. I noticed the streets were fixed up, many businesses remodeled their buildings, and new businesses sprung up. Royal Restaurant & Banquet is one of the new restaurants here.

I had a wonderful time; I enjoyed the companies and the excellent food. BTW, if you ever decide to go there for lunch, check out the combination rice dish. And, the best part is I went home with a memory card full of photos.

-Quan.
March 2011.

Water Tower

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Many water towers were constructed during the Industrial Revolution, when the cities and villages were equipped with a public water system. These towers were symbols of progress and a better quality of life.

Nowadays, people do not give much attention to water towers. They are either demolished or becoming historic landmarks. Along with the typewriters, dot matrix printers, pinball machines, water towers are now historic relics.

Rapid technology advance causes many things to become obsolete too soon. Still, I like to see one more thing to become obsolete. I want to see war to become the thing of the past just like dueling was.

-Quan.
March 2011.

“Either war is obsolete, or men are.” ~ R. Buckminster Fuller

A Lotus for Japan

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Even when its roots are in the dirtiest waters, the Lotus produces the most beautiful flower. The Lotus flower is regarded as a symbol of purity, enlightenment, self-regeneration and rebirth.

I like to dedicate this Lotus flower to the people in Japan. I wish that there are no more aftershocks, and the death toll to stop rising. I wish them a speeding recovery. My thoughts and heart are with the people in Japan.

If anyone likes to help, I include this link from Yahoo! News: “Japan earthquake and tsunami: How to help”

-Quan.
March 2011.

Quang Tuấn Delivers His Crescendo

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I went to a fundraiser concert back in January. There were many entertaining performances, including a number sung by Quang Tuấn accompanied by the band Phượng Hoàng. I had seen them performed together a few times before – this time was no different – always exceptional.

Quang Tuấn walks and speaks with a moderate pace. His songs selections are usually with slow to medium beat. When on stage, he always dresses very well and conservative. I think that personality reflects in his singing.

What I like most about Quang Tuấn’s singing is the way he delivers his crescendos. His crescendos always begin with a smooth tone in an unhurried, deliberate pace; and ends with tremendous dynamic.

When he does that, I get goose bumps. I am not a musical expert; but whenever I get goose bumps, I know I am listening to good singing.

-Quan.
March 2011.

“You are the crescendo.” ~ P. Diddy Puff Daddy (American, b.1969, Harlem, New York, USA)

Walking upon a Stone - The Last Chapter

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This is a follow-up entry to my previous post. In the previous blog entry, I asked my readers for their preferences as if they like this photograph in color or in black & white. As the result, the blog page had a record number of views to date. I also received many responses from many readers via emails, comment section on the blog page, and offline conversations. For this reason alone, I think a summary of the votes is necessary.

Three blog entries for one image are too many already. I promise not to bore you; this will be the conclusion and the last entry about this one photograph.

Before getting into the photography stuffs, I like to express my appreciation to Flux Lux readers who took the time to write me their preferences, comments, critiques and ideas; through those words, I learned a lot about this particular topic of "color-vs.-black-&-white". I also like to thank those readers who stopped by to view the page; even for whatever reason chose not to write. However, you showed up by large number. That makes me feel connected, and that this blog is not a waste of time and effort. Thank you for the support.


The Readers’ Choice

From the responses that I received, there are roughly the same counts go for both color and black & white version.

Those who picked the black & white version said they like it because:
  • No reason, just prefer the black & white version.
  • The image is all about shape and texture.
  • The image is about light, form, and composition.
  • The color version hides the poetry.
  • The black & white belongs more in the “art category”.

Those who picked the color version said that they like it because:
  • No reason, just prefer the color version.
  • The color version has more depth.
  • The beautiful warm light falls on the stones.
  • The black & white version is not as beautiful as the color one.
  • The foreground stone in the color version anchors the meditative story (click here to read the story in the first post, in case you missed it). The black & white is an exercise in exposure, tone, and printing contrast.

44 percent picked the color version, and 56 percent chose the black & white version. Clearly, the reader’s choice goes to the black & white version. Not by a big margin, but still the readers’ choice.


My Choice

Given that this is my photograph, I will cast my vote, and describe how I came to the decision.

After I published the previous post, I have a week to ponder. During this time, I went back and forth between the two versions for various reasons. Each one has its own strengths that are not present in the other, and vice versa. It is a tough call for me – especially it is my photograph – it is difficult to be objective. This turns out to be more of a mental exercise for me.

A dear friend of mine likes to say, “In writing, words are medium of expression.” Similarly, in photography, I think black & white and color are medium of expression. All the things – we, photographers, pay so much attention to – such as, lighting, textures, shape, forms, tone, contrast, etc. are, I think, words, sentences, paragraphs, pages which collectively comprise a book.

Do we judge a book by its cover? What kind of paper is used? Which font is used? Nope, we judge a book by its story. A good book has to tell a good story.

Now the question is which version of this image tells a story? And, if there’s a story, which one tells a better story?

I like to thank L.K. and R.C.M. – (I am using their initials rather than their real names. And if you read this, you know who you are) – for their fine comments.

L.K. said “... there’s a leader everywhere, even down on the ground...”

R.C.M. said “...it stands out as THE stone of the epiphany... the shot says, “It was THIS STONE, RIGHT HERE” and anchors your tale...”

Both of these comments are responses to the color version. They nailed it on the first day. However, it took me a week to decide.

I finally pick the color version of the image because it tells the tale.

As they say, “that how the story goes...” Until next time, my friends.

-Quan.
March 2011.

Walking upon a Stone (in Black & White)

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After viewing the last blog entry, a dear friend suggested that this photo would be a good candidate for black and white. Knowing myself, I will never pass up any suggestion.

Below is a side-by-side comparison. Which one do you like better? If you have a preference either way, drop me a line. I love to hear from you.

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-Quan.
March 2011.