Plums Four Ways

I’ve been playing with my images lately and liking the altered versions more than the “as shot” originals. I shot these plums last Sept for Connecticut Magazine and they’re beautiful as is in all their purple majesty but I’m loving the toned versions too.

Here is the original and a couple other versions.

The preparation

Sometimes on a shoot the preparation shots are the most interesting. This was from a recent travel story where the staff was setting up flowers on the bar. I shot the it later when it was cleaned up and pretty as it was I liked this better. This was in an Inn where everywhere you looked there were beautiful things to photograph inside and out.

Summertime al fresco

The best part of summer is eating outside, sitting on my deck with a nice glass of wine with a friend or family or by myself, corn on the grill, a stack of magazines or just meditating on my trees… I dream of this all winter and although we’ve had a brutally hot summer I’ve enjoyed many evenings sitting in my outside dining room, a gift from someone who enjoys the outdoors and a nice glass of wine as much as I do.

Goodbye old Friends

I bought my first Hasselblad 25 years ago and my third about 5 years ago when I added the digital back. They’ve served me well and are a marvel of engineering and design but it’s time to move on, I have a new love now, yes Canon, it’s you. So I sold them all for a tiny fraction of what I paid but I suddenly feel freer and lighter. I’m free of cords and external hard drives hanging off me, free from the ever present tripod and now have the lovely autofocus working for me. It was a huge decision to give up medium format and my beloved square but now that it’s done I’m excited about creating new lighter pictures, and working within a rectangle. So thank you Hasselblad, I will not forget you!

Blue Breezeway

Somehow you see things in a photo that you don’t with your eyes. My breezeway is looking very blue here, although the dogs like it in this heat. I went to the Ben Moore store looking for a tan/gray/weathered cedar color and was talked into this blue by the “decorator”, Mistake! I’ll repaint in the fall when it’s cooler.

Daily snapshot

My new Canon makes it so much easier to document daily life, this is my son playing his bass

Canon love

As a long time Hasselblad shooter I never thought I would be using 35mm again. I picked up some Canon equipment recently and love it. The lenses are beautiful, it’s soo much smaller and easier to handle than my clunky but loved square format. I’m using both formats on jobs right now but can see that with the addition of a few more lenses I may make the complete switch to Canon.

Julie Bidwell meets Julie Bidwell

Met my “distant cousin” Julie Bidwell and her family yesterday in West Hartford. Turns out we’ve both known about each other for years, having the same name and me being a photographer and Julie being an anchor on Fox News in NY (Julie Banderas on TV) we both show up on google on a regular basis. I contacted her on Facebook last week and we met at Cosi this afternoon, Julie with her Mom Fabiola, husband Andy & newborn daughter Addison. I was a reluctant convert to FB but without it we would likely never have met. We had a great time talking for a couple hours and discovered that we are related and both included in the Bidwell genealogy Book. It’s great to connect with “new” family members!

Daily shooting

continuing daily pics shot with my snap shot camera

Currently showing

This was part of a story on Jamestown, RI I shot for Yankee Magazine. Love the warm, end of summer light and the iconic Dels truck. I submitted it to the Teacher/Student show at the West Hartford Art League where I’ve been teaching photography workshops for a few years now. The show is at the Clubhouse Gallery and up until the end of June.

everyday shooting

after the storm

Up close with Chuck Close

This show of Chuck Close photographs is up at Univ of Hartford’s Joselof Gallery until the end of June.
The tonality of the photos is so rich and beautiful, they almost look 3 dimensional.
Daguerreotypes, photogravures, digital prints and tapestries are all used to show the same image in different ways.
The photogravures looked flat to me compared to the digital prints and the tapestries invite you to get really close (NPI)
and see the individual threads making up the whole.
Aperture produced this show that you should see if it travels your way.