Showing posts with label commercial photography. Show all posts
Showing posts with label commercial photography. Show all posts

Sunday, March 8, 2015

WOW! Bursting With Pride!

Lipton on a zip line, filming.

It’s either the caffeine I imbibed this morning, or I’m having a heart attack, or I am simply bursting with pride! I think it’s the pride thing.

Lipton (as in Lipton Jayawickrama – remember that name!) worked on a commercial video for Borderlands Sri Lanka, for Annoyboy Pictures. He was the Director of Photography for the film and did all of the shots, except the underwater whale shots. He was gone for several days, up in Kittugalle and down south in Mirissa, doing this project and I had an idea of what it was about, but when I saw the video this morning I was BLOWN AWAY!

Now it’s YOUR turn to be blown away!

Enjoy!

Lipton Jaywickrama - DoP - Director of Photography



Check out our Sri Lankan wedding photography, travel photography, portrait photography, female photographers, commercial photography and videography, Colombo photographers, at our website at: http://www.shadetreeSL.com

To book us for your photography and videography needs, call +94 777387734/5

© ShadeTree Productions



Friday, August 22, 2014

Colors Galore!

It’s time for a new LucysBuzz. I’ve been waiting anxiously to put up this video. Our very own Lipton Jayawickrama was the Director of Photography. It’s a super commercial and was a super shoot, so says Lipton!

I love it! I hope you will, too! Share it!

Multilac commercial shoot – Lipton Jayawickrama, Director of Photography



Check out our Sri Lankan wedding photography, travel photography, portrait photography, female
photographers, commercial photography at our website at: http://www.shadetreeSL.com
© ShadeTree Productions

Monday, April 28, 2014

The Noisy Ati Kukula


Every year around the time of the Sinhala New Year comes a Whoop Oop Oop from the neighboring trees. It’s a loud birdcall of the Ati Kukula and this morning four of them were going at it and Whoop Oop Oop’ing it up. So loud that their calls woke me up.

I’ve seen this bird in my garden and I usually get Toby to chase it away. I had a nest of baby birds and my old house and an Ati Kukula snuck up and ate them! I’m not a fan of this bird, but I did learn that they eat snakes, and so if they are stalking around on the ground, I’ll let them be, but if they are in the trees where the other birds nest, I send out Toby!

They have red eyes and walk in a stalking manner. I’ve never seen it do its famous call, but I find them quite creepy.

As I write there are two of them calling to each other in the tree by my bedroom window. I wish I could get a sound bite for the blog. One time I was talking to my granddaughter in the US on my mobile and she heard the Ati Kukula whooping it up in the background. Made her miss the Sri Lanka she came to visit one year.

As for me, I could have used a bit more sleep this morning, instead of waking up to the Ati Kukulas calling to each other!

I've not gotten a photo of the New Years noise maker, so I took an image off the web and a video off youtube.

Web photo of the Ati Kukula

Below is a youtube video of it stalking around.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8_w3g-4r1Ls

Check out our Sri Lankan wedding photography, travel photography, portrait photography, female photographers, commercial photography at our website at: http://www.shadetreeSL.com
© ShadeTree Productions

Sunday, April 20, 2014

Easter Dog


I totally missed Easter this year. I knew it happened because I saw a bunch of Easter greetings on Facebook today, but I missed it because of all the weddings we had this week.
There is an Easter story, though – never doubt that I don’t have a story!
When I was about 7 or 8, when I think I still believed in the Easter Bunny, my parents snuck into my bedroom to place the Easter basket full of candies by my bedside. I was still awake, but I kept my eyes shut tight, feinting sleep. They were whispering and my beloved stepfather, John, wanted to hang the basket off the curtain rod by my bed, so that I’d wake up thinking the Bunny had missed me. What a jokester! Well, my mother didn’t want me to have one moment of disappointment so John’s idea was nixed. The basket was placed beside my bed and they left the room.
I’ve never been one to cheat and open Christmas or birthday presents early and pasted the paper back so they look unopened. I’ve always liked the waiting for the surprise. That’s part of the fun for me, the waiting. So, I didn’t attack my Easter basket, I went back to sleep.
When morning hit, I looked down at the basket with great anticipation of all the chocolate and especially the Sanders Candy chocolate Easter Bunny, and there was nothing in it except chewed up candy wrappers! It had been raided by Laurie, our family Dalmatian. She’d eaten everything!
So sad, too bad John didn’t get his way and put the basket up on the curtain rod!

My beloved stepfather, John H. Begle
Handsome fellow!

Check out my Sri Lankan wedding photography, travel photography, portrait photography, female photographers, commercial photography at my website at: http://www.shadetreeSL.com
© ShadeTree Productions

Saturday, April 12, 2014

This Wasn’t No George!


Well, I’m almost up to here (top of my head) with tropical wildlife, especially when they are in my house. I walked into the office yesterday afternoon only to find a 5ft snake slithering toward the back of my giant glass and wood bookcase.
‘OH MY GOD!’ I shouted and shut the office door, trapping the creature. I’m surprised I didn’t let 3 F-bombs shout out! I called Lipton who was not much help. He said to get a broom and keep an eye on it, but I’d already lost track of it when I slammed the door shut.
My friend Madhuri told me to go to the neighbors, each one if I had to, to get help. I went to the neighbor across the lane and told the houseman my dilemma and he said he couldn’t help because he was afraid of snakes! So, I asked him to get the Sir of the house and see if he could help. Which he did. He came along with the Chicken (two, if you count me) and we got two brooms. I was the one, though, who had to open the door and enter the room to look for the snake. The brave men stood at the door.
Trying to find a flashlight that worked was impossible, so I found a long PVC pipe that the Sir whacked behind the bookcase. Nothing came out. Not even a puff of dust!
I rattled the broom under the desks and in cubbyholes and anywhere a snake could hide. It couldn’t have gotten out because both doors were closed. But by that time I was brave enough to open the door to the outside so it could escape.
In the meantime, my gallant helpers went home and Toby and I barricaded ourselves up in my bedroom and watched 4 episodes of The Killing.
I’m now in the office, my feet up on the stool underneath the desk and I’m assuming that the 5-footer has taken off. I’m praying it’s taken off!
But now after having had the giant monitor in my kitchen – which I rarely enter at night, and never enter without checking here and there to make sure that the kitchen is monster-free – I’ll have to do the same with the office every time I enter it!
How much more can a girl take!
I shouldn’t actually be afraid of snakes because when my daughter was 10-years-old, she had a pet Gopher Snake that was also 5ft long. We would both let George wrap himself around us and she would actually go to the door and greet people with George wrapped around her neck! We eventually let him free in the wild, as we couldn’t bear to feed him the baby mice he needed for his monthly dinners. We called his liberation day, St. George’s Day.
Madhuri called me back to see if the snake (she said it was probably a rat snake) was gone and also told me that’s why she lives in an apartment, so she doesn’t have wildlife visitors come visiting! I’m seriously thinking of moving in with her, her husband and two kids!
This is what Google said about the rat snake:
Rat snake is the second largest snake in the country with some specimens observed with 3000mm long while many exceed 2400mm in length (de Silva, Anslem & Jinasena Jayantha 2009). It is a widely distributed snake from sea level to higher hills including some off-shore islands in Jaffna peninsula (Somaweera R., 2006) while common in the low country and foot hills.  It is mostly living in anthropogenic habitats like home gardens, plantations and paddy fields since its main food frogs, toads and rats are abundant in such places. Other than that it feeds on lizards, birds, snakes, palm squirrels, bats etc.  Rat snake is active during the day time and it is mainly a terrestrial snake though usually climbs trees and roofs in search of its prey.  It is a non-venomous snake though may bite savagely when cornered. Its usual defense habit is raise its fore body and hissing like a cobra while sometime also produces a deep long groaning sound. ----Holy shit! 

Since I didn't get a chance to get the camera
and ask the buggar to pose for me, I'm resorting
to a google photo. I think that's what it
looked like. Brown and greyish looking.

This selfie was sent to me by Grace Rachow, another
blogger! So funny and apropos!



Check out my Sri Lankan wedding photography, travel photography, portrait photography, female photographers, commercial photography at my website at: http://www.shadetreeSL.com
© ShadeTree Productions