Message from andy
    
      
      
Welcome to Lighthawk Photo.  Enjoy your tour.
 
 
 Pbase has become the most prolific way for me to share my journey, although prints are my ultimate goal.  I value the community that Pbase creates for photographers and visitors to share and comment in a public forum.  I have learned from many of you and enjoy comments given and received.  I ask you to share your insights on individual images or galleries.  Please comment!  
 
 My Photo Story:
 
 I have been fascinated by cameras since an early age, using my own Polaroid Land Camera SX-70 in late sixties which delivered prints in just a minute!.  In the mid-seveties I was fortunate to shoot two solid years as a high school yearbook staff photographer, using 35mm SLR and Yashica twin-lens reflex formats. We had enormous battery packs that we lugged around.  I learned layout and cropping skills as well as photojournalism.  
 
 My first SLR was an Olympus OM-10 for a B&W college course.  It was light, semi-automatic and had a fast 24mm 1.8 lens.  I gave it plenty of use both outdoors adventure and with international travel.  I wore out several fanny packs bringing my camera up daylong rock climbing adventures.  Someday I will scan and catalog selections from more than 1000 slides from a period of 1983-1999.  Luckily, when I went somewhere important (high altitude climbing in Peru and Mexico, I always shot slide film.  Some of the slide film is from the OM-10 body and also a variety of mid-quality point & shoot models (Vivitar, etc.).
 
 I was an early adopter of digital and bought a Sony Mavica in the late nineties which spun 3.5" disks for recording job sites.  I read that it's one of the pioneer digital cameras.  In 2001 I brought a Olympus 3MP Camedia digital point & shoot on a trek in Nepal, shooting in blizzards and rain, warming my batteries and charging when I could get near the generator.  It was a lot of fun, but I missed the control of an SLR body.  I have done 8x10 prints, but the jpeg files over very little post-processing headroom.  
 
 When Canon broke the $1000 USD barrier in 2003 with the Digital Rebel 6MP, I jumped back into my photography career.  The Rebel was light and I took it skiing and backpacking, while learning interior photo skills for my construction business portfolio.  I bought a Sigma 12-24mm and a basic tripod, later added a light system (see www.pbase.com/wrightbuilt).  I got rid of the kit lens right away.
 
 In 2005 I upgraded to the Canon 20D after my kit was stolen in Belize. Since many of my pursuits require lightweight equipment I purchased the Canon XTI body in 2008.  My next upgrade will likely be a 5D for the full sensor and discounted now that the Mark II is out.  UPDATE:  2010 I purchased the Canon 7D for 8fps performance.  It's a crop sensor, which I still find limiting, but handles my 400 5.6 very well with super quick focus.
 
 **UPDATE July 09** Recently purchased Canon G10 15MP f2.8 and am having a ball with it.  It goes everywhere and fits perfectly with my Manfrotto table top tripod with a miniball head.  It makes it ridiculously easy to take long exposures with minimal setup.  Lot's of fun and quite sporty. 
 
 G10 updates:  Spring 2010 Canon replaced the lens under warrantyt after I sent it in with two noticeable scratches from the lens covers ( a fairly well documented mfg. flaw ) Summer 2010 this G10 survived a complete immersion in water.  I stripped the battery quickly and put it in front of a blow dryer for hours.  After waiting overnight I put the battery back in and it works!  Amazing.
 
 Lenses:  
 Sigma 12-24mm (sharp, wide and someday full sensor) 
 Canon 24mm f2.8 (sold, but light & fast), 
 50mm f1.8 (sharp as a tack), 
 85mm f1.8 (excellent compact, sharp & fast), 
 17-40mm f4L (great for hiking, compact), 
 24-85mm f3.5-4.5 (pretty darn sharp, light but has good reach), 
 17-55mm f2.8 IS (excellent low light, versatile) *my favorite
 70-200mm f4L IS (compact tele, great color, very sharp, now with image stabilizat
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