Category Archives: ramblings

Trash

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The Blizzard of 2009 pretty much shut things down around here and we were basically house-bound for four days. The good side is that I made an incredible amount of progress on my image files – a DVD full of Mexico sent off to one stock agency, almost 900 shots of Egypt uploaded to Alamy (that alone took most of three days) and another 650 or so images of China prepped for submission.

While processing the China shots, I ran across this one that I’ve intended to blog about for awhile now. It’s a basket of trash that had just been swept up at the Master of Nets Garden in Suzhou. What strikes me about this is that I was compelled to photograph someone’s trash. Had I shot this in the US, you’d most likely be looking at a bulging plastic bag sitting on some cracked concrete. But there’s something beautiful about this trash. Sure, it’s just leaves and not discarded paper and junk, but it’s also being kept in an honest basket with a useful but colorful handle. The pavement is rough and stained but it’s real materials and carefully laid. I don’t know. It just says something to me. Makes me wish for less plastic and paper in the world and that all of our trash could be this beautiful.

The winter of limited progress

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I’ve made a long overdue update to my website by changing the home page photo to a couple from my Feb ’09 Egypt trip. It’s something I’ve always intended to do on a monthly basis at least. This time it went for over a year.

This winter I made plans to make lots of updates to the site, this blog, and especially to my other Shade of the Cottonwood site. I usually have a lull in travel over the holidays and winter months so I thought it would be a good catch-up period.

Well… that was the plan. Reality often bears little resemblance to my plans and, so far, this winter is no exception. It is becoming one of those “one step forward, two steps back” periods. When I returned from Mexico in October, I planned to get through the processing of images from that trip and then I’d be free to dig into my “winter projects”. Then the cat fell from the balcony and broke his leg resulting in 8 weeks of heavily supervised recovery. While hanging out with him in his cushy rehab pad (actually Sally’s sewing room) we noticed the carpet was damp. After some exploration, it was discovered that the hot water heater was leaking and, although there is a floor drain less than three feet away it’s apparently uphill from the water heater. Plumber called, new water heater installed and now we are in the middle of the carpet drying process — pulling the carpet and pad up, fans everywhere, etc.

I won’t go on with my entire list of distractions (and there are a lot more), but you get the picture. Today I decided to ignore everything else (except the cat duties, of course) and make a dent in the web site updates. Much progress has been made but it will be a while before you begin to see it online. Hopefully not too long.

To help me get down to work, I used up some remaining credits I had in the iTunes store and added Ceu’s “Cangote” EP and Minipop’s “A New Hope” album to my library. I find it really helpful to crank up some new tunes when working at the desk. It’s a trick I use when post-processing a shoot, too. I usually buy some local music while I’m on the road and then I listen to it while processing the images. Listening to Chinese pop while processing Shanghai images or a Desert Beat compilation while going through an Egypt take keeps me connected to the place. Plus, music makes a great souvenir that’s easy to pack.

Caper’s big day

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Meet our cat, Caper. He doesn’t always wear the hat — he was posing for a Christmas card a few years ago. The image on the right is him, too. His right hind leg, to be exact. Busted.

Caper loves to race up the stairs, jump onto the railing and jump again *over* the stairs onto the roof of our living room wet bar (the house was built in the early ’70s — didn’t everyone have a wet bar?). Three times now, that we know of, he hasn’t made the second jump. When that happens, gravity does its thing and Caper goes down, a little over 1 full floor, to the downstairs hallway floor.

Normally he’s springy like Tigger in Winnie the Pooh. Today he was less Tigger-ish and broke his leg. We took him to one vet 30 minutes to our west who recommended that we take him to another, 30 minutes to our east. That’s where he is now, awaiting surgery in the morning.

Sure, we had plans for today. I’m sure Caper had plans for today, too. My day might not have gone according to plan but at least it was better than Caper’s. And yes, we’re already making plans for a minor renovation of the stairwell to try and prevent a repeat performance.

UPDATE: After having a steel plate surgically attached to his broken bone, Caper came home yesterday. After less than 45 minutes in a room we had “cat-proofed” to keep him from jumping, he bent the plate and had to go back in for a second surgery. We hear he’ll be coming home again today and I plan on bubble-wrapping him to prevent any more re-injuries. I should also mention that the vet techs are calling him “Houdini” due to his ability to escape splints and bandages. It’s going to be a long recovery period…

Really — I’ll get back to the subject of photography soon. I promise.

Almost but not quite

grapes

I returned from Ohio on Saturday and ran right back out the door for a shoot at a winery near Kansas City on Sunday. The plan was that there would be a large number of people harvesting grapes but that work has been postponed for a week to let the fruit build up some more sugar. I’ll probably go back again next weekend but thought I’d better get something in the can yesterday since the weather was good. No telling what next Sunday might be like. So, I made do with the absolutely terrific owners of the winery and staged a little bit of a harvest. I really like what I got but also look forward to shooting the entire process with buckets and buckets of grapes.

The Ohio trip also went well but there was always a little something that prevented me from getting what I had in my head onto the card. I usually have some preconceived idea for a shoot before I arrive on location. Sometimes it works out, sometimes it doesn’t. The best is what seems to happen most often and that is discovering something that is even better than what I had in mind. Certainly a lot of that happened on this trip but there were also a few shots that I would have loved to have captured that just didn’t come together. I’ll post more about those missed opportunities over the next few days.

Oh, and I finally have a shiny, new version of WordPress powering this blog. There have been a few hiccups so far but I hope to soon be able to add some new bells and whistles.

Sticky, gooey, goodness

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I’ve been on the road this week working on several projects. Domestic stuff — nothing outside the U.S. — but the inner Canadian in me was thrilled to spot this (and several other) Tim Hortons near Columbus, Ohio. Oh, Timmy! I knew you’d broken into Michigan but I’m so happy to see you spreading southward.

For those who aren’t familiar, Tim Hortons is like the Canadian McDonalds. Actually, they’re everywhere like McDonalds, but the menu is closer to Dunkin Donuts with some chili and sandwiches thrown in. I connect Tim Hortons with Canada at about the same level as the maple leaf. Tim Hortons IS Canada.

Unfortunately, I’ve found the U.S. Timmys to be inferior to the native Canadian varieties. Maybe the Canadian Tims rely on some artificial flavoring that has been banned in the U.S. Who knows. I only know that when I see a Tim Hortons it makes me happy. Honestly, it’s not the donuts. It’s a symbol of a country I love. I must have been Canadian in a former life.

Oh, and the funkiness of the above images is due to the Toy Camera App on my iPhone — it randomly applies lomo-like effects to each shot. I’ll have some “real” photos from the trip once I’m back in the office.

Tough work if you can get it

Luxor Hilton

I can’t complain about my job. I try to but nobody buys it. Truth is, it’s a pretty darned good job. I get to stay at places like the Luxor Hilton (shown above) in Luxor, Egypt and take photos. Sounds pretty sweet, doesn’t it? Take a look back across that infinity pool in the other direction:

infinity pool

That’s the Nile beyond the pool and the palm trees and the Valley of the Kings lies just over that mountain.

No. It’s a pretty good life.

The downside is the upside. I never get to relax by such a pool. With beautiful light like this, you’d better believe I’m scampering around taking photos. Whether I’m on assignment or not, I have to shoot. It would be painful for me to sit on one of those lounge chairs and “relax.” Relax? Are you kidding me? No, I’ll take the 2:00 am wake-up calls and the long days lugging a backpack full of gear. It’s my job.

And I wouldn’t do anything else.

Update: Okay… full disclosure. I don’t ALWAYS get to stay in places like the Luxor Hilton. Need I tell you about the time I spent a freezing winter night by a river in a four-foot-tall plywood enclosure with a cardboard box for a toilet so that I could shoot some migrating birds? ‘Nuf said.

But I still think it’s a pretty good job.

A homecoming

gentleman's press

This weekend we brought home the family furniture (mentioned on this blog before here) that has been being lovingly restored for the past year. That’s it. We’re officially finally all moved in to our new house now. I didn’t say unpacked — just moved in. (And, true to my word, I did get some of the family history wrong in that first post. Oops.)

Many thanks to Dave MacFee and his talented crew for bringing this wood back to life. It was dark and dull when we dropped it off to you and look at it now. There are fireworks in that grain. Thanks also to Chris, Estelle & Jonathan for helping to heft the very heavy top half of this cabinet onto the very heavy bottom half. We couldn’t have done it without you guys.

To make a long story short (ish), this furniture was commissioned by Sally’s grandfather’s grandmother’s grandfather (I think I got that right — but you know my track record) who was instrumental in the building of many of the early canals in Montreal in the early 1800s. Phillips Square in downtown Montreal was named for him and the furniture was made for a large home he had built on Beaver Hall Hill.

Why I need to pay more attention…

When I was in Montreal a couple of years ago, I made a few casual remarks about the family history but didn’t really know enough to ask the right questions. I knew the house had burned down in the mid-1800s but was curious where it had stood. With new research we’ve been doing this past month to try and answer some questions about the furniture, I now know that I was nearly standing on the spot where the old house stood when I took this photo:

Beaver Hall Hill

If I have my bearings right, the street along the right is Cote du Beaver Hall. I was right there and never knew it. And Phillips Square is probably within a three minute walk from here as well.

We’ll go back, do some family research, and properly visit these sites sometime in the near future. It’s just funny how close I was to a place I’d always wanted to see and didn’t even know it. Glad I at least took some photos.

Pretending to be normal

Saturday morning

Okay. So, by now, you’ve probably noticed a change in my posting schedule. Like… I’m hardly posting.

I’ve been off the road for four weeks now. Four weeks. That’s almost unheard of for me. It’s not due to the economy — it’s actually been somewhat purposeful. It was time to recharge. Time to stay home for a bit. Time to pretend to be a normal person.

So what have I been doing? I’m slipping into routines. The above is my Saturday morning; 7:00 a.m. at the farmer’s market, then find some breakfast downtown where there’s sidewalk seating. This is my new life. Not too bad.

I’ve also taken on some affectations that I’m not sure are healthy. Top of the list is that I’ve started mowing the lawn in diagonals. I’ve seen people do this for years but I never thought I’d be one of them. Huh. I’m not shooting many photos other than with my iPhone (like the above) and I haven’t worn a backpack for over a month. Who am I?!?

Have no fear — I haven’t given up the life of the nomad altogether. In fact I’ve just signed on to teach a Photoshop and Lightroom workshop in Guadalajara in October and I have several other domestic assignments between now and then. More will also be added, I’m sure. It will be good to hit the road again. The road is one of my favorite places. Home is good, too. Balancing the two is the best.

Antiquity

This could be a long one but I’ll do my best to be brief.

My wife has an incredible collection of family furniture. Originally Scottish, some of the family wound up in Montreal where they were prominent engineers involved in, among other things, the building of the earliest canals along the St. Lawrence. Wealth followed and a mansion was built somewhere around the year 1800. The family had furniture built specifically for this home, sourcing the wood from as far as South America.

I’ll pause here to say that I’ve yet to entirely read the massive volume of family history that is somewhere among our packed belongings and I haven’t done any real research on this information. But, family lore has been passed down and I’m repeating it here. Hopefully I’ll get at least some of it right.

Not long after the construction of the mansion in Montreal, it burned. To the ground. But not before the servants were sent inside to save a few pieces of furniture including a large gentleman’s press (like a combination wardrobe and dresser), a gaming table, a foot stool and an enormous gilded mirror. In the following years, the family’s fortune disappeared but these few pieces of furniture survived and were dutifully passed from generation to generation. For the last 20 or so years, they’ve been in our possession.

The 200-plus years haven’t been entirely kind. We had the table restored a few years ago and, when it came time to move last year, we decided to deliver the gentleman’s press to the restorationists for its turn. It’s big — really big — and we figured that we could move it fewer times this way.

To make a long story short, it’s been there for a few months now and we’ve visited from time to time to consult on the details of the work. We made another stop yesterday and I decided to bring the camera along to record the progress. The piece had become nearly black with age and this trip would be the first where we would see a few of the parts with the build-up removed and the original glow restored.

restored piece of antique furniture

Suffice it to say that they are doing an incredible job. I was photographing a few of the resurrected parts like this door bracket, marveling at the glow and depth of the wood grain when…

I got distracted.

Did you notice the texture of the table that the woodwork is sitting on? I’ve been a semi-obsessed collector of textures for decades. They are part of an ongoing project of mine and this work surface was a gold mine. The restorationist probably thought I was nuts as I began to photograph the table top instead of the fruits of his restoration efforts. In the end I had over a dozen textures with a wide variety of tones and color like this:

texture

It may not look like much but — trust me — this kind of layered surface isn’t easy to find. What do I intend to do with them? Well, I’ve long been working on a series of artificially aged images that involve textures like these overlaid on other images to create the look of a worn and aged photo. I’ll post more of these later and plan an entire gallery on my site but here’s an example from last Fall’s trip to China:

Shanghai Pearl Tower

The original of this image can be seen here.

See? There was a photography-related aspect to this story after all. I’ll post more of my texture experiments later and, when the gentleman’s press finally arrives, I’ll post a before and after of it as well.

Just goes to show you — always take your camera.

Happy New Year!

Here it is, 2009. Where did the time go? 2008 was an amazing year for me, filled with plenty of travel — even though we swore we would cut back so that we could buy a new house. While we did buy a house, move, and sell the old one, we didn’t do a very good job of cutting back on the travel which made for a very busy, very hectic year. I even started traveling earlier than normal with a February trip to Banff:

Banff, Alberta, Canada

Hard to believe that was less than a year ago. That trip set a great tone for 2008. Truly an amazing destination. This year will begin with another amazing place and I’m starting 2009’s travel even earlier. The first week of February will find me in Egypt. The rest of the year is a mystery at this point but with a start like that I’m sure it will be a wild ride.

The past month has had me furiously processing the images from 2008. I normally don’t like to be more than one trip behind but I didn’t even come close this year. I’m now in shouting distance of being caught up and may be finished by the end of the weekend. I want to feed all of my stock outlets before I start the 2009 travel so I need to keep moving. The China trip has been fully processed and is already in the hands of one stock agency. Once I see what they accept, I’ll place the rest elsewhere. I’ll show more here over the next couple of weeks as well.

Enjoy the new year everyone! I hope it brings success, health and happiness to you all.