Light Entertainment
January 2nd, 2026New Year’s Tree
I am still fiddling with Photolab9, trying to improve a photo of a tree. I shot it yesterday, thinking the only purpose of shooting was to learn how to use the camera and lens, but later I saw that with editing, the photo was very nice. It lacks a compact subject that ties it together, but such subjects aren’t always necessary, and also, there is nothing wrong with a photo that serves as a non-distracting background.
Google AI told me to use Photolab’s AI masking tools. These are somewhat like the old magnetic lasso tool in Photoshop Elements, except they require less work and give you less control. The magnetic lasso would let you draw a border around an area and apply changes within it. It would automatically cling to the object to avoid selecting things outside of it. The AI mask simply guesses and grabs a large area it thinks you want to isolate, so it may include or exclude things against your will.
I have not been able to get the mask to work well enough. It grabs the entirety of the tree’s canopy, so if I try to brighten up the trunk and limbs, I will also ruin the color of the sky behind the canopy.
I decided to try Smart Lighting instead. It tries to compensate for things like inadequate flash.
The first version of the edited photo is in yesterday’s blog post. Here is the new one:
I think this is considerably better than the first version. I lose some of the encompassing feeling of the dark tree, but on the other hand, I get a lot of detail on the side facing me. Sadly, reducing this to blog size really makes it coarse.
I can’t upload a better version because WordPress rejects files over a certain size. Maybe it’s a webhosting issue. I will look into ways to put bigger shots on the web so I can link to them.
AI thinks there is a way to make the mask work. Maybe I’ll figure it out later.
Last night, I had an emotional experience. I had been editing photos for a long time, and I started thinking about the way photography had opened my eyes to how much beauty there was around me.
That sounds trite, but there is more to it than it seems.
I don’t like this world. The suffering here is beyond anything we can imagine. We are numb to it because we have to get used to it in order to survive without being miserable around the clock, but it is here. All around us, creatures are always suffering tremendously, and it would never have gotten this way had we let God rule us.
There are a lot of sickly people in this county, and then I’m out and about, I see them. When I spot somebody with enormous, swollen legs, a hunched back, morbid obesity, or some other serious problem, my heart sinks, and I think, “This place is horrible,” referring to the entire world. It reminds me how much pain there is and how unusual it is for us to be able to do anything about it.
Heaven isn’t like this. The Messianic Age will not be like this. We did this to ourselves.
I said photography shows us the beauty of the world, but that’s not really true. It makes the world look more beautiful than it is. We choose subjects we like, and we choose our variables and edit our shots to bring out beauty they don’t really have. We bring out a little bit of the much greater beauty God intended them to have.
It’s like there is a black sheet between us and God, with little holes in it, and what we see in beautiful photos is like looking through the holes briefly and seeing what the world is supposed to be like.
The tree I photographed doesn’t look as good as the photo. It’s my effort to show what an ideal version of the tree would look like. A version in a world that isn’t cursed.
When I edit photos, deep relaxation settles over me, and I believe it’s because I feel as though I am making things right. I am creating images that feel a little bit like they were shot in heaven.
Maybe God helped me get back to photography and start creating better pictures in order to provide a painkiller to reduce the pain of living in this world. My life is wonderful, but I still hate it here because of the suffering of the creatures around me who are not so blessed and who are so hard to help.
Maybe God is reminding my heart that something better is coming.
I don’t just see beauty in photos, of course. I see it in love; in the relationships I have with God and the people who know him.
In 2018, I was praying, and in my mind, I kept hearing, “Thank you for beauty.” I wonder if God was hinting at things to come.
When I went out to shoot yesterday, a group of sandhill cranes were eating in the pasture. These are 4-foot-tall birds just made for wildlife photos. Unfortunately, I could not get anywhere near them, and my 50mm zoom made them look like ants in photos. I wonder if I should consider getting a real telephoto lens. Is it worth it? This farm is loaded with birds and squirrels, and we occasionally see coyotes, foxes, possums, and coons.
I may try it. The more beauty I can grab while I live in this rotten world, the better I’ll feel.

January 2nd, 2026 at 5:45 PM
Steve — I’m pretty sure you can increase the file size limit in WordPress, if you’re hosting it yourself that is. I think I’ve done it on my vanity site, though I can’t remember the details. A plugin probably.
As for masking your tree — something with a shape that complex is always going to be very difficult, even for an AI tool.
Telephoto lenses are great if you want to photograph wildlife — something I’ve not tried. If you decide to go ahead, make sure you get a long enough lens. I think bird photographers, for example, use lenses as long as they can reasonably carry around, maybe 600mm or thereabouts. You also might need a lot of patience to wait for the animals to come close enough to get a decent picture. Wildlife photography is a world unto itself.
I also get into a what I think is called a “Flow state” when I’m editing photographs. It’s almost therapeutic.
As for the pain of living in this world — I don’t know. Like a lot of people, my own life has been pretty difficult for one reason and another. I try to take it as it comes, though there are good days and bad days. I think my frame of mind is pretty variable, which maybe has more influence on how I experience things than anything else. I’m not religious. Maybe that would be some sort of balm, I don’t know.
Anyway, it’s good for me personally to have distractions. Photography is one of the main ones, and it hurts nobody.
Happy New Year.
January 2nd, 2026 at 7:43 PM
If you are going lens shopping look at keh.com. they are a long-time used retailer with a great reputation. Atlanta area. Their grading is very conservative.
January 3rd, 2026 at 10:08 AM
Happy New Year, Stephen.
I have some stuff from KEH, and a lens from MPB is arriving today. It’s a 27 mm f/1.2, so I am hoping to get better indoor shots.