Island Girl

I’ve traveled to Hawaii many times as a tourist. It is a wonderful travel destination.

I’ve visited many of the islands and done a wide range of excursions from zip lining, snorkeling, riding a submarine and everything in-between.

However, as a photographer I’ve always wanted to do a swimsuit shoot on Maui.

Fortunately for me I had my favorite model with me on this trip. Jessica has been modeling for me for a few years. She has a natural beauty and talent and the camera just loves her!

I did some research, targeted a fairly secluded beach, used my iPad to find it and had a great time capturing my “Island Girl”. It was all as fantastic and turned out as great as I had hoped.

I think from now on I’m going to have to do something like this on all my vacations.

Sadly it all ended and the sun set far to fast for me.

Thank you, Jessica, for a fabulous shoot.  You look stunning!

Aloha & Mahalo!

Catherine the Great!

Catherine emailed me two weeks ago about a Senior Portrait session.  I was very happy she asked a lot of questions because it showed she cared about the quality of the photographs and the photographer who would be taking the photos for her.  We exchanged at least 2 dozen emails when she finally told me she wanted to sign with me.  Woohooooooo!


Catherine is from Nebraska.  She is visiting Colleges & Universities in CA to research which one she’d attend next fall when she graduates from high school.  She told us she emailed many photographers and we really stood out.  She didn’t want cookie-cutter photographs like everyone else’s.

Wendy and I first met up Catherine at the park.  As she approached closer, her personality radiated like the ray of sunshine that day, bright and cheery.  She was a bit nervous in the beginning.  But it took no more than 5 minutes for her to warm up and she totally rocked like a teen supermodel!

When she told us that she hadn’t seen the beach before, we couldn’t let her go home without taking her to one of our favorite beaches.  It’d turned into a treat for all of us.  We had a BLAST!



Catherine has set her goals in becoming a doctor.  Her mom proudly told me she excels academically in school.  Beauty and brains,   Catherine, you’re such a pleasure to photograph.  We wish you the very best in your future.  We have no doubt, you will one day make a “GREAT” doctor!


Oh Baby Baby

This past Saturday, Wendy and I got to hang out with little Danny.  Looking at him, you will never guess he is only 7 1/2 weeks old!  He is just a bundle of joy.  We have known his mom, Janet, for almost 10 years.  It’s a delight to see her family grow.  Baby Danny is absolutely adorable and precious.  We had great fun photographing him.  Even his big brother got into the action at the end!

Look at the BIG smiles on their faces!  PRICELESS!!!!

Great Photographs!

I have been asked before how does one make a great photograph. I believe that there are basically 3 major factors that go into creating a special image. They are equipment, the photographer, and the processing of the captured image itself. Let’s look at these three influences in reverse order.

Processing: One of the things few people realize is that processing an image is almost as important as taking it. For example, Ansel Adams was a master printer. This is not an insult in any way. Before digital imaging became easily accessible, people would train their whole lives to become master printers in a professional film lab.  It was a respected career. Ansel Adams used to take numerous test strips, wash them, and then later in his career, throw them into the microwave to dry faster. Take a look at this clip from Ansel Adams: A Documentary Film.  You will get a glimpse into his creative process. Although the tools have changed for processing with digital imaging, the importance still holds true. If a photographer is just shooting jpeg format files straight out of the camera and not shooting raw format images, then its like they are processing their images at K-mart or any similar automatic place. No thought goes into it and they are trusting a machine to do the work. However, with raw files there is an opportunity to hand process the digital images like Ansel Adams did with his black & white negatives. Creating and capturing the vision that was intended to be captured initially by that same human photographer.


Equipment: Having good equipment can make a the process easier to carry out, there is no doubt. However, it won’t make the image for you. The photographer still has to decide how and what equipment to use and only a well trained photographer knows how to best use it. In other words; yes a non-photographer can “take” a better technical picture with a better camera, but they couldn’t “make” better photographs because of it. It’s that simple.  Nobody asks a painter what brushes he uses and they don’t consider  themselves a painter having completed a “paint by number” kit. No doubt the equipment can help, but if you don’t know what to do with it, you’re lost.

The Photographer:  They are the entity that makes everything happen and brings them all together. For a real photographer has the skills, vision, and experience to take a photograph with care, passion, and planning. They use the equipment well and to their purpose with no surprises (good or bad). Then finally, the often ignored step, process the image to give rise to the initial idea. This takes creativity and experience.

So if you want great photographs, make sure your photographer knows how to creatively make them. Look at their images and see if they have a vision or if they are simply paint by number.

Young Ones

One of my favorite quotes is by Arthur O’Shaughnessy from the initial lines of the Ode from his book Music and Moonlight (1874). It starts with;

We are the music makers,
And we are the dreamers of dreams,

I’ve always perceived it and the several lines that follow as a honor to artists. I’ve even placed it on the front page of my fine art website.


However, I also think it can be identified with children, looking forward, and things to come.


It continues with,

Wandering by lone sea-breakers,
And sitting by desolate streams;—
World-losers and world-forsakers,
On whom the pale moon gleams:

Yet we are the movers and shakers
Of the world for ever, it seems.