New York City | October, 2022

On a clear day in Manhattan the natural light is downright dynamic. As the sun moves across the sky, the light floods passages through narrow streets lined with tall buildings, and intersects main thoroughfares creating deep valleys of stark contrast in light and shade. When I’m holding a camera, this is the kind of environment that I see in black and white.

For a visit this past October — my first trip back to NYC since October, 2019 — I stayed at a hipster dive boutique hotel in Chelsea, in what’s known as the city’s Flower District, a single block of plant and flower stores on 28th Street between 6th and 7th Aves that service the bulk of the city’s floral and horticultural needs. The sheer amount of flora & foliage that hits the street first thing in the morning is impressive. It turns the sidewalks on either side of the busy one-way, single-lane street into a jungle of plants, trees and flowers that encroach on walking space, fill the environment with lush life, and cast wild shadows that divide visibility into into high contrast zones of light and shade.

The block starts bustling around 5am, several of the stores close mid-day, but many are open until late afternoon, so I managed to take advantage of the light and the action in the street most days, whether I was coming or going. In the morning I’d grab a coffee at a spot around the corner and move up the block east to west; if I was back on the block later in the day, I tried to roll up from the other direction, west to east. In both cases, I kept the sun at my back, giving me some cover and lighting up the subjects in front of me.

This strategy framed most of my travels throughout the city over six days. Whether I was headed to a museum in midtown, meeting some friends in the Village, or on my way to hit up a record store in the LES, whenever I moved through the city, I traveled mostly on foot and tried to roughly map out routes that let me take advantage of where the sun was going to be, in areas where I knew the foot traffic was likely to be busy. I tried to leave enough time to get to where I was going so I could stop and post up in spots where the light was especially good.

And even if it didn’t work out as planned and the sun was squarely overhead flooding the streets with light… New York still the most bustling and interesting city in North America, a target-rich photo environment regardless of the lighting particulars.

This collection of images contains both digital and 35mm film photographs. The digital images, which make up most of the batch, were taken with a Fuji X-Pro3 and an XF27mm f/2.8 lens (equivalent of 40mm on the Fuji’s APSC sensor); the film was shot using a Rollei 35S (also a 40mm f/2.8 lens) with Kodak Tri-X 400 35mm black & white film. A few of these shots are pretty decent, but they’re all passable enough to share publicly. (I might throw some outtakes into the next edition of One For The Roadjust sayin’ .) Enjoy…

San Diego Comic Con 2019

I attended San Diego Comic Con this year, for the first time. My girlfriend works in the industry and has been going to the show for years, and my daughter is a burgeoning manga and anime nerd, and is now old enough to 1) know what Comic Con is, and 2) know that access is just a polite request away.

So basically, I just went along for the ride, figuring I’d get some quality time in with the kid and make photos. Which is pretty much exactly what I did. And while Comic Con isn’t necessarily my jam, it’s a sprawling event — taking over the entirety of the San Diego convention center, and spilling out into the surrounding Downtown San Diego Gaslamp District — and its general sphere of cultural reference is broad enough to appeal to almost any interest, so I was certainly never bored while we were there.

I tried to avoid taking pictures of cosplayers blatantly posing for the camera, instead working to keep a low profile — dad mode or whatever — and capture people being themselves, regardless of their appearance. That turned out to be more difficult than it sounds. Generally speaking, as soon as anyone in cosplay at Comic Con notices a camera pointed anywhere in their general direction, they immediately get into character. And I did specifically ask one or two people if I could photograph them.

In any case, I managed to make a handful of passable images at the show, and aside from one image in this set, all these photos are in color. It’s just too vivid of a scene to shoot in black and white…


Getting There...

I’ve been tinkering with this site a bit. The design isn’t changing, but the structure’s been slightly tweaked, the galleries are being reorganized and culled a bit to focus on images that represent what I think is the best of my efforts. I’m still trying to find my photographic vision and voice — honestly, I think that’ll probably be a life-long pursuit — but hopefully I get closer to figuring it out the further along I get. The changes to this site are meant to represent that current state org that pursuit.

Part of this process involves the removal of some images from the galleries. There’s no pressure on me to build a portfolio. I don’t eat off photography — this is strictly a labor of love. If I had the time to spend my days behind the lens I’d probably be developing the vision and voice much more quickly. But the slower, more restricted approach comes with the freedom to work at a pace that allows for deeper (perhaps more brutal) reflection, and the opportunity to populate these galleries with the kinds of images that fit the vision of where I think I’m trying to go with all this…even if I struggle to put that vision into words.

At any rate, I’m getting there.

Here are a handful of photos I made in April…


Weekly Photoset: March 17, 2019

Time flies when you’re working your ass off.

i‘ve been taking photographs every chance I get recently but, per usual, haven’t had much time to circle back around to review, edit and post what I’ve been shooting. But I’m still making that effort to get it in when I can, so this week’s set contains scenes from the few weeks. In that time, I spent four days in Anaheim, CA for work, and traversed the Bay between Oakland and San Francisco on the usual paths.

I’ve been thinking a lot about photographic style — my opportunistic approach, no matter the setting — and have been sort of longing for the time required to post up in busy places, make myself invisible, and capture the traffic of life as it goes by. But right now I have no time for plotting careful approaches, or lying in wait, so shooting on the move’s gonna have to continue to be the M.O…

Weekly Photoset: February 25, 2019

Back to routine, scenes from daily local travels…

Weekly Photoset: February 18, 2019

I’ve spent a lot of time recently playing catch up (work, life, creative pursuits, etc.), so this week’s photoset includes images I’ve made over the last few weeks (the recent LA trip notwithstanding).

Lately, photographically speaking, I’ve been trying to see past the drudgery of the every-day (my life is fairly routine when I’m not traveling) and find beauty in the normal average spaces and places around me. Spaces devoid of people are easier for me, though the perennial challenge of photographing people is a part of this — and something I still struggle with. Ultimately, regardless of the subject, I’m trying to employ the (often [mis]quoted) wisdom of California photographer Morley Baer: “Quit trying to find beautiful objects to photograph. Find the ordinary objects so you can transform it by photographing it.”

At any rate, here are some ordinary objects I’ve photographed recently (all shot with the FujiFilm x100f, and edited as minimally as possible in Adobe Lightroom). The beauty is, I suppose, entirely subjective…

Photoset: Los Angeles, CA | January 2019

I’ve been beyond busy for the last month, as well as sick (twice), and generally preoccupied — so much so that I haven’t even thought about posting photos. Which isn’t to say that I haven’t been taking photographs, I just haven’t had much time to review, edit or share.

So in an attempt to get back into the swing of the complete process, here’s a gallery of street photos from a recent quick weekend trip to LA, where I attended the women’s march with friends, and wandered the streets of Echo Park, DTLA, and the Arts District.

Weekly Photoset: January 6, 2019

Wrapping up the first week of the new year by publishing some photos I made over the last seven days. Here’s the first photoset of 2019…

Weekly Photoset: January 1, 2019

Happy New Year. I spent some time in Carmel and San Francisco last week, and these pix came out of those adventures. This batch is predominantly black and white, except for one — when I pulled the RAW image from the camera, the color was so vivid, it clearly wasn’t meant for black and white. There’s also a rare selfie here, please don’t hold it against me…

Weekly Photoset: December 20, 2018

After months of deactivation — and a couple of years after removing the app from my phone and iPad, which essentially removed it from my daily life — I deleted my Facebook account this week. So, just a heads-up: if we were connected there, we’re not any more...or rather, we won’t be for much longer, as it takes 30 days to delete an account for some reason.

I’ve been toying with the idea of shitcanning my Instagram account too, but I’m not quite there yet. I’ve managed to keep it curated enough — mostly photography, art and design, records, bands, vintage cars, and boxing — that it still delivers content that generally makes me happy…despite the glut of advertising, and the fact that I’m pretty sure those bastards are hot-micing my phone to target said advertising.

Anyway, few days late (per usual), but here’s the week’s photoset…

(Bi)Weekly Photoset: December 10, 2018

I blew it last week and failed to post The weekly batch of photos, so here’s a short collection from the last couple of weeks. No black and white — these are all color, all made with the Fujifilm x100f in my Oakland, CA neighborhood.

 (Also, just a heads up — I finally published a gallery of pictures from my trip to Oaxaca, MX back in June, and I’m writing up a post about that. I’m also working through photos from a trip to NYC in October, and I hope to get those published here soon as well. Life’s been a little nutty lately, so unfortunately creative pursuits have suffered.)

Weekly Photoset: November 25, 2018

I had most of last week off work, which offered a break in routine, as well as the opportunity for a short road trip in observance of the Thanksgiving holiday. The upshot of all that is a weekly photoset that’s a bit heavier than usual.

This week’s set also features some pretty vivid color shots among the standard black and white fare. I do love strong black and white images, but I’m certainly not married to the look, because every image has its own requirements. I’m just trying to create what I see in my mind’s eye — without too much editing — and I see in both color and black and white.

Most of these images are devoid of people, too, which has, historically, been a compositional norm in most of my photography. As I mentioned in last week’s post, I’m still working on my comfort zone when it comes to taking pictures of people in public, but the opportunity to do so didn’t really avail itself last week.

Weekly Photoset, November 19, 2018

If there’s a theme to this photoset, it’s traversing the Bay on BART. I made a couple trips between Oakland and SF last week, and captured these images along the way.

I’ve been working on photographing people more lately. It’s not something I’m super comfortable with, and like most of my photography, regardless of subject, I’m opportunistic with it.

One of these pictures was made with the Lightroom Mobile camera on an iPhone 8, the other three with the FujiFilm x100f. (Can you tell the difference?)

Weekly Photoset: November 12, 2018

Last week was a rough one. It’s been difficult to escape the fires that have effected the whole state — we’ve gotten shitty air quality in Oakland, but compared to what folks in Butte and Ventura Counties have been going through, rotten air quality is, in the immediate term anyway, not much more than an annoyance. I mean, I’m wearing a filter mask outdoors (which feels pretty dystopian), but still have a roof over my head. I have friends in Paradise and Calabasas, near Malibu, who can’t say that at this point.

Please give what you can to help the victims of the Camp (Nor Cal) and Woolsey (So Cal) fires. The NYT put together a pretty good list of places to start. If you live nearby, please consider donating your time by volunteering. If you live away from the affected areas, please throw some money at the problem. People can use all the help they can get right now.

With regards to this week’s photos, I shot more with the Lightroom Mobile camera on my phone this week than I did with the x100f — or rather, I was happier with the results on the phone — but both are represented here…

Weekly Photoset: November 6, 2018

I set a Sunday deadline for myself to post a weekly photoset, and I blew it right outta the gate. I should have posted these images two days ago. But that’s life these days — I’m busy, and sometimes things fall by the wayside. Better late than never, I guess…

Weekly Photoset: October 28, 2018

I haven’t been posting to this site enough — to the blog or the photo galleries — but that doesn’t mean that I’ve got nothing to post. I take photos almost daily, either with the Lightroom Mobile camera on an iPhone 8, with a FujiFilm x100f that I have on me most of the time, and sometimes with a Nikon D7200. Currently the output is just piling up in the Adobe cloud and on a hard drive.

Also, I’m increasingly fried on Instagram, annoyed and frustrated with a shitty user experience. It’s flooded with ads and, as far as a creative outlet goes, feels like just shoving bullshit in to a black hole. And while I do post to 500px and VSCO from time to time — and find those to be cleaner and more curated communities despite (or maybe because of) the smaller, more photography-focused user bases and ad-free paid options — I don’t own those spaces like I own this one.

So in an attempt to breathe a little life into this site, and do something lasting and more personally meaningful with the photos I make, I’m going to start publishing a weekly dump of images. There may be just one photo, or there might be several, but I’ll put in the effort to put up something here every week; these photos won’t get any explanation beyond where and when they were snapped; and the weekly cadence will hit on Sundays, with a seven day lookback. Beyond that, no rules.

Just for the hell of it, and because some rules are for breaking, this first edition goes back two weeks. So let’s see where all this goes...