Wednesday, January 19, 2011

2011 Mailers



I just brought my 2011 mailers back to the office. Very excited! Thanks to Girlie Press for bashing these out super fast and super perfect. The best colour reproduction experience I have ever had, amazing.

Of course the official approval of the artwork was conducted my Sir Sausage. Apart from a rather foul stink coming from the off-gassing mailers, Sir Sausage was thoroughly impressed.



I have printed 5 different mailers. They are 17"x 11" posters that contain three images each and all my contact info. These will slip into some custom envelopes that I am currently having printed and head off into the world.



At the end of last year I changed my list service provider over to Agency Access and I have been using their database service to generate contact lists. I then supplement my Agency Access lists with my own ones which have previous clients and other handpicked peeps who I would love to work with. Combined the lists total 500 select contacts.

Here are some awesome blogs and blog postings that I have found invaluable in helping me develop this years mailers:

blog.noplasticsleeves.com
Jasmine DeFoore, Pt. One
Jasmine DeFoore, Pt. Two
Jasmine DeFoore, Pt. Three
APhotoEditor

Tuesday, January 18, 2011

Bandon Dunes for Men's Journal

Last October we shot a quick story for Men's Journal's Best of 2010. The lead for the article was Bandon Dunes Golf course, which is an amazing traditional links style golf course on the coast of Oregon. I'm not a golfer but this course was utterly spectacular and clearly challenging. The wind howls off the ocean most days, rain should be expected and the course is wiley, tricky and unforgiving. Apparently the head coach at Bandon Dunes can play the course with just a putter. I thought that was rather impressive.

Below are some out takes from the shoot that didn't make the magazine. And a link to photographer, Wood Sabold who has spent a great deal of time photographing the course in stunning style: www.woodsabold.com









Monday, January 10, 2011

New Zealand & the Year Ahead

Happy New!
I spent the holidays Down Under this year with family and friends. What special places Australia and New Zealand are, WOW! We hiked the Abel Tasman Coastal Track in New Zealand for five days with our 14 month old scamp of a lad strapped to my back. Celebrated Christmas with my first ever glass of sparkling red wine (Sparkling Shiraz). Visited one of my best buddies in Sydney for three days. And introduced my son to his Great Uncle Herbert in Wellington. Its been a jam packed holiday. Below are a couple of moody landscapes from New Zealand. I took these during the ferry crossing from Picton on the South Isle to Wellington on the North.



Over the past few weeks I have tuned into some really fabulous new music ranging from bad DnB beats to juicy deep House and lots of ragga, reggae and dancehall in between. Music is hands down my biggest source of inspiration and I have lots of exciting new personal projects in the pipeline for this year. 2011 is going to be all about pushing the envelope!

Welcome to the New Year!

Friday, December 10, 2010

Wednesday, December 8, 2010

Best Video - UK DnB Awards

I am a massive fan of Drum and Bass music. DnB music is big back home in the UK where it comes from and just recently the Drum and Bass awards were held. Below is the video that won Best DnB Video of 2010. The video is for a tune by DJ Fresh who is actually a US based artist. Love it!!

Wednesday, November 10, 2010

Remembering Our Talent


I am reading a fabulous book at the moment, City of Thieves by David Benioff, it is about the lives of two young Russian men during the German blockade of Lennigrad (St. Petersburg) in the Second World War. I thought it timely to mention this book and in particular a short passage from it since today is Rememberance Day, I think Americans call it Veterans Day, and the passage I want to share describes talent, something us photographers and all artists a like for that matter seek to harness and develop. Benioff personifies talent as a woman, saying:

"Talent must be a fanatical mistress. She's beautiful; when you're with her, people watch you, they notice. But she bangs on your door at odd hours, and she disappears for long stretches, and she has no patience for the rest of your existence: your wife, your children, your friends. She is the most thrilling evening of your week, but some day she will leave you for good. One night, after she's been gone for years, you will see her on the arm of a younger man, and she will pretend not to recognise you."

I feel like there is so much for us to take away from this little passage. Does our talent really slip away? Here one minute and gone the next? Or can we remain in a constant state of evolution, harnessing our talent as it shifts and turns with our personal growth, our journey through life? Perhaps it is good to have a sense of fear, that our talent could leave us at some point in the future, so that we seize every moment to create exceptional work. In the same moment this passage is both terrifying and exciting, motivating and depressing. But for some reason I feel empowered by it. I can't quite believe that talent simply slips away and instead have to believe that some how we can always keep it close to us, forging a new relationship with our talent as we age and evolve as artists. And therein I think lies some sort of truth. Our relationship with our talent is mysterious and difficult. Every person in the world has talent, everyone. But finding it, tuning in to it and having a healthy relationship with it is perhaps one of the hardest and most challenging relationships of all. Talent then can slip away, but it is up to us to maintain our relationship with it, to continue to learn, and remain open minded. The moment we stagnate, she'll find a better lover.

So while we take a moment to remember, perhaps we should also take a moment to listen to ourselves, tune in to that which we do best and do something exceptional. We owe it to those who died for us and we owe it to our mistresses.

Thursday, November 4, 2010

Finalist in PDN's Digital Pix Contest

Very excited to post that a series of images I entered into PDN's Digital Pix Contest came in as a finalist in the New Talent category. Below is the image that appeared in PDN this month and further down the rest of the images from the series.