Nissan Pathfinder

I went out car shopping today and found a 98 Pathfinder. All the financing stuff should be finished on Monday or Tuesday. I'm real excited to get it. Going through Provo Canyon and up to Park City won't be so bad this winter.
Winter is pretty well on it's way, I think. All the mountains here got a pretty good dusting last night. I think Park City is high enough that it saw some of the dust as well, which might be bad news for us framers. We're about done with the roof of the house we're working on, and then we get to finish framing up the interior walls in the upstairs and finish out the basement, and finish the porch and deck (which are quite large). And then we have another house to start that will be ready in 2 or so weeks. This new company is really good. It has been a good switch. Except for the coming winter. We could do without the several feet of snow that will be on the ground soon.

New Job

So I start a new job on Monday. I'll still be framing, but I'll be building log cabins up in Park City for Custom Scandinavian. I can't wait. It'll be fun to learn some new skills, but it'll be an awefull commute. Oh well. Oh, and I got a new hammer. My old one started getting a crack in the handle, so I decided to replace it now.

Anyways, like Jon, I had neglected my camera for too long. WAY too long. This morning I was out running errands and drove by the BYU campus and there was a little "park" area that looked excellent, and decided to come back in the evening when the light was nice. So I loaded up my film holders and headed out. It turned out to be quite a nice little "park." Although with all the wedding bridal shoots in this one "park," I actually started to gag. Just kidding, but seriously, it was redicolous. Anyways, on with the photography stuff....I think I came away with some nice images. I almost didn't make one or two of the photographs because I wasn't too sure about them, but decided to make the photograph anyway. If they don't turn out well, no big deal. I won't have lost much. Well, anything at all really. All in all, it was a pretty satisfying date, er, evening with my camera. Now I just gotta work on gettin my negatives developed and scanned.

New Apartment

So I'm in my new apartment. I got moved in a week ago, and I'm "borrowing" someone's wireless. (shh...don't tell). I'll have my own in a week though. I'm liking it so far...except for one thing: the walls are completely bare. All of my frames are still up in Idaho. And the way things are going, I won't be able to go back up to Idaho for 3-4 weeks. I may just go buy one or two frames to get something up. I really want to have my photos all over my walls here. Other than all that, things are still pretty much the same: work in the day, do whatever in the evening. Once I get all my developing trays down here I'm going to get to work with getting negatives developed. I mentioned in my last post that I have a lot of them. I still haven't figured out how I'm going to solve thescanner situation; it's going to be a while before I can afford my own, unless I want to max out a credit card. Maybe after I get my skill saw and nail gun paid off I'll do it...we'll see.

Here are a few more new/old photographs:

I printed this off, but I'm still not sure if I like it. The tree right in front looked better on the ground glass than I thought it would...I'm torn. By the way, that one is in Discovery Park in Seattle.
This next one is really old; I took it on the last trip Darren, Jon, and I took to the City of Rocks. I don't think many people have seen it, but I like it, especially after adjusting the contrast and levels. I almost think I could go a bit further though.

It's Mine!

I just got the R2400 today, and just ran off my first print and it is gorgeous. Okay, it's my second print--I forgot to check a certain setting on the first one, and even it turned out beautifully. Anyways, I'm soooooo excited to be able to output my photographs again...it's been a long and painful year. I'm hoping that within a month or so to get a good scanner to import new images and get those printed.

I'm Back, But From Utah

Well, It's been a real long while. For those of you who read this, and have wondered "where in the world is he?," I moved down to Utah a few weeks ago, and just barely got internet service last night. I got a job framing still down here. I'm living in my cousin's basement (while finishing it), who lives in Saratoga Springs, located a few miles west of Lehi. I think I've decided to just take this year off of school and not go to USU for the Landscape Architecture degree...yet. My heart is still set on an MFA. I just need to figure out a way to get better copy slides QUICK, cause deadlines are very soon. Or perhaps altogether new slides of my photograms. I just wish that grad schools whould accept a web gallery or some other type of digital presentation for the portfolios. It would make things easier on all parties, I think.
Anyways, I don't have any new images this post, although I have about 50-60 sheets of film to develop. As soon as we finish the bathroom in the basement, my big project will be to get all thos sheets developed.

Long Time

Well, it's been about three weeks since my last post, so I figured it was about time to put something up. Nothin particularly exciting has happened in the meantime, except that I went down to Salt Lake City two weeks ago looking for apartments in the area, and while I was down there, I went to Liberty Park (here's a link to some photos I found on the web). It's a fairly large park, close to downtown. I'd been there once a few months before and knew I would need to photograph it. I don't know the history of the park...yet, but just from being there, I could see that whoever designed it was influenced by Frederick Law Olmsted in one way or another. There were certain elements that Olmsted used in his parks that were apparent in Liberty Park, such as a Ramble in the park, and a Parkway leading to the park from the city. I made several photographs of the park that trip, and I will likely need two or three more trips to completely capture all that needs to be captured there. I still need to develop those negatives, along with several others. That's the one bad thing about being out of school now, is I don't have ready access to a darkroom.
Anyway, here's a new construction photograph:

Camping Trip

Well this weekend I went up to Island Park to camp and to photograph. It was a much needed trip; for one, I just needed to get out and camp (it had been a LONG time since my last camping trip), and two, I needed to go up there and make some photographs before the snow sets in up there, which is coming quickly. I stopped at all the..."major" sites: Sheep Falls, Harriman State Park, Island Park Reservior, Big Springs, and my favorite, Island Park Scout Camp. All the leaves are changing color up there (and in some spots, have completely fallen off the trees), and it was really pretty.
I borrowed my brothers digital camera and made some photographs to be able to put up here on the blog sooner than if I had just used film (it seems it takes forever for me to get film developed). I hiked down to Sheep Falls, and found a fire ring:

I'm not real sure how old it is. I looked like it had been there a while, but it still caught my eye nonetheless.
Then, I made this photo:
I only made it to pretty much document the change in the position of the log. My friend Darren photographed this waterfall a while ago, and the log has completely changed location. But after looking at the photograph more, I actually kind of like it.

More Construction Photographs

I got one of the rolls of film developed of all the construction photographs I have been making at the jobs/houses I'm framing, and have been gradually getting them scanned and corrected in photoshop. The goal/plan is to have a good number of prints to bring to the regional SPE conference at the end of October to share with some friends. Here are a few more that I have finished (well, sorta, I still need to work out some color balance issues, but you get the idea):


And, on another note, I've ultimately decided to forego the grad classes at USU, and instead, begin pursuing another degree in Landscape Architecture. It took a LOT of thinking and debating to arrive at the decision, but it's what I think to be best right now. I still may apply to a couple grad schools this winter, but I'm not sure yet. I think I may have my parks project to blame for the decision. I began to notice a lot of things about the layout and placement of plants and paths and such in the landscape, and I have begun reading Frederick Law Olmsteds biography again (I got half way through during the second semester at school last year, and then kind of put it aside at the end of the semester), and it started making me think about a second degree. So I submitted my application to USU for the winter semester, and now I'm just waiting to hear back from them, which may take a little over a month or so, minimum.

Website Update

I finally got a web gallery of my photograms up on my website. So far I only have the images posted, and I'm in the middle of writing a process statement, and maybe an artist statement; I'm not sure if I have anything to come up with for an artist statement yet though.
Also, here's another photograph I made at the last house we just finished building

Photograms

The past little while, I have been slowly getting all of my photograms corrected and fixed to put them up in a gallery on my website (which I hope to get done this weekend). While I was trying to fix one that was, and still is, nearly impossible to match to the original print, I started playing around with levels and curves and hue and saturation, and other tools in photoshop, and I came up with these:

I played around with the curves on this one
On this one I just applied auto color
This one is the original scan, which doesn't at all match the original print (I've finally decided I'm going to have to rescan this to get it to match the original print)
After playing around like this, I think this could be a way to take Burchfield's idea one more step. But I almost feel like it's a cheap way to be different. And, there are some that I just can't bring myself to alter so dramatically; the original colors are too beautiful to not try to preserve.

Actual Construction Photographs

Well, I finally have some photographs from the construction site to show. I actually remembered to borrow my brother's digital camera today, after lots of times of forgetting, and made quite a few photographs. Here are some of them:






Once I get all my film developed I should have enough for a whole portfolio.

Just an Old Image I Dug Up

Well, it's been over a week since I last posted anything up here. I've meant all week to take my brothers digital camera with me to work to get quick results with the construction photographs I've been taking, but I always forget to either ask permission, or bring it along. So I'll just have to wait another day or two to get any of those photographs posted (I still have to take my slides in to get them processed, and I'm only half way through my current roll). I have been shooting almost every day this week for that project. It seems like every time I turn around I see a little grouping of shapes and angles or curves that catches my eye.
I the meantime, here's a photograph I made in Island Park earlier this summer:

Construction Photographs

Today I started on a new project. The other day, while I was at work, I thought I needed to start making a few photographs of the houses I am framing. The past few days I have been starting to see neat little geometric patterns in the walls and floors and scraps and hoses that lay all over the work area. So today, during my lunch break I got out my camera and started shooting away. I ended up making about thirteen or fourteen images, all on slide film, so it'll be a while before I get the slides back and posted, but I really had fun this afternoon letting loose and making images of something that I don't normally photograph. I can't wait to get the slides back

Fire Pits

Hmm...It's been a week since my last post. I got a new job framing houses, so I'm pretty beat at the end of the day, and I guess posting to this thing got a little ignored.
Anyway, on the the photography stuff: I was going through all of my images that I have scanned a little while ago and found this photograph:
It was taken about a year and a half ago at Beaverdick Park, before I even came up the idea of the Fire Pits project, so I guess this one was really the first image made of a fire pit. At least one that didn't have a fire burning in it at the time the exposure was made. I have a few such images that I made last summer and the summer before when I worked at a scout camp in Island Park, Idaho. I'll do some more searching and try to dig those ones up and get them posted. They are part of another project I'm working on, of the scout camp. That area of Island Park is more home to me and my brothers than our house is, and for the past three years I've been trying to get images made of the camp property. So far I have a measly dozen or so negatives. I know, a VERY poor amount to show for "working" on the project for three years. Every summer I tell myself I'll get a whole slew of images together, but it never happens. I come up with excellent excuses to not go up and make photographs, but truth is I'm lazy. I guess it's time to get my butt in gear and get serious about some of these things.

Parks Project Ideas

Monday night some guys from NASA came up to the Idaho Falls Museum to present an award to Nitrocision. My father works there, and the company fabricates liquid nitrogen cutters that can be used in many different applications. Some applications include removing the surfaces off of aircraft carrier decks before they are resurfaced, and removing the insulation material out of the housings for the rockets that propel the solid rocket boosters away from the space shuttle, which is why NASA came up. There has been a space and aeronautical exhibit at the museum and it was pretty cool. But there is a part of the museum that is dedicated exclusively to Idaho's history. There was a book set out full of old photographs of Idaho Falls, and I was thumbing through it and came across some old photographs of Tauphaus Park (a park that I photographed a few times already for my project, and still need to photograph more) dated from the 1950's and earlier. There was even an aerial photograph. The park looks almost nothing like what it looks like today. There was a big dirt race track where horse and car races and rodeos were held, and the only things that survived (atleast what I could easily identify from the photographs) were the Lilac Circle and a waterfall along the Idaho Canal. The rest has been altered significantly.
Looking at these photographs sparked another idea. I want to start contacting the city officials, who ever I would talk to, and ask if I can get some of these old photographs to include in the project. I've been wanting to contact the Parks and Recreation Departments and see if I can get copies of the original designs for these parks (if there are any; some parks I realize probably weren't "designed" by a landscape architect) to include in the project. I think it would be beneficial, at the very least to me, to have these resources, and, if and/or when I show these again, it would be beneficial to the viewer to see a sort of "history" of these parks.

Park Photographs

I got Photoshop CS 2 today, and it is one slick program. There have been a few improvements that make working with photographs a lot easier (at least for me). It kind of got me excited about fixing all the scans of all my photograms, so I spent a good amount of time doing that today. I also came across some photographs of some parks up in Seattle.

This one is the Rhododendron Glen at the Arboretum

Me and my brother went out to Discovery Park one day, and as we were getting in the car, I thought I heard some running water. I poked my head through the bushes and found this:


Another one from the Arboretum. I could have spent weeks at this place.
I want to include these photographs in my parks project, but haven't quite figured out a way to make them fit in. Maybe just getting more images from similar places will help. If not, I'll just have to come up with a new project...or make this current parks project have a couple of facets, i.e., the City Park, the Arboretum, the Nature Park, etc... I'll just have to keep thinking about it. And shooting.

Painting Progress

The progress on my painting is going pretty slow. I guess I feel a little intimidated by it. Oh well. Here's a picture of it (see the first photograms I posted below for the "reference").

Grad School

While this post won't really cover anything really new or exciting with my ongoing or potential projects, I have some good news.
Yesterday I called Craig Law from Utah State and asked about taking graduate classes as a non-matriculated grad student, as he said I could a few months ago. So I called him asking if the offer was still on the table, and he said it was, and come January, I'll most likely be down in Logan goin to school again! I guess Craig had a hard time convincing Sarah (who is now no longer teaching there) and the graduate student acceptance committee that I should be accepted. The reason why, and I quote directly from Craig, is "your slides were bad." Talk about a crushing and humbling comment, and one that will make you seriously consider how thorough you are about what you do. And make you kick yourself for trying to fudge something that perhaps you know shouldn't be included.

More Ideas

I just got back from camping in Star Valley with a friend's church activity, and like all my camping trips (and road trips), I got some thinking done.
I left on thursday, and at Swan Valley I followed an old dirt road that follows the South Fork of the Snake River all the way up to Palisades Reservoir. I found plenty of fire pits to photograph, and came up with some ideas about the project. Up until now, much of the photographs that I have made have been pretty romanticized. I think that for some of the images, it is appropriate, while others probably shouldn't be romanitcized. It really depends on the environment where the fire pit is located, but til thursday, I hadn't really taken that into consideration. One thought I had about fires and fire pits (and this is where the surrounding environment comes into play) is that fire can be destructive, and yet, it can also be relaxing. I recall many camping trips, and many nights when I worked up at scout camp when we would have a fire burning, and how much of a stress reliever it was. On the other hand, if not given the proper respect, and especially in this area, fire can be a very dangerous thing. So where am I going with this? I guess my point (at the risk of sounding a bit redundant) is that I finally realized that this project will require special attention to other details such as quality of light, etc..., whereas with the parks project, I didn't have to worry about that--or maybe I did need to and didn't, or I did worry about it, and didn't really realize it. Either way, I think overall, the parks project has been successfull.
Another thought that I had is that it's hard to make a large number of images of something so specific as a fire pit, and have them all look interesting, and have a good variety of images in compisition especially. I remember during a critique for my BFA class Darren more or less warned me of something that had started happening (and still occurs at times, unfortunately). He warned me of becoming too formulaic in my work (i.e., with compositition). I had found a composition that worked well, and was using that same basic composition in many images. As I was setting up for the first photograph of the fire pits I made on thursday, the composition started looking exactly like the one that I have posted below. So, I forced myself change the composition. The two still probably will end up looking a little similar, but as I said before, it's a little difficult keeping a good variety in this project as far as where I decide to put a small circle of stones in the image area.
I also went into Jackson Hole, Wyoming on thursday and went to a couple of art and photo galleries. There is a new photo gallery there called the Oswald Gallery
. There were several orginals by Ansel Adams, Edward Curtis, Henri Cartier Bresson, Paul Capinigro, Yousef Karsh, Hiroshe Watanabe, and many others of my favorite photographers. It was incredible (as it always is) to see the originals. They have so much more depth and richness and allure to them. While I was in an artist's watercolor gallery, I realized that I don't have to confine myself to oils for the experimentation with the photograms that I have been doing (sometimes I can be a little...closed-minded about things). Hopefully I can finish the current painting soon so I can experiment with watercolor, acrylics, or pastels. I might even get some clay or something and try mixing some 3D artwork into it. I'll just have to see what I have the time and patience for.

Photograms and Painting

Last week I began experimenting with incorporating/mixing painting into the photograms that I have been doing. So far I don't really have much to show other than a canvas painted with just one color. The plan was (and maybe still is) to take the photogram, and make a painting of it, but I'm not sure how enthused about it I am now. Maybe I just need to stick with it and complete the painting before I make a final decision. After all, I have put only one hour of work into the painting so far.
I also have been making a few more color photographs than I usually do. I've really been trying to push myself and try to get some more diversity into my photography. I love black and white, but I want and need to become more proficient in working with color.