Portrait of a Friend

So for those of you out there keeping up with my life through my blog, it’s been a little while.  But I think it’s time to get this thing moving for real now.  So in the way of updates, I’m adding a new category of blog posts called “NMPJ”.  NMPJ stands for New Media Photojournalism.  This is the name of the Masters degree program in which I cam currently enrolled.  Yes, you got it, I’m going back to school.  Crazy times, but, so far, pretty awesome.  And, because of my intense devotion to readers (assuming I have any readers), I’ve decided to start posting assignments and things of interest from my program on my blog.  Why?  Because it’s my blog, I can do whatever I want to do.

So our very first photographic assignment in this program was to go and make a portrait of a friend – with bonus points awarded for portraits of “friend with dog”.  You don’t have to tell me twice.  🙂

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We had to select three to turn in.  These are my three.  Thanks, Mike (& Zoey) for sharing a morning with me.  Always a good start to my day.

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Cuban Embassy Raises Its Flag in USA Again

For the first time since since 1961, the United States and Cuba have diplomatic ties and host embassies for each other.  Today was the official reestablishment of diplomatic ties between the two countries and I felt I could not live in DC and pass up on the opportunity to witness this historic moment.  The brutal heat and poor air quality today in DC made the experience that much more challenging, but seeing the Cuban flag flying in the US for the first time in my lifetime was worth the discomfort.  Here are some of the images from this morning.

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More Than Just a Photographer

A blog is a place where I can tell you more about me.  Presumably you care.  And so it is with both of those assumptions that I write this little blog post.  If all I did was post wedding photos on this blog, I suspect some of you might not stick around.  But I am more than just a collection of (lovely, brilliant, amazing, moving) wedding photographs.  I actually have other interests too.

When I was younger (possibly much younger…) I used to fundraise and do an annual cycling event called the MS-150, a 150-mile, two-day cycling event to raise money for multiple sclerosis.  The one I did was in my home region of Northeast Ohio.  After doing this ride for years, I eventually became one of the top fundraisers in the event.  And that was back in the days before people had websites to collect donations online.  Yes, I knew those days.  I used to ride my bicycle (before I had my driver’s license) door to door all around my neighborhood and surrounding neighborhoods asking for and collecting donations for this ride and cause.  Fast-forward to present day (we’ll skip the admission of how many years we’re fast-forwarding through) – I’m doing it again.

GoPro Selfie

This time I’m doing a ride that is a little more grueling than two consecutive days of 75 miles.  I’m doing a “century” ride – 100 miles in one day.  Actually the ride is 104 miles in total, but after 100, nobody is counting.  The ride, Bike to the Beach, is this Friday, August 1st and is a ride to raise money for Autism.  I’ve been doing some training rides in anticipation of having a very sore butt and some very sore legs, but I’m optimistic about surviving this thing.  It’s been a while, but I’m not dead yet.

I’d love to have you join me on my journey to survive cycling 104 miles and raising money for autism.  If you’re so inclined to make a tax-deductable donation to this worthy cause, I’ve attached a link for your (and my) convenience.  But if you prefer to have me show up at your doorstop on my bicycle and collect in person, simply send me your address and I’ll show up.  If you do make a donation, I (and about 1.5 million Americans affected by autism) thank you wholeheartedly.  If not, that’s ok, there will be another bike ride to raise money and another chance for you to help out.  Here’s the link for this one.

http://biketothebeach.kintera.org/dc/zarconiphoto

There you can even find another lovely bike selfie and chart my progress toward a fundraising goal of $2000 (slightly higher than the required $500 per rider).  Help me decimate this goal and my thanks are yours.  Perhaps next year you can ride with me?  Here’s a little video to show you how excited I’ll be if you donate…  Ride safe!!!

http://youtu.be/X9mYSi6tXjE

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Supreme Court Considers Equality

Ok, so perhaps not the most unbiased headline ever published.  Good thing this is a blog and not a newspaper.  Keeping my opinion out of my photography is not a particularly important goal of mine.  And why should it be, this is MY blog.  Besides, nobody told you you had to read it.  Or like it.

So yesterday and today at the Supreme Court, justices are hearing arguments pertaining to same-sex marriage and marriage rights on the Federal level.  And after an important election, the US has 9 states (plus the District of Columbia) who allow same-sex marriage.  The Supreme Court will consider whether there is legal standing to make same-sex marriage a federal law thereby allowing any same sex couple the right to marry legally in their state (as long as their state does not have a law expressly forbidding it).  Obviously this issue has some folks up at arms.  So I thought I’d take a little trip, thanks to the wise suggestion of my friend Jon, to make some images.  Here are some.

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Obviously there are a number of viewpoints represented here.  Some are more appealing than others…  This next photo comes with a little note.  While the ramifications of federal allowance and recognition of same-sex marriage may not be obvious to everyone, they are clear to me after having a conversation with a very near and dear gay couple.  One of this pair is a US citizen, the other is not.  And while they reside in the District of Columbia which allows them to be married, it’s not a federal law and therefore lacks federal benefits.  Among these benefits is the right for the non-citizen to become a citizen after marrying a citizen.  Heterosexual couples enjoy this right, naturally.  But perhaps that context will explain the sign if you didn’t get it already.  Choosing between country and spouse is not cool.

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Ever see those t-shirts or coffee mugs that say “how could you say no to this face?”?  I mean really, how could you say “no” to these faces?

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As a photographer who shoots a lot of weddings, I can’t help but love this sign.  Reminds me of a sign I saw at some other same-sex marriage event that read (basically), “let gay people be miserable too”.  LOL.  Not exactly the point, but I guess the idea that we all bleed the same blood does come across.  Just asking for equality, not special treatment.

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Classic DC.  Gotta love the “Guys, I said I hate figs” poster.  Just classic.

So while the Supreme Court weighs the issues before it, huge numbers of Americans wait with eager anticipation to hear what will become of them and their partnerships in the eyes of the law.

I love that I live in a country that allows me the right to say whatever I want to say.  But I do wish, sometimes, that some of these people wouldn’t feel the way they do.  It’s sad to see people so proud to say something they should be so ashamed to feel.  And that’s the show, don’t forget to take care of yourselves – and each other.

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The Open Road

People always ask if I just shoot weddings or if I shoot other things as well.  I always have to stop for a moment before answering to decide whether to proceed with the “my parole officer has asked me to deny shooting anything or anyone” response or the “just weddings?  What’s the matter with shooting just weddings?” response.  In either case, the answer is no.  I shoot all kinds of things (sorry, officer).  It’s one of the things I love about shooting weddings – the diversity of shooting opportunities.  Weddings are like whole academic photography curricula condensed into a single day (or a couple days in some cases).  A little sports work, a little portrait work, a little studio lighting work, some posed group shots, candids, emotion, action, direction, observation.  So much goes into planning a wedding and I get the gift of being able to witness and document those things.  It’s not just shooting weddings like anybody could do it.  It’s a wedding!

What is not a wedding, however, is this post.  I warned you in the About Me section of my blog that my interests were more diverse than just weddings and that those topics would emerge eventually in my blog.  Among them, motorcycles!

So a client of mine called me and told me that he built a motorcycle.  Obviously this caught my attention because I like motorcycles and I have a sense of what it would take to actually build a motorcycle.  Also, I know this man is a manager at the Home Depot in NE DC so moonlighting as a motorcycle builder is pretty awesome.  He asked me, like usual, if I just shoot weddings or if I do other things as well.  I smiled to myself and told him I would shoot whatever he wanted to have shot.  So he told me about the motorcycle which sounded pretty spectacular and we set up a time to make some images.

So I was chatting with Mike while photographing his bike about the bike and the process.  Before it got cold last season, Mike decided to move the motorcycle, then a stock 2006 Harley-Davidson Road King, into his garage for a major face-lift.  He then described the process of hibernating in the garage for the winter working on the bike meticulously.  As the spring rolled around, it was time for Mike to get his bike rolled out of the garage and start riding again.  And the finished product was even more spectacular than he had hoped.

Mike is not one of those prissy motorcycle owners who has a motorcycle, works on it all the time, and never rides.  Mike prides himself on both having a beautiful bike that he rebuilt from the ground up and actually riding it.  Now, don’t get me wrong, I can appreciate a good show bike like the best of them.  Wouldn’t even mind having one or two myself.  But, like Mike, I’d ride them.  That’s what they’re meant for anyway, right?  There are few things more glamorous, manly, or honest than polished chrome and the open road.

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Don’t like gay marriage? Don’t get gay married.

So writing a blog is primarily about sharing my images.  But knowing your photographer is really almost as important as liking his images or trusting his artistic judgement.  I don’t intend to have this blog solely serve as a showcase of my images – if you want to see those, you should go to my website.  Actually, since you mention it, why don’t you swing by my website?  (too shameless?)

So I had a marathon weekend of shooting this weekend.  I shot a rehearsal dinner Friday, an admissions piece for The George Washington University on Saturday morning, a wedding Saturday evening, and a wedding on Sunday.  And, in case that wasn’t enough images to bury myself in editing, I employed one of my assistants to cover a rehearsal dinner for me on Saturday too.  Phew.  No wonder I was looking for a 5-hour energy at the start of the reception on Sunday.  And no wonder I slept in on Monday.  And no wonder I still have studio lights, stands, and god knows what else still in my trunk today…

But what a spectacular weekend and pair of weddings I was able to be a part of!  Certainly each of these weddings will have its own blog post later (once the images are edited), but for now each of them warrants a story that doesn’t need images (and might help you to know me).  So if you’re looking for pretty images, scroll down farther (or go to my website).  These ones I stole from the googles. 😉

So the wedding I shot on Saturday was a gay wedding.  James and Bill contacted me through a fellow photographer who was unavailable to cover their wedding and discussed with me their plans for a “garden party” outdoors at the beautiful Woodrow Wilson House in NW DC.  They described their tastes, hopes, designs, and dreams about their wedding and talked to me about what they liked about my photography and about photography in general.  I could tell right away I like them.  Little did I know how much I’d like them – but you will read more about that when I share photos from their wedding.  Suffice to say they were wonderful.

Shooting gay weddings is always interesting as a straight man.  You don’t realize necessarily what it’s like to deal with vendors for your wedding (for example) as a gay couple planning a wedding.  Since DC legalized gay marriage, there has certainly been an influx, at least in my business, of gay weddings and gay couple contacting me about photography.  And of course I’m happy for the business, I mean at some point it has to be a business.  But it’s been a joy celebrating with these couples because their celebration is about more than just each other, their love, and their lives.  Their celebration is about something much harder for us to understand, something we all take for granted, and something that these couples have to work hard to find.  Their celebration is about things I’ve never had to fight for and about things I don’t claim to fully understand.  But what I do understand is that James and Bill are in love.  They’re not in love a little bit, or for appearances, or for their families to understand.  They’re not in love so they can file taxes together or join their bank accounts.  They are in love because James makes Bill so happy he can barely stand up for a 20 minute ceremony.  They are in love because Bill makes James so happy he can’t even close the lips around his smile for a 20 minute ceremony.  They are in love because they are in love.  Does it matter that they’re gay?

I was speaking with Sherri, their officiant, at the reception.  She and her partner were there together and while she was waiting for her partner to arrive, she chatted with me at dinner.  She is the one who mentioned the fantastic advertisement posted above.  I thought it was clever and it made me smile so I thought I’d share.  Then I started poking around a bit and found these other funny little quips.  There are a lot of funny images and sayings online about gay marriage.  But they’re only funny now that it’s legal.  And it’s not legal everywhere (yet – go ahead, doubt it, it’s coming).  I was telling Sherri about what it’s like getting calls from same-sex couples about photography.  There is always a moment in the conversation, after I’ve told them I’m available for their date but before we get too much farther, when they stammer a bit about making sure that I’m comfortable shooting same-sex weddings.  And to all of you couples out there who have learned through bad experience in your lives that this awkward part of the conversation is necessary, I am so sorry.  Let me assure you that there are people out there dying to celebrate with you.  And if you call my studio, I’ll celebrate with you.

Besides, it’s straight people’s fault anyway, right?  LOL.  That’s a good one.  I’m not sure where this sign was displayed, but I’m glad someone got a photo of it.  Pretty priceless.  This isn’t a political post (I mean, more than it has to be I guess).  I’m not looking to incite anything or stir the pot.  Sherri made several comments that made me think and I just felt like a little flag-waving for basic human rights never hurts.  When we forget that we are all humans and that our basic rights are rights and basic, then they go away.  And what a terrible shame it would be to see the means for such joyous celebration go away for anyone.  More happy and healthy relationships like James and Bill’s relationship is the solution, not the problem.  Congratulations, guys!  Can’t wait to share your photos.

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Always Say Yes

Can it be that I’m posting TWO blog posts in one week?  While I’d point out that this is a record, I suppose that goes without saying on a blog with four total posts…  Just goes to show I have a long way to go.  Also, probably dangerous waters publishing a blog post with such a title.  Rest assured, I don’t mean about that.

I was hired to shoot some family portraits at a couple’s 50th anniversary party recently.  A nice gig where everyone is happy and the couple who was celebrating 50 years was just as cute as could be.  Actually, they were downright adorable.  They were each joking about what saints they were for putting up with the other for all these long years but it was pretty obvious that they were in a marriage that was improving each day – even after 50 years.  My hat off to you two!  May your next 50 make the last seem dull.

Now this blog post is not about saying yes to proposals for marriage or even about saying yes to photographing family portraits.  Although those people are so stinkin’ cute…

So after we spent some time in the park photographing family portraits, the couples’ children (who hired me for the shoot) invited me to join them at their home for a drink or some food.

$50 tip: Always say yes.  This tip is for you photographers out there who think that you’re shooting strict documentary photography and have to keep yourself at arms-length from the content of your shoot.  You don’t have to stage things in your work and interfere with documenting life, but get involved.  Go ahead, have a drink with your clients/subjects/whatever.  You never know what opportunities you will afford yourself in doing so.

So, as the post suggests, I said yes to their invitation and went back to their home for a drink.  While I was there, I took some photos of their unique cat and continued snapping a few photos of the family while hanging out.  Then, I decided that I needed a different lens for an image I was trying to make.  When I went out to my car, this is the scene I passed (and then photographed).

Obviously these photos are not what I was hired to shoot.  And clearly I’d not have taken these photos if I’d declined the offer for a drink after I “finished working”.  Luck plays a funny role in photography sometimes.  But you can’t get lucky if you don’t keep your mind open.  And say yes to whatever.

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The Blog Begins…

So every good photographer has millions of photos on their computer, on their desk, on their shelves, in their basement, in storage, maybe home at mom’s house.  We are, as artists, surrounded by our work.  It never ceases to amuse me how hard it is, among these thousands upon thousands of images, to find a single decent photograph of myself.  Or even just a photo in which I appear.  Don’t get me wrong, this is one of the great blessings of taking pictures – avoiding being in them myself.  So to all you grooms out there who come to meetings with your fiancee (good for you, by the way, bonus points will help you later) and tell me that you “hate to be photographed”, trust me when I say I know the feeling.  I sympathize with you.  I will, however, still take your picture.

So it is with some anxiety and great excitement that I finally put pen to paper with my blog.  The idea, I admit, was conceived some time ago and has gone through varying phases of interest.  It was not until yesterday that the whole concept snapped into clear focus for me and suddenly I HAD to start immediately.  If you’ve ever seen the movie Amelie (and if you haven’t, stop reading this post and go immediately to the store to buy, not rent, this life-changing film), you’ll know the moment I’m describing.  Suddenly the secret of the man in the photographs is not a secret and all the over-exposed, shiny, sun-kissed moments of Amelie’s life flash before her to a melody that only the French could conceive.  It was like that – except I’m not as cute as she is.  Or as French.  Nevertheless, inspiration comes to us all in strange ways.  My inspiration you’ll have to wait for that blog post to read about.

So who am I?  Why do you care about my blog?  Why DO you care about my blog???  Well, I guess we’ll find out together.  I’ve been shooting weddings and events happily in Washington, DC and all around the country since 2003 and have finally decided to make a studio of my own.  I’ve had some absolutely wonderful experiences, met some absolutely wonderful people, and learned so many things.  Maybe I can share some of the things I’ve learned and I will do my best to share new experiences as they change me.  We can change together.  And if you’re looking for a photographer, look no farther.  I’m right here.

I have been known to climb things, stand on things, scale walls, hang off of whatever necessary.  I’m not your typical prim and proper photographer who is worried about getting something on his suit.  Quite the opposite in fact.  I’m here to work!

Not all of my weddings are in Cabo San Lucas, shockingly.  This brisk October wedding in Kentucky was cold, muddy, and outdoors.  Eventually I’ll post about this wedding, but for now, this whole post is a bunch of foreshadowing.  Besides, if I wrote everything in my head down here tonight, it wouldn’t be a blog, it’d be novel.

So with that, I’ve introduced myself and my blog.  The best, as they say, is yet to come.

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