Jig Jag Blog – Random Pieces of Text

Tickets as Gifts

07.02.2010 (3:14 am) – Filed under: Opinion ::

Looking for a great and unusual gift? Want someting that the recipient will remember forever?

Tickets are a great gift for the person who has just about everything and doesn’t want any more material goods. Life to me is now more about experiences to remember. Time with kids and grandkids. Time doing things like fishing, travelling, watching live shows and sports.

Too much stuff means too much to care for and maintain. With tickets you get to reexperience the memories over and over again.

There’s lots of tickets I want this year. They could include BANK ATLANTIC CENTER TICKETS, BENEDUM CENTER TICKETS or even Harlem Globetrotters tickets.

I hope my son is a mindreader. It doesn’t really matter which tickets I get, as long as I get one of the three. When in doubt, buy tickets ! They make a gift that will be remembered.

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Shape and Form in Photographs

01.09.2009 (10:00 am) – Filed under: Opinion ::

Like our eyes, a camera captures reflected light. If the light source is directly behind the camera, reflections bounce back directly off the subject and give an idea of its shape but not so much of its forms, scale and dimensions. But if lit from behind or from the side, the camera captures more light reflected off the subject’s angles. There are more brighter highlights and fewer shadow tones, contrast is higher and the subject’s shape and form become more distinct.

When the light comes from behind the camera, a scene has less contrast, lighter-coloured areas stand out and shadows are filled with light and contain visible detail. But the photograph’s overall impact is often drab and flat. However, when the camera is pointing into the light, edges and shadows become much more distinct.

In a landscape, for example, the sun may shine through leaves, making them stand out, showing the different types of trees and silhouetting trunks and branches. Light also bounces brightly off water and other surfaces. This results in an image with much more of a sense of depth.

Also consider the quality of light. Strong, raking light is often better able to show the form of angular structures, but diffused light can reveal more subtle forms in faces and other softly rounded objects.

As well as the angle and quality of light, the physical composition of a subject’s edges is important for conveying its shape. This is especially important in outdoor portraits. With the sun in the subject’s face, and less contrast, the shape of the head is not clearly defined against a background lit by the same light. But with the sun behind the subject, the light is diffused by the many individual hairs and forms an attractive fringe that brings out the shape we expect to see in a portrait.

Objects with multiple angles are great for exploring shape and form, especially when they are shiny or wet. Very bright specular (mirror-like) highlights can bounce off many angles, and even on a particularly drab day, shapes with such surfaces can stand out.

Flick through our Australian photo library and have a look at our wide and interesting selection of Australian stock pictures. We pride ourselves in quality images at affordable prices.

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Don’t Write Off the Market Just Yet

10.04.2009 (9:05 am) – Filed under: Interesting Stuff, Marketing, Opinion ::

Some investors have a different view on stockmarket falls. They see the low stock prices as an opportunity to purchase a bargain.

During times of market fluctuations, it is our natural instinct to guard our wealth and distance ourselves from risk. While this reaction is unsurprising, it can also mean losing out on growth opportunities created during volatile times.

Warren Buffet, one of the world’s best professional investors, believes market slumps from another perspective, saying “Look at market fluctuations as your friend rather than your foe; profit from folly rather than participate in it.”

Generally when we see a lower price for something we want we rush in for a bargain, however it can be quite the opposite with stocks. Why is it that we treat shares that have dropped in price with dread? Stock prices of a company can fall for a multitude of factors.

Lately we have seen the share prices of a number of reputable companies with sound balance sheets be negatively affected due to a rush to sell as a result of the economic crisis.

Despite the uncertain share trading environment, fund managers are constantly reviewing the market for investment opportunities. Many fund managers are searching to find stocks in sound companies with strong balance sheets and returns. For example Australian companies such as household names like David Jones have delivered strong profits after tax and dividends in 2008. However during 2008, David Jones’ share price fell by more than 30%.

Identifying opportunities
Not all firms will be affected by the global economic crisis in the same way. Some sectors are more susceptible to the economic cycle than others.

Providers of basic goods and services continue on almost unabated, for example we all need to eat – so supermarkets aren’t as affected as much as manufacturing, motor vehicle sales or luxury goods.

Australia’s population growth is at a 20 year high and growing at 1.7% per annum. Australia’s growing population provides increasing demand for goods and services as people need food, housing, cars, and other staples. Unlike many overseas countries, Australia benefits from two key factors: a high population growth rate and a high demand for houses.

Population growth is nearly double that of the US while Germany has negative population growth. In the US there is an over-supply of housing while Australia suffers from a lack of supply. The combination of limited housing and a rising population will create growing demand for housing which will support further construction and provide opportunities for the building industry.

The value of companies
Many people view companies with falling share prices with fear, but we need to take a look under the hood of these firms to find out why. Have they borrowed heavily?

What industry are they in? Are they competitive against their peers? Only by answering these questions, can we know if their stock value has fallen for valid reasons or if the company is indeed on sale.

When investing, many professional investors seek firms with high and maintainable dividends, strong balance sheets and ongoing cash flow. These companies are more likely to outlast the volatility storm and may give you a greater return when the market moves into the next phase of recovery and
beyond.

Before you consider changing your investment, you should see a professional. Having a financial planner and a long-term financial plan can give you confidence to manage the effects of market cycles. With the right advice you can ensure your investments are tailored to your risk profile and time horizon, giving you the certainty of knowing you’re doing what’s right for you. This article brought to you by a Brisbane business consultant who offers sales training courses and a web site designer brisbane. Distribution by seo packages. BS1004

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