Monthly Archives: June 2008

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Wilshire Restaurant - Santa Monica, California

The LA Times gave me an assignment left over at the end of the day. It was interesting to say the least. I was walking around to photograph an overall of the Wilshire Restaurant and Bob Saget (Full House & Americas Funniest Videos) asked me not to photograph him. I didn’t recognize him at first but told him I wasn’t going to take his picture. He told me to pester the restaurant for some free food and later introduced himself to me in the lobby and apologized for potentially ruining any pictures. Nice Guy.

Wilshire Restaurant - Santa Monica, California

A Portrait of Protest

Protesters organized in downtown Los Angeles against illegal immigration and in support of Jamiel’s Law. Jamiel’s parents are right and left. Organizer Ted Hayes wants illegal immigration stopped due to job loss among african-americans and gang violence between immigrants and locals.

A portrait of protesters against illegal immigration and supporters of jamiel\'s law.

The Set

When I first visited Portland in November of 2007, I had the privilege of being on the set of an aspiring photographer, Alicia Rose, to view her rendition of a project called fairy tales. The photographer asked me to hold off posting my images from the set until her gallery of images had been displayed locally. This photograph was taken during a break in shooting using the modeling lights. This gives the photograph a different appearance than the image in the gallery due to the ambient light bleeding into the forest of Sauvie Island. This is my favorite from the series.

Snow White

Gilt Club

The best weekly in Portland, The Willamette Week, had me running around photographing locations for their annual drink guide. One of my favorite places to photograph was the Gilt Club in Northwest Portland. As a professional photographer you often want as much training as you can get shooting in a style that represents your vision, but you also need to get out of your comfort zone once in a while.

Editorial photography (essentially cheap advertising photography) is good training because you’re forced to make compelling images regardless of the location you’ve been assigned to. In some aspects it’s more difficult than advertising work as you’re not able budget for location scouts and assistants to help with lighting and props and you don’t have a second pair of eyes to make sure you’re thinking of everything. This is why I urge emerging photographers to shoot as many different styles and genres as possible. Inevitably what you learn in these other ventures will pay off when you’re problem solving in your higher end work. I found my prior experience photographing in dim situations as a photojournalist really helped me with this assignment. Lighting the scene was not an option. Hauling in lights would’ve disrupted business and given me unnatural expressions. In any case, the Willamette Week was happy with the body of work and I reinforced my ability to photograph in extremely low light. Play on playah.

Gilt Club Portland Oregon

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