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Michael D Housewright
  • Housewrighter
  • Imagery
  • Video Production
  • About Michael
  • Contact
  • Housewrighter Musings

Folded Napkins – 5 Years of Commitment to Design

Folded Napkin

Happy 5 Year Anniversary Juliet! Today marks another notch on a societal calendar reminding us that we should celebrate. As if we need any reminders to do what comes so naturally to us. Since the day you sat across from me, in the now defunct “Gravitas” restaurant in Houston, we have celebrated yearly, monthly, and often daily ceremonies of love and experience.

In so many ways I think you were born to celebrate. In no way is this more beautifully illustrated than the large kitchen drawer, in our new apartment, filled with perfectly folded decorative napkins. No matter how small the place we have called home since leaving Houston 3 years ago, we have had a devoted space for gorgeous table linens, fine place settings, and exceptional service-ware. This is no accident. This is the life we have chosen, shaped, and mostly you, have designed.

These folded napkins are the visible outreach of your attention to the details of the heart. Few can see your ability on display, healing the broken hearts of your patients and their families. Few could know the intricacy of our creative life, and the commitment you have to me, and my challenging career pursuits. What people can see is, your radiant smile, your abundance of colorful scarves (mentioned in a prior anniversary letter), and the intricate folds of your beloved serviette(s).

By default, your creativity is crowded in your profession, so your passion is channeled in textiles, flowers, and paint colors. Your vision for our future includes even more color, more detail, and more intricacy than I can easily comprehend. I have grown to love our napkins, and not only because they represent an impending meal. I love them because I see your hands in every careful bend in their fabric. I know when they are out, that our simple weeknight repasts are elevated. More and more often I crave our time cooking, sharing, and our beloved Beethoven.

As people, I think it is essential that our grasp of our spouses must grow, equal to our wish to better ourselves. To me, the more I know about you, the better I have become. I like to believe I know some of the things that bring you joy, and I often try to avoid more of the ones that bring you pain. I miss the mark certainly, but my intention to do it right continues to grow.

We celebrate 5 years tonight with a meal, great wine, and just us, alone in a new home we are growing to love. However, we understand our celebration is not limited to the specifics of time and place, it is continual. For we have celebrated for years in our home, together. We will not measure the success of our marriage in years, countries visited, or professional accomplishments achieved together. We can measure the success of us, by pretty little pieces of cloth, folded with precision, displayed with love, and frequently shared.

Thank you Juliet for being you, unwavering in your design, and your desire to design our lives. I love you so much more than I knew I was capable of loving.

Michael

tags: Adventure, anniversary, Design, Folded Napkins, Michael Housewright, Juliet Housewright, The Housewrighter
Wednesday 04.30.14
Posted by Michael Housewright
 

The Italy Rules

The Gondolier

The Italy Rules are my set of guidelines for the first-time and infrequent Italy traveler. I have traveled to, lived, and worked in Italy frequently over the past 20 years. In this time I evolved from a curious tourist to hardened, salty, veteran of the trials, travails, and pitfalls, of one of the world's most visited countries. One usually dreams of Italy for years before finally setting their foot into the proverbial boot. The dream usually crashes in much less time. This post is really for the traveler who has not been deep into the Amazon or climbed to base camps in Nepal. This post is for those of you who enjoy modern conveniences, large bathrooms, and the amenities of a comfortable Western life. For the most part, I am you. I love my big bed, my central heat and air, and my very fast wi-fi connection. However, Italy is reason enough for me forego these luxuries for a few weeks or months out of every year.

One of my dearest friends is half American and half German. He is the model of organization and efficiency. He said to me just the other night that one of the reasons he loves Italy is because it is chaos. Yes, he loved the chaos, and if you have any hope of really embracing la vita Italiana you'd better be ready to embrace chaos as well. I am 100% confident there will be detractors of my post, and let them come. The information I am going to share with you here is well won. I have been down many paths of serious consternation in Italy and if you listen to me, you can likely avoid most of these, and perhaps even enjoy a bit the ones you cannot avoid.

Now, without further ado, I give you, The Italy Rules:

1. Do NOT Over-Schedule - Italians typically accomplish about 4 things per day in their lives and have a damn fine time getting from 1 to 4. Do not attempt to do more than the locals do and you will be happy. Here is what an exceptional first 2 days in Italy look like: (this is not a derogatory comment about Italians, it is praise for the art of good living)

Day 1 - Arrive in Rome - Meet your guide (you will be 100% happier than you can imagine if you hire a personal guide) Check  in Hotel or Apt -   (away from sites at least 10 min walk)- Have long lunch - see 1 site - have cocktails - eat dinner

Day 2 - have good coffee outside of hotel and nowhere near any sites - go to first site of day (perhaps the Vatican) - have very long lunch - go to another site (maybe the Borghese gallery) - walk around eating gelato at a few places  or get another coffee - rest for a bit - have cocktails (called aperitivo and usually includes little snacks and is best taken out on some street-side cafe but not in Piazza Navona, or Campo dei Fiori - go over to Monti and enjoy a glass of wine at one of the many little wine bars in that hood) - have an evening stroll in your finest travel threads - eat a wonderful dinner at around 9 PM - you won't starve if you had a proper aperitivo , and you won't look like British granny arriving too early.

2. Do NOT Over-Travel - You may think you can do all of Italy in 2 weeks, but you cannot. You may think you must see all you can because you may not come back again to Italy. If you rush from town to town, hang around tourists and touristy places, and eat shitty tourist food you may indeed not ever come back. Here is my itinerary suggestion for the first-time Italy traveler.

2 Weeks - if you can't go for two weeks, go somewhere else and save Italy for when you can make a real commitment. Italy requires commitment

Arrive Rome - follow above plan...Rome is 4 days at a minimum including arrival day so let's say 5 in total counting departure day

Florence - Now, I don't love Florence, but there are things that must be seen and frankly, if I say skip it, I will get more hate mail than I care to read. Take the train from Rome and spend 2 nights in Florence. Make sure  to book any museums, churches, and  touristic sites in advance. I have no time to give you links to all this, and half the fun of travel is planning to me, so Google how to do it, and do it. Waiting in line sucks no matter where you are. Waiting in line on an expensive Italian vacation is a hell that would make Dante cringe. Hit a couple of great sites in Florence on Day 2 then get yourself a car and drive to...

Wine Country! - Real Tuscany happens in the hills. I would take 2-3 days to do Chianti (Radda and Panzano) - Montalcino and Pienza - San Gimignano - spend 1 day exploring each of these options (do not rush and make sure to eat well)

Bologna/Parma - go here and eat all the classics like Ravioli, Tortellini, Prosciutto, Parmigiano, and Balsamic - great towns, easy to drive in and out, and not nearly the number of foreign tourists (1-2 days)

Venice - I really love things about Venice but you MUST stay away from the central tourist areas - you MUST go to the islands (take the early ferries so you can get back to Venice by 2PM lunch and avoid paying for expensive island food) See the sites as early as they open, then wander around enjoying your day while the hordes crowd around eating shitty ice cream and wearing horrible clothes. Eat lots of seafood, drink loads of wine in the wine bars everyday before dinner. Stare at the wonders of water travel before flying home.

This is in my opinion an aggressive itinerary. Any more stuff than this and you will hate it. If you plan to return to Italy then just do Rome 6 days Florence 2 Siena 2 - Tuscan Wine Country 4 :-)

10 Things to Know and Myths busted

1. Pizza in Rome is an anytime meal (lunch and snack hours best). Pizza south of Rome is generally eaten only at dinner as the ovens are not fired up until evening. There are some Rome pizzerias that serve only at night but those serve whole round pizzas. The tasty square kind served throughout the day by the slice are fun to mix and match. Order by weight and eat on the go.

2. You do not have to order every course in a restaurant. Order what you want to eat. Be adventurous. Look around you and order things you see on the tables. Pointing works if your Italian is non-existent.

3. Breakfast in Italy is not hearty unless you are staying at a nice hotel or agriturismo. If you love breakfast (like me) buy some meat and cheese at the store and shove it down before leaving your hotel each day. Then order coffee and a pastry like everyone else. (you need not order food to enjoy a great coffee if you prefer to skip the sweets)

4. Do everything you can to make sure your own telephone works in Italy. Set up an international plan on your phone and get lots of texts and data. Getting an Italian phone can be done, but visits to the phone store wastes a ton of time. Use your US phone and budget the extra $100 bucks it may add to your bill

5. Pack lightly - Italy is a small country with lots of small spaces. I can offer suggestions how to pack if you ask me directly. However, for this piece I will simply say if you bring too much to Italy, you will hate yourself, and old ladies on public transportation will hate you! My travel friends and I compete on who can bring the least shit on a trip. It's a worthy competition.

6 Hire Guides - expats, especially ones with blogs about food, wine, and life in Italy are wonderful. I can suggest guides for many regions and a little investment will go a long way to your overall success as a first-time Italy traveler.

7. Plan heavily but be flexible - Do your research and have contingencies if something sucks. If you hate Rome, leave early. If you love Radda in Chianti and want to stay an extra day..stay! An old friend always said "never leave a good party hoping the next one might be better" if the place you are is stealing your heart, then let it be stolen.

8. Cab drivers in Rome suck...really bad! use the buses, the metro, and the trains. Walk if you can and have time (and you should). If you must use a cab make sure and ask them the fare in advance...which also sucks. Driving in Rome is also pure unadulterated hell and should be avoided.

9. Italians are not circus animals and they do not want to do tricks for you. Don't ask them to twirl pizza, throw pasta against a wall, or sing some fucking folk song for your listening pleasure. Keeping this in mind, Italians can be entitled, lazy, and intentionally vague. The fact is that all people are people and generally, people prefer to do things in their own way. Respect this and yourself. Don't give or take shit.

9. Try not to dress badly, but you do not have to wear a dress or suit everywhere. Italians frequently wear ugly clothes and have bad hair like we do, they just have their own ways to do it. Hipster glasses are standard and t-shirts are common among many. However, looking like an extra from Duck Dynasty is not cool. Somewhere between Mad Men, Anderson Cooper, and Honey boo-boo should suffice.

10. Don't spit, put your feet on things, go barefoot in public (or really ever outside of the beach). Do not flip anyone off, or try to buy anyone's attention in any way at a bar, restaurant, or airport counter.

These are the Italy Rules and you must abide by them. No matter what, you will have moments that are so sublime they will hardly be done justice by your memories, just as you will have days that will just suck. Italy is slow. Italians are less and less hopeful of their country, and the monuments are starting to decay faster than they can be repaired. I believe in all of this that Italy will have its generational renaissance and will continue to be one of the finest collections of art, people, and culture on the planet.

I look forward to your comments.

tags: Adventure, Food, Housewrighter, Humor, Italian, Juliet Housewright, Michael Housewright, Photgraphy, Photography, Rome, Travel, Travel Tips, Venice, Wine
Tuesday 04.29.14
Posted by Sarah Finger
 

iPhone Imaging Classes - How do you do this stuff?

I teach iPhone imaging classes in the Bay Area and around the country. If you would like to get better results from your iPhone camera, let me help you. I offer group classes and one-to-one lessons. I also lead trips abroad, where we shoot, eat, and enjoy great wines, in some of the world's most wondrous settings. My programs will make you a better iPhone photographer. Please read on for pricing, dates, and programs. The images here I have recently submitted to photo contest for the Mid Peninsula Regional  Open Space District

645 Pro Pano

  • Group Classes - I teach groups up to 25 persons intro to iPhone imaging. This course can be a single 6 hour day with a lunch break, or 2 three-hour classes on consecutive days (or weeks). This is a fun course and it is amazing how far students go from start to finish. This class ranges from $99-150 per person depending on class size, and configuration. *Pricing is for San Francisco Bay Area only.

  • One to One classes - Usually 1 to 3 students (who know one another) these are hourly courses intended to take students from beginner to amateur level, or to hone skills learned prior (processing, light, capture apps) Classes are $150 per student for a 2 hour course $200 per student for 3 Hours and $300 per student for a 5 hour full-day program

  • Travel - We are launching a Travel with The Housewrighter program for 2014. We will be in Southern Italy in November for a full week of amazing fun, and great photography. Much more to come :-)

HDR done well on the iPhone

iPhone imaging classes will improve your ability to take great photos for social media, documenting the lives of your children and pets, and give you a sense of accomplishment and artistic expression. I have taken over 75,000 images with my iPhone since 2011, so let me offer you insight into using the device, and you will be pleased with the outcome.

For more info, please complete the attached contact form, and I will be in touch soon. I will not share your contact info with anyone, including the NSA.

Cheers,

Michael

tags: Images, Italy, Juliet Housewright, Michael Housewright, Photography, The Housewrighter, Travel
Wednesday 03.05.14
Posted by Sarah Finger
 

Olympus Stylus 1 Trials - Russian Ridge

Olympus Stylus 1 Trials at Russian Ridge is part 1 of a series of photos I have taken with my new Olympus Stylus 1 Camera. I am slimming down my camera bag for upcoming trips to Mexico, Northern California, and Denver. This amazing piece of equipment takes beautiful images and weighs so very little compared to my Nikon DSLR. These shots, taken at Russian Ridge Open Space Preserve, show some of the capacity that this little gem of a camera has, equipped only with its factory settings.

One of the features I coveted most when seeking a new point and shoot camera is: bokeh. The ability to get attractively blurred areas of an image while keeping other areas sharp. In DSLR photography this is done with short focal length lenses and fast F stops. With the Stylus 1 I simply zoom tight on my subject area from a distance and I get this sharp foreground, and dreamy background effect. The effect is even more powerful on small objects or subjects at greater distances.  I am enamored with the natural beauty of Russian Ridge, and this quick portrait of Juliet given an indication why.

One of the most powerful features associated with this camera, is the built-in Wi-Fi app. I took this photo, and within 10 minutes it was on my iPad, edited, and saved. I need this kind of ease of operation when I am in the field and shooting abroad. The wi-fi connection is a hot-spot between the camera and the iPad (or iPhone) and so no external connection is required to make transfers. One would obviously need an outside connection to post an image. This shot was edited on Snapseed, Old Photo Pro, and Blender. I love the texture and the dreamy association to the past.

I like to crop to 1:1 (square images) to use on Instagram and for print purposes. I caught this young man doing his Tai Chi into the sunset. I was 30 yards from him and was able to get this kind of detail in the zoom. A little editing with Snapseed was all I needed to insure the effect would be strong. This is a moving image and without the lovely zoom and continuous f2.8 capacity of the Olympus Stylus 1, I would not have been able to get this high-quality image. 

Here is an example of the range of the Stylus 1. These deer were roughly 75 yards from me when I caught this image. I cropped the image to 1:1 and the detail in the deer faces is very good. The Bokeh is pleasing, and the shot gives a good example of the twilight capacity of the camera. And of course, the lovely wildlife in Russian Ridge Open Space Preserve.

The purple and pink hues in the sunset that evening were simply stunning behind these craggy oaks. A little Snapseed tied it all together like a good rug in Jeff Lebowski's living room. Very low light is a slight challenge for the Stylus 1 as f2.8 is not the very top end for speed. At the same time, shots like this have less noise than my iPhone and a nicer depth of field.

Finally, with the light waning quickly I snapped off some very nice zooms of the moon. I can never get my SLR to get this correct (without lots of tweaks), and with the Stylus 1 I simply dialed down the exposure, and got a personal taste of moon rocks. I used a fun new iPhone/iPad app called Waterlogue to get the watercolor effects. I blended this in Image Blender to get this take on the moon over Russian Ridge. We were hustling out at this point to avoid any undue encounters with Mountain Lions.

I hope you enjoyed this little review of the Olympus Stylus 1 at Russian Ridge Open Space Preserve. The camera is $699.99 at most retailers and comes with everything one needs to get right out and shoot (except an SD card). I give this camera an A- overall, and that may go up as I get better with it.

tags: Adventure, Camera Trials, Images, Juliet Housewright, Michael Housewright, Olympus Stylus 1, Photography, Russian Ridge Open Space, The Housewrighter
Thursday 02.27.14
Posted by Michael Housewright
 

Travel and the Ethereal Images

Travel and the Ethereal Images is the link to our gallery show Nov 2-26, 2013 at Miraflores Winery in Placerville, CA. There will be 2 artists receptions this weekend Nov 2 and 3rd at 1PM each day. Join us for wine, conversation, and a chance to enjoy our work. Click any image to begin a full-screen slide show (manual controls included) with details, sizing, and pricing information.

Travel and the Ethereal — A mobile photography exhibition Michael and Juliet Housewright are mobile phone photographers inspired by years of foreign travel. Their work has been featured in yearly shows in Denver, Vermont, and the outstanding online publications, Your Life is a Trip, and Hipstography. Their first exhibition at Miraflores features images shot using only an iPhone in Hong Kong, Italy, California, Utah, Vietnam, and Colorado. Their work often blurs the lines between the concrete and the abstract. What is apparent immediately is how close the viewer feels to the subjects of the photos and how incredible the sense of place has been captured using only a mobile phone. You may see more of their work at www.theblissfuladventurer.com or at Miraflores. A reception for the artists both days at 1 pm.

tags: Adventure, Fine Art, Hipstamatic, Juliet Housewright, Michael Housewright, Miraflores Winery, Photography, Travel, Travel and the Ethereal
Tuesday 10.29.13
Posted by Sarah Finger
 
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