Kevin Trotman Photography: 2008

Wednesday, December 17, 2008

Egret


Egret, originally uploaded by The Rocketeer.

Monday, December 1, 2008

White Ibis


White Ibis, originally uploaded by The Rocketeer.

Storks Sharing a Good Joke


Storks Sharing a Good Joke, originally uploaded by The Rocketeer.

Cormorant and Turtle


Cormorant and Turtle, originally uploaded by The Rocketeer.

Florida Sandhill Crane


Florida Sandhill Crane, originally uploaded by The Rocketeer.

Monday, November 10, 2008

November Moonrise


November Moonrise, originally uploaded by The Rocketeer.

North Georgia on November 8, 2008 around sunset.

Tuesday, October 21, 2008

Death Comes Out of the Sun


Death Comes Out of the Sun, originally uploaded by The Rocketeer.

F-22 Raptor at the "Wings Over Marietta" 2008 Air Show on Saturday, October 18, 2008.

Monday, October 20, 2008

Heritage Fly By


Heritage Fly By, originally uploaded by The Rocketeer.

F-22 Raptor, P-51 Mustang, F-15E

Sunday, October 19, 2008

F-22 Raptor in Flight


F-22 Raptor in Flight, originally uploaded by The Rocketeer.

Ladies and Gentlemen: The Thunderbirds

Shooting most of the day into the sun, this was the results of a happy accident. I thought it came out rather well.

F-22 Raptor


F-22 Raptor, originally uploaded by The Rocketeer.

This particular F-22 Raptor is the 129th to roll off the assembly line.

Wednesday, October 15, 2008

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Sunday, October 12, 2008

Sunset at Longboat Key, Florida

The Rescue


The Rescue, originally uploaded by The Rocketeer.

A helpless Sock Monkey gets rescued in the Great Barrier Reef off the coast of Cairnes, Australia. Photo taken from an observation window on the boat that took us out to the reef. The hand is of my friend, John Daniels, who has a very good photostream on Flickr. We went to Australia together in 2006.

No Vacancy at the Underwood

On Highway 301 in Florida.

San Jacinto Monument


San Jacinto Monument, originally uploaded by The Rocketeer.

"In future time, then may the pilgrim's eye see here an obelisk point toward the sky...."
— Anonymous poet

The above prediction was penned in the poem: “Ode to San Jacinto”, even before the Republic of Texas became the State of Texas. Today, the world’s tallest war memorial stands at San Jacinto—15 feet taller than the Washington monument—honoring all those who fought for Texas's independence.

Immediately after the Battle of San Jacinto, the land—then privately owned—commanded respect from all who walked on its soil. The Texas Veterans Association began planning a formal monument, and the state finally received funding to purchase land in the 1890s.

After years of pushing by the Sons and Daughters of the Republic of Texas, as well as help from President Roosevelt’s Secretary of Commerce Jesse H. Jones—a prominent Houstonian—its proponents raised enough money to build a fitting monument. And the time was right, with San Jacinto’s 100-year anniversary at hand.

The design was the brainchild of architect Alfred C. Finn, engineer Robert J. Cummins, and Jesse H. Jones. Construction ran from 1936 to 1939. With continued support, the San Jacinto Museum Historical Association has occupied the facility since its doors first opened.

Its builder was the Warren S. Bellows Construction Company of Dallas and Houston. The monument building alone—apart from its great historical significance—is worth a trip to the San Jacinto Battleground Historical State Park. At 570 feet, this Texas giant one of the finest examples of Moderne (Art Deco) architecture in the United States. The monument has been recognized as a National Historic Civil Engineering Landmark by the American Society of Civil Engineers.

The museum is located in the base of the monument, greeting visitors with bronze doors emblazoned with the six flags of Texas. The base is 125 feet square, with text panels highlighting significant events in history leading up to and resulting from the Texas Revolution.

The shaft itself is octagonal, 48 feet at its base, 30 feet at the observation level and 19 square feet at the base of its crowning jewel—a 220-ton star made from stone, steel and concrete. Despite the scale, danger and novelty of the project, not a single life was lost during its construction.

Solar Windmill


Solar Windmill, originally uploaded by The Rocketeer.

Windmill in Pittsburg, Texas.

This photo was included in Cabinet Magazine in New York. My photo was featured in issue #30 "The Underground". The theme was underground.

Jump!


Jump!, originally uploaded by The Rocketeer.

Sydney Opera House.

Remember the Alamo


Remember the Alamo, originally uploaded by The Rocketeer.

It's hard to get a shot of the Alamo without people in it.

Fremont Street


Fremont Street, originally uploaded by The Rocketeer.

From my one and only visit to Las Vegas in August of 2002. I used a post in the road as an anchor point to keep the camera movement down to a minimum.

Saturday, October 11, 2008

Wading for the Right Moment

New South Wales, Australia
Lake Tuggerah
Chittaway Point

1955 Pontiac Starchief Hardtop

Droste Watch


Droste Watch, originally uploaded by The Rocketeer.

My grandfather's pocketwatch but with a "twist". I used a program called mathmap to create the spiral effect and recombined the results with the original shot to overlay the face of the watch with the resulting image from mathmap.

Cherry Abduction


Cherry Abduction, originally uploaded by The Rocketeer.

The aliens like fruit...

Drowning in a Sea of Grass


Drowning in a Sea of Grass, originally uploaded by The Rocketeer.

This shot was taken around the home I used to live in when I was in Houston, TX. This fire hydrant (along with a half dozen others in the area) either sunk or was half buried when they finished the subdivision. At least the top part was still visible and the area around it was dug away enough so that if it needed to be used, it could have been. I replaced the sky with a dradient blue in Photoshop and increased the saturation to complete this image.

Tuesday, October 7, 2008

Radios

Trotman Photo

Starting over with a photo blog. More to come soon. Meanwhile, view my photos on Flickr...


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