Archive for Travel

Costa Rica 2011 | NWA Nature & Travel Photographer

In the middle of September, the Mrs. and I finally went on our honeymoon in Costa Rica. I had been there once before on a study abroad trip in 2009, and boy was it good to be back! We both love to travel, so it was a nice break from the daily routine.

 

We spent the first two nights in San José, the capitol city, with a friend from my previous trip. We explored downtown, went to the Central Market, saw the old theatre, and had a good (re)introduction to the city.

Image (c) Stephen Ironside / Ironside Photography 2011.

We visited an art museum near one of the large parks.

Image (c) 2011 Stephen Ironside / Ironside Photography (37)

(My friend Andrés and his girlfriend Carmen.)

After Costa Rica broke ties with Taiwan and forged ties with China, the Chinese built them this giant soccers stadium. Here are some guys playing next to it.

Image (c) 2011 Stephen Ironside / Ironside Photography (38)

The bus was broken…and the typical Costa Rican red taxis are everywhere (except when you need them.)

Image (c) 2011 Stephen Ironside / Ironside Photography (39)

Image (c) 2011 Stephen Ironside / Ironside Photography (40)

Image (c) 2011 Stephen Ironside / Ironside Photography (41)

The central market is quite an experience.

Image (c) 2011 Stephen Ironside / Ironside Photography (43)

Image (c) 2011 Stephen Ironside / Ironside Photography (44)

 

We then took a 4 hour ride up to the mountains to a place called Monteverde. Monteverde is famous for its cloud forests, ziplining, and, sadly, the extinction of the golden toad. It’s a beautiful place. We stayed at the Hotel Sunset, a small hotel owned and operated by a German ex-pat and his son. They were great hosts, the rooms were clean, and the breakfast hit the spot. He also helped us arrange our ziplining and canopy tours. Here’s the view of the Nicoya Gulf (Pacific coast) from the hotel. It’s a better view in the dry season, but this was nice all the same. There was a small trail near the hotel that went down by a stream, and we took some time to hike around that (despite beginning to get sick), and I even got Darby out on a couple of night hikes! We visited the butterfly and hummingbird gardens as well.

Image (c) 2011 Stephen Ironside / Ironside Photography (21)

Image (c) 2011 Stephen Ironside / Ironside Photography (22)

 Darby’s first time ziplining was quite an experience. Terrified at first, she leared to have fun by the end. The last line was a kilometer long and we had to go town it tandem in order to make it to the end! That was probably one of the coolest points of the trip. And I own’t show the video of Darby screaming on the Tarzan swing, for fear of an early divorce. The next day, she took it low-key and read in the hammock while I explored.

Image (c) 2011 Stephen Ironside / Ironside Photography (25)

I just like this one of Darby looking up through the forest from the hammock.

Image (c) 2011 Stephen Ironside / Ironside Photography (23)

Image (c) 2011 Stephen Ironside / Ironside Photography (24)

Image (c) 2011 Stephen Ironside / Ironside Photography (26)

The canopy bridges were cool (hi mom!)

Image (c) 2011 Stephen Ironside / Ironside Photography (28)

Image (c) 2011 Stephen Ironside / Ironside Photography (27)

Image (c) 2011 Stephen Ironside / Ironside Photography (35)

Image (c) 2011 Stephen Ironside / Ironside Photography (29)

Image (c) 2011 Stephen Ironside / Ironside Photography (30)

Darby and her beloved peanut butter pie, and the butterfly garden.

Image (c) 2011 Stephen Ironside / Ironside Photography (34)

Image (c) 2011 Stephen Ironside / Ironside Photography (31)

Image (c) 2011 Stephen Ironside / Ironside Photography (32)

(Blue Morpho butterfly, wing, and larva.)

Image (c) 2011 Stephen Ironside / Ironside Photography (33)

Image (c) 2011 Stephen Ironside / Ironside Photography (36)

By this time, my throat had begun to feel like there was a small acupuncturist living and practicing inside it. I don’t get sick often, so this came as a big surprise. Luckily I found some great antiseptic lozenges that seemed to help a lot. Mebucain (mebocaína) to the rescue.

We hopped back on the van and took a ride down from the mountains to the southern pacific coast and Manuel Antonio National Park. It turns out the hotel I booked (a small private jungle “bungalow”) was RIGHT next to the park entrance. Next to the gate. And it was a very short walk to the public beach and some great sunsets. This was a very good thing, as by this point I was feeling dreadful and Darby had begun to get sick as well.

The next day, feeling worse, I decided that I did NOT come so far and get to the most popular national park in the country only to miss out on it because I was sick. This was probably a bad decision, but I went into the park all morning until the early afternoon. Lots of walking ensued, and my upper respiratory system still probably has me blacklisted somewhere for making it suffer through it. There were some great beaches, lots of animals (though not as many as I’d expected), and if I hadn’t been sick it would have been a much better experience. Darby, also sick by this time, stayed at the hotel. A miserable middle of the honeymoon, but we still remember it fondly.

Image (c) 2011 Stephen Ironside / Ironside Photography (10)

  I saw a three-toed sloth (osa perezosa) with her baby!

Image (c) 2011 Stephen Ironside / Ironside Photography (11)

  Of course there were plenty of ctenosaurs.

Image (c) 2011 Stephen Ironside / Ironside Photography (12)

  The white-faced capuchins (monos carablancos) frequent the trees by the beaches, hoping to get some food. This is a sad thing–note the one with the trash in the tree. It happens a lot. But one thing that is a little more rare, I think was the monkey who picked up a frog, carried it up into the tree, looked at it, and petted it with one finger before releasing it back to the ground. Now THAT was fascinating.

Image (c) 2011 Stephen Ironside / Ironside Photography (13)

Image (c) 2011 Stephen Ironside / Ironside Photography (14)

Image (c) 2011 Stephen Ironside / Ironside Photography (15)

Image (c) 2011 Stephen Ironside / Ironside Photography (16)

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Image (c) 2011 Stephen Ironside / Ironside Photography (18)

Image (c) 2011 Stephen Ironside / Ironside Photography (19)

Image (c) 2011 Stephen Ironside / Ironside Photography (20)

After a couple of days in Manuel Antonio, we hopped on a very small plane (ALMOST as small as the one in Nepal) to get back to San José in order to catch a bus to our last destination, Cahuita. Little planes are always fun…especially when they are new!

Image (c) 2011 Stephen Ironside / Ironside Photography (9)

 

After a 4 hour bus ride to the caribbean coast, we reached the small town of Cahuita. (This is also where I lost my phone.) Cahuita is a small, quiet town with a distinct afro-caribbean feel to it. Jerk food, dreds, the whole nine yards. Darby even tried some octopus and lobster! It is also home to another national park with a nice coral reef, which unfortunately we didn’t snorkel at. At this point we were both almost recovered from being ill, so we just took it easy, explored the national park a bit, and had some fun on the black sand beach. Funnily enough, we stayed at a Swiss-German owned hotel here as well, so Darby had a second chance to impress and whip out her mad German skills (she’s much better than she lets on). This was a good thing, as the owner spoke hardly any English and very limited Spanish. She even comped the beer I had from the mini fridge because of the frustration of losing (and looking for) my phone.

Image (c) 2011 Stephen Ironside / Ironside Photography (1)

Image (c) 2011 Stephen Ironside / Ironside Photography (2)

Image (c) 2011 Stephen Ironside / Ironside Photography (3)

Image (c) 2011 Stephen Ironside / Ironside Photography (4)

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Image (c) 2011 Stephen Ironside / Ironside Photography (6)

Image (c) 2011 Stephen Ironside / Ironside Photography (7)

Image (c) 2011 Stephen Ironside / Ironside Photography (8)

(Sometimes the best view is right between your legs! Wait, maybe I should rethink that statement…)

 

All in all, it was a good trip. It was good to get out of town, be away from the computer and phone (OK, maybe a little too far away from the phone…), see some old friends, and enjoy some “alone” time in one of the most beautiful places on earth.

It had also been too long since I’d taken any nature and travel photos, which are my favorite types of photos to take. Sorry it took so long to get them up–there were quite a few, and I’ve been busy! You can see even more photos from the trip here on Flickr. 

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Costa Rica 2009 Revisited | NWA Nature Photographer

Two years ago, I went to Costa Rica on a semester-long study abroad program through Duke University and the Organization for Tropical Studies. While studying tropical biology, I also took a LOT of photos. Today, I’m going back to Costa Rica on my honeymoon!

Here are a few images from last time, and I can’t wait to come back with more. I’ve improved a lot over the past couple of years, and hopefully the images will show that. Catch you in a couple of weeks!

 

 

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Las Vegas and Skip’s Summer School 2011


Last week was intense. On my virgin trip to Las Vegas, I attended a 3 day photography workshop called Skip’s Summer School Yes, there is an actual “Skip.” Skip Cohen is the man behind this great program, and as the past president of Hasselblad and WPPI, among other accomplishments, he knows enough industry leaders and professionals to make any photographer green with envy. And because of this, he knows how to get the big shots to come teach at a 300-person intimate workshop.

This was my first time to attend a photo workshop, as well as my first time to Vegas. Put them together and I had one heck of a week! I learned SO much about photography and especially about marketing, and came home rejuvenated and ready to start making changes to my business. In fact, the night before I had to get up at 3:30 to catch my plane home, I couldn’t even sleep — I was THAT excited and had too many ideas floating around on how to improve things around here. Expect big changes soon.

Besides the great vendors we had on exhibition — Adorama, WHCC, Bay Photo, Kubota Image Tools, Animoto, Asuka Book, Marathon Press, onOne Software, Nik Software, SmugMug, Tamron, and more — there were some truly incredible faculty members. We had presentations by so many award-winning photographers, and I wish they’d each had more time to talk. Jerry Ghionis, Tamara Lackey, Vincent Laforet, Matthew Jordan Smith, Clay Blackmore, Jules Bianchi, Bob Davis, Bambi Cantrell, Bobbi Lane, Roberto Valenzuela, Scott Bourne, and of course Skip Cohen, and more, were all there to drop huge loads of knowledge, experience, and insight onto our photography careers. We had great presentations, but also some hands-on workshops. I saw Bobbi Lane, Clay Blackmore, Matthew Jordan Smith, and Bob Davis in action and learned some great tricks.

There was even a casual Q&A with the photographers on Sunday night where we just sat around, with no microphones, and asked them questions. They put in every effort to help us, and it was obvious that even though technically we were their competition, they wanted us to succeed both in the photography business and in life.

 

A few quotes:

Jerry Ghionis:

“As photographers, we capture the natural magic that’s there, but also create magic of our own.”

“What’s priceless tomorrow should be really expensive today.”

Roberto Valenzuela:

“Don’t practice when you’re supposed to be performing.”

Bobbi Lane:

“In photography, everything is everything.”

Clay Blackmore:

“The mark of a professional is someone who can repeat things over and over.”

Matthew Jordan Smith:

“Each one of you sees life differently, and you put that life into your images.”

“The professional determines what normal is.”

“Only three things can enhance your life: the people you meet, the places you go, and the books you read.”

Scott Bourne:

“Stop letting your view of how business is done determine how your business is done.”

Vincent Laforet:

“As photographers, we anticipate the future and capture the decisive moment.”

 

 

And those are just tidbits.

Surprisingly, I didn’t gamble even once while I was there! Honestly, I was more worried about losing my money to all of the awesome vendors who were present. They had some great deals, and having them there to answer questions was invaluable.

 

I’ve put together a quick slideshow of some photos I took while I was there. Check it out and play it in HD! You can also see the photos here on Flickr.

 

Can’t wait till next year!

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Happy New Year from Ironside Photography!

Happy New Year, everyone! Here’s to a great year and a great 2011.

2010 was a great year for me, and here’s a quick recap:

• January 1st of 2010 marked the launch of this new website.
• I had a show at the Julie Wait Gallery up in Rogers.
• I applied to six grad schools for an M.F.A. in photography, and didn’t get into a single one. I’d like to attribute that to my never having taken an art class instead of my portfolio, but who knows. Then I realized that the academic/fine art route wasn’t the one I wanted to take anyway.
• My birthday, of course.
• I officially, and legally, formed a business. Ironside Photography became real.
• I got engaged. Have you seen our website? www.stephenanddarby.com
• I showed at Art Amiss 12, and participated in many a First Thursday Fayetteville art walk.
•  I drove to Iowa to see the Dalai Lama speak.
• I shot the Wakarusa Music Festival, along with various portraits and a few weddings.
• I did some work for the University of Arkansas Honors College–most of the photos on their new website are mine.
• I went to San Francisco and Yosemite with my family and came back with some portfolio-worthy shots.
• I finished my honors thesis and graduated!
• I traveled to India on assignment.
• Darby and I traveled to Washington, D.C., to see the Rally to Restore Sanity and/or Fear.
• Ironside Photography’s website turned 4!
Help Portrait 2010 happened, and it was great.
• 2010 ended with a nice show at Arsaga’s in Fayetteville, a contest win, and an unusually cool lunar eclipse.

How’s that for quick?

Thank you all for all of your support this year, and I’m looking forward to what 2011 will bring. I couldn’t have done it without you.

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Summer Part 2: San Francisco!

In my last post, I talked about my trip to Yosemite National Park with my family this summer. After that, we spent about five days in sunny (and  chilly) San Francisco.

My family had been to San Francisco once before (yes, they went without me when I was gone for a summer in high school), but this was my first time. Of course, I only brought one long sleeved shirt. No jacket.

San Francisco is windy.

We did the touristy city things, such as seeing Alcatraz and going to the Fisherman’s Wharf, but we also went out to the Muir Woods and loitered around the shores of Marin County for a day. We had plenty of good food, from little pancakes to Indian, and the hotel’s TV was larger than any I’d seen in a hotel before.

The old trolleys were fun, but of course they were always crowded. You know why? Because we were there on the 4th of July weekend. Crazy. That night, we went down to the Wharf to see the fireworks, but the fog came in and they weren’t much more than bursts of lit-up-cloud.

We saw a lot in the few days we were there — the Ghiradelli chocolate factory, Coit Tower, Legion of Honor, California Academy of Sciences, Lombard Street, Haigh-Ashbury, Alcatraz, the Golden Gate, and more. I’d love to return some day, take it slow, and see what else this city has to offer.

Below are a few photos from the trip, and you can see many more here on Flickr. Hope you enjoy.

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Summer Part 1: Yosemite!

This summer I went to Yosemite and San Francisco with my family for a couple of weeks. I’d never been to either places, and it turned out to be a great adventure. I’ve FINALLY finished processing the photos, so here they are. I’m going to split this into two posts.

First up: Yosemite.

Our time in Yosemite got cut short by a day due to airline mishaps and delays, but we still got to see plenty of the park. I’d love to return in the fall or winter and get a new perspective, but I think the summer made for a good first visit.

A few highlights:
•  Running into a bear on a trail and mistakenly wandering through mountain lion territory at dusk.
•  Running into another bear at 1 a.m. after photographing the lunar rainbow at Yosemite Falls. It wandered right where our tripods had been less than 5 minutes before.
•  Seeing the Ansel Adams gallery and finally seeing Half Dome in real life.

We weren’t there long, but we got a good taste of everything — mountains, waterfalls, wildlife, hiking, landscapes, etc. Oh, and lots and lots of tourists.

Of course, I wish I had been able to be there with fewer people for a longer time for the express purpose of photography. I only got to visit each site once, and therefore was limited to the light available at that moment. The best photos you see from places like this are usually by people who live there, work there, or are otherwise there for a long time and can revisit places time and again until the conditions are what they’re looking for. I didn’t have that luxury…but I hope I did all right. :)

The technical highlight of the trip was when we went to photograph a lunar rainbow at Yosemite Falls. This only happens a few times per year. Moonbows happen the same way that rainbows do, but of course they happen at night. Due to the long exposure times, I only came away with about 15 shots. My favorite is already in the portfolio (and is the sixth hit when you google “lunar rainbow yosemite”!).
(Thanks again to my family for being willing to sleep in the car while I did this for 1.5 hours at midnight.)

Anyway, Yosemite is beautiful. The national parks really were “America’s Best Idea.” Their preservation for future generations is extremely important, and I believe that sharing images from these sacred places will help plant the seeds of conservation in the minds of those who view them. It’s simply not something worth destroying, for any reason. That’s pretty much what the International League of Conservation Photographers is all about. Maybe I’ll be a part of that someday!

Below are a few photos from the trip. You can see the rest in this set on Flickr!

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In Pictures: Rally to Restore Sanity and/or Fear

This weekend I went to Washington, D.C., to attend the Rally to Restore Sanity and/or Fear and visit some friends from my study abroad trip to India in 2008. I’ve never been to a big rally like this before, and I think I made a good decision for my first one. It was a great time, and I’ve never been around so many other people in my life. CBS estimated that about 215,000 people attended. Even Comedy Central was surprised by this–the permit they applied for was expecting 60,000. Obviously, people are comparing this to Glenn Beck’s rally a few months ago, which by the same CBS methodology drew only 87,000. (Note: these are the only scientific polls of the crowd sizes at either rally. The rest is guessing and hyperbole.)

All I can say is that the people who I was with, who were from D.C., said this was the largest rally they’d seen. The metros were backed up for hours. People started showing up at 5am. One metro we were on had to completely unload and go out of service because there were so many people trying to get on that the doors couldn’t close. I know people who were waiting up to an hour to get on a metro and arrived at the rally late.

There were a lot of people.

There were quite a few surprises — most people didn’t know that there were going to be musical guests, especially of the fame of Ozzy Osbourne, Cat Stevens, Sheryl Crow, Kid Rock, Tony Bennett, Mavis Staples, John Legend, etc. That’s not why we showed up and, honestly, I wish there had been more of a sincere political aspect to the rally. But I guess that was the point: to “take it down a notch for America.”

Here’s a transcription of Jon Stewart’s final (keynote) speech:

“I can’t control what people think this was.  I can only tell you my intentions.   This was not a rally to ridicule people of faith or people of activism or to look down our noses at the heartland or passionate argument or to suggest that times are not difficult and that we have nothing to fear.  They are and we do.  But we live now in hard times, not end times.  And we can have animus and not be enemies.

But unfortunately one of our main tools in delineating the two broke.  The country’s 24 hour political pundit perpetual panic conflictinator did not cause our problems but its existence makes solving them that much harder.  The press can hold its magnifying up to our problems bringing them into focus, illuminating issues heretofore unseen or they can use that magnifying glass to light ants on fire and then perhaps host a week of shows on the sudden, unexpected dangerous flaming ant epidemic.

If we amplify everything we hear nothing.  There are terrorists and racists and Stalinists and theocrats but those are titles that must be earned.  You must have the resume.  Not being able to distinguish between real racists and Tea Partiers or real bigots and Juan Williams and Rick Sanchez is an insult, not only to those people but to the racists themselves who have put in the exhausting effort it takes to hate–just as the inability to distinguish terrorists from Muslims makes us less safe not more.  The press is our immune system.  If we overreact to everything we actually get sicker–and perhaps eczema.

And yet, with that being said, I feel good—strangely, calmly good.  Because the image of Americans that is reflected back to us by our political and media process is false.  It is us through a fun house mirror, and not the good kind that makes you look slim in the waist and maybe taller, but the kind where you have a giant forehead and an ass shaped like a month old pumpkin and one eyeball.

So, why would we work together?  Why would you reach across the aisle to a pumpkin assed forehead eyeball monster?  If the picture of us were true, of course, our inability to solve problems would actually be quite sane and reasonable.  Why would you work with Marxists actively subverting our Constitution or racists and homophobes who see no one’s humanity but their own?  We hear every damn day about how fragile our country is—on the brink of catastrophe—torn by polarizing hate and how it’s a shame that we can’t work together to get things done, but the truth is we do.  We work together to get things done every damn day!

The only place we don’t is here or on cable TV.  But Americans don’t live here or on cable TV.  Where we live our values and principles form the foundations that sustains us while we get things done, not the barriers that prevent us from getting things done.  Most Americans don’t live their lives solely as Democrats, Republicans, liberals or conservatives.  Americans live their lives more as people that are just a little bit late for something they have to do—often something that they do not want to do—but they do it–impossible things every day that are only made possible by the little reasonable compromises that we all make.

Look on the screen. This is where we are. This is who we are.  (points to the Jumbotron screen which show traffic merging into a tunnel).  These cars—that’s a schoolteacher who probably thinks his taxes are too high.  He’s going to work.  There’s another car-a woman with two small kids who can’t really think about anything else right now.  There’s another car, (referring to the Jumbotron blowing in the wind) swinging, I don’t even know if you can see it—the lady’s in the NRA and she loves Oprah.  There’s another car—an investment banker, gay, also likes Oprah.  Another car’s a Latino carpenter.  Another car a fundamentalist vacuum salesman.  Atheist obstetrician.  Mormon Jay-Z fan.  But this is us.  Every one of the cars that you see is filled with individuals of strong belief and principles they hold dear—often principles and beliefs in direct opposition to their fellow travelers.

And yet these millions of cars must somehow find a way to squeeze one by one into a mile long 30 foot wide tunnel carved underneath a mighty river.  Carved, by the way, by people who I’m sure had their differences.  And they do it.  Concession by conscession.  You go.  Then I’ll go.  You go. Then I’ll go.  You go then I’ll go. Oh my God, is that an NRA sticker on your car?  Is that an Obama sticker on your car? Well, that’s okay—you go and then I’ll go.

And sure, at some point there will be a selfish jerk who zips up the shoulder and cuts in at the last minute, but that individual is rare and he is scorned and not hired as an analyst.

Because we know instinctively as a people that if we are to get through the darkness and back into the light we have to work together. And the truth is, there will always be darkness.  And sometimes the light at the end of the tunnel isn’t the promised land. Sometimes it’s just New Jersey.  But we do it anyway, together.

If you want to know why I’m here and want I want from you, I can only assure you this: you have already given it to me.  Your presence was what I wanted.

Sanity will always be and has always been in the eye of the beholder.  To see you here today and the kind of people that you are has restored mine.  Thank you.”

Seems pretty sane to me.

We also went to the Smithsonian Natural History Museum for a few hours, though we could have spent all day there. We had lots of good food, including Ethiopian. Delicious!

Obviously, I couldn’t get a press pass for this event. I didn’t end up taking nearly as many photos as I wanted to, and not as many of them turned out due to me not being very tall and there being a LOT of people in front of me. In any case, here are a few. The rest are here on Flickr.

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On Assignment: India 2010

A few posts ago, I mentioned that I was going back to India, this time on assignment — but I never gave any more details after that. Here’s what you’ve been waiting for.

I was contracted by a global corporation to travel to India for them to do some photo work with the goal of bringing back images they could use in meetings, presentations, etc. I was charged with documenting the garment supply chain — everything from growing the cotton, to turning it into thread, to making the fabric, to cutting, sewing, and packaging clothes to be shipped across the world.

The company also partners with NGOs such as the  HOPE Foundation, which runs training centers where factory workers can go to gain technical and life skills such as spoken English, sewing, computer training, etc. I photographed one such center, as well as a primary school. It was fascinating, and all of the people seemed quite happy to be there.

I also got a chance to go to a few workers’ homes to document how they live, which might have been the most interesting part of the trip. I’d been to India before, but I hadn’t been to India in an intimate way such as this. The people I met were very kind, welcoming, and generous — sometimes too generous… I can only drink so much orange soda, and no, I’m sorry, but I really do not like coffee!

It was a wonderful experience, and, from what I can tell, they are pleased with the images I brought back.

This was the first time I had traveled internationally with a full load of camera equipment, and although there were some snags, I made it there and back without breaking anything. I had one big scare, though: I had to check my main camera bag coming back from India. Long story short, Lufthansa’s 8kg limit on carry-ons is ridiculous. Somehow I went undetected on the way there, but I wasn’t so lucky on the way back. Luckily, my Naneu U220 held its own and nothing got broken…even though the airlines lost it. This trip was also the first time I’d shot exclusively in Manual and in RAW the whole time. And that’s not just 50 photos — I came back with over 6,000. I’m not sure if this was one small step or one giant leap, but at least it made me feel more like a pro…

Even though I was out shooting about 8-9 hours a day, I did find a little bit of free time while I was there. Miraculously, I also got to meet up with an old friend. When I went to India two years ago, my fiancé and I stayed at a Tibetan buddhist monastery for a month. The main monk who took care of us while we were there took an overnight bus to meet me in Bangalore on the first day of this trip. Even though I got to see him for less than a day, it made the day unforgettable, and we were both smiling the entire time. It was perfect.

I had a wonderful assistant from the company’s team, and because of him I was able to get all of my model releases signed fairly efficiently. But more importantly, he helped me have the best week of food I’ve ever had in my life. Spicy, delicious, savory Indian food. Three meals a day. It was heaven. I even learned the special trick to eating with your hands, and got much better at it over the course of the week.

P.S.: mushroom masala and butter naan is a wonderful combination, and I don’t even like mushrooms.

While I am unable to post the photos that I took for them here, due to contractual limitations, I can post the images that I took “on the side.” You can see the rest here on Flickr. They are mostly from the streets of Bangalore (mainly from inside a speeding rickshaw or taxi), but there are a few from Tirupur as well.

I hope I can return to that side of the world soon — be it in Tamil Nadu or anywhere else. Photographically, it’s a dream. But the food and the people are even better. If you haven’t ventured to India, I highly suggest it.

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Back from India + Featured Photo

So, I’m back from India. It was  a quick, one week, in and out job…but it was fantastic. I had Indian food three meals a day for a week, got to reunite with an old monk friend from my study abroad trip two years ago, and took over 6,000 photos. That said, I’m still processing them. You won’t be able to see many, due to the nature of the contract and client (which I’ll explain later), but you’ll get to see a few. Stay posted.

In other news, one of my photos from my Costa Rica trip is featured on the website Travel & Leisure in an article on the world’s most painful insect bites. I was contacted by the assistant photo editor of American Express Publishing almost a month ago with the request to use the photo, gave consent, and finally came across the article this evening. She even kept her word and gave a link to my site. Hooray for free publicity.

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Lunar Rainbow over Yosemite Falls

Lunar Rainbow over Yosemite Falls, Yosemite National Park, 2010

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Coming Soon: Wakarusa and Yosemite!

This is just a quick post to say that I won’t be updating until about two weeks from now.

Long story short: I shot lots of photos at Wakarusa, then went to San Francisco and Yosemite with my family for two weeks, hung a show at Ozark Natural Foods (which runs now through the end of the month!), and am now frantically trying to finish my honors thesis. I defend on July 26th, so that evening I’ll start powering through all of these photos and you’ll be hearing from me again!

Here are two from Wakarusa and two from Yosemite to hold you over. Check back in a couple of weeks!

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Road Trip: The Dalai Lama in Iowa

Last week–May 17-19, to be exact–my fiancee and a friend (A.K.A. Darby and Stephen C.) drove up to the University of Northern Iowa in Cedar Falls to see His Holiness the 14th Dalai Lama of Tibet. I’ll stop there–if you want to know more about him, let me know.

He spoke at two sessions on the 17th: the first was a panel discussion about educating for a non-violent world, and the afternoon “main event” was simple a long discourse on the power of education in the promotion of peace. He also touched on inter-faith tolerance, how humans are peaceful by nature, the importance of caring for the environment (and he even mentioned overpopulation!), and more. It was quite a day.

Sadly, I wasn’t allowed to take my camera in (too big), but we took Darby’s point & shoot to the event in the afternoon so I could get some noisy, blurry shots.

Geshe Dorjee, the monk who teaches at the UA, and Dr. Sidney Burris, director of the Fulbright College Honors Program, had been traveling up to UNI all semester to prepare their students for this big day. Geshe la is also the reason we even got tickets for these events! Two monks (one who is 89 years old!) from Gyuto Monastery who live in Minneapolis came down and constructed a sand mandala, and it was quite a sight. It took them over 300 hours to construct, and then, as always, they swept it away as a symbol of impermanence.

And, in case you didn’t hear, the Dalai Lama is coming to the U of A next May (and he’s already got a kickin’ website)! It’s going to be bigger and even better than this event at UNI. I can’t wait.

Maybe I’ll get a photo pass.

Here they are on Flickr.

We also met the Tibetan students at UNI–all seven of them, which is seven more than there are at the U of A. After the main events, we had dinner with these students and other people from the Tibetan Cultural Institute of Arkansas at one of the UNI professor’s house. It was a great night–the Tibetan students sang and danced for us, and there was a general feeling of happiness all around. Beautiful.

Here’s a video of some singing the night before His Holiness spoke. I don’t have their names, but when I do, I’ll post them. The song, in short, is about Tibetans’ respect and love for His Holiness, calling him their protector, etc.

(Oh, and on this trip I learned to drive a stick shift…in Kansas City…in construction…at rush hour. I’m pretty much a pro.)

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Skip’s Summer School – Why I Want to Go

The summer of 2008 was one of my worst summers on record. Not only did I have to go to summer school, but it was the worst kind of summer school. The Organic Chemistry I and II kind of summer school. I hate chemistry, and the fast-paced throw-it-in-your-face nature of summer classes didn’t help. It was a drag.

And all I wanted, while I was sitting in that class five days a week and doing nothing outside of it but studying, was to be out taking pictures.

That’s why this summer, I’d much rather go to Skip’s Summer School. I’ve never been to a photography workshop or conference, nor have I ever taken a photography class. All of my education has been, essentially, by myself. Skip may be able to change that, but only if he gives me a free ride. Let’s just say that expensive workshops and college student bank accounts aren’t on the best of terms.

I’ve been following Skip Cohen’s articles and work (along with his evil sidekick Scott Bourne) for some time now, and I’ve been impressed with how they’ve adapted to the new-fangled world of the internet in their photography businesses.

What I’ve learned so far from Skip: while you need to be a good photographer to be a good photographer, you don’t need to be a great one–you need to be a great marketer first. And that’s where I’m lacking. While I’ve had no real photography education, I’ve had even less marketing education. I need both. I need to go to this.

In short, going to this program would be insanely beneficial to me and my career, and I hope that Skip likes me and my work enough to give me that opportunity! It would be a great boost to everything I want to do.

So, Skip, if you read this, here’s my plea. Wish me luck!

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Lotus Lake Reflections

A monkey sits above Tso Pema (“Lotus Lake” in Tibetan), a pilgrimage site in northern India. 2008.

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Door to Somewhere

A photograph of a gate to a field in rural Nepal. November 2008.

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Prowling Howler Monkey

A howler monkey forages in the early morning at the Palo Verde Biological Station, Guanacaste, Costa Rica. Spring 2009.

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Backlit Glass Frog

A glass frog sits on a heliconia leaf at the Las Cruces Biological Station in southeastern Costa Rica. Backlit with a headlamp. Spring 2009.

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Study Abroad Travel (b)Logs

Until I can find a better way of putting these on here, here are the links to my recent study abroad blogs.


Click here to go to the blog I kept while studying Tibetan culture in India and Nepal during the fall 2008 semester through Students in International Training.

http://www.ironsidephotography.com/blog/mere_perception.html

And here for the blog I kept while studying tropical biology in Costa Rica through Duke University and the Organization for Tropical Studies during the spring 2009 semester:

http://ironsidephotography.com/blog/pura_vida.html

If you haven’t navigated this type of blog before, be sure to try the “Archives” and “Previous Posts” links in the sidebar. Start from the beginning. Enjoy.

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Happy Cheeks

A toddler looks down from an upper level over a religious puja in Lo Manthang, Mustang, Nepal. November 2008.

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Himalayan Foothills

A view of the Himalayas in upper Mustang, Nepal. November 2008.

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Snotty-Nose

A young boy plays in Lo Manthang, Mustang, Nepal, while his family slaughters two yaks behind him. November 2008.

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Puerta al Barrio

A door in Granada, Nicaragua. Spring 2009.

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Tibetan Apple Picker

A young boy in upper Mustang, Nepal. Though the people of Mustang are politically Nepali, they are culturally Tibetan.

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Two Years Later

A shot from a Trash the Dress shoot in conjunction with Stone Ridge Photographers at the War Eagle creek in northwest Arkansas two years after the bride’s big day.

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