One more post of iPhone Snow Pictures. Here’s the last of them.




One more post of iPhone Snow Pictures. Here’s the last of them.




The weather outside is frightful…yuck…rain. Soooo, in order to lift my spirits a little, I am posting a few more iPhone photos from last week’s snow in Boston.
Growing up in North Carolina, I didn’t see snow all that often, and now, as an adult, I turn into the biggest kid when it snows. Tis the season…BRING IT!



Yesterday’s concert was a huge success. Also, the Christmas carol sing was made even more awsome by the fact that there was snow falling outside. Everyone was in a festive mood.
Today, I had a chance to grab a few shots with my iPhone using Chase Jarvis’s Best Camera app. I love snow and get really excited to see it and photograph it each year. Here is one of
my images from today.
I’m excited to be on my way to Boston for a singing engagement. This evening is the third installment of the “An Evening of Culture” series, hosted by Evan Ricker. Tonight’s venue is in the suburbs–Concord, MA. I am looking forward to seeing old friends and making a few new ones! On the program: Votre Toast from Carmen, Baby It’s Cold Outside, a Woton excerpt from Das Rheingold, and some Christmas carols.
Right now, I’m on the Bolt Bus, on the way into town and editing images of Darlene E. McCullough. I look forward to posting these new shots. They turned out beautifully.
Hi Everyone! I would like to wish you all a Happy Thanksgiving and a great start to the holiday season. I wish you safe journeys, good food, and good times with friends and family to you all!
Now…go eat some turkey!
Often, I am asked to give advice on capturing good snapshots…or, I find my clients saying, “I’m not good with a camera.” I think anyone can capture a photo that will make your friends say wow. So, today, in the spirit of the upcoming holidays, I have decided to to give away a few strategies I employ for getting that cool family shot or holiday shot.
1. Find an unusual angle or perspective. As adults, we are used to seeing each other and our family from a particular point of view. Looking at the world from a different perspective (through the lens, and at a different height) will make the picture “pop.” So, try a photo from a kid’s point of view. Look at that turkey or Christmas Tree from “down low” or if there is a ladder or steps in the room your shooting in, take the picture from “up high.” A change of perspective, or even simply a tilt of a lens can completely change the look and feel of an image. One special note: don’t shoot your family and friends from down low. Shooting up on a person will often bring out dreaded double chins, or show what is hiding deep in their nose. No one wants to see that.
November/December booking will benefit a charity dear to my heart: Kids with Cameras.
Kids with Cameras was founded in 2002 by photographer Zana Briski out of her work teaching photography to children in Calcutta’s red-light district. They believe that photography is an effective tool in igniting children’s imagination and building self-esteem. They believe in the power of art to transform lives, for both the artist and the viewer.
Kids with Cameras was the subject of a documentary film called “Born into Brothels” (available on Netflix). One of their first kids, Avijit, is now a film student at NYU! My donations will go directly to his scholarship fund. Here is a link to a short film he has made dios te salve maria yt version. I would like to see his dreams come true.
10% of my fee in November and December of 2009 will be donated to Kids With Cameras and the Avijit scholarship fund (http://www.kids-with-cameras.org).
As a performing artist, and a photographer, I know how art changed my life, growing up in the mountains of North Carolina. My first camera was a kodak instamatic x15f (think a little point and shoot camera with a disposable flash bar). I immediately began terrorizing the family pets by making them pose in my mother’s flower garden. While “at work” I destroyed many flowers and took hundreds of photos of the pets, flowers and the family, which my parents were obliged to print and save.
This certainly is a year in which charities really could use our help. Many are feeling the financial crunch. So, I now challenge you to consider giving a matching sized gift to a charity of your choice.