
Although I am not at liberty to offer many details, I can say that the image above represents a significant milestone achieved by my team at Digital Alloys as we continue to refine our metal 3D printer.

Although I am not at liberty to offer many details, I can say that the image above represents a significant milestone achieved by my team at Digital Alloys as we continue to refine our metal 3D printer.

I made an early morning trip to the coast to tour one of the properties Jeanine and I thought might be interesting for our retirement years. The house, in serious need of remodeling or possibly total replacement, is situated above a private cove which is quite lovely. We have thoroughly enjoyed the view of the field in our back yard for the last 16 years and are hoping to find a home with an equally enjoyable vista. We have been focused on wetlands, mountains, or a lake view but now have expanded the list to include an ocean view.

Not one of the more photogenic insects I have managed to photograph recently, but all I could find today. He was sunbathing on the picnic table outside my office at lunchtime. He seemed quite content to share the bench with me. Judging by the amount of pollen on his body, I am guessing this guy was taking a breather after some heavy-duty pollination.

For a change of pace and locale, Jeanine and I spent the day house hunting on the Atlantic seaboard. We started in Beverly and work our way down through Marblehead to Nahant. We found a couple of interesting properties that will make our “saved” list as well as two lighthouses. Pictured above, is the Hospital Point Light Station (now a private residence) named for a smallpox hospital built on the site. It is one of 5 Massachusetts lighthouses that still retains its original Fresnel lens. Pictured below, is the Marblehead Light Station, one of about 14 examples of pyramidal skeletal lighthouses surviving in the United States today, as well as the only one of its kind still standing in New England. The 105-foot tall, cast-iron structure with a central tower cylinder was built in 1896.



We are having our house painted this week including the 34 shutters that flank the windows on the front side. Of that number, four were in need of repair of one type or another. I spent several hours fabricating and installing missing or damaged parts. Thus far, I am very please with the work of our painters who are taking the time to do the job right. Today they spent the entire day doing prep work and probably will not start painting for a few more days.

Today, I received an e-mail from a favorite Truevision colleague. She reached out to get copies of the photos I took at her daughter’s wedding for an album to celebrate their five year anniversary. She was specifically interested in photos that the couple may have not seen before. I was able to send her 40 images from my archive. Just to put things in context, I have known the bride since she was 7 years old and she is now pregnant with her third child. Boy, do I feel old.


Occasionally, I have an opportunity to utilize my photography skills at work. Often, it is for marketing photos or employee headshots. Today, it was for forensic failure analysis. I am not at liberty to divulge what you are looking at but can say that having this image helps my team and I identify the root cause of a failure we observed.

A gift from my mother, this Japanese lantern has graced our garden since we moved in some 16 years ago. It looked on, as the entire family worked together to clean, declutter, and organize the shed that is attached to the back of our house. The intensity of work was matched only by the oppressive humidity and temperature of the day. The transformation after a couple of hours, however, was nothing short of dramatic. Elsewhere in the yard, there were many late-blooming flowers left to enjoy.




Our corn crop is getting fairly tall despite this guy’s propensity for dining on the plants. It will not be long before s/he is able to traverse the field unobserved. Pictured in the foreground and outside the depth of focus is a birdhouse with its resident sun tanning on the roof. If you study the aerial photo below carefully, you may find another instance of our frequent diner.


I recently photographed a dragonfly with a macro lens at a very close range. Today, I used one of my telephoto lenses to shoot one from about 3 feet away. Even so, he was quite skittish. Fortunately, he kept returning to the same perch which made it somewhat easier for me to get a nice photo. I just love the faces and variety of colors that can be found among these magnificent little helicopters.
I am coining a new phrase; “work art.” It describes artwork made during the course of work not intended to create artwork. This image, taken last week on Digital Alloy’s scanning electron microscope, provided very important evidence to help us diagnose a problem that we have been trying to solve for some time. When I saw it for the first time, my initial response was that of a photographer, admiring it for the beauty of the image rather than a researcher looking at the answer to a long-standing mystery.