Below: Snoqualmie Pass Snowshoe hike. Gold Creek Trail.
Below: Does anyone remember where we parked the car?
Below: Snoqualmie Pass Snowshoe hike. Gold Creek Trail.
Below: Does anyone remember where we parked the car?
Below are a few more new photos from the project on Washington state’s Olympic Peninsula, photographed with an instant camera. See more images from the ongoing photo essay here.
I had a great opportunity today to continue my photo essay of the Olympic Peninsula as seen through photos from an instant camera (my Fujifilm Instax 210). I happened to be in Port Townsend, Washington doing some filming for the University of Washington’s very impressive National Center on Quality Teaching and Learning in Head Start. After my shoot I continued my instant camera project. Here are a couple of new pictures below. See more from the photo essay in older blog posts here and here.
The National Press Photographers Association (NPPA) brings some of the best multimedia storytellers together each year for its Multimedia Immersion workshop. Thanks to a generous grant from the NPPA, I’ll be joining the week-long event in Syracuse, New York. Thank you NPPA!
I’ll be one of 40 students working with visual journalists and editors from organizations including The AP, Washington Post, NPR, USA TODAY, MSNBC.com, and many others.
You should be there if you want to be part of the rapid-expanding field of multimedia storytelling! Sign up here.
Rediscovered some images in my archive from my time in South Africa. Here is a Cape Town beach photo for you to enjoy:
This is what snowshoeing in Washington’s Olympic National Park looks like on a sunny day. Not bad, huh? This route takes you to the top of Hurricane Hill, which is inside the park’s Hurricane Ridge entrance.
Here are a few scenic Seattle ferry pictures for you to enjoy. Hopefully the bottom one displays OK on your screen; it’s a little dark but it’s my favorite. Just at dusk I was heading to Edmonds from Kingsgate on the “Puyallup” boat when I spotted Mount Rainier just barely visible in the distance. Of course, a ferry was on its way and it was only a minute or two until the two images lined up well enough to make a decent photo. As always, thanks for looking.
Above: A ferry leaves downtown Seattle.
Above: A ferry, pictured with the Olympic mountains in the background, makes its way toward Seattle.
Above: A ferry heads toward Kingsgate as Mount Rainier keeps watch from above.
In case you saw the trailer for The Tallest Hurdle and were waiting for the finished piece, or if you don’t even know what I’m talking about … you should have a look at this new video I recently finished! I shot everything on location in Nepal and I’m really happy with how it turned out. It is a difficult story to tell but very important, as these kinds of things often go. Below is a short story summary. Please also see The Tallest Hurdle photo essay.
In Nepal, it is surprisingly common to find children with severe burn injuries since villagers cook over unprotected fires in their homes. Both parents of a household may often have to work, leaving children unattended or under the care of a relative who may also have many responsibilities. Children can crawl or walk in to an indoor fire, or perhaps tug on something hot that is cooking. In smaller homes, children can even fall into a fire while sleeping, as was the case with Sujan Gautam, who lost most of his right hand from injuries sustained while sleeping. Fortunately, the Disabled Newlife Center in Kathmandu and similar organizations are providing support for people like Sujan and are working to challenge the stigma associated with disability in Nepal.
I thought it would be interesting or useful for some of my readers to hear the story behind one of my photos, so I decided to explain how the above image was made and what led up to it. It is one of my favorite images from a recent trip to Peru, where I shot a story, Legacy of War, about the decades-long internal conflict that saw approximately 70,000 lives lost. I traveled to Ayacucho, a city in the Andes, to investigate a tumultuous period in Peru’s history, which began in this town. After meeting and photographing many people directly affected by the violence of the 80’s and 90’s, I took a taxi into the hills above Ayacucho in order to make some photographs of the entire city – I needing something with more of a sense of place. I shot landscapes and wide shots of the city from above and I told our taxi driver in Spanish that I’d like to stop once or twice on the way back in order to chat with people in the fields and/or make photos. After a minute or two, I spotted two women sitting together in a beautiful pastoral scene. I told the driver to stop and I got out of the car with my girlfriend, Karlie, and we approached the women.
From across a large ditch, I yelled to them in Spanish, telling them that I am a journalist, I came from the U.S., I’m interested in the daily life of Ayacuchanos, and I want to chat with them and take their photo. They nodded as we climbed through the ditch and slipped and slid on the dry earth. Standing next to the ladies, the first thing that struck me was the size of their cheeks. Like chipmunks, they each had a giant wad of something stuffed into one cheek, and it took me a few seconds to realize that it must of course be coca leaves. As a Seattle photographer, this obviously isn’t something I get to see or photograph often. They smiled as I talked to them in Spanish and I noticed just a few teeth in those smiles. One woman was spinning yarn while we sat, and I’m not quite sure if it was llama or alpaca or neither. I listened to a few very thick and difficult Spanish words that the woman spoke to me, saying to me that she understood some Spanish but spoke only Quechua. We laughed as she asked me a few things in Quechua, to which I could only reply “no sé,” … “I don’t know” in Spanish.
I told them to just carry on as if I were not there, and then I walked behind them to capture the beautiful hills in the background behind them. The two cows in the left of the frame mirrored the two women spending the afternoon together, and the picture came out quite well. It felt calm and quiet, with just the right colors and tones. I wanted to shoot the image at f/1.4 to make the background blur significantly, but with the Canon 50mm lens that I have it can be a pain to keep the subject in focus. I snapped a few quick frames before saying goodbye, and only one of these frames was decently in focus. With a bit of luck, as usual, I was able to meet a couple of people in a really cool scene and make a photo out of it. Once I got home, I didn’t hardly do anything to the photo in Lightroom or Photoshop except perhaps bump the contrast and saturation up just a bit. Thanks a lot for looking and stay tuned for more.
Today I am launching the trailer for an upcoming multimedia project called The Tallest Hurdle, based on this photo essay I produced in Nepal about indoor cooking fires and the surprising prevalence of young burn victims. Please have a look:
Mixing work and pleasure at Machu Picchu, Peru on Christmas Day, 2011. What a way to celebrate with family: atop one of the coolest places on earth! Have a look below at a few of my Machu Picchu photos.