New Year

black vulture drying its wings upon a sign in c&o canal park

5:30 AM, deep violet-blue darkness. I can see my breath in the moonlight. The only sounds I hear are my own footsteps on the towpath and the faint whooshing and swirling of the Potomac River in the distance. I walk south and as the minutes pass the sky in the northeast begins to glow faintly. Out of the corner of my eye in the dusky shadows of the canal I glimpse a great blue heron as it pumps its six-foot wingspan. 

My camera hangs from my shoulder and is equipped with my go-to lens: a 70-200mm. In various pockets of the fly fishing vest I wear, equally distributed, is a 50mm lens, a speedlight, some batteries and an energy bar. There’s a canteen of water in the back pocket. 

Cirrus clouds on the horizon begin to reflect a variety of pinks, magentas, and oranges of the coming sun. Contrasted with the aqua blue sky it brings to mind the greatest of the impressionists and invites a sense of a serenity. Enhancing this tranquil scene are the first calls of songbirds like the Carolina wren and tufted titmouse.

More birds join the woodland chorus. Pileated woodpeckers, robins, eastern bluebirds, redwing blackbirds and more. 

Further along the way I detect a hint of a rotting carcass. This makes me, paradoxically, look to the tree tops. Sure enough, above the towpath in a leafless, mature oak sits a committee of black vultures. And across the canal at the water’s edge is a small dead deer. Already there are two birds pecking and tearing at the eyes and the rear end. (The softest areas are the best places to start.) 

Still too dark for a decent photo so I whisper to the committee, I’ll be back! And I walk on.

About a half mile later I round a corner and see a bench. I take a seat, wait for the sun, drink some water and eat the energy bar. From the trees on my right I see my second great blue heron as it flies down and settles on a rock jutting out of the water like a miniature island. This creates a lovely double silhouette above and below the waterline which is now reflecting a deep amber glow. I make a few photographs and move around to find another angle. The speedlight is now affixed and ready for when the bird flies off. After about 15 minutes it does just that and I capture it in flight, slightly blurred background, flash illuminating the bird. It’s shaping up to be a productive morning I think. I make my way back to see what the vultures are up to.

There are now about 15 birds clamoring for a spot on the carcass. In the trees there are at least 20 more. One or two birds leave the feast and a couple more drop from the tree tops to replace them. A few skirmishes break out. It’s clear they’re going to disappear this deer in short order. A few days perhaps.

A woman with a large backpack and walking sticks stops and asks me why there are so many vultures. I explain the situation and point out the deer across the way. She seems properly fascinated and pulls out her phone to take a few photos. We talk about the C&O Canal and the various and amazing things we’ve experienced here and how lucky we are to have it. 

The sun is just above the horizon now. I notice two vultures sitting on a sign that’s placed next to the towpath. I move in that direction, slowly so as not to spook them. One of them spreads its wings for drying. The other jumps from the sign to the ground. As I’m shooting the sun breaks through the trees, strikes the back of the bird and creates a nice highlight on the edge of its outstretched wings. 

In the past two years I’ve made nearly 100 trips to the Canal. Given the pandemic and the current state of the world I am sure I would have lost my mind without it. There is a certain calming effect the Canal and its environs have on me. We know spending time outdoors is good for you…like, all around good for you. Your heart rate slows, stress dissipates, mood improves. To hear the breeze in the trees, the song of the sparrow, the roar of the falls. It’s like a natural IV hook-up to the pleasure centers of the brain. And you don’t have to climb El Capitan or shoot the rapids here at Great Falls to get the benefits. A gentle walk through the woods gives you more than enough. 

The incessant reminders of a deadly virus infecting the planet, the concerns for friends and family, have had a deleterious effect on all of us to varying degrees. For many, the need to unplug and power down has been most acute in recent months. For me the occasional escape to the Canal goes a long way toward keeping me balanced. 

For 2022 staying sane and healthy by visiting the C&O Canal 50 times or so seems the smart move.

Being Prepared. Recent C&O Canal Excursions.

Most mornings at the canal I explore. I don’t often have a specific photograph in mind. I’ll walk for miles, camera over shoulder, watching, listening, and even smelling the air around me. I’ll let nature happen.

If I am prepared then I will capture it. If not…well, at least I have the experience! But I am almost always prepared. 

Being prepared is more than having your camera and knowing it inside and out, it is also being mindful of your surroundings.

Hearing the screech of an eagle in the distance, spying the tawny coat of a deer in the underbrush or catching a powerful whiff of a rotting carcass on the wind means a good photo is just around the corner. So be prepared.

Earth Day/National Parks Week 2019

I spent the early part of this Earth Day 2019 at the C&O Canal National Historical Park in Potomac Maryland. There before sunrise and as the natural world began to wake up around me I saw more and more reasons to return as often as possible. This happens all the time of course, and so I do return. And return, and return.

Happy Earth Day and National Parks Week!

The big, wide world of photography

photo of passport and nikon camera, with filson bag

You don’t have to go to the four corners of the globe to find good photographs. However, there is something uniquely exhilarating about photographing virgin territory. When you explore new places with your camera every photograph is a discovery. Every click of the shutter is like unearthing a new fossil or an unknown society. You are more than a photographer you are an anthropologist, an archaeologist.

Few places are left on earth that human beings haven’t explored. But that takes nothing away from the thrill one gets from one’s own discoveries. Documenting those discoveries with the camera lifts our spirits and stokes our inquisitiveness. It pushes us to seek and find more.

Durango, COolorado. At the train station, Jeremy Wade Shockley photographs Rachel Klein-Kircher.

At the train station, Jeremy Wade Shockley photographs Rachel Klein-Kircher.

Whether it’s 300 miles down the coast or on the other side of the planet, traveling to new lands stimulates your inner Indiana Jones. Adventure is around the next bend. Everything is new and different. The people, the food, the music, the art. The geology and the landscape. All there for you to discover for yourself. To fill your brain and broaden your mind; to stimulate your curiosity. It may not be a first for humanity but it’s a first for you!

That adrenaline rush, that increased heart rate, those hairs standing up on the back of your neck…that is real.

Telephone post, cable and electric wires. On the road, somewhere in Colorado.

On the road.

So what are you waiting for? Pack up the camera gear and get to discovering.

 

For The Love Of Photography

I love photography. But I’m not sure I can tell you why.

The act of organizing the camera gear before heading out. The trip to the location. Arriving and getting started. Looking for photographs. Finding photographs. Shooting. Shooting more. Looking for more. The occasional peek at the LCD screen. Love it. Love it all.

I love shooting scenics. I love shooting wildlife. I love shooting life in the city. I love shooting portraits, studio and environmental. I love shooting events, Pride parades, weddings, bat mitzvahs. I love shooting skateboarders, kayakers… adventurers. I love the challenge of trying a new style. I love the never ending search for the perfect composition… or look… or moment.

I love the solitude of walking the banks of a river in the pre-dawn light… others love the crazed camaraderie of a press scrum.

The sound of the shutter, the sharp “click” as the lens locks into place, the flash of light I catch out of the corner of my eye when the on-board strobe fires. Love it.

I love the the look on peoples faces when I show them the image on the back of the camera. I love when I find a “Wow!” photograph I’d inexplicably passed over in my archives.

When I’m looking through the viewfinder and I’m not thinking, just doing. When everything is happening and I’m just trying to keep up. When I’m deep in the zone dancing that dance, staying with it, trying not to get in the way, but move closer, now step back, bob and weave, check the edges of the frame, shoot, shoot, shoot… it’s hard to describe the feeling in that moment, but I’ll never tire of it.

Garry Winogrand was once asked about his philosophy of photography. He said, “I photograph to find out what something will look like photographed.”

That’s perfect. If there is a more honest, unpretentious approach to photography I haven’t heard it. Who doesn’t want to see what their favorite person, place or thing looks like photographed? That’s what it is, isn’t it?

Photography is its own reward.

 

The Photographer’s Footwear

I was meeting a friend in the city for dinner. For reasons I can’t remember I arrived a couple hours early, but hey, I was cool with that because Street Photography! I wasn’t super dressed up, but you know, a little nicer than just t-shirt, jeans and tennis shoes. I spent about two hours walking around DC looking for photographs. I had on nice shoes. Not nice as in comfortable; nice as in good looking, sporty. An hour or so into my strolling I noticed my feet were sore. But I shook it off… hey, feet get sore! Photos need taking! I ambled on.

It wasn’t until the next day I came to understand the foolishness of walking around for two hours on pavement and cement in sporty looking boat shoes with little to no support. Plantar fasciitis. It took a few weeks for the pain to go away, because, you know… I have to walk everyday… on my feet. But going out to make photographs eventually stop being painful. From now on I aim to keep it that way.

To make quality photographs, you need quality footwear.

teva sandals, quality footwear

When the image you hoped for doesn’t materialize

From far above the river I saw this great blue heron standing still on the rocks below. It was right on the river’s edge, waiting patiently for a passing meal. I carefully made my way down over fallen tree limbs and loose rocks. As I got closer I would stop occasionally and make a few photographs. After about five minutes I’d edge myself closer and wait and shoot some more. Then scoot a little closer still. I eventually got myself into a good position about 15 to 20 feet away.

From the moment I first saw the heron I imagined a photo of a good size fish struggling in that stiletto beak. I waited over an hour, sitting uncomfortably on solid rock, hoping for the bird to snag a catfish or bass from the water. There were several attempts, yet each came up empty. From my perch above I could see the occasional shadow of a fish swim by, but the heron either didn’t see it or it was too far out of reach to even try.

At one point another heron landed nearby. It was apparently just a little too close for comfort and this one chased it off. Then as it made its way back to its fishing spot I made this shot. Ultimately, other obligations made it impossible to stay any longer so I never got the fish-in-beak shot. But I’ll be back. And so will the herons. I’ll get the shot. Just going to take some patience.

Great blue heron at the potomac river near great falls, Virginia.

Sometimes the image you hoped for doesn’t materialize.
But that shouldn’t mean you come away with nothing.

 

 

Instagram’s problem with Women

I love Instagram.  It’s a wonderful place to showcase some of your work, create your own personal gallery, get social, interact with other photographers, editors, and curators, keep up to date with family. It’s a great platform. However…

Last week I was reminded of Instagram’s weird issue with women. As I was scrolling through my Instagram feed I came across a photo by Jocelyn Bain Hogg of the photo cooperative VII. The model in the photo is using a kitchen knife to cut off a tag from her dress. And, as you can see, her breasts are exposed. As you can also see there are two “X”s over her nipples. No they are not two pieces of tape applied to the nipples by the model herself, they are digitally added to the image so that it can pass muster for the censors at Instagram. That’s right, one of the worlds most respected photo agencies has to degrade itself and have an employee put little “X”s over the nipples in an image just so they can post it to Instagram.

My friend and colleague, Lisa Hogben, posted a self portrait couple years back showing off her damaged shoulder, bruised and broken in a skiing accident. She made the photo just after a shower and as it happens you could see one breast and nipple. She posted it to our PRISM Instagram account and it was up only a short time before Instagram took it down with a warning of being banned from the platform if similar photos are posted. Lisa later posted the same photo (see below) on her personal IG account but this time with a black strip across the breast. This, the Instagram censors allowed. As Lisa pointed out however this only seems to make the image seem seedier than it really is. How is this a win for Instagram…for any of us?

It takes no time at all to find on Instagram young women, many of whom look as if they’re barely old enough to drive, in little to no clothing, in comically obvious sexualized positions, but as there is no nipple showing there is no censorship. Now think about that. Two adult women in two thoughtful, mature photographs that happen to show nipples, they get the humiliating treatment of censorship. But doe-eyed, hyper-sexualized young women? That’s A-OK.

Again, this attitude toward women from Instagram is not new. The hashtag #freethenipple is one of the most popular hashtags (over 3.6 million posts so far) due to the prudishness regularly exhibited by the censors. But it is still an infantile, degrading attitude.

It’s long past time for Instagram to grow up.

 

Photo by #JocelynBainHogg / @VIIPhoto. Click on the link in our profile to buy the print! Anouska de Georgiou, singer, songwriter, actress, model and 'It Girl', customizes her party dress by cutting off the label with a kitchen knife inside her apartment in London's trendy Portobello Road before Sir Elton John's summer party in Notting Hill, London, England in June 2005. To celebrate the agency's fifteen year anniversary, VII is offering a very special edition of our VII #printsale — iconic prints for just $100. Each 8×10 photograph is hand-signed by the photographer. They are printed on #Fuji Crystal Archive Paper at New York City's top photographic lab and are beautifully backed and sleeved in fully archival materials. Each print is embossed with the VII logo, and comes with a certificate of authenticity printed on museum quality acid-free paper. The sale ends on June 7, so click on the link in our profile to shop now!

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Don’t listen to the snobs, the pop-up flash is not an amateur’s tool.

I think it’s unfortunate that you can still find people out there bad mouthing the built-in or pop-up flash as a feature only “amateurs” use. They think a true “pro” would never waste their time with it. I think that’s snobbish and self defeating. Don’t listen to them.

The pop-up flash is an important and useful tool.

Fill Flash: Portrait in a non-formal portrait setting. Main light coming from window, camera right. One side of face lit, other side shadow. Dial down the pop-up flash to -1.3 EV. I find this puts just the right amount of light in there. Catch light in the eyes. It just fills in, doesn’t overwhelm. ( -1.3 EV worked for me in this case. Do some experimenting and see what works best for you.)

Portrait of John. Fuji X100S. 1/125 sec f 5.6. Built in flash fired at -1.3 (I believe!) Fills in shadow side of face just a touch. Small catch light in eyes.

Portrait of John. Fuji X100S. 1/125 sec f 5.6. Built in flash fired at -1.3 (I believe!)
Fills in shadow side of face just a touch. Small catch light in eyes.

 

Main Flash: Flowers in the shade. Sure, lovely colors. But flip the flash up, dial it down to about -0.3 EV and shoot. All those colors will now pop. More vibrant than without.

Flowers without flash.

Flowers without flash. Fine image. Nice colors.

Flowers with flash.

Flowers with flash. A little more vibrant.

Modified: This is useful for all kinds of flash/strobe photography, so I thought I’d toss it in here for a little extra tip. Using gaffer tape or, as I do, small strips of velcro, affix a 1/4 CTO gel to the flash and you get a more natural color temperature. Not that cold bluish/white color. It’s a slightly warmer tone and is usually very pleasing. I like this for almost everything, but definitely when shooting people.

Amber gel affixed to the pop-up flash of a Nikon D700 using custom cut velcro strips.

Amber gel affixed to the pop-up flash of a Nikon D700 using custom cut velcro strips.

Getting creative: Follow this link to a previous post on how to get an off camera soft-box look using your pop-up flash, a spoon and a white piece of paper (or–in this case–the back of an 8X10 print)!