Interior Design by Reid & Siemonsen Design Group

Featuring beautiful views of Kingston's Confederation Basin and City Hall. This modern, artistic condominium was completely renovated and transformed including a new open floor plan, high end finishes, and custom furnishings.

The spaces that surround you directly impact your comfort level, feelings, and overall moods. All of the interior spaces you encounter on a daily basis and how these spaces play off of one another impacts us greatly. From your bedroom when you wake up in the morning, to your kitchen when you have your morning pick me up, then to the location in which you work and the restaurant you visit for dinner. Every one of these locations are logged into your brain and is released through your emotions, feelings and moods. It is essential that the areas you spend most of your time in are a true reflection of who you are and how you want to feel.



Good interior design merges form and function into one and Reid & Siemonsen Design Group did a phenomenal job with this living space on Ontario Street in Kingston, Ontario . Featuring beautiful views of Kingston's Confederation Basin and City Hall. This modern, artistic condominium was completely renovated and transformed including a new open floor plan, high end finishes, and custom furnishings. It was a pleasure being the photographer who captured their vision of this space, so please check out more their latest work.



Read More
Cameras Corey Beazer Cameras Corey Beazer

Ever have your camera stolen?

This Site Can Tell You If Anyone Else Has Taken Pictures With Your Camera

This Site Can Tell You If Anyone Else Has Taken Pictures With Your Camera

unsplash-image-4nXnRJ7_VsI.jpg

If your camera has gone missing, check out this website. It's worth a shot. Losing both a piece of expensive gear and the priceless digital moments of your special day. This website provides a chance of seeing your precious camera again. It’s a tiny sliver of hope to be sure, but it’s better than no hope at all.

Here is how it works: You upload a picture taken with the missing camera to stolencamerafinder.com, which then uses the camera’s serial number (saved in the photo’s EXIF data) to crawls the internet in search of other photos taken with that same camera. If it finds a match, you may have a lead on where your camera ended up.

After that, you can attempt to try and track down the “new owner” via email to request your camera’s return, file a report with the authorities, or devote your life to hunting the thief yourself, John Wick style… who knows maybe you had precious dog photos on your camera.

None of these options is likely to result in the return of your Canon, but it has worked in the past, and maybe it will help you find closure. Maybe just knowing what happened to your lost baby (we do all love our cameras) is the best you can hope for? The site also provides a database of lost cameras all over the world, so you’ll at least know you’re not alone.

Read More