Thanks @housebeautiful for the shoutout! 👍🏼✨ #repost @housebeautiful ・・・ Hands-on coffee table styling by @michellenussbaumer. 👋 (📷: @glangergram) #onstandsnow #decorating #interiordesign
sheepfilms
trying on a metaphor
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PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH
macklin celebrini has autism

pixel skylines
NASA
KIROKAZE
Stranger Things
Not today Justin
One Nice Bug Per Day
occasionally subtle
hello vonnie

Product Placement

Kiana Khansmith
Jules of Nature
noise dept.

titsay

izzy's playlists!

Kaledo Art

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@glangerblog
Thanks @housebeautiful for the shoutout! 👍🏼✨ #repost @housebeautiful ・・・ Hands-on coffee table styling by @michellenussbaumer. 👋 (📷: @glangergram) #onstandsnow #decorating #interiordesign
cover story
Thank you All American mag. for the cover story! Worth a read about this tragic yet inspirational story. It was wonderful to meet this beautiful and resilient family. Sue is to be commended and I could really feel the strength this family had despite the very untimely loss of their clearly dynamic father / husband.
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IT’S NOT ABOUT THE CAMERA
This was also shot on the 4th of July with iPhone 6 plus (in burst mode).
When I say “it’s not about the camera” that isn’t me saying how great this shot is, just that technically it is a sound image of action even including frozen water droplets mid air. That is mainly due to the fact that it was shot in daylight when most cameras are at their best. (High shutter speed, low ISO, capable of smaller apertures)
But beyond any of that, in my humble opinion what will always resonate far beyond the technical, is literally everything else. The subject, the light, the composition, the mood etc… So, to young shooters or “gear heads” (whenever asked my 2 cents) it is always to focus far more on those things than on what equipment you have. Don’t get me wrong. I’m a techno/gadget-nerd at heart, but it is all fun for me and I treat it as a means to an end with full awareness that it will never hand me a strong image.
That doesn’t mean to abandon the technical though, just not to solely rely upon it. An equally frustrating thing is when so called professional shooters don’t seem to be encumbered by simple things like focus! Intentional blur is one thing entirely, and can be beautiful and effective, but so often I see blur even on magazine covers or in ads that is definitely neither intentional nor beneficial to the image and it just blows my mind! Ok… rant over for now. ; )
MAKE A SPLASH!
Some 4th of July lake fun – shot with iPhone 6plus (in burst mode)
(via Make a splash!)
Strangers in a strange land.
Ok, so I said I’d post more from inside the town of Civita Bagnoregio, and I didn’t waste any time. I couldn’t resist one more before turning in for the night. My nephew, Ethan is in the grey shirt and he’s just one of those kids that never met a stranger. He has such an open heart and speaks to people so freely it’s a pleasure to witness and I hope he never grows out of it. We were walking through this, as I mentioned before, magical little town (there is simply no better word to describe it) and next thing we know Ethan is having an impromptu soccer game with another American child who happens to be spending the summer in this tiny town with his mom. I was suddenly nervous since everything was almost sacred feeling in this place. According to Wiki it is 2,500+ years old! So part of me thought "don’t break anything!” and part of me realized that this place is thousands of years old, so a soccer ball is unlikely to bring it down.
Maybe that’s what happens after 2,500 years? A place feels like magic.
Make yourself comfortable, take your shoes off, find a power outlet and live life with STYLE.
I love seeing moments like this when I travel, or just in life in general. Why is it we seem to notice so much more when we travel though? I think it’s not always that there is so much more to notice, as much as that we are in “seeing” mode. All too often I am the lady in this photo, glued to my phone, missing a spectacle that may be unfolding in front of my nose.
I must say I love how savvy she is to have found this spot to plug her phone in. Respect. This was a single table outside of a tiny convenience shop in Italy where people crowd in to hydrate and refuel just before making the very long trek up a footbridge to Civita Bagnoregio - a place not to be missed if ever you are in the region. Truly.
The second photo is the one I took of Civita before making said trek. I plan to post more of the actual town another time. It was a magical place - and I don’t throw that around lightly. For anyone who knows me, something better be magical to require that amount of walking. I not only walked that ENTIRE footbridge, the whole day was then spent walking even more in the town and was capped off by walking back across the footbridge. It was more than worth it.
A 2016 photographers dilemma - horizontal photos look better on computers. Verticals look better on phones. Discuss.
Me
Double Portrait
This is an outtake from a recent shoot I did. For fairly obvious reasons, this shot was a little “much” to be used as the final. I'm simultaneously drawn to and repulsed by it. Down to the coffin chairs in the background, it is downright creepy and sad and it makes me want to be vegetarian. But... I don’t love vegetables and therein lies one of my many life dilemmas.
I have to be grateful to butchers like Neal who are behind the scenes facing the realities of meat preparation so that I can put on my blinders when I eat a burger. : ( He named this cow head, I think it was something like Hammond? I was too panic stricken to remember. It’s a wonder I got any shots in focus and a greater achievement that I did not throw up.
Everything's bigger in Texas, and sweeter, too! Mosey on over to Dude, Sweet Chocolate in #Dallas for cocoa concoctions ranging from bark to bars.… - Marriott - Google+
I can’t tell you how much fun it is to shoot chocolate. It’s almost as fun as eating chocolate. Loved being able to shoot this at Dude Sweet for the Marriott!
My idea of a good picture is one that’s in focus and of a famous person.
Andy Warhol
I never have taken a picture I’ve intended. They’re always better or worse.
Diane Arbus (via jonwoodhamsphotography)
To photograph is to hold one’s breath, when all faculties converge to capture fleeting reality. It’s at that precise moment that mastering an image becomes a great physical and intellectual joy.
Henri Cartier-Bresson, The Mind’s Eye: Writings on Photography and Photographers (via amilinda)
The camera is an instrument that teaches people how to see without a camera.
Dorothea Lange (via saenzdesantamaria)
I am not interested in shooting new things – I am interested to see things new.
Ernst Haas (via thewhitedarkroom)
just a random photo taken while out and about on shoots. I’m always drawn to lines and the sky as well as man vs. nature moments.
SODA GIRLZ!
I remember my photo professor at University once said “throw away your camera bags! What if you are walking on campus and you see the second coming? You want to be ready!” ; )
I was out shooting a job and happened upon these great girls who were kind enough to let me snap some shots of them. They had just stopped in at Rocket Fizz in Deep Ellum and they were drinking soda’s called “Martian Poop” and “Peanut Butter and Jelly”. They said they were pretty terrible! Between their cool hair, the amazing graffiti murals and the hilarious sodas I was lucky to have my camera with me!
Zagat - 30 under 30
https://www.zagat.com/30under30/2016/dallas
Shooting 30 portraits in a short space of time is INTERESTING! And I need a nap! This was a lot of work, but mostly the fun kind. Driving all over town was not the highlight, but getting to meet all of these cool, talented and interesting people was an absolute pleasure.
I approach these hoping to succeed in as many facets as I can. Firstly, I want the subject to feel as comfortable as possible (but really, who is super comfortable with a fairly large picture taking device pointed at their head?). This naturally varies so much from person to person. That variance is part of what makes these so much fun to shoot, just working out how to very quickly strike some level of comfort or rapport with so many individual personality types.
Secondly, I try to capture a sense of place, since these are environmental portraits, but I don’t want it to overpower the person either. The rest of the normal elements matter to me, too - the light, the mood, composition etc… and I’m a stickler for focus, so unless it’s pretty tack sharp exactly where I want it to be, it will likely never see the light of day.
This was such a fun group to shoot and I wish each of them every success as they move forward in their lives and careers! A great thing about continuing to shoot in one city is that it’s not unlikely for paths to cross again for another shoot at another time. I hope they do!