Archive for June, 2010

Summer.

Here it is at last. A long nine months of school and very cold welcoming to our three month “summer”. In North Idaho the weather has been foul. Rain, clouds, winds, storms. Everything but the sun. But that does not stop us North Idahoans from having fun and certainly doesn’t stop us from graduating (seniors that is). Last week the Coeur d’Alene High School Class of 2010 Graduated and I had the privilege to shoot it. With around 250 students walking, it was quite the ceremony and took a great amount of time. Thanks to Essex Prescott for letting me use his 70-200mm and his 15mm Fish Eye, with out them, I would have been at a larger disadvantage. I say larger because prior to the graduation my Canon 40D croaked on me, most likely the circuit bored fried out on me but I am sending it into Canon to fix it. But another thanks to my brother, Scott Sturges for letting me use his 50D. Really the only things that were mine to shoot with were the memory card, battery grip and flash. But I just recently purchased the new 7D :) quite excited about that part. Here are the graduation shots:

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Aaron vetsch

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Brandon Di Simone

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Hats being thrown!

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Before they were thrown

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My brother, Scott and Principal or CHS, Randy Russell

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Joey Ozol

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Best friend shot

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I spotted some classy graduates, Graham Neff and Lane Mehringer

After graduation, my family and I headed over the Glacier National Park, Montana for some outdoor-ness. Though I didn’t have a camera, I did have a brother that would sometimes lend me his camera, thanks again Scott. Something that most people do not take into consideration is the beauty that God has placed before us. God has placed amazing nature right in front of us and we are just too “busy” to notice the beauty of it. When I was there in Glacier, I wanted to take the time to slow down and acknowledge the beauty that The Lord has given us. Something I read in Psalm 104:24, 30: How many are your works, O Lord! In wisdom you made them all; the earth is full of your creatures…. When You send Your Spirit, they are created, and You renew the face of the earth. Those verses were perfect for what I was seeing In Glacier. It was truly one of the most beautiful places I have every seen. Something that I am going to start doing is visually document the beauty of our earth and bring recognition to God’s beauty. Here are the photos from Glacier:

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Not sure if this was carved into this tree or if it was just naturally like this, regardless I like it.

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Just some grass I found photo-worthy.

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An interesting fungus on some leaves.

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Moss on a log.

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Beauty.

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A lonesome leaf.

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A lightning fire came through here.

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Water on some leaves after a heavy rain.

Thank you for viewing, please comment!

-Steve

Fin.

At last the year has come to an end. Looking back through all my work from this past school year I have covered a very large amount of the photography spectrum. I have done abstract, action sports, black and whites, landscapes, portraits, team sports and many more. Though I have tried to do something new every week with my photography, I feel strongest in my portraits and landscapes. After looking back and seeing all the work I have done this last year, I decided to do my final series on portraits. The key things that complete a portrait to me are these things:

1st – Facial Expression. This is what seems to make or break a shot. The photo could be perfect composition and perfect lighting, but if the subject has a bad facial expression it can pretty much ruin the photo.

2nd – Body Language. If the subject is doing a stupid pose, it could ruin the photo. The photo could have the best exposure, composition, best anything but with bad body language, or a lame pose, bam, the photo is considered ruined (to me of course).

3rd – Lighting. Regardless of what look the photographer is going for, lighting is key. If it is a silhouette portrait (doesn’t make a whole lot of since, for a portrait) the lighting has to be prime. If it is just a studio portrait, still the lighting has to be dead on. If it is a lifestyle portrait, more often than not, the lighting has to be solid.

4th – Composition. Where you place the subject matters a whole lot also. A perfectly composed portrait is always nice to look at. Make sure there are not clipped/missing appendages or clipped heads. People want to look at a well-composed portrait and if it is sloppy, it is typically a bad portrait, let a lone photo in general.

5th – Story. This is a very important thing to remember. People want to look at a photo and really see what is going on. It is very crucial for the viewer to see the story that the model/subject is sharing with them. Eyes are a big part of that. One can share so much just through the eyes and also with facial expression.

Those 5 concepts are something that I have tried my best to include in every portrait I shoot and for that matter every photo I take. So with my final project, I shot portraits. But I started noticing it is a lot harder to get those concepts perfect and in every photo. With this project I have tried to descriptively show the subjects story and demonstrate the skills that I have obtained shooting this last year.

I originally started out with about fourteen portraits, but I slowly go rid of a few and then narrowed it down to ten portraits. I used the fact that your project is as strong as your weakest photo. I wouldn’t consider the unused photos bad but defiantly not as strong. I was originally going the balanced contrast of 10 photos that five are black and white and five are color. With in that I was going for five that were horizontal and five that were vertical. It didn’t completely happen as planned but I ended up with six horizontal photos and four vertical photos. Also I have four color portraits and six black and white portraits. I realized that I have shot the majority of my portraits vertical this last year. It seems with a battery grip I got lazy and shot so much vertical that I forgot about horizontal shooting. So that is why I tried to shoot half of my portraits horizontal and half vertical. I ended up with the six horizontal shots and feel good about that number. It isn’t the balance that I wanted but it was close. I feel that I have a way better grip of shooting horizontal now and especially horizontal portraits. Something also that I noticed is a horizontal portrait (to me of course) is more powerful than a typical vertical portrait. Maybe that is because I thought vertical portraits were just a little boring to me.

When I first approached the final project, I was like “I am going to do black and white portraits! Yay!” Before I started shooting I thought that a black and white photo was more powerful than a colored photo. But once I did start shooting I came to the conclusion that it is not a black and white portrait that makes a photo powerful, but it is a combination of those five points I jotted down above. A colored photo can be equally as powerful and moving as a black and white portrait.

Here are the photos of the final project:

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Bobby Gibbs

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Essex Prescott

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Lane Mehringer

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Cody Schneider

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Mario Martinez

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Kyle Harris

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Zach Black

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Andrew Harder

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Josh Tyvan

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Michael Shamberg

For the very first one of Bobby Gibbs, I had my 540EZ flash focused at 50mm and at 1/2 power pointed down towards his feet. I had this idea for this portrait because almost every single portrait is in the top corners and I felt that this was a perfect angle for him. Flashing for portraits outside of studio is a lot of fun mainly because you have so much freedom with the lights and can get really creative. I have shot a lot more with my flashes and not the strobes due to the portability  factor and also it is so easy to focus the flash on just one section. But there are advantages to the strobes because a lot more power.

For the second one of Essex Prescott, it is all natural light which I really like. After shooting with flashes for a lot of things it becomes like an addiction. It is just so easy to use the flashes and makes it a lot easier to expose photos. But going back to natural light is a lot of fun for me right now. It was shot at ƒ/ 1.8  and I did that primarily to get a perfect bokeh. The background is all grass that was swirling so it was perfect for a bokeh shot. This shot just seems like a perfect photo for Essex because it fits for his normal environment because he is an out-doorzy person.

For the third shot of Lane Mehringer, I had him in the studio which doesn’t really seem like it would fit for Lane, but I used a black back drop for his shot because almost every time I see him, he is in black, so it fits. But I shot wide for this one so I could get a little disproportion in him. It doesn’t make him look as tall and seems to fit him. I tried to incorporate his long hair as much as possible and this was the best shot of him with his hair.

For the fourth one of Cody Schneider we were out at the golf course and though this isn’t really who Cody is, I really like the photo. Shows the story of us out there. The bokeh is perfect for the shot, really reminds me of golf. This one was natural light also. I did try this one with flashes so I could light up the background a tad but stopped using the flashes for this shot of him.

With the shot of Mario Martinez we were down town shooting some skateboarding and he was just looking at me so I snapped this photo and I wasn’t really intending for a portrait but it came out really good and I love it. I was shooting portraits of somebody else in this same spot but Mario is very photogenic so I really like it. It really fits in for rule 1 and 2 of mine so I am pleased with it.

Kyle Harris is one of the best models I have ever used and it is partly because of a nice face and a grungey beard and ear rings. I love the exposure and composition of this. With the horizontal photo like this one, it really makes this shot strong so I am quite pleased with it.

With the photo of Zach Black, I had a flash behind him lighting up the door way to bring out all of the textures and giving a very proper amount of back lighting around him. I had Mike Shamberg hold another flash to left of Zach and point it at his face so the viewer can really see the facial expression.

Back to the Avadon photos. I shot the photo of Andrew with the Avadon style. Why? Because he was the king of portraits and Andrew is the perfect person for a studio shot like this one. I tried to incorporate his dreds in with this shot because he is quite proud of them. This to me is my most favorite photo in the whole series because it just has so much power. It also shows the progress that he has in his dreds and how long he has been growing them which is something the “dred-heads” are proud of I have been informed.

Josh Tyvan is fun person to photograph. He is a very serious person so it makes for a good shot. I usually only shoot skate shots of Josh but this was a shot that I got of him after he was done skating. It shows the good expression and color contrasts so I love those factors. Playing with bokeh is a lot of fun because you can do so much with the textures. The trees and folliage in general in the back ground of Josh’s shot really stood out to me so I thought “bokeh?!?”

Last but not least, Michael Shamberg. Taking photo of photographers is probably one of my favorite things to do. They understand what has to be done, where they have to be, and just know how to pose. It is fun shooting with fellow photogs because we can discuss the photos and come to a steady medium and combine our skills and create a great shot. So I have to give Mike some props for helping compose this shot. When I looked back through my blog I saw a photo of my friend Tim in very close to the same spot so I thought that I should come back there and re-do it. Going back to spots that I have shot at is fun because I can re-create an image that I have already done and compare them. This one of Mike I like a lot more because I feel like a composed it better and it has better exposure.

The inspiration for this project was mainly sparked up by looking back through my blog and finding something that I feel strong with. But there is this one photographer, Corey Perrine, who is a photo-journalist that I have been following his work ever since we came in contact via Sportsshooter.com when I contacted him about a lens. But seriously his work, portraits specifically is just amazing and I love viewing it. Thank you Corey for being my inspiration.

That is my final project, think you for viewing please comment.

-Steve

P.S.- I will continue to blog throughout the summer so please check weekly :)

Long Weekend, Short Week

Last friday a group of my friends and I headed west to camp in/outside of Leavenworth, WA. On our way there we watched the sun set behind an incoming storm heading out way. I shot photos for pretty much the whole drive there just messing around. We had planned for bad weather there the whole weekend because thats what Weather.com said, but instead while every other city in the Pacific Northwest got rained out, Leavenworth, WA stayed dry the whole time until we were just rolling out of town. We had a great time just hanging out in the town and just meeting the “germans”. I didn’t plan on shooting as much as I did with my camera because I didn’t want to haul it around but I ended up shooting just about everything we did which was actually a lot of fun to shoot. The Leavenworth skate park is basically all tranny so that was really fun, but kind of limited to shoot. But there was this one wall that was very fun to shoot and thanks to Joey Ozol, he can shred so we shot this wall.

There is so much to talk about from this trip but I think the highlight was our mountain climb. It truly was a mountain climb. I do quite a bit of climbing my self and I can easily say that this was a challenging climb, especially in skate shoes. Props to trip member, Brynn Hathaway for conquering our mountain with a healing ACL and her knee in a knee brace. There are photos below of the mountain. Here are the shots from the trip:

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Group Shot

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Aaron Vetsch on left, Joey Ozol on right.

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Aaron Vetsch everyone.

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Vaguely you can see a climber towards the bottom corner, They thought we couldn’t make it to the top, psshh.

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Beauty in the Northwest.

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More beauty.

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A good sunset to start the trip off.

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One of the mountain goats I spent 30 minutes chasing around the mountain. It is weird, they don’t like to be followed, yet they love to follow.

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A good stream to take a photo of with a slow shutter.

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Same stream, different spot, I didn’t have a tripod so its sitting on a log.

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Pathway leading towards our destination mountain in the top left corner.

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Another sunset shot from the car.

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Can you say “natural framing”?

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Thought this was a cool photo.

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Some cross hatching in bokeh form.

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Typical road trip photo.

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Some locks I thought looked cool.

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Joey Ozol, Shredding.

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Bringing skateboarding back to the old school days, literally. Behind Joey is a school. There is a skatepark in a school parking lot. How lucky are those students.

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Pretty much our staple food of the trip.

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The Leavenworth Maypoll.

We all really wanted to get a group photo, but I didn’t have a tripod so I came up with the idea of taking individual portraits of everyone and combining them on to one canvas to make a complete group shot. Props to Joey Ozol for taking the one of me. If you look at the mountain shot with the blue sky (5th photo down) we managed to climb to pretty much the top of the mountain/peak on the left. We felt like champions. We saw mountain goats, rolled some large rocks off the side of the mountain. I didn’t get any photos of that because I was pre-occupied with the rolling of rocks. Defiantly something I wish I had taken a few photos for.

For the photos of Joey skating, I had my friend Matt hold a flash above the wall pointed down on to Joey just so I could really expose the back ground good and flash Joey with some fill light. We were pretty excited of the out come of those shots. We plan on making a trip back in winter (hopefully there is some snow) to hit some rails in Leavenworth. Leavenworth has some very impressive rails and ledges that are perfect for snowboarding.

For the majority of the photos it was just mess around stuff but it was tight, we had a good trip.

Here are the rest of the photos from the week:

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Good ‘ole Coeur d’Alene Lake

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A good sunset for Coeur d’Alene

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The Plane down on the lake docks.

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Trevor Groth, Coeur d’Alene, Chamber of Commerce

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Zack Black, Coeur d’Alene skatepark

If you remember a while back I shot a photo of Joey Ozol ollie-ing through the Chamber of Commerce heart downtown CDA in mid-winter. This last week, we shot it again but with flashes. Trevor was trying kick flips through it but never landed one, but he did land the ollie. I had a light to the left of the heart pointing directly where he would be. And for the last shot of Zach Black doing a back tail slide at the park I had very similar lighting on it. Really loving skate photography right now, so that is a big part of my photography.

Defiantly my influence for this week has been Garric Ray. He is a photographer for transworld skateboarding and wow, he is just super good. His lighting on everything is just perfect and he has published so many skate shots with natuaral framing and I am pretty sure that is what won me over with him. I have always follow his work but have just recently been reading a lot about him. Props to Garric Ray.

Thanks for looking,

-Steve