Sunday, February 14, 2010

Recent Feature


Double page spread of our recent feature in Luxe Interiors + Design. The home was located in Boulder Colorado and was a real treat to shoot.

Monday, November 23, 2009

Recent Cover Features !

Here are a few  recent magazine covers  that our work has been featured on!



Both of these covers were for our good clients Luxe Colorado and Log Home Living. Both homes were shot here in  Colorado! This home featured on the cover of LHL was shot in my own backyard of Crested Butte. The mountain in the background is Crested Butte Mountain and where we spend  our free time skiing and boarding down. Sure is nice at times not having to get on  a plane and fly half way around the world to go to work to shoot a project! These time are few and far between though. Enjoy!



Another one for Luxe. Just another small abode. The Architect on this one was Kyle Webb out of Vail. His work is incredible! The Interiors were by Insite-Design of Denver. A great group of ladies to work with. 



Tuesday, September 15, 2009

The Tipple House

Wanted to show our latest project that we just completed.  The Tipple House is named for the main highlight of the house as you can see here in this exterior. For those of you who don't know what a Tipple is it is originally the place where the mine cars were tipped and emptied of their coal, and still used in that sense, although now more generally applied to the surface structures of a mine, including the preparation plant and loading tracks. OK the short answer is its a structure that came from a mine. In this case the tipple is over 102 years old and deconstructed piece by piece and reassembled along with the new structure of the house as you see here.



I was hired by our good client Corbin Marr of www.marr-corp.com
Corbin is fantastic builder with an eye for detail at every turn and a great communicator. The Architect on the house was our long time client Jennifer Hartman of Sunlit Architecture www.sunlitarchitecture.net. Having shot exclusively for Sunlit over the last nine years it never ceases to amaze me how each project is a one of kind and completely unique of any of Sunlit's other projects. The Interior was furnished by Interiors With Ooh's & Ahhs out of Park City Utah.  Impeccable is all I can say.


 Last, but not least  Eric Naughton owner of Electrical Logic www.electricallogic.com was the lighting designer on the house and the icing on the cake you could say. This baby lights up like a Christmas tree at night and because of his artistry  makes my job a heck of a lot easier.
Since  the majority of the shoot was  in the evening except for one four in the morning session we spent a total of five different evenings shooting the house. This was so we could really bring out as well as utilize the interior and exterior lighting of the house. The only problem with this time of the day is that its smack dab right in the middle of happy hour and dinner. Oh well I guess every job has its drawbacks. Trust me I'm not complaining I am very fortunate to have a job that I love.
 








As always thanks for checking in seeing what I have been up to!

Thursday, August 27, 2009

My Great Uncles Funeral

My Great Uncle Dutch Spahn passed away a few weeks ago. He was 93 years old and had one hell of a life. He was very close to my family and was my Fathers best friend. He was old school all the way. He was also a World War ll Vet and this is the reason for this post. He participated in the European and Africa campaigns and also participated in the liberation of the concentration camps of Bukenwall. An experience that stayed with him long after his return from the War. He spent many of nights haunted by what he saw there. His stories to me as a child were frightening.

He was buried at the Fort Logan National Veterans Cemetery in Denver Colorado with Military Honors.
I have been to several funerals in my life, but had never been to a military funeral and did not know what to expect. The ceremony is all handled and presented over by Veterans. It is very solemn to say the least. It is made very clear from the start that our veterans need to be honored with the highest respects. In regards to WW ll Veterans its noted throughout the proceedings that their numbers are few and diminishing rapidly.


I was a pall bearer for my Uncle. This is me on the left.

I was second in line during the procession. This was due to my being the only other family member at the funeral. Uncle Dutch was one of eleven children (two died at child birth). His last remaining sibling is Aunt Rosie. She is in the car in front of me.
There was a seven gun salute at the start of the proceedings.
Taps was then played. Those of us that were there were instructed to salute at this time.

I was glad that I had brought my camera. I wanted to document the day for my children so that they would know the seriousness of what our veterans have sacrificed for them and their country.
I was nervous that I might be disrespectful taking pictures. I asked permission before I started shooting and was told that I could shoot away. The military encourages documentation of the services.
This was the flag folding part of the ceremony. Every fold of the flag is symbolic and represents an event in military history. I wish I could remember all their of their descriptions.


The flag was then presented to Uncle Dutch's sister Aunt Rosie. The Serviceman then gave an apology for her loss and  of the sacrifice Uncle Dutch gave his country.

At this point the military part of the service was over. A Catholic priest then took over and prayed for Uncle Dutch that his soul will be in Heaven and he will live in eternity.









Wednesday, July 29, 2009

Trapeze Act!

Well leave it to me being a professional photographer and leaving my camera at home. I was probably to busy loading the cooler with Corona for the fourth of July firework show we were going to that night. Anyhow, we live in a ski resort and the owners of our base area decided we didn't have enough outdoor activities already and installed bungee jumping equipment at the base of our ski mountain.


If you didn't already know kids love to jump in general. Hell my son tried to jump off the roof of our house the other day. Our daughter is a walking pogo stick when she's not tap dancing on our wooden floors (my nerves I tell ya!). So when the mountain announced the grand opening of their new bungee jumping play area on the fourth of July who was first in line to buy two fifteen dollar tickets for a total of $30.00. Yeah you guessed it. My American and I were right there to take the plunge, or should I say jump.





Now that my kids had their tickets in hand and were in line with all the other screaming yard apes it was time to sit back and enjoy their first attempt at bungee jumping (without the bridge though, this bungee jumping is kind of a tamed down version of the real thing, I don't think you could die doing this kind). After waiting almost an hour (remembering the whole time I had an ice chest filled with corona that hadn't been cracked yet) they got their turn. which brings me back to my camera that was left behind. We needed to document this event for posterity as well as capturing any shooting vomit that might occur. With no camera the next best thing was my trusty crappy iPhone camera. The damn thing cost a fortune it should be able to produce pictures better than Ansel Adams could on a bad day. Not the case though. If you have one you know what I mean. Anyway I shot the occasion with the damn thing and got some pretty neat effects with it on this particular day. It just goes to show you that its not about the best equipment to create an interesting image.






One final note. I was inspired to post these shots after seeing some other crappy (I mean fantastic) photos from my good friend and fellow photographer Chipper Hatter had posted on his face book page. He shot a series of images out a commercial flights window he was on flying back from a shoot. I encourage you to check his work out at www.chipperhatter.com. His work is incredible to say the least. Now back to that ice chest of Corona...........


Friday, June 5, 2009

My Sons Seventh Birthday Party!

Don't know if you have kids or not or can remember when you were a kid and how important birthdays were. Maybe they still get you excited! To me they are just a reminder about how much little time I have left on this earth. Anyway, my son had been counting down his seventh Birthday for the last six months. Just about every other day he would ask the same old question to either me, his mother or his sister "how many more days until my birthday"!. Maddening I tell you. I started carrying around a calculator so I would be ready to answer him. I got tired of making up numbers and thought it better to start telling him the truth. Yeah your right, I am terrible at math. Thank goodness for my daughter she is the bright spot in the family when it comes to the books. This is probably why I am a photographer and not a Mathematician.


As his birthday got closer talk within our family unit turned to what type of birthday he should have. You know like Chucky Cheese, pool party, sleepover, just one friend, maybe two friends,the whole first grade class, all boys, no girls, well maybe one girl. You get the drift. All painful decisions trust me, but important ones to a six year old turning seven. Oh to be a child again. Well leave it to our brilliant daughter to come up with the idea of our son having a costume party. What a great idea! This is perfect for our son's birthday since he usually can be found in some type of costume on a daily basis. Spider man (an all time favorite, has been actually known to where this to bed) Indiana Jones (he loves the whip) Darth Vader, Robin Hood, Jedi Knight, Pirate (Jack Sparrow Ayyye mate), Ninja. Oh and yes any costume that comes with a sword as an accessory. So it was settled the whole first grade class would be invited (this way no one is left out soon to be parents) and everyone would come dressed up in their favorite costume. My wife would rent a small hall in town next to the park where all the kids could play after being sugared up on cake, candy and assorted fruit drinks. Oh and a few beers for the adults to drown out all of the screaming.




As the party got nearer I came up with an idea for a personal project. I have needed one of these lately. I would take a portrait of each child in their costume at the party. So how to go about it and light the kids. Do I use daylight, reflectors, soft boxes, umbrellas, Q-Flash? What do I use for a background? Do I need a tripod (we all know how first graders can only hold still no longer than a Sponge Bob Episode and that's pretty long (as a side note my son usually watches Sponge Bob upside down). My job would be tough here for sure. Keeping in mind all of the sugar they will be consuming I better come up with a system that's is fast and efficient, but still creative. You guessed it 25 barebulbs screwed into a piece of plywood and set in a circle. Ring Light! You got it. What is a ring light you may ask. Well I will tell you. Its a light that is in the shape of a circle (good explanation right!). In the fashion Industry its called a beauty light. It gives off a nice light that wraps around the subject and can be very flattering. The professional ring lights can run in the thousands of dollars. I made mine for about fifty bucks! Now that I settled on a light source I needed a backdrop to hang from a wall in the hall where the party was being held. Yep your right a borrowed sheet from the closet would be the ticket. A couple of thumb tacks and presto instant backdrop. Next. what camera to use? Just what I was thinking a Hasselblad loaded with Tri-X black & white film. FILM! Yes I am from the old school of photography where you had to actually craft an image in camera. A lost art these days if I don't say so. Digital is great for many things, but so many think its a miracle worker. That's the problem that I see with photographers today. They think digital can do all things for them. How easy they forget that they need to light properly, have great composition and get the shot while on location and not back at their computer at two in the morning. But that's just me.





The one thing I have learned about having two kids is that trying to get them to do anything at the same time is difficult. I took this knowledge and let the kids come and go in front of the camera at their leisure. I took only one frame of each child. I already new my exposure (yes I had a few sheets of Polaroid still floating around) and composition. This way I could concentrate on my subjects and make sure they didn't get third degree burns from the my trusty fifty dollar ring light. And there you have it! Instant personal project......Enjoy!









Thanks for stopping by! Check back soon for more personal projects and news.