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Confused by Digital Cameras? Don't Be Like many in the Baby Boom, I
grew up in a house full of cameras. The post-war prosperity meant
that most families could afford to chronicle their own lives. The
cameras ranged from antique Kodak Brownies to SLR box cameras and
gradually to Instamatics and Polaroids. When I started art school
in 1971, Photo 101 included darkroom developing and printing. My
"photo editing software" was a dodging stick - a thin rod with
variously sized and shaped cardboard forms on the end, held
manually between the projector and photo paper to deny light to
chosen areas of the print as I counted off seconds. Since I was too
broke to afford am upscale SLR, I compensated for my cheap camera's
shortcomings with creative darkroom technique. Today, we'd say most
of my work was "Photoshopped." However, I soon learned that if I
planned the shot properly, I needed less darkroom trickery to get
the finished piece I wanted. That planning paid off years later,
when I finally did have better hardware. From 2004 to 2007, I
taught a series of photography courses at the Ed Tech Training
Center in Marion, Kentucky, and shared my approaches to planning
each shot, and developing the artistic vision. I was still using
the anachronism "film speed," and would be told each time by the
students with digital cameras that they did not have film What they
couldn't grasp is that they still had film speed settings (ISO) on
their cameras. The manuals I had created for those courses formed a
solid instructional core, and were expanded into a full book.
Professionals in several states told me they've learned from my
lessons. I hope you find this work of value to you as well
When Dr. Taylor Warren appears in Doe Run searching for the secret
of his ancestry, he is surprised to meet the beautiful entrepreneur
Katie McGee and her loving, strong-willed grandmother. Katie and
her grandmother help him search for the secret that his mother kept
hidden for so many years. Katie also helps him find that true love
is worth all the pain. The Secret of Doe Run is a journey home for
the heart. It creates a rich sensory perception of an area of
Appalachia, its people, their customs and a look into an age old
question "Why are we here?" With the resurgence of family values,
this story will touch the hearts of those who value the importance
of family, and tradition.
With renewed interest in the ancient Cherokee Calendar and other
Native American timekeeping systems, the need for a simple way to
learn the major factors affecting each days has now been filled.
While there are traditionally 22 factors affecting each day, and
calculation can be a time-consuming process, this ephemeris
provides the five most important factors. For each day from 2012 to
2054, the Day Sign, Wind Sign, Week Sign, Year Sign and Year Wind
are provided in an easy-to-use text-based almanac format
How would you like to be able to get more exposure to any product,
service or band without having to spend a lot of money? What if you
can get that massive exposure without having to spend ANY money at
all? How about giving your online and offline reputation a boost?
This book can not only teach you how to do that but so much more by
leveraging the media. This is the guide to becoming newsworthy and
getting FREE publicity you couldn't buy. Brian Wilkes goes shares
many powerful strategies to give you an advantage over the
competition. The key is becoming genuinely newsworthy so that the
media regards you as a reliable source of information in your
field, the "go-to guy" when they need a comment or analysis.
The Asian martial arts rely on thousands of years of experience
when it comes to fighting skills. Injuries happen in the martial
arts, and fortunately, the arts also rely on thousands of years of
healing skills. Fatigue is also a frequent companion, and there are
traditional strategies to deal with that as well. This book
contains in-depth analysis of three topical preparations, and well
as five energy teas - all of which you can learn to make yourself
The Savior spoke to His audience at their level of sophistication.
To the religious leadership of His day, he quoted Holy Scripture.
To Pilate, He spoke of law and the underlying nature of truth. To
the common people, He spoke in common terms, and quoted popular
folk sayings. In a similar way, the apostles realized that there
were different levels of understanding in the first Christians as
well. St Paul tells the Corinthians that as babies they must have
milk to survive, but will receive solid food, deeper teachings,
later as adults. They would not be able to grasp the deeper,
theoretical aspects of the Gospel message until they had a firm
grasp of more fundamental teachings. We each have our own learning
styles, and varying ability to grasps the messages. Great
dramatists layer their works so there's something for each level of
understanding, from those who understand symbolic language and
allegory to those who only perceive an action story. How much
better, then, does The Lord knows that not all have the same
spiritual capacity or insight. We would do well to pray for
increased understanding of the milk of the Christian life so that
we will find the joy in the solid food of the Kingdom that awaits
us. In that spirit, we offer the children the warm, sweet mother's
milk of these simply-told Bible stories, in the earnest hope that
the listener and reader are built up and strengthened for the New
Life.
The complete 27 books of the New Testament, translated into
Cherokee in the early and middle 1800s, offered now in a larger
print version. Rev. Samuel Worcester created the first mass printed
version of the New Testament in the writing system then recently
devised by Sequoyah. This edition also includes blank pages you can
use as a spiritual diary or to record genealogical information for
your descendants. Proceeds from this edition benefit the Cherokee
Bible Project and the Four Rivers Native American Church.
In this new collection of more than 50 poems and essays, Robert
Yehling "(Shades of Green, The River-Fed Stone, The Champion's
Way)" returns to a prime source of inspiration and fulfillment -
the back roads. Blending challenge with adventure, and natural
observation with awakening, he uncovers the textures, rhythms,
loves, tears, laughs, and ever-renewing cycle of life off the
beaten path - visiting a few cultural icons along the way.
"Backroad Melodies" reminds us of those treasure-laden roads deep
inside ourselves that we all too rarely explore. "With clarity of
thought and mastery of word order, Robert Yehling alarms the
conscience, stimulates the brain, tugs at the heart, and tickles
the funny bone-all to excess." -Charles Redner, poet, author,
publisher of "The Hummingbird Review" "You're talkin' my language.
And drivin' my landscape. The colors. The sky..." -Luis Alberto
Urrea, American Book Award-winning author of "The Hummingbird's
Daughter" and "The Devil's Highway," finalist for the Pulitzer
Prize.
As with our humble efforts to bring these Hymns in the Cherokee
language back to our scattered people worldwide, we are grateful to
be able to assist in this effort to bring the songs and prayers
themselves back to into the homes of all people who desire to see,
read, and to hear them. Transliterated songs to the familiar
melodies of Amazing Grace; One Drop of Blood; Wayfaring Stranger;
Guide Us, Great Jehovah; What a Friend We Have In Jesus; I Will
Arise; Just As I Am; Jesus Loves Me; Rock of Ages; Come, Thou
Fount; At The Cross; How Great Thou Art.
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