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Thursday, August 19, 2010

Photographing John Frieda

Well not quite the legendary hair dresser but his product line.  For the past year or so a graphics group in town has been using me to shoot product for his clients when images are not supplied.

Normally I'm not at liberty to share these images because they are for products that have not yet been released.  This was particularly important when I was photographing phones. In this case though, the client asked for images of a combination of already released product for promotion.
It's been a real test of lighting.  It's fun working with the strobes in different ways to get the perfect mixture of light and shadows.

Just thought you might be interested in some of the non-people related photography I do from time to time.  Have a great weekend folks and you'll see a new post from me Monday.

Monday, August 16, 2010

Jaq and Brian - Pregnancy Announcement

A few weeks ago I was able to work with some of my favourite clients and good friends again - Jacqueline and Brian.  Since I shot their wedding a few years ago, earlier this year we photographed the whole family again and now they're EXPECTING!  I'm pretty excited for them and Jaq wanted a special way to let everyone in their family know.  So she asked me to come in and take a few shots of just the two of them.  


For these, I simply used the soft natural light that was coming from the window.  It added a little glow to them


I really enjoyed the natural look to their room.  For someone who is used to "cleaning" up the background it was nice to have the two coffee cups (which Brian managed to spill because of his monstrous pontoons he calls feet) 



This is the image they used in their announcement to their family.  I'm looking forward to documenting the pregnancy and the growth of their family.  Congrats to the two of you!

Saturday, August 14, 2010

Eye on London

Over the years I've passed through London a few times and only really stayed in the city for three nights.  It's just sooooo expensive.  The photos below are from the European adventure with my mother in 2007.  I hope sometime in the near future, I get to go back and enjoy more than the quick and dirty tour.


Outside of Buckingham palace, this is a tribute to the navy.  The exact name has escaped my memory but the wind ripping through the British sails at dusk really caught my eye.  I was thankful I had a tripod on that trip.


You can't go to London without taking in the ceremonial changing of the guard outside of Buckingham Palace.  I think my mother said it best, though, when she suggested "I'm glad I saw it and I'll never do that again."


Isn't this just the type of bobby you expect...right out of Coronation Street me thinks...


Can you really go to London and not take a photo of the red phone boxes?  



Can't leave out the underground...



I'll end with an unconventional photo.  On the River Cruise of he Thames they pointed out this tower.  In the early 1920s London had a ban on large advertisements high in the air so the owners of OXO "coincidentally" built the windows to advertise the name.  

Wednesday, August 11, 2010

The Gothic Line - Sample Chapters

Folks - First off let me apologize for the lack of posting.  I have three web projects on the go right including my own website and I've been incredibly busy.  Busy is good, but busy hasn't allowed me the time to get to you enough this month - Only two posts in 11 days.  You've been a loyal readership though and I promise soon I'll have the brand new site to share with you and some exciting shoots coming up.

A member of the North Nova's gets a moment of shut eye in the slit trench on the Gothic Line

In the meantime I have a little reward for the historian out there and for those with the faintest interest in the Second World War.  A sneak peak at the Gothic Line and the Battle of the Rivers guidebook.  Here I am posting the first history section and the the first tour section for anyone who wants to download them.



The First History Section Here

The First Tour Section Here

Hope you enjoy...and I'll be back with more of my most recent photography and design soon...

Sunday, August 8, 2010

Finally...The Gothic Line has arrived...

Four years, 3 books (an Italian Translation of one) and the end of a series that tries to do justice to the Men who fought in Italy during the Second World War.  From the boot in Sicily to the Rivers of Ravenna these three guide books allow you to trace the footsteps of the D-day dodgers. After a long and arduous process, what Eric McGeer referred to as death by a thousand cuts, I have, in my hands, a final copy of The Canadian Battlefields in Italy: The Gothic Line and the Battle of the Rivers.  


Almost a month and half after the first round of proofing it's really great... who am I kidding, it's a massive relief to hold a copy straight off the presses and not see anything major out of place.

The table of contents matches, the colour looks great, the photos look crisp and I don't think we could have done a more thorough editing job on this manuscript.

With the printed version in my hands, this brings an end to the series that started 4 years ago when Terry Copp asked if I'd be willing to try my hand at design and working with Eric McGeer to produce The Canadian Battlefields in Italy: Ortona and the Liri Valley.

It's been an epic journey.  The series introduced me to the world of publishing and I've now been apart of seeing more than a dozen books through the process, including 8 this year.  I'm certainly thankful to the Laurier Centre for Military Strategic and Disarmament Centre for providing me the opportunity to act as the publications manager.  The role has allowed me to combine two of my passions - History and Photography/Design - in a way that is exceptionally fullfilling.

I've saved the last part of this blog for Eric.  Eric McGeer holds a PhD in Byzantine History from the Université de Montréal.  He is an accomplished scholar and can work in so many languages your head would spin.  But what makes Eric so remarkable is his personality.  He is the most genuine man I've ever met in my life and I grew up on the East Coast of Canada.  I would never have known any of his accomplishments if I hadn't watched them come to the fore over the years.  While we were working on the first Italian guidebook it became apparent through the stories I would press him for that the way he managed his way around the remote countryside where the Canadians fought was by chatting with the locals.  When he published Words of Valediction, I asked if he had a translator for the various Greek and Latin inscriptions.  Shyly he conceded that he was fluent.  Just the other day we stumbled across a German language website and, though it should have come as no surprise, I was shocked to see him give me a translation in no time including nuance.  The languages are but one aspect of many but perhaps the easiest way to understand his modesty and intellect.  I've also had the opportunity to watch his young family grow.  After young Sarah came along, we started to meet in Toronto a little more.  Since then Colin has also joined Eric and Sylvia and I can look back with fondness on the times that I've spent building blocks and sharing snacks with the two little ones as Eric proofed the text/design.

For us the journey does not seem to be over as it looks like we have another project in the wings.  I really hope we find the way to get this to publication so that Eric and I can work together again and we can spend a few more evenings together with his growing family.  

Thursday, August 5, 2010

The New Website - One Wedding - Jaq and Brian






Some of you may have noticed that for the better part of the last month symplicity.ca has been redirecting you to this blog.  I'm thrilled with the new design and can't wait to unveil it but the process has been arduous to say the least.  It is perhaps the worst time for me to be going through a site redesign but it was badly needed.  

Now that the negativity is out, one of the unexpected side effects of the web redesign process has been the need to showcase some of my work.  Potential wedding clients are going to want to see a wedding portfolio which has been finished now and they are also likely to ask for a sample of a single wedding.



Below is a video of Brian and Jacqueline Ernst who, despite knowing my reluctance to shoot weddings, refused to take no for an answer.  


Of course my reluctance to shoot weddings has turned into a genuine interest in providing the visual record of that special day for my clients.  There are few experiences more rewarding than seeing the smile of a thankful couple.

You'll notice that this video features Morning's Gonna Wait by the The Wind Broken Stones.  I think this song really says something about the moments we all hope to experience with that one other special person.

I have a wedding coming up in early September, another in early October in Brandon, Manitoba and I am already booked for two weekends in May next year.  If you are looking for me to capture your special day please get in touch soon.