Posts Tagged ‘Travel’

Need some more practice… My commitment towards Landscape photography

April 28th, 2011

Earlier this year I told myself to make a make a commitment towards improving a part of my photography that has well, been neglected for a long time as I was striving to improve other aspects of my photography. Now I don’t believe I’ll ever be the next Ansel Adams or Galen Rowell but I also know that I’ll never come close if I never try. So the day I decided to try came last week while Julie and I were out scouting some beaches for an upcoming engagement session with a couple from Colorado next week.

 

Earlier this year I told myself to make a make a commitment towards improving a part of my photography that has well, been neglected for a long time as I was striving to improve other aspects of my photography. Now I don’t believe I’ll ever be the next Ansel Adams or Galen Rowell but I also know that I’ll never come close if I never try. So the day I decided to try came last week while Julie and I were out scouting some beaches for an upcoming engagement session with a couple from Colorado next week.

Speak to anyone who really knows me and they willl tell you that that I love beaches and I love tropical islands with incredible beaches. So it was only natural that I start off working with seascapes and our scouting for a suitable beach for the upcoming engagement session gave me the great opportunity to do so. I can honestly tell you that I am my own harshest critic and while I’m not terribly disappointed in these photos I can honestly say that I’m not very excited about them either. I can already pick out the areas where I could have made the shots better and I wish we would have had more time in our scouting session to shoot so that I could have taken full advantage of the beautiful sunset that came later that evening. I also wish I would have spent more time in finding a better spot to shoot from to feature a more interesting foreground than what I have below. Either way, it was still good to get out and shoot for once for my own pleasure and I can think of a lot worse things to do in life so I’m content with just being able to get out and practice for a bit. Enjoy!



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A guest of a Southern Wedding with two of my best friends

October 12th, 2010

Sometimes it’s a really small world. Back in 98, when I was a senior in high school, I had a part time job working as a sales representative in the computer department at Best Buy. One of the managers in a separate department back then was a guy named Jeremy, and from what I can [...]

 

Sometimes it’s a really small world. Back in 98, when I was a senior in high school, I had a part time job working as a sales representative in the computer department at Best Buy. One of the managers in a separate department back then was a guy named Jeremy, and from what I can recall of my limited interaction with him, he was a pretty nice guy. Fast forward to 2007 and I’m in Destin, Florida hanging out with one of my best friends, Ryan, who coincidentally happens to be living with his older brother Jeremy whom I’m now just meeting for the first time. That’s the same Jeremy from when I was working at Best Buy back in high school. Sounds funny doesn’t it? We’ll I’ve got a perfectly good excuse for it as I met Ryan through my other best friend, Ron, at the end of senior year in high school a few years after he had moved to another town and changed high school along with it. So by coincidence, I just never happened to run into Jeremy simply because I barely knew Ryan back then.

This trip to Destin was also special for another reason. Jessica and Jeremy’s wedding also meant that I would be reuniting with two of my best friends, Ron and Ryan, together all at once for the first time in a few years. It’s amazing to look back and think that I first met Ron back when we were freshman’s in high school and that I eventually met Ryan through Ron at the end of my senior year. We’ve gone through a lot together and have had some crazy fun times together but the one thing I realize most is that as we get older, we have (to include 3 different deployments to two different war zones) and we will always be there for one another even though we’re now separated by thousands of miles between us. Or at least me anyways as Ron has recently relocated to Southern Florida while Ryan is still in Destin, Florida.

But that’s enough sappy stuff from me. Though before you skip on down to the photos, I just want to add that I attended this wedding as a guest and I only shot a limited amount of what I could without getting in the way of the paid photographer (whom I’m going to link to as soon as I receive her contact info) while still being able to enjoy the wedding as a guest. So because of that freedom I decided to play around slightly with the look of some of my photos so don’t be surprised if you see something different from me. Enjoy!



Jessica + Jeremy
Jessica + Jeremy
Jessica + Jeremy
Jessica + Jeremy
Jessica + Jeremy
Jessica + Jeremy
Jessica + Jeremy
Jessica + Jeremy
Jessica + Jeremy
Jessica + Jeremy
Jessica + Jeremy
Jessica + Jeremy
Jessica + Jeremy
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Jessica + Jeremy
Jessica + Jeremy
Jessica + Jeremy
Jessica + Jeremy
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Jessica + Jeremy
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Jessica + Jeremy
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Arlington National Cemetery, Washington, D.C. Part One

October 15th, 2009

Washington, D.C., the Nation’s Capital. My earliest memories of our Nation’s Capital date back to when I was a young kid in elementary school flipping through history book after history book in the school library. Since those days I’ve always wanted to see our Nation’s Capital and all of the historic monuments located there in [...]

 

Washington, D.C., the Nation’s Capital. My earliest memories of our Nation’s Capital date back to when I was a young kid in elementary school flipping through history book after history book in the school library. Since those days I’ve always wanted to see our Nation’s Capital and all of the historic monuments located there in person, but as a kid I never really knew if I ever would get that opportunity in the future.

Fast forward to the summer of 99 when I was helping a good friend of mine move his family from Ft. Bragg, NC to Springfield, MA before he was to attend the US Army’s Officer Candidate School in Ft. Benning, GA. We made the long 12 hour drive without stopping aside for the mandatory gas, food and bathroom breaks.  That was when I got my first glimpse of our Nation’s Capital, through the windows of a 1990ish Toyota Camry while stuck in traffic along the Capital Beltway. It was not a fun experience by any stretch of the imagination and our bladders can attest to that as we were stuck in some horrendous traffic between D.C. and Baltimore where we couldn’t even find a place to stop for a bathroom break.

So ironically, even with my great travel benefits I still somehow managed not to make it to D.C. until this last September, when I traveled to D.C. to cover Sophiline Cheam Shapiro and Khmer Arts’ performance at NEA’s National Heritage Fellowship Concert. During that time, I was lucky enough to have some free time to site see during the day while Sophiline and Khmer Arts were busy practicing for the concert. I should also note that I was lucky enough to be staying at a hotel that was within easy walking distance from the Bethesda Metro Station: my affordable and easy to use link from Bethesda to pretty much anywhere I wanted to go in D.C.

Anyways, Part One of this entry starts with Arlington National Cemetery. I’ve got to admit, I didn’t know what to really expect when I first stepped off the escalator from the Metro’s Arlington Station. All I knew was that I wanted to visit Arlington to pay my respects to all of those who have made the ultimate sacrifice in defending our nation’s freedom. My original plan was just to make a quick walk through of whatever parts of the cemetery that I could; however, after arriving at the visitor’s center to pick up a copy of a map of Arlington, I pretty much figured that the “quick” part of my plan wasn’t going to happen. Because of my time constraints, 5 hours before returning to cover Sophiline and Khmer Arts’ official practice at the Strathmore, I decided to purchase a ticket on one of Arlington’s tour mobiles. The tour mobile was supposed to give you a one and a half hour tour of the Kennedy Grave sites, Tomb of the Unknown Soldiers and the Arlington house if you were to make a stop at each site, but I found that to be grossly incorrect unless you only spent 15 minutes or less at each site. Unfortunately for me I ended up missing several buses and my hour and a half tour turned into a two and a half hour adventure before I finally gave up and just walked from site to site as it was quicker in the end. Anyways, I’ll stop here with the long entry and let you get onto the pictures. If you would like more information about any of the sites pictured below just run your cursor over the photos for the captions then visit the Arlington National Cemetery website here. Enjoy!