Slideshow

About Me

My photo
An 8th grade English teacher for the past 16 years, my interest in photography began in my early teens. An avid Fuji Velvia shooter for years, I finally purchased my first digital camera, a Canon 20D, in January of 2005. I started my photography business on the side in 2004, and it has grown into a second career. I love how my teaching profession and photography business work so seamlessly together. Today, I find myself shooting in excess of 100,000 images a year, including wedding imagery, senior and family portrait work, sports team and action shots, and my true passion, landscape and wildife. I'm actually doing what I always dreamed and I feel totally blessed.

Sunday, December 26, 2010

A Few of My Favorites

It's been a long fall, and sadly, with the drawn out passing of my grandmother and other important family issues, my blogging and other social networking has taken a backseat on my priority list.  My website needs updating, my blog needs to be maintained, and my Facebook pages need to be refreshed.  I'll be working on those things over the next several days as Christmas Break has finally arrived.  I'll start here on the blog by highlighting some of my favorites from this year's crop of portraits.  I continue to watch my images evolve as I learn new techniques and purchase new equipment.  I'm quite pleased with most of my work this year.

Because I do field a number of questions in person and through email, etc about my work flow, I'll outline a bit of that here.  I'll start by saying, though, that I spend as little time as possible in front of the computer.  If it's not done right through the camera, 99% of the time it ends up in the recycle bin.  I shoot RAW exclusively for all of my images and process those RAW files using Adobe Lightroom.  Most of the images you see below are simply extracted jpegs straight from Lightroom with no further image manipulation of any kind.  The senior portrait representatives have been further airbrushed for skin blemishes using Portrait Professional.  Otherwise, I work extremely hard to control lighting where I'm shooting so I do not have to spend much time in front of the computer.

Before you begin looking, though, I'd like to ask for honest comments.  It seems that a blog becomes more of a showcase or bragging post, but I truly value any and all constructive comments.  I have been mentoring a couple of friends in their journeys as budding photographers and sometimes wish I had others who might offer me similar help, advise, criticism, etc.  As both a classroom teacher and professional photographer, I simply do not have the time to immerse myself in other photo blogs and networking sites.  I've got to get those papers graded sometime!  Therefore, I'd love to hear any and all thoughts, both positive and negative.