Wednesday, September 5, 2007
Back Home!
I'm back from my most recent destination wedding. It was help in beautiful Medora, North Dakota surrounded by the North Dakota Badlands.
While in a fairly remote location, Medora is North Dakota's number one tourist destination. While populated by only about 100 people year-round, during the summer months it is occupied by thousands of tourists and seasonal employees.
I'm sure in the coming weeks, I'll be posting more images from this wedding, as there were so many great photo opps.
Monday, September 3, 2007
Finally Back to Blogging!
After a longs summer hiatus, I'm promising to post on a regular basis again.
In hind-sight, perhaps leaving up funeral photos for the past month was not the best choice. I'm thinking that this blog is going to be mostly of a wedding and portrait slant from here on out. More personal work will be posted elsewhere to be linked shortly.
Currently I am in Montana on my way back from a destination wedding in Merdora, North Dakota.
I'll post some of the images from this very beautiful wedding soon.
In the mean time here is a North Dakota Landscape.
Monday, July 2, 2007
RIP Sandy Barr
A few weeks ago Sandy Barr, a well known St. John's figure died while running his flea market. He was 69.
For years he was well known as a wrestling promoter and, many years ago was a pro wrestler himself. He even hosted pro wrestling at his flea market every Tuesday. I covered his memorial service for The Sentinel newspaper. It was held in Cathedral Park on a rainy afternoon.
Wednesday, June 27, 2007
Starlight Parade
Thursday, June 21, 2007
Berries
Thursday, June 14, 2007
Dignity Village
One story I've been following for the past several years is Dignity Village
Now located in Northeast Portland, they have become quite a collection of small houses. Beginning in 2000, Kwamba Productions has been working on a documentary film about this intentional community and I have been working with them providing some still images.
This image is from my last trip out there back in March.
Tuesday, June 12, 2007
Suzanne Vega
Monday, June 11, 2007
Commissioner Sam Adams
I have a shot of Portland City Commissioner Sam Adams on my new site. Images from my 15 minutes shoot with him have been used both in PDX Magazine and in the St. John's Sentinel. The image used on my new site is a close-up. PDX used something similar. I liked this photo also of Commissioner Adams on the steps of city hall.
Wednesday, June 6, 2007
New site now up!
My editorial site is coming along. I now have two galleries live to give people an idea of my more journalistic endeavors.
Let me know what you think -- http://www.jasonekaplan.com
Monday, June 4, 2007
Peacock
Thursday, May 31, 2007
Monday, May 28, 2007
Thursday, May 24, 2007
Wednesday, May 23, 2007
St. John's Parade
Tuesday, May 22, 2007
Back at last
Early last week, Anika, my three year old daughter became violently ill. Then Summer, my wife fell sick, then it was my turn. It was a pretty awful week, but we are all well on the mend now and all on antibiotics. These next few days I'll be trying to get caught up on my work.
A couple of weeks ago I rented a perspective control lens. This lens allows you to use tilts and shifts to alter the focal plane. Most often this type of manipulation is done with large format cameras, but I wanted to try it on my full-frame DSLR. For a while I've been fascinated by the potential for using tilts to enhance selective focus in portraits. You can see a couple of photos experimenting with this.
The first one is of Anika. The effect is subtle here, but you can see the plane of focus cut across her eyes. In the next image the lens was able to be used to isolate her while sitting at a table with Summer.
I also went for a bike ride with my camera and tried to experiment with "false miniaturization" which is an optical illusion created by using selective focus to make your mind see subjects in an image tiny models. I discovered that the angle of view is just as important as the use of selective focus. You can see that in the image looking up at the bridge there is no miniaturization. However, the illusion is achieved nicely while looking down from the bridge onto a condo complex.
It would be interesting to try to incorporate this illusion into photographs of people. I'll have to work on that.
Sunday, May 6, 2007
Tuesday, May 1, 2007
Tree at TSD
While I was in Texas I stopped by to visit the Texas School for the Deaf where I worked during the 96-97 school year. It was strange going back. For one thing , It's a closed campus now and I had to go with security and get a tour from a staff person. Walking through the grounds was a little like walking in a ghost-town. All the kids were in class during my mid-day visit, so everything seemed empty. When I was working there, the whole campus was under construction. Only a few of the new building were finished (including the dorm where I worked). Now the whole complex is not only complete, but lived-in, aging, no longer new. It's quite nice, though; much nicer then when I was on staff. All the plans that seemed to be distant dreams back in 1997 are now fact -- the new cafeteria, auditorium, and media center. New huge school buildings now house the classrooms that used to be scattered in small, dilapidated structures connected by covered walkways. One thing I always loved about the campus was the live oak trees that had been meticulously spared during the construction. There was one right outside the dorm where I worked. I could stare into its upper branches from the office. I looked at it for months before I finally brought my 4x5 camera to work and photographed it. The small image was the result of that picture taken 10 years ago. The larger image is the biggest reason I wanted to visit that campus -- to see that tree again, and photograph it one more time.
Thursday, April 26, 2007
Austin Bats
The very first time I set foot in Austin, TX it was early August, 1996. I was driving from Portland, OR to work for a year at the Texas School for the Deaf. My car broke down outside of Waco and I had slept in it the night before. I then walked to the closest small town and had a very uncomfortable encounter with a tow truck driver who took me to a mechanic shop in Waco. I had to leave my car and take the Greyhound to Austin with only as much as I could carry.
When I arrived Downtown at the bus station it was about 7:30 pm and 105 degrees. The damp heat was oppressive and I strained under the weight of my luggage. I was walking across the Congress Ave Bridge to find a Motel. I noticed a long line of people on the sidewalk looking over the side. Looking over the rail to see what they were watching I saw about 100 people sitting on the grass below starting back up at the people on the bridge. When asked, a woman on the bridge said "we're waiting for the bats." "There are bats under this bridge?" I asked. She said, "you're not from around here, are you."
I went down to lie on the grass and watch. At about 8:30, just at the sun touched the horizon to set, about one and a half million bats flew out of the grooved in the underside of the bridge and made a cloud that darkened the sky as they flew out and spread over the river to spend the night foraging insects.
Last week I was excited to hear that the bats had returned from their Mexican migration and were flying right after sunset. In the cool of the spring time, they don't fly out in one huge cloud so much as stream out in a fluttering river over about a 10 minute period. It was still something to see, and the people were still lined up on the bridge.
Wednesday, April 25, 2007
Back Home
Thursday, April 19, 2007
The Conference has begun
It is good to see that unmistakable skyline again. I spent the day driving around the city and wondering around downtown. I had lunch at the Avenue Cafe which was just as good as I remember. In the evening I photographed the opening party of the Craft Brewers Conference. I'm now on my way back to the conference to photograph more of the conference activities.
The opening party took place at Stubbs BBQ on 8th st. Before it began I walked down to fabled 6th st and was exstatic to see that Jim-Jim's Water Ice is still open and going strong. Jim-Jim's makes the best Italian ices I've ever had.
The opening party took place at Stubbs BBQ on 8th st. Before it began I walked down to fabled 6th st and was exstatic to see that Jim-Jim's Water Ice is still open and going strong. Jim-Jim's makes the best Italian ices I've ever had.
Wednesday, April 18, 2007
Back in Austin
Ten years ago I lived in Austin TX for a school year while I was working at the Texas School for the Deaf. Now for the first time since 1997 I've returned -- but now I'm here to photograph a conference for one of my clients: The Brewers Association is holding its annual Craft Brewers Conference. Last year it was in Seattle and I covered it up there. Happily, they liked my work enough to hire me again to cover it down here in Austin. The image above is from the 2006 Great American Beer Festival, which I also covered for the BA in Denver Colorado.
I'm going to be in Texas the rest of the week, and will do my best to post some Texas photos to the blog while I'm here.
Monday, April 16, 2007
Lacrosse
Tuesday, April 10, 2007
Easter Egg Purgatory
Hope everyone had a happy Easter. The community center here in St. John's hosted a nighttime egg hunt called the "flashlight eggstraveganza" I think that the warm weather must have brought out more people than the community center was expecting. They did not seem equipped to deal with us all. The line was two blocks long and was moving so slowly it took over an hour just to get to the door of the center.
Once inside, it was another 20 minutes of waiting as we slowly moved down the hallway to where we would buy our Easter basket.
Finally it all culminated to 10 minutes of sitting in the grass and picking up plastic eggs with small prizes inside. Anika said that she had fun, so I guess it was all worth it.
Wednesday, April 4, 2007
Sample Wedding Now Online
Thursday, March 29, 2007
Sample Weddings Coming Soon!
Tuesday, March 27, 2007
Pillow Fight Club
Last week I caught wind of a "flash-mob" type occurance that was planned to happen at Saturday market(Thanks Gwenn). Looking up on the internet I saw that a pillow fight was scheduled for 2 pm by the Skidmore Fountain. I stopped by with my camera and saw about 2-3 dozen young adults (early twenties) standing around with backpacks and shoulder bags. At 2 pm sharp someone yelled "Pillow Fight!" and everyone pulled out their pillows and began beating on eachother for about 90 seconds. Then it was over, and everyone walked away.
Friday, March 23, 2007
Welcome to the Photo of the Blog.
Ross and Chelle being Gothic
Welcome to the new home of the Photo of the Day. Those of you familiar with my site know I have been posting images several times a week since late 2000. At some point soon I will have the vast "Photo of the Day archives" live online as well. For now I am going to try publishing the photo of the day in this blog form -- so I guess you can call it tthe "Photo of the Blog".
Through this blog, clients and interested parties can keep tabs on my recent work, both wedding and reportage. And I'll do my best to update at least 5 times a week (every business day) so that there will always be freash photos to look at when you visit www.jekphoto.com.
Welcome to the new home of the Photo of the Day. Those of you familiar with my site know I have been posting images several times a week since late 2000. At some point soon I will have the vast "Photo of the Day archives" live online as well. For now I am going to try publishing the photo of the day in this blog form -- so I guess you can call it tthe "Photo of the Blog".
Through this blog, clients and interested parties can keep tabs on my recent work, both wedding and reportage. And I'll do my best to update at least 5 times a week (every business day) so that there will always be freash photos to look at when you visit www.jekphoto.com.
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