Archive for December, 2009

December 29, 2009

My Top Ten Shots of 2009

As a response to Jim M. Goldstein’s challenge, I’ve assembled what I believe are my 10 best images of 2009. Things definitely took a turn with the purchase of my first new SLR in years. Yeah, yeah, I know you’re all sick of hearing about it, so plug your ears.  An early trip in the year turned out to be very fruitful and an adventure filled year made for some great shooting.

School is to blame for not getting to more remote locations for landscapes, a scenario which will not repeat next year. We’ve got some really big projects in the works (some invovling NASA’s final shuttle launch) and we are looking forward to some eary weddings in 2010, so look out, its gonna be a great year.

So I want to say thanks to all of my readers. You’ve stuck with me as things struggled to get off the ground and I can’t thank you enough for all of the time and eencouragement you’ve invested in me, I can only hope to give you more next year than I did in 2009. Thanks again to all those great friends and families that let us in to record their lives.  We look forward to creating memories of 2010….

December 22, 2009

Pets and Parents

For a slideshow of these images, please click here.

I’ve been trying to hone the portrait skills a lot lately. The more I learn about light, it seems the less I know. Every subject is different and its not always a simple task to record the essence of someone’s personality in 1/250th of a second. I’ve had an idea of pic of my father in my head for along time and I finally sat the parents down for a portrait session. It didn’t last long enough, but I was pretty happy with the results. My Dad and my step-mother, Jean made great models and could’nt have been more patient with me.

After investigating why my dog was flipping out, I waslked out the front door to find a very young Siberian Husky cruising and terrorising the neighborhood streets. Of course, the dogs of the ‘ hood weren’t standing for it, so I went to check for tags and this little monster came at me full speed ahead. The tag read,”Chiya,” and we called the number only to find out that the owner had just started a softball game. I told him we’d take care of her until he could pick her up. In the meantime, I had to snap a few shots, and she seemed not to mind.

December 18, 2009

Hiking Saddleback Butte

~4 miles, 1000 feet, easy

A friend and I hit up a local hill for some views and elevated heart rate. The Station Fire put us out of business for a while; it closed down many of the roads heading into the Angeles National Forest, our favorite stomping grounds. Not to mention we can hardly afford to drive elsewhere and don’t get much time to do so anyhow. So we headed to the mis-named Saddleback Butte, a hill at best, that resembles a small rocky mountain ridge and is not and looks nothing like a butte.

The semantics meant nothing of course when we finally put feet to trail. This very easy 3.2 mile climb to the summit is hardly a hike at all, more like a stroll, but there’s enough elevation gain in it to get you panting if you hit it hard enough and the views are lofty, if only of the high desert (For the record, National Geographic’s TOPO software calls it 1.97 miles one way, or almost 4 miles round trip, 1000ft gain). There might not be any cascading waterfalls or towering granite cliffs, but it’ll do just fine for me.

On the way, we passed a sheriff giving a fruit stand a hard time. I can’t really decide where I come down on this argument, and I know theres an amount of “just doing one’s job” happening here, but you hate to see any kind of home-spun family money making venture having a hard time these days. We passed an old rusted out hulk of a car that has been bleaching in the sun along with all the other couches, shotgun shells, etc that people leave to elements. The Aztecs sacrificed in a sacred place to  a God, it seems desert dwellers sacrifice just on the outskirts of town and offer the gods simply discarded and unfashionable items.

We began the trail from the South parking lot, but you can add perhaps a mile starting from the North end. It is a simple path heading due west straight up the hill. Whoever built this trail possibly had never heard of switchbacks. The trail is sandy and loose on dry days but rain will make itmore cohesive. It can feel like the beach as you walk through what amounts to a gallery of the life cycle of the Joshua Tree, not the amazing album, but the amazing plant.

The trail gets more rocky the closer you get to the “butte,” allowing for a more steady foot plant as you ascend the hill. You pass some great faulted outcrops with signs of ancient volcanism before you’re greeted with panoramic views of the San Gabriel Mountains, the Tehachapi range and the distant frosted white Sierra Nevada. In Trails of the Angeles, John Robinson says that you can see Mt. Whitney from Pleasant View Ridge atop the San Gabriel’s high country and I’ve been looking for it ever since. I’m still not sure, but we saw the best candidate so far from Saddleback Butte. I’m anxious to actually take a lensatic compass and map up there to verify.

It seems like you can’t go wrong being above the desert at sunset.  The wind pushed you around like a sail at the summit, but there’s a lovely summit plateau that you could spend hours exploring where the conditions are nice. I know the term “golden hour” is well deserved for this magic time, but I think it goes beyond photography. There’s definitely something rewarding about watching the Earth turn whether you take photos or video or just sit with your #1 squeeze and take it all in in with Sangiovese and Oreos. Sometimes simply observing and witnessing the world is enough for me. You don’t have to look very hard or very far to find something amazing.

All images taken with Canon 7D + EF28-135mm IS, many of these are HDR’s.

December 16, 2009

More fun with the Canon 7D

I’ve been struggling through finals this week, but I had to get my head out of the books for a while. I’ve been stir crazy not shooting and I finally hit critical mass. I know these are old tired tricks, but they’re fun ones. There’s about a million shots of water drops out there, but I could’nt help it. The rest of the shots are my regular models for new settings and gear, I try to image these objects differently everytime which challenges me to keep things new. The Canon 430EX II coupled with the flash triggering of the Canon 7D is making that an easy task. If you’re interested in photography and have an external flash, you’ve probably heard of the strobist movement. Strobists are capturing amazing results with modest gear and putting amazing images out there.  Visit David Hobby’s site and blog to learn more.

Its new moon, so check back soon for more astrophotography and a post on

December 7, 2009

Chase Jarvis, Slinkachu, etc.

Photo by Chase Jarvis

Are you paying attention? Good. These guys are the real thing. This marks the first time that I have posted another photographer’s work on my site (except for my wife). If anyone out there still has doubts that photography is a fine art, spend a couple of days thinking about these guys:

Chase Jarvis is a commercial photgrapher based in Seattle who was just named photgrapher of the year by Photo Focus. At his website, you’ll find mostly commercial and lifestyle photography that lives up to today’s dramatic lighting standards but still takes risks. His images speak for themselves. Be sure to check out his blog, it is the best photographer’s blog I’ve found yet on the net and you can bet I’ll be taking cues from Mr. Jarvis on web presence.

Slinkachu is brilliant. I can’t quite explain the intimate experiment in scale that this artist gives us. Just check out his work and you’ll laugh and think…about the simple and profound. I have been known to read a little too much meaning in things from time to time and I may be doing that here, but I always come away from Slinkachu’s work with a more humble walk, a more centered brain. Enjoy.

Photo by Slinkachu

December 2, 2009

The latest.

All images taken with EF 28-135 or EF-S 55-250 IS , Canon 7D. Things are getting a little crazy at school right now, so I haven’t been out and about as much as I normally prefer (studying for finals). The day light is also slowly retreating for a few more weeks as the sun approaces soltstice, leaving fewer hours of daylight. Finals are over in 2 weeks. In the mean time, Heather bought me a new lens and I’ve been cruising around the house getting what I can….

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