Often I will just play with an image just to keep in practice regarding my Photoshop skills. I spent about 2 hours on this one, just trying different things, not having a particular agenda since it wasn’t commissioned. I like having some time to do that and it is essential for any artist to spend time just ‘goofing’ off so to speak. Without it your work can become so stale and uninspiring that you cease to do it any more.
This week will be a number of photos from an Equestrian competition I photographed in Inola, OK.
This is a pretty straight portrait. I waited for her in the shade of the arena knowing that the very bright sunlight behind me would make for a great glow on her face and in her eyes.
This is a series of black and white images that I worked on to create a very painterly, beautiful and moody feel to them. I wanted them to look hyper real yet very other worldly at the same time.
Back in 1982 my wife and I had returned to San Jose after a year in Michigan. We basically were broke so we had to live with her parents while we got back on our feet.
We lived in the five bedroom house my wife had grown up in. My father in law and the family in general did everything themselves; cars, roofs, water heaters, wiring, etc. It didn’t matter what it was, if it could be done without having a pro do it, it was done.
My brother in law was working on putting in a new shake shingle roof when I went up onto the roof to document it for my father in law. I spied the pool next door and my original thought was how nice it would be to cool off in it. While I was up there the neighbor’s daughter came out and jumped in the pool, quickly got out and laid down to sunbath. All of a sudden a completely cool image came into my view finder. A hard at work roofer, all business (which he was, he was completely oblivious to the woman swimming and sunbathing) and the woman, completely absorbed in her pleasure activity. Snap away I did until I got this composition out of it. It is one of my favorite photos from the beginning of my photography work.
They came to me when I stopped at the convenience store, asking if I wanted to have my car windows washed in exchange for a donation to their cheerleading fund to send them to the national championships. They are from my daughters’ high school (they all graduated a few years back) and they are currently state champs so I was more than willing to help them out…IF they would also let me take their photos.
My wife and I chaperoned about 40 teenagers to Disney World in 2007. We went for a ‘Singabration’ (I started calling the participants ‘singabrats’ haha). The week was filled with images and memories and stimulation. Watching the kids sleeping on the bus on the way home from Disney World, I imagined what all the kids were dreaming of, what little flotsam and jetsam of memories were being glued together in their brains.
This image of my step daughter Caitlin was a simple color image. I worked it extensively within Photoshop, using the unsharp mask tool quite a bit in getting the high contrast and high grain. The color overlays were relatively random.
The quote is one of my favorites. I read it first in ‘sketchbook with voices’, a photo sketchbook I worked within back in the 80s. I have liked it ever since and think it is a crucial sentiment when understanding what an artist does in the world.