Thursday, December 29, 2011
The Nikon F Story
Wednesday, November 9, 2011
Freedom to See
Photography is about seeing, not what tool you use. I enjoy going on photo trips -- excursions for the sole intent of making images. These trips are planned out, researched and treated like a major assignment. Sometimes the gear list will rival any commercial photo shoot, sometimes it could be simply a few Diana cameras and a brick of film. It depends on the trip and what, and how, I want to explore.
Lately my camera of choice is the iPhone 4s and my processing lab is Snapseed. The results are amazing and inspiring. No longer do I have to remember a camera when I walk out the door because my camera is always in my pocket. Sometimes I use it as a sketch pad, but more and more I'm using it just to see, to keep my eye in shape, to do that visual shadow boxing a visual artist needs to keep at the top of their game.
It's exciting because I no longer think or plan to see photographs, I just do. Every minute of every day I just see. No matter where I'm at, I'm seeing. And now I capture and process all in the palm of my hand.
Later,

Monday, October 17, 2011
Packing and moving
Tuesday, September 6, 2011
The importance of your archive

Saturday, August 20, 2011
Everything is all right, everything is fine
Tuesday, August 2, 2011
Portrait of a physician

Saturday, July 16, 2011
Friday, July 15, 2011
The problem with commercial photography
Tuesday, July 5, 2011
July 4th Freedom!

Hope everyone had a great 4th of July!
Like millions of Americans I watched a firework display over the holiday. Not a big computer generated extravaganza, but a simple, small town 'shoot em up and do it again' kinda show. The best part for me was this year I wasn't "working the show" but just being a spectator. Not being a job allowed me to experiment as I would never be able to is someone was paying for guaranteed results.
So I just let them rip and shot what, and how, I wanted -- without a tripod. I knew would be tossing a lot of wiggly jiggly frames, and I did, but I didn't care because I had the freedom to play and see if anything worthwhile came out.
That's the fun in photography, which is exactly why I've spent my life doing what I do.
Technical notes: Leica M9 fitted with a 35 and 90 Summicron lenses respectively. Exposure was a few seconds, hand held, at f/11-16. ISO 200.






