Category Archives: photography

Midsummers Festival, Lindsborg, KS

I spent part of last saturday shooting the Midsummer’s Festival in Lindsborg, Kansas — also known as Little Sweden, USA. I love Lindsborg’s festivals but I hadn’t shot this one since back in my film days so I was long overdue for a return.

The dances on Main Street have always been great for photos and I decided to shake it up a bit and use some flash to try and overpower the sun a bit. I didn’t want an unnatural look but was hoping to underexpose the bright skies in the backgrounds to pop the foreground dancers out with the flash. I had totally forgotten about this particular dance (above) where the men swing the women completely off their feet as they spin round and round. It doesn’t last long and I was happy to find myself in a fairly decent position when it happened.

It actually happens twice in this particular dance and for the second time, I decided to try and shoot from a very low angle — basically shooting blind with a wide angle held right down on the brick street. My aim was not perfect, however, and I cropped the heads off of the dancers in nearly every frame. That’s one of the main rules of photography, right? Don’t crop heads off. Well, the more I looked at these shots, the more I thought there was still something there. I cropped a bit more, dodged and burned to redirect the eye, and ended up with this:

Would I have shot it this way purposefully? Probably not. But I now consider it a happy accident. When viewed large, there are some great expressions on the dancers faces in the background on the right side. They actually become the subject and the foreground dancers become more of a frame. I’m liking this shot more each time I look at it.

Here are a couple more from the raising of the Maypole. Many thanks to Jim Richardson who was kind enough to wander over before the proceedings and give me a little preview of what would happen. Jim’s a great and generous photographer. If you ever find yourself in Lindsborg, be sure to look up his Small World Gallery on Main.

And one last telephoto shot, intentionally blurred for a little movement:

I think my comments are still non-functional here so if you want to leave a note, I’ve also shared this post on Facebook.

Gypsum Hills of Kansas

I spent a couple of days on the road last week with my friends over at Gizmo. They were documenting the Gypsum Hills Scenic Byway and I tagged along to grab some fresh stock photography. I hadn’t been on the backroads in this part of south-central Kansas for a few years so it was fun to reacquaint myself with one of the more unusual scenic regions of the state. I found some of my old favorite spots nearly unchanged and others — like my favorite little reflecting pool — to be entirely missing. The formation above was a new surprise. I’d been down this particular road before but evidently not quite this far because I don’t recall ever seeing that balanced rock before. As much as I’ve traveled this state, it is surprising to continue to run across these little treats. You’d think I’d have found them all by now but that’s the beauty of Kansas. The longer you look, the more you see, and exploration is nearly always rewarded.

On other fronts, this seems to be the season for software issues. As I mentioned previously, it appears that my recent WordPress update has disabled the comments on this site. I’ll continue to try and rectify that situation but I’m also investigating new platforms for some new features that I hope to add to my website yet this year.

I’ve also been working toward upgrading all of my Adobe software to CS6. I’m already running Lightroom 4 and have been using the beta version of CS6 for weeks but as of the end of May, the beta version was discontinued since the final version had been released. My transition was slowed somewhat this time due to a special offer I took advantage of where I was able to upgrade to CS5.5 in early May and a free update to CS6 would be provided by the end of May for me to download. Given the amount of Adobe software that I use, this added up to a substantial discount so I purchased my CS5.5 upgrades and waited for my download link for 6 to arrive. By May 30, I still hadn’t received it. I contacted Adobe and they manually added me back into the system and I finally received my link last thursday. On Saturday, I worked through the update process and it went very smoothly (thankfully). Until Mountain Lion is released, that should be the last of my upgrades for awhile. Good news, since I now need to get up to speed on all of the new features of the entire Adobe Creative Suite. At least I have a head start on Photoshop, having used the beta. All-in-all, it feels good being caught up again and feeling like I can get back to work.

SATW Central States awards

News arrived yesterday that I had six images place in the 2012 Society of American Travel Writers Central States Chapter photo competition. Thank you to the judges and organizers — I’m honored. The real kick for me was in getting 1st, 2nd and 3rd place in the People category. What a shock! The photo above was the 1st place winner. I also took 1st in the Action category, 3rd in Food and an honorable mention in International Places.

The awards were announced at the Central States meeting in the Florida Keys last week, which I was unfortunately unable to attend. It’s always great to see the other photographers’ work during the presentation. Hopefully they’ll eventually be posted somewhere online. I’ll share the link here if that happens.

Congratulations to all of the other winners as well!

Balloonfest

A shot from last weekend’s Balloonfest in Anthony, Kansas. Lightroom 4’s new “shadow” slider really brought out the detail in the dark portions of the image. I pushed it a little further than I normally would because I liked the way it affected the faces. They almost look like characters out of a Thomas Hart Benton painting to me.

New Orleans revisited

Now that I’m running both Lightroom 4 and Photoshop CS6 (if only in beta), I’m going through old files to see what the new software can do for some images that I never quite felt were finished. Back in the days of the darkroom, it was a good idea to work a print and then set it aside for a time before coming back to it, reassessing, and trying some new ideas. That’s basically the way I treat digital files as well. I process them almost immediately after capturing them, but I like to come back later to take a fresh approach. These files from New Orleans are from 2006, less than a year after Katrina hit. We made the visit with a group of journalists at the invitation of the tourism bureau to help get the word out that the main tourist areas were largely unaffected and open for business. The impact in tourism numbers was very evident, however, in the quiet streets and restaurants.

In reprocessing these images, I tried to focus on that quiet feeling of a nearly abandoned city. The texture of New Orleans also comes through. It’s an old city by American standards and after all that it had been through it seemed to be feeling its age. I look forward to my next trip there, to see what has changed in six years.

Abandoned places

Call me weird, but there are few things I enjoy more than rooting around in abandoned buildings. The layers of history and questions that arise from strange additions and alterations — it’s fascinating. Earlier this week I got a quick peek at the building above. But this isn’t just any old, decaying building. It’s believed that this is the very second-floor room (it was originally one big open room with no dividing walls) where forty elected delegates from the Kansas Territory gathered to write the Free State Constitution in October of 1855. In fact, it may be the first permanent building constructed in Topeka, Kansas.

This was a quick scouting trip and I hope to return soon to further document the building in this condition — basically abandoned since the 1940s — and throughout its proposed restoration. More to come…

Around the yard…

One advantage of being home this Spring is getting to see everything in bloom for once. Due to the early warm weather, the daffodils and tulips are long gone, but there is still plenty going on around the yard. Extra credit to anyone that can identify all the species…

Wind power, part 2

A couple weeks ago, I was out in western Kansas shooting wind farms for a State project promoting economic development and employment opportunities in rural areas. I got my start shooting out in this part of the world. Throughout high school and college I had jobs that had me prowling the backroads of this under-appreciated state and I came to know it in detail. I’ve roamed all 105 counties and it’s a rare dirt road that I haven’t been down at least once.

Over the past few years, my attention has largely been elsewhere. My photography began to take me farther afield and international travel has been a bigger priority. I never stopped shooting around my home state, but it has taken a bit of a back seat for a while. This year I decided to refocus on Kansas a bit and to freshen up those stock files. That decision led partly to my taking this ongoing assignment of documenting rural areas for the State. It has several aspects, but the common element is that it’s getting me back into the countryside and I’m having a blast rediscovering this place that I’ve known so well, but — in some ways — has changed so much over the past few years.

It was appropriate that this first segment would focus on wind farms, as they may represent the biggest visual change to the Kansas landscape in decades. Even crossing the state on I-70, you can’t help but be awed by a large and growing group of these behemoths in the Smoky Hills near Ellsworth. I shot one of the state’s first wind farms near Montezuma for Kansas! magazine years ago and in the time since, they’ve been sprouting up everywhere. On that first shoot, I only visited a finished wind farm but on this assignment, I would also visit factories, assembly areas and holding yards where the giant components are stored until needed.

What I saw on this assignment is that wind power is changing the Kansas landscape in more ways that you see by driving down the interstate. This is a new, booming industry. It’s not uncommon now to see turbine blades being shipped by rail or passing you on a flatbed trailer as you drive down the highway. In a lot of ways, Kansas hasn’t changed much since I was exploring it 10 and 20 years ago but it has not been standing still. Every time an assignment takes me out into the field, I’m discovering something new about this place.

And I couldn’t resist a quick self portrait while shooting from atop the crane that’s used to load components on rail cars — complete with all my required safety gear:

Unintended portrait subject

Sorry. I usually try to avoid posting cat photos (the interwebs seem full enough of them already) but this one has a story behind it. My wife/business partner needed a new headshot and, as I was setting up the lighting, our cat PiƱa decided to make herself available as a stand-in while I got everything situated. She was a real pro. She hopped right into the chair and waited patiently as I made test shots, adjusted lights, etc. until everything was set for the real shoot.

I liked this shot in particular because it feels so formal. I added a bit of an oil-painting filter just to push it a bit further into the realm of those thoroughbred horse portraits. I think it would be perfect in a gilded frame, hanging above a cherry wood humidor full of Cuban cigars.