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Posts Tagged ‘authenticity’
Thursday, February 24th, 2011
 Sculptural Elements
This is number five in the series on Loves. It is actually entitled Four. (Really.) If you understand the play on words with the copy title “Fore”, well then, you “get” Art and Artists. That is a good thing. We like it when people get us. It is why artists do what they do. ART is our love.
Robb Havassy just left, after a 30 hour visit. When he had arrived, I was working through a series of images where I had been subtly taken by surprise at how the ocean had sculpted rather unique looking gems my Canon 5DM2 had managed to catch, while I happily and possibly very quickly, was ducking in to, or out of, a waterbash. (reads: having fun)
Robb fronts a huge collective of people who have several things in common. The principle of which, is that they are artists, who comprise the cultural tableau that is Surf Culture. One of the interesting things to me about Robb is his surfboard collection. I have taken to calling them bastard children. 350 surfboard sculptures produced by a Corporation, to sit in mall clothing stores across the US.
The children are copies of a surfboard Robb had left at the home of a well know photographer and friend of his. As circumstances would have it, the board was left by Robb as a sort of gift to the photographer (along with a painting) and had been used in a shoot. Then later, copied “to a T”, and placed in stores to help brand and authenticate a company whose modus was “borrowing” from surfing to brand themselves, because in fact, contrary to surf theme inspired companies, this one was completely disconnected from surfing. They were a clothing company. They do not surf nor contribute to the culture. They take. That is their History. Robb’s experience was simply one of many examples the the Company’s branding modus.
 Corporate Disclaimer
Here is the funny part. On top of coming to Ventura to hang with designer Donna Von Hoesslin and I (creative sparks fly), work on Surf Story Volume 2 (which should publish late 2011), Robb was in town to pick up the first surfboard he had ever shaped, which was produced at the shop of Dennis Ryder. (If you do not know about Dennis, you really should. Not only is he a historic figure in Ventura Surf Culture, but is a pioneer in surfboard design development.) But Robb was also getting another shaping lesson from me, and doing board# 2.

What got me excited, is that he brought two of the bastards up with him! I had never seen them. You see, Robb got those 350 surfboards back AND a small settlement in a suit against that apparel company. This was the catalyst for our meeting awhile back.
 Robb and his bastard children.
It had been the proverbial young David, taking on a sage old Goliath. Robb had used the proceeds to fund Surfstory Vol 1, his statement on the authenticity of Art and Culture. That is a done deal. But 350 bastard children remain in a storage unit in OC.
Robb, Donna and I, and now some of the leadership in Project Kaisei, have been brainstorming concepts whereby we may utilize the bastards, which could really now be construed as cultural effluent, with faux fin boxes and foam gouges where the company logo was removed, and place some value back into the world with his collection of plastic trash.
This resonates with me because I have built close to 40,000 real surfboards. That translates to 40,000 people who developed a relationship with the ocean on something my hands and heart helped conceive. These mall store boards? Though replicas of Robb’s board, they were merely store fixtures, some even with leash plugs built into odd places, to be used for tie down points as the boards sat in malls, silent icons to materialism and faux lifestyle, whispering sweet lies to all who admired what they thought that the bastards stood for. The irony of this hit me instantly when first I heard about Robb. Surfboards are symbolic of people- surfers. They are meant to be magic carpet vehicles to adventure in a watery wonderland.
We became fast friends of course. All of us.
But that is Art, and why Art, is one of my many loves.
 Cosmos
Seth Godin has this to say about Art, Artists and Artistry. Simple brilliance. His Art inspires me.
Richard Lang is one of the many bright lights, who as an artist, is collaborating with us on Project Kaisei, plastics awareness, and changing the world through Art. Here is a fantastic video which illustrates how he and his wife Judith do that.
Art is for everybody and can be produced by anyone. Here is a great example of that.
The imagery below in the gallery is a small sample of a collection of refuse. I say trash, because I had overlooked these images in first edit of the collection I just built here in Ventura, California, in what may be a historic benchmark for the ocean this Jan-February, 2011.
I did not frame or intend to build these. They just happened as a result of an accord between perfect meteorological conditions, pristine ocean, and me swimming 57 times with my camera in 34 days. Spawn of my world.
Click on any of the images to toggle through as a slide show. Foreward!
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- Sculptural Elements
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- Robb and his bastard children.
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- Corporate Disclaimer
Replete with Faux fin boxes and a disclaimer. Robb Havassy holding one of the recovered boards.
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- Cosmos
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- Corporate Disclaimer
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- Not so Fantastic Plastic



Tags: Art, Art History, authenticity, Betty B, branding, Canon 5D Mark2, conservation, Dennis Ryder, Donna Von Hoesslin, Environmental awareness, MOMA SF, North Pacific Gyre, ocean art, One Plastic Beach, Plastic garbage patch, Plastics, Project Kaisei, Richard Lang, Robb Havassy, Seth Godin, Surf Art, surf culture, Surf Story, Surf Story Vol 2, surfboard building, surfboards, sustainable change, The Betty Blog, ventura, ventura artists, Ventura Surf Culture, waves, where is Matt?, working artists Posted in Uncategorized | 1 Comment »
Monday, November 15th, 2010
 Impossible Panoramic
I know who I am. So I recognize those traits that resemble mine, in my colleagues and friends.
This creates a deep affinity with those people who I repeatedly refer to as Savants.
Check the definition below.
savant |saˈvänt; sə-|
noun
a learned person, esp. a distinguished scientist. See also idiot savant .
ORIGIN early 18th cent.: French, literally ‘knowing (person),’ present participle (used as a noun) of savoir.
I was pleased and honored when one of those, a certain Sean Davey, showed up at my door in Ventura, California.
Sean is a Tasmanian born, Hawaii ensconsed photographer whose work has forever impressed me. He arrived on a long standing invitation, to visit and photograph the place I live, which many of us refer to as California’s Gold Coast.
Coincidentally, Scott Aichner, who I regard as the best water action sports shooter in the world, had recently moved home to Ventura from Hawaii as well. And me being Hawaiian and living in Ventura, well, you get the picture: family reunion.
Then Brian Nevins rang. He would be in California at about the same time. Brian rocks. Pretty much all there is to say about him. His heart is bigger than yours or mine, and it shows in his phenomenal work.
So all of us sort of collided in Ventura California. Learned and talented and passionate and on fire.
What resulted is pretty cool. We re- fueled each other.
The world will suck you dry. Your friends and colleagues know how to reverse that.
 Sierra Partridge
Seth Godin has this to say about us.
I was always told by those “In the know”, that as an artist and a photographer, you need to specialize in one thing.
Bullshit.
Scott Aichner, Sean Davey, Brian Nevins and myself are better than that.
 Aichner, Davey, Pu'u
Why?
We think that YOU should see and experience what we do. All of it. A perfect example is below.
Prickett Films has produced an amazing piece on the Irons Family, which documents the Memorial paddle out on Kauai for Andy Irons. They take you someplace incredible. Go there. It is a complete and generous gift.
Because you matter.
So we shoot.
It is very obvious when one looks around, to see who is authentic and who a clone.

This video is a very cool little piece that Robb Havassey did in honor of Kelly Slater winning his tenth title. Check the first song in the video. It is No Substitute. Written and performed by my son Josh. Josh gets it. So does Robb. See how it works?
Savantism is contagious.
The following gallery is a teensy cross section of what I have shot lately. If I were in an Arts or Photography school I would get an F for basically not parking between the lines. But in the real world: you win. Come with us, check THIS out. You need to try it. Feel it. Taste it. Do it.
None of us is fond of those straight white things.
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- 2 trees sunrise
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- Aichner, Davey, Pu'u
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- Impossible Panoramic
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- Sierra Partridge
Tags: 10th world title, Andy Irons, art savant, authenticity, Brian Nevins, colleagues, Donna Von Hoesslin, Josh Pu'u, josh slavin, Kelly Slater, No Substitute, photography savant, Prickett Films, Robb Havassy, Savant, Scott Aichner, Sean Davey Photography, Seth Godin, Surf Story Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »
Wednesday, April 28th, 2010
 Bobby Hart gets it.
I get a global look at things through my photography business, which has web strands anchored to many countries. I see something first hand, that many do not have the personal luxury of acquiring: a broad economic and cultural perspective.
This country is in the single greatest period of change and challenge since the Great Depression. So what to do, as assets dwindle and fiscal potential narrows? For the answer, look to the past.
About a year ago, a group of people met in my little town. There were a series of meetings actually. No official city committee was involved. No State or Federally appointed grant commissions were tapped. The consensus was, that our town was hurting, and consequently, change was being wrought that could forever alter the things that make Ventura a unique and authentic place to live.
 Christmas Wishes and Our Friends
My friend and colleague Shawn Alladio, (also a member of “Team Betty” as Donna calls her girls) runs another global scope company called K38 Rescue. Shawn always tells me that doing something, action of some sort, is the best answer one can give. Too many people forget that action part.
So that group did something. Each one. Individually and collectively. Even as some saw the US fiscal collapse bring the fight to survive right to their front door, they resolved to contribute. They became agents of change.
I am not talking about peanut sized problems. Some of these people lost homes, businesses, commercial holdings, marriages teetered. It is the stuff we read about occurring in that Great Depression: suffering.
It is no secret that in many ways, American Small Business is the fiscal backbone of this country. But what happens when a Government gone over large and linked to big business, looses focus and leaves Small Business in the lurch? What then?
The answer lies in your own community. Each member has assets of a sort, but more to the point each PERSON is the single most important asset that there is. People are what matters in this world of ours.
When a community comes together, it is entirely possible to fabricate a cultural and economic micro climate that can be vital, and buck National trends. My home town of Santa Barbara has always done this. It is one of the reasons I know this works. SB has always maintained a fiscal integrity separate from the rest of the US. Even now.
Many people think that it is due to the uber rich living there. That has not been my experience. As someone who ran businesses there starting at the age of 15, I learned that SB was a microclimate unto itself because of its sense of community. Santa Barbara works together.
 Santa Barbara
So I had a look back at the past. There are many stories that have stood the test of time, that have brought hope. People need hope. So we tell stories. It is what journalists and photographers do. But the world requires action to be taken as well. Being stuck at home, due in part to the collapse of paper publishing, I began to organize my own resources as a writer, photographer and film maker, and turn my global focus back on to my own community. It is not unlike what one would do as a child: playing with a magnifying glass.
For the first time, my own town would become my primary focus, along with the imagery that has contributed so much to my commercial library. Hopefully things would warm up as a result of the action of my own magnifying glass in our chilly local economy.
So “This Is Ventura”, a video montage, was created to communicate what makes my town unique. It showed first as an expression of gratitude during Artwalk. It may, in title at least, become the calling card for a collective of local residents to unify a town by focusing on small business and the tenets of inter community support.
Community involvement makes for a more robust source of income for the City and allows for the advance of Art, Culture and Creativity, which in turn provide a foundation of hope. It is a strong hedge against the forces which seem to be dragging our country into the gutter.
Last week, my friend Kat Merrick, (one from that original group) via Facebook, let us know that she was planning a get together at a local Restaurant and bar. Jonathan’s is located across from Mission San BuenaVentura. Well known local musicians, Bobby Hart, Eric Lemaire, and others, were going to perform. It would be a good time.
My girlfriend, Donna Von Hoesslin, who heads up yet another globally connected small business that is based here (Betty B) told me that she was in desperate need of images for a new line of jewelry which is designed by members of Team Betty.
 Donna Von Hoesslin
So we dropped in on the party at J’s, sat in the window booth and shot the girl’s designs there as Bobby and crew rocked. Typically we would do this away in some distant land, or somewhere on the coast. Definitely not associated with any particular business. (I actually have developed a penchant for Ventura night, street shoots) But deciding to both take care of Betty B’s business needs, and provide bodies, texture and a few extra dollars to the day’s till at J’s, allowed for an exponential increase of benefit for everyone involved.
Here is a video that explains in 4 minutes, the gist of Donna’s remarkable company. We did the piece for the Intuit Small Business United program. It helped Donna win a 5000 dollar grant from Intuit, which she used to help fund her Bali expedition.
On Bali last season, Hailey and Sierra Partridge, Jeanette Ortiz, Mary Osborne, and Donna, did a Betty B design trip. Each one of the girls worked with the local artisans who comprise a portion of Donna’s creative team, to produce collection pieces that exemplified themselves as ocean connected women. Each young woman then selected a cause or charity, whereby Betty B would donate a portion of the income from sales of each piece.
Donna’s company is a very active member of yet another organization, which was the brainchild of Ventura’s Chouinard family (Patagonia), which is called One Percent for the Planet. Through One Percent, Donna and other companies support David Booth’s fantastic Organization, the East Bali Poverty Project, which literally is changing the face of Bali, by educating the youth on their connection to the environment via the Arts and cultural action.
So with our country on the ropes, it all starts here. With me. With you. In our own back yard.
The answer is right there in your community: your dollars are a part of your voice. Now do something. Do it for yourself. Do it for your town. But more importantly: do it. By acting locally you affect Globally, as well as Nationally. Do it.
 A Global Doorway
This song from John Mellencamp is very appropriate. Our past is our future. It begins today.
So after several days of post production that Betty B shoot has 120 images in the final edit. Those images will go various places. General commercial use for Betty B, the girl’s individual projects, to my agency rep at Corbis images, and to various editorial concerns that continue to use my work. I never know where an image will find an eventual home. I am often pleasantly surprised to see a billboard, or international ad campaign base itself on my work. But it is especially nice to know that those moments were created here, in Ventura, California.
The following montage is from that Betty B shoot at Jonathan’s, and is an example of what the group, which has taken the name of Totally Local VC, wants to do: bring us all together. Together, we win. Click on any of the images for a larger view, and to toggle through as a slide show. Then go patronize a local merchant, and change your world.
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- Bobby Hart gets it.
Saw this as we were shooting the Betty B catalog. Paying attention to the larger picture.
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- Christmas Wishes and Our Friends
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- Santa Barbara
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- A Global Doorway
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- Donna Von Hoesslin
Small business owner and designer. Ventura resident Donna Von Hoesslin, looks on during a photo shoot for her company.
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Tags: authenticity, bali, Betty Belts, BettyB, Bobby Hart, Coastal Community, community, contemporary culture, Corbis, Corbis Images, David Booth, david pu'u photography, david puu video sample, Donna Von Hoesslin, Downtown Ventura, East Bali Poverty Project, eco fashion, eric lemaire, globalism, Green Business, green fashion, Intuit, Intuit Small Business United, j's, Jeanette Ortiz, Jim Scolari, Jonathan's, K38 Rescue, Kathy Merrick, Mary McGrath, Mary Osborne, mission san buenaventura, one percent for the planet, Patagonia, revitalization, Shawn Alladio, Sierra and Hailey Partridge, Small business united, Social consciousness, team betty, this is ventura, totally local VC, VC Local, Ventura Community, Ventura surfers, West Cooke, Yves Chouinard Posted in Uncategorized | 11 Comments »
Thursday, March 25th, 2010
 House of the Waves
Recently, NYC based production company Silent Crow was in Ventura. Two writers with the company happened to have connected with Donna Von Hoesslin of Betty B and learning a little bit about her female inspired Eco Fashion line. They came up with an idea.
Producer Matt Bennett showed up to do a little bit of discovery work, and honed a reality show concept that deviated from the norm, in that it endeavors to look at the personalities and lives of the women in both my and Donna’s lives. Silent Crow named the show Bonafide.
Donna and I have long exchanged working relationships with people who we see as unique, and able to be involved in both the editorial market, and branding process, both for the model as a product, and for Betty B’s unique, ethics based, Fashion accessories line. The Betty Blog is here.
What Matt discovered is that each one of these women is a story unto themselves. Tricky thing to formuate a show upon. I just saw the teaser reel that Silent Crow Produced, and that I contributed footage and stills to. I think they get it. Not an easy thing to do, getting something that is a world unto itself.
Hailey and Sierra Partridge are two of the girls who were not involved in the show pitch per se. Recently a potential new supporter of theirs, Tonic, asked to use a couple images of the girls for branding purposes on their website.
What ensued for me, was a look through the girl’s files that began with a shoot for Betty B in Santa Cruz when they were about 16. Images from that first shoot went into a multitude of publications. Donna had simply shown me a cold pitch the twins had sent in and asked; “What do you think?”
“Duhhh yea”, was my first response. “Beautiful twins, athletes, and self motivated? What is the question?”
 Sierra, Winnie, Hailey
But what I discovered in the course of my years traveling and shooting with these young women, was something special. Having a rough go as life started for them, (They were basically born blind) the two daughters of Santa Cruz waterman Rym Partridge, and his wife Winnie, a career flight attendant, weathered the waters of Nor Cal, the alpha male environment of Santa Cruz, and tutelage of their Dad (Think gnarly. Better than you, better than me), to become waterwomen.
 Rym
As they engage college, they have had a high bar for life and ethics set for them by the family, which has a history of not only strong nurture, but strict ethical and moral compass headings. Rym’s stories of outback charity work which began in the poor parts of Hawaii, and has taken him all over the world (he is a Dentist by trade), set a certain level of expectation for the young ladies.
 Rym riding Rym's Reef. 65 years old.
Then there is Donna, and the incredibly competitive group of women who are the core of Betty B’s brand identity. Not an easy act to join, as each person is an entity unto themselves. They are sort of the anti team. But then again, surfing is an anti sport: a renegade, self oriented, lifestyle.
I find it interesting, as I look back on the thousands of images that the girls and I have produced, that I never saw two lanky blond beauties, I only saw sentient, kind people, who happened to be great athletes, and a certain potential. Shadow of their parents.
Betty B, Hobie Sports, K 38 Rescue, Oneill Intl, Ocean Minded, and countless editors, have supported and published this work. It gets pretty entertaining when certain fashion magazines come up with “great ideas”, then use the girls in them, right down to my art direction items, like the Red Ford Bronco we used in one of our Hobie shoots. (Hey I have a great idea) There is a reason for me hanging with who I do. I have a low tolerance for insincerity, and a penchant for authenticity. Real is valuable, and life is far better than fiction ever could be.
This edit illustrates a best case example of why I tend to to keep my subjects with me over time. The work becomes vital. We learn. We have fun. And authenticity? Well, they are the real deal. This is all them. I just pose suggestions which my career and vision allow for. If someone will not push the edge of their comfort zone continually, they will really learn to hate me in short order. But if they do have that desire, what an adventure occurs.
Model models for me, as they are the anti models: they are real.
Another one of Donna’s talented women, is singer songwriter Zuri Star. She has this to say. “You Don’t Know Me”
“Sex appeal is 50% what you’ve got and 50% what people think you’ve got.” ~Sophia Loren
The following gallery is a cross section of some of our work together. Click on any of the images for a larger view.
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- Shawn and Sierra
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- Hobie athlete, Sierra Partridge having fun riding a wave
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- Greg Iler designed architectural projects
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- 2 trees sunrise
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- 2 trees sunrise
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- hobie swim
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- 2 trees sunrise
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- Greg Iler designed architectural projects
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- Sierra, Winnie, Hailey
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- Rym riding Rym's Reef. 65 years old.
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- Rym
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- House of the Waves
Tags: authenticity, Beach culture, beach fashion, Betty B, Betty Belts, bona fide, Corbis Images, David Pu'u, Donna Von Hoesslin, eco fashion, green fashion, Hailey Partridge, Hobie, individualism, K38 Rescue, ocean minded, Ocean sports, Partridge twins, rym partridge, santa cruz, Shawn Alladio, Sierra Partridge, Silent Crow, Silent Crow Arts, social sustainability, Stereofame artist zuri star, surfing, Ventura Photographer, waterman, waterwoman, Winnie Partridge, women's surfing, you don't know me, Zuri Star Posted in Uncategorized | 9 Comments »
Sunday, March 21st, 2010
 Matillija Spring
I was cameraless this week. It was great. Sort of. Okay, maybe not completely cameraless. I still had four 35mm stills film bodies, three mini DV cameras, and five high speed film motion cameras, all sitting on the shelf, along with the water housings for those. But I loaned my Canon 5DM2 system out and sold my Rebel T1i, in preparation for buying the new RebelT2i. (Wow, that Rebel was so new it had only seen 3000 frames before the new one was released.)
Canon (along with Apple) has been blowing my mind the past few years. We spoke, they obviously listened. The application of technology and digital imaging, has created the ability to produce massive amounts of content. But this creates some big questions:
Where does that content go? What makes yours special? Does your content meet that unspoken, and often unseen bar of international standards?
A career is a function of time. Effort is applied and what comes out these days, is useable digital content-data. You can convert that pliable data into a variety of projects in short order.
I had an e mail tet a tet with photographer Brian Nevins this week about post production. Brian and I both share a bar that is similar for our work and subjects. “Hey Brian, how is your post production list looking?” Answer:“Oh hopeless. I just seem to keep getting further behind.” We cyber groaned in unison.
Right now, I have 7 stills shoots and 6 motion picture projects, in various stages of post production. More work is being thrown my way daily. I must be very careful, or I will find myself homeless with probably one of the most phenomenal collections of stills and motion imagery that I could ever imagine.
Why? Production is shifting. Usages are changing. Now, more than any time in History, publishing is having a demand to screen content placed upon it, that is heavier than ever. Everyone who owns a camera is a “photographer” and those voices, they all scream out “Look at me”, often without really knowing that, um, maybe you may not want to do that.
Of course some get through on occasion, by virtue of salesmanship and persistence. You can see some amazingly low bar crap go to print, web, TV, Theater or Gallery. But over all, the access to the market that the web affords and which shifts in demand have created, offers the potential to embarrass one’s self globally in a very short period of time. But what this also does, is make the truly great work stand out. A lot is on the line for publishers these days as many companies teeter. Edit staff can annihilate a publication’s value in a very short period of time.
The market is not stupid, though it can be naive. It self levels.
Authenticity, now more than ever, is the most valuable of commodities, along with content quality and validity.
Seth Godin writes here about the slush pile. That great pool of self spawned, unsolicited content. It is one of the better things I have read about being a creative, as it describes a bar, direction and potentiality measure, for content creators.
So back to my post production I go. 60 hours down this week, in front of the large 32” monitor I use. The surf was pumping. Offshore and warm. Spring has arrived overnight. Weird yet perfect for us, as this weather and swell combination combination rarely occurs this time of year. I got six calls to shoot the last few days, and wanted to.
“Sorry I loaned my cameras out” was my soft answer. Clickety clack goes the keyboard. “Save as” was selected in Photoshop about 1500 times and “Render” hit, in Final Cut, a lot. Whew. Life choices in the click of a mouse.
Here is a piece of music which a close friend sent along. The message in it struck a deep chord with me. Southern Cross. If you read through the gallery descriptions, you may figure it out. It is descriptive of our lives, she and I. It may be said of many whose lives tie to the sea. I cherish my friends.
The gallery below is illustrative of Spring, Diversity, and Authenticity. Click on the images for a larger view and description, if you like.
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- Matillija Spring
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- Contact
Jim Birdsoule, Hailey and Sierra Partridge and a Spinner Dolphin who decided to include us. Kona Coast.
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- Santa Ynez Vineyard
As I stood shooting and chatting with Rob Dafoe, David Crosby strolled up, and we all admired the view and the light on the vines.
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- Blue Heron Glide
Inexplicably, this endangered species specimen decided to hang out with me one week. Nature can be so strangely engaging.
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Brandon Arrambide on a chilly Winter morning off Ventura, California
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- Born in the 50's
I was. It all goes by so rapidly.
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- Pomp
I grew up around horses. Fortunately my friends who ride them still offer me that opportunity.
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- Chuck Patterson
Chuck and I managed some very high bar SUP imagery this year which you may or may not see published.
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- Our Winter is the Best Summmer
Chuck Patterson. Blissful.
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- Fantasy
Hannah Frasier and a very surprised surfer in the Maldives.
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- Mirage
The convection layer makes this Oil Rig which sits between the shipping lanes in the SB Channel, look surreal. A pelican glides in on the offshore wind.
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- California Brown Pelican
In Nature the Males are the most colorful. I always found it fascinating that mankind makes the female the most splendid.
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- Spring Love
There are a heck of a lot of analogies to be found in this image, shot in the early Spring in the California high desert. Jeanette Ortiz, and Adam Gray-Hayward
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- Hailey
Hailey Partridge in our Villa in Ubud Bali, wrapped in a swatch from Stewart and Brown
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- Sumatran Reality
Life is often what you make of it. What are your choices?
Tags: action sports, Adam Gray-Hayward, Apple, authenticity, Brian Nevins, Brian Nevins Photography, Canon, Canon 5D Mark 2, Canon Rebel T2i, Canon RebelT1i, Chuck Patterson, Corbis Images, David Crosby, david pu'u photography, Hailey Partridge, hobie sports, Jeanette Ortiz, Mary Osborne, Modern Publishing, nature, New technology, Ocean centric lifestyle, Partridge twins, photography, Professional photography, Seth Godin, Sierra Partridge, Southern Cross, Stewart and Brown, SUP, surf photography, surfing, surfing lifestyle, Ventura Photographer Posted in Uncategorized | 3 Comments »
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