Sunset at one of the pocket beaches along the Sonoma Coast of California
Jim Lundgren Photography
Thursday, June 28, 2012
Tuesday, June 26, 2012
Rainbows and Waterfalls
I hiked to Sol Duc Falls expecting even light under an overcast sky, exactly the perfect conditions for this scene. What I ended up with was filtered sunlight and harsh highlights and shadows which make photography very difficult.....On yeah, and this rainbow that kept getting in the way....
Friday, June 22, 2012
Summertime On The Snoqualmie
Summer is here....well, not exactly here yet up in the Pacific Northwest but it is on it's way. Soon the rivers that are thundering bank to bank with fast cold snow melt will begin to slow down. Deep calm pools and playful cascades will appear where the water raged only weeks before. There will be rocks to toss, rocks to hop on, and rocks to sit on. It will be a kinder and gentler river. It might invite you to stop and stay for awhile. Maybe an hour, maybe a morning, or maybe a day. Summer is just like that....everything slows down.
Summertime along the South Fork of the Snoqualmie River, Cascade Mountains, Washington
Summertime along the South Fork of the Snoqualmie River, Cascade Mountains, Washington
Tuesday, June 19, 2012
Camano Island Sunset
By some bizarre chance of luck or circumstance, I had the beach at Camano Island State Park completely to myself on a Friday evening a couple of weeks ago. Throw in nice calm weather and a beautiful sunset and I began to look around and wonder if I'd missed the police barricades on the way in. Well, never look a gift horse in the mouth (the one and only time I will ever use that cliche in my writing.)
Camano Island State Park, Washington
Camano Island State Park, Washington
Sunday, June 17, 2012
Lake Sabrina
Just a little color to start the week off right. Sunset over Lake Sabrina in the Inyo National Forest, California.
Thursday, June 14, 2012
Keystone Spit
During my wanderings on my last trip to Whidbey Island, I found this weathered stump of driftwood along the high tide line on Keystone Spit. The spit is part of Ebey's Landing National Historical Reserve in Washington.
Tuesday, June 12, 2012
Camano Island
I spent Friday evening on Camano Island and after braving the northbound traffic out of Seattle, I was rewarded with some very empty beaches and fantastic skies.
Iverson Spit, Camano Island, Washington
Iverson Spit, Camano Island, Washington
Thursday, June 7, 2012
Tuesday, June 5, 2012
A Personal Story
Why do I participate in social media? Well the answer to that question has changed a lot over the last year. Let's just explore the facts:
I took several years off from photography after my son was born, telling myself I was burned out and needed a break. At first, sleepless nights and the never ending battle of taking care of an infant's needs stole my motivation. Rising at 4am to meet the sunrise happened everyday anyway with a screaming newborn. If there wasn't a screaming child, I was sleeping. As the months and years sneaked by, life fell into a routine and inertia set in. I was so detached from the business that I barely picked up my DSLR for nearly 4 years, mindlessly picking up the family's point and shoot camera for all our snapshots.
Life began to stand still.
Then one afternoon, I picked up my "real" camera again and wow, did it feel good. By the end of the day, I was brainstorming ways to jump back into the business. Should I go back into stock photography or should I try to sell prints? It didn't take long to figure out that every major photographer was using social media sites, so I tested the waters too. I posted images, wrote stories, and tried to connect with people. I joined the social media sites to try to market my work, but things changed.
It slowly dawned on me as images flowed across my screen, the photography world had moved on without me during my absence. The images were completely unlike anything I had seen before. They were crisp, they were colorful, they popped off the screen, and they absolutely blew me away. They also crumbled my new-found drive and in the back of my mind, I began to doubt myself. How in the world would I ever catch up if I was so far behind? Why even try?
Then one night, as I lay awake worrying about the future, I remembered another sleepless night 20 years before: the night after my first class at Brooks Institute of Photography. I arrived in Santa Barbara supremely confident in my abilities and I walked into class ready to take on the world. Within one hour, I realized I knew absolutely nothing about photography. I was not arriving at the top of the class, I was arriving at the bottom. I went back to my apartment and cried. Through that night, I twiddled the minutes away, stared at the ceiling, and wondered what I was going to do. Finally, near dawn it occurred to me that I was not there because I was a great photographer, I was there because I wanted to be a great photographer. Now that was concept I could work with. My education began the next day.
Remembering that night, it suddenly dawned on me that it was worth trying but I had to start all over again. I had to relearn the techniques, I had to humbly ask questions, and I had to accept that I wasn't at the top of my game anymore. With that realization came another. It was time to break the routines. I had been inventing excuses about why I couldn't pursue photography. The weather wouldn't cooperate. I didn't have enough time. The truth was that I was just pissed off. Everything in the photography world had been changing and I didn't know what to do about it. Everything was changing and I didn't want to. I just stood still. My education began again the next day.
Life began to move again.
Why do I participate in social media today?
To be inspired! Everyday I get the chance to see something stunning! Somewhere, half way around the globe, a photographer goes out and comes back with a crazy and new way of looking at life. That motivates me to get out the door and create something.
.
One year ago, I would have never come home with the image I'm sharing with you today. In fact, I would have never left the house, blaming it on the rain, bad light, or any other excuse I could have come up with. Instead, I headed out into the gloom to see what I could come back with. I got down on the wet sand, got soaked, and got the shot. And who knows, maybe somewhere another photographer is looking at this image thinking, "I should try that..."
I took several years off from photography after my son was born, telling myself I was burned out and needed a break. At first, sleepless nights and the never ending battle of taking care of an infant's needs stole my motivation. Rising at 4am to meet the sunrise happened everyday anyway with a screaming newborn. If there wasn't a screaming child, I was sleeping. As the months and years sneaked by, life fell into a routine and inertia set in. I was so detached from the business that I barely picked up my DSLR for nearly 4 years, mindlessly picking up the family's point and shoot camera for all our snapshots.
Life began to stand still.
Then one afternoon, I picked up my "real" camera again and wow, did it feel good. By the end of the day, I was brainstorming ways to jump back into the business. Should I go back into stock photography or should I try to sell prints? It didn't take long to figure out that every major photographer was using social media sites, so I tested the waters too. I posted images, wrote stories, and tried to connect with people. I joined the social media sites to try to market my work, but things changed.
It slowly dawned on me as images flowed across my screen, the photography world had moved on without me during my absence. The images were completely unlike anything I had seen before. They were crisp, they were colorful, they popped off the screen, and they absolutely blew me away. They also crumbled my new-found drive and in the back of my mind, I began to doubt myself. How in the world would I ever catch up if I was so far behind? Why even try?
Then one night, as I lay awake worrying about the future, I remembered another sleepless night 20 years before: the night after my first class at Brooks Institute of Photography. I arrived in Santa Barbara supremely confident in my abilities and I walked into class ready to take on the world. Within one hour, I realized I knew absolutely nothing about photography. I was not arriving at the top of the class, I was arriving at the bottom. I went back to my apartment and cried. Through that night, I twiddled the minutes away, stared at the ceiling, and wondered what I was going to do. Finally, near dawn it occurred to me that I was not there because I was a great photographer, I was there because I wanted to be a great photographer. Now that was concept I could work with. My education began the next day.
Remembering that night, it suddenly dawned on me that it was worth trying but I had to start all over again. I had to relearn the techniques, I had to humbly ask questions, and I had to accept that I wasn't at the top of my game anymore. With that realization came another. It was time to break the routines. I had been inventing excuses about why I couldn't pursue photography. The weather wouldn't cooperate. I didn't have enough time. The truth was that I was just pissed off. Everything in the photography world had been changing and I didn't know what to do about it. Everything was changing and I didn't want to. I just stood still. My education began again the next day.
Life began to move again.
Why do I participate in social media today?
To be inspired! Everyday I get the chance to see something stunning! Somewhere, half way around the globe, a photographer goes out and comes back with a crazy and new way of looking at life. That motivates me to get out the door and create something.
.
One year ago, I would have never come home with the image I'm sharing with you today. In fact, I would have never left the house, blaming it on the rain, bad light, or any other excuse I could have come up with. Instead, I headed out into the gloom to see what I could come back with. I got down on the wet sand, got soaked, and got the shot. And who knows, maybe somewhere another photographer is looking at this image thinking, "I should try that..."
Monday, June 4, 2012
Tonight's Sunset
I went for a last minute dash to the beach this evening and was rewarded with a little color. Sunset at Picnic Point County Park, Snohomish County, Washington
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)