This is Alanna. We met in Ubud, a city on the island of Bali in Indonesia. I spent a few months living just outside of Ubud in 2009, where I spent most of my time doing things related to photography, agriculture, potlucks, and acro-yoga (not too very different from my life right now).
Alanna and I became fast friends, sharing, among other things, a love of the camera. At some point in our friendship, she began teaching a hooping class at a local hub, called The Yoga Barn. As you could probably surmise, The Yoga Barn, set near downtown Ubud and surrounded by rice paddies, was a popular spot for yoga practitioners. Her hoop classes were popular at the time that I experienced them, and I very much wanted a portrait of Alanna with one of her many arts.
But a few months ago, when I scheduled a flight to North Carolina for work, I saw one of my flight options routed through southern California. With the option of a long layover, I booked a flight with a 5-hour pause in LA, hoping that Alanna was free. She picked me up an shuttled me far down the freeway, where we found time to have lunch, catch up on life, and then shoot back to get me on a plane.
She now produces remarkable branding and marketing work in LA with her company, Co-Creative Media, and photography-that-makes-me-wish-I-were-a-model-just-so-she-would-photograph-me at 2nd Chakra Studio.
And it's not a Hula Hoop. Just a hoop!
Tuesday, December 18, 2012
Wednesday, December 12, 2012
Paul on the Ridge: Rifle, Colorado
This portrait took about 8 minutes and two small handheld speedlights. Working on a budget, the lights were a LumoPro 160 and a cheap 30-year-old Vivitar, bought at a thrifty camera store. Expressing that I wanted a good photo, Paul drove us up to this point. He is talking to Kacy (he just liked to stand this way, and needed little direction). I used manual settings on a Nikon D300 to get a good exposure for the sky (the sun is directly above us, as seen by the shadow on his chest), and made sure his hat totally shaded his face from the sun. With radio slaves, I hand-held a flash aimed at his face, while Kacy stood to camera left and aimed a vertical beam at his body. The photo took very minimal retouching later, mostly just to bring some detail out in the clouds. |
We spoke in deep detail about farming and ranching issues...the finer points of which will someday be transcribed on the Stewards blog...as well as about other local problems, such as the fracking going on in the local shale deposits. But the story that stuck with me the most was the one about his pack horse, lost decades earlier on the ridge that you can see here in the distance.
When Paul (pictured here in his 70's) was a teenager, on one of his earlier herd-tending treks in which he had heavy responsibility, he was tasked with directing a number of cattle up a winding trail on a shale-based slope. Back then and, to a lesser extent, sill today, cattlemen set their herds loose on public lands for the grazing season, sometimes with a worker to live out there and check in on them.. Months later, the rancher and team would return for the roundup, tracking the cattle by brands.
On this particular journey, pushing those cows upward, one of Paul's pack horses hit a loose spot of shale. Even a horse, known for quick recovery, is not immune to gravity, and Paul saw/heard the animal fall to its death. He then dealt with the grisly need to get himself down the hill again and recover his belongings and goods from the horse, as well as deal with the fact of the body and his emotional attachment. A classic cowboy, respect and appreciation for his animals ran deeply through our conversation and through the story that he has been telling for fifty-odd years.
Tuesday, December 4, 2012
Brent and his Dreadlocks: Portland, Oregon
This is Brent. We met in Bend, Oregon sometime in 2005 or 2006, when we were both attending Central Oregon Community College. I was living in my van on campus. Between classes one day, while I was killing time in my vehicle, possibly playing the banjo, he and another friend poked their heads in and introduced themselves.
This was just a couple of months ago, in late 2012. After 7 years, Brent was considering cutting off his dreadlocks, and asked me to take a series of photos highlighting his hair. He looks much tougher here than he really is.
We became fast friends; less than a year later, he, I, and a few other friends rented a house together, named it The Goodness Collective, and began an epic phase of potluck-hosting, musical jams, and general community-on-a-budget living.
When we met, his dreadlocks were relatively short. We've shared many experiences together, including a week at the Burning Man Festival in Nevada in 2007. Look at those short dreads. This is from Burning Man in 2007, five years before the first photo. He still has this hat.
Brent now lives in Portland, Oregon, not too far from me. He fishes commercially for salmon in Alaska during his summers, and studies political science the rest of the time. While he is contemplating the next step in his life, I sincerely hope that we will remain close at heart. He was married this year, and I had the serious honor, after all these years of friendship, of documenting his wedding.
When introducing yourself to a stranger, as he did to me years ago, you never know how long and serious the resulting relationship will be. Take that risk, and say hello.
This was just a couple of months ago, in late 2012. After 7 years, Brent was considering cutting off his dreadlocks, and asked me to take a series of photos highlighting his hair. He looks much tougher here than he really is.
We became fast friends; less than a year later, he, I, and a few other friends rented a house together, named it The Goodness Collective, and began an epic phase of potluck-hosting, musical jams, and general community-on-a-budget living.
When we met, his dreadlocks were relatively short. We've shared many experiences together, including a week at the Burning Man Festival in Nevada in 2007. Look at those short dreads. This is from Burning Man in 2007, five years before the first photo. He still has this hat.
Brent now lives in Portland, Oregon, not too far from me. He fishes commercially for salmon in Alaska during his summers, and studies political science the rest of the time. While he is contemplating the next step in his life, I sincerely hope that we will remain close at heart. He was married this year, and I had the serious honor, after all these years of friendship, of documenting his wedding.
When introducing yourself to a stranger, as he did to me years ago, you never know how long and serious the resulting relationship will be. Take that risk, and say hello.
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