From the category archives:

photography

If I don’t break this up into parts, I will never get them all answered.

Steph asked …

So, I’m well into my second year of owning a dslr (Nikon D60) but have only been using the basic lens it comes with. What is my next step, if I just like to take photographs for recreational reasons and not professionally?

First of all, I think your pictures are just wonderful, Steph, and I adore the moments that you capture with your kids. For the money and flexibility, you just can’t beat a 50mm. The basic Nikon 50mm f/1.8 is just a little over $100 and is truly one of the most versatile lenses out there. It takes some time to get used to prime lenses (ones that don’t zoom), but you’ll be hooked in no time!

I used my Canon 50mm f/1.8 for our entire Orlando trip last summer, and never regretted not bringing my other lens with me!

IMG_5815

Emily M. asked …

i would LOVE to know how you learned to use photoshop! classes? books? trial and error? tutorials?

I started using Photoshop about 12 years ago when I was working as the Quality Assurance Coordinator for a regional vending company. My boss thought designing brochures and trade show banners were easy, so he bought Photoshop and told me to get it done. Only problem was that I have a degree in marketing … NOT in design. But I learned a lot of the ins and outs of PS by pretty much sitting in my office day in and day out designing things.

As for the photo side of it, I have learned a lot through trial and error, but I have learned the most through online tutorials. Some of my favorite tutorial blogs are The CoffeeShop Blog, I Heart Faces (Fix it Friday posts are great for learning how to do things in Photoshop), and YouTube. Seriously, if you just search for whatever you want to know on YouTube, there will probably be a tutorial about it.

I am not scared to Google things, though. I am a huge fan of trial and error!

Becky @ Life with Kaishon asked …

Every day you see beautiful images by photographers taken from all around the world. Some of the photographers are famous. Some of them are not. How do you deal with feeling like your pictures are not *as good* as theirs?

Are your parents sad that you are done having babies?

What has been your favorite age Emma has experienced so far?

I know you hike a lot and do all sorts of active things with your family, do you worry about dropping your camera? Would you be fearful to take your camera on the beach?

I just read somewhere that if you are a professional photographer you will need to buy a new camera body every.single.year. What do you think of that? That freaked me out a little.

Haven’t you already interviewed me, Becky?? {wink}

How do I deal with photographers who are better than me? Since I see photographers that are better than me every single day, this is an easy question. I, of course, strive to be a better photographer, so I am inspired by them. I am constantly finding new ideas, especially when it comes to shooting the “everyday” images of my girls, since that’s what I tend to do the most right now. When I look at photographers like Rachel Devine, I’m inspired to shoot in more natural tones (rather than the vintage processing I do all. the. time.) – and when I look at Beth Armsheimer, I am inspired to work with more purples and blues in my processing – and when I look at Kelle Hampton, I’m inspired to just capture my everyday life rather than dressing the girls up and tromping through the woods. Those are just a few of the photographers in my Google reader, but I could go on and on. So to answer your question in one word – INSPIRATION.

IMG_6864

I don’t think my parents are necessarily “sad” that we’re done having babies. Are you, Mom? My parents have always been the most supportive parents, and I’ve always been quite an independent little booger. It used to get me into a bit of trouble {ahem}. I know that they would love to have twenty-eight grandchildren running around, so they are probably sad in that extent … but at the same time, they have always wanted what was best for me and my brother.

My favorite age? Oh goodness, that is a tough one. I think two was my favorite. Wait … ack, I don’t know. I LOVE the stage when they start crawling and getting into things. I’m a lazy mom, so I prefer letting them roam and explore and tear the house apart rather than have to entertain them. I really loved two, because her vocabulary was exploding, and her personality starting coming through. Whoever came up with the term “terrible twos” was mistaken, because there was nothing terrible about two. Three has been a little tough, but mostly because I’m quickly coming to the realization that she is a lot like me. And that’s scary. But I’ve also enjoyed three, because she has become a lot more independent and outspoken and curious, so it’s like having a little person in the house. I don’t have to “oversimplify” things … I just tell her the truth and she gets it. So that didn’t answer your question, because I’ve loved it all!!

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

You can tell you do photographer interviews every week … you have the best questions!

Honestly, I’ve never really been scared to take my camera anywhere. And I have taken it to a lot of places! I’ve taken it to the beach, I’ve (carefully) walked into the water with it, I’ve taken it up high and down low … and I’ve never really been afraid to drop it.

AND THEN I DROPPED IT LAST WEEK!

IN MY DRIVEWAY!!!!

AND IT BOUNCED 3 TIMES!!!

And now my 85mm lens is broken.

{sob}

As for getting a new camera body every year? I think that’s kind of crazy. Now, I fully believe that if you’re a professional, you need to have the best camera body you can afford. I’m not saying you can’t be a professional without the best camera, but I believe that if you’re going to make that jump into “professional photographer,” you should definitely invest in the best camera you can or else you’ll feel like you’re constantly trying to catch up with everyone else. At the same time, if you’re a famous professional photographer with a gajillion clients, then I’m assuming that a.) you can afford to get a new body every year, and b.) you’re using your current body like crazy, therefore rendering it necessary to get a new body. But I wouldn’t know anything about that. I do know that I’ve had my current camera body for a little over two years, and I’m jones’ing to get a nicer one. If I could afford it, I’d upgrade for sure, lol.

IMG_8984bw

Kathy asked …

How does one get to be as awesome as you?

When Emma was around 2, how in the world did you get her to be your model? Like the cute Halloween image I still adore.

It takes a lot of practice to be as awesome as I am. HAHAHAHA!

Actually, I got very lucky with her. Emma has pretty much always liked having her picture taken , so it hasn’t been that hard to get her to model for me.

It’s funny you should mention this particular image …

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

She was actually getting over a horrible cold so I kept her home from preschool that day, she fell down the hill that we were walking down to get to this little trail, and she was beyond cranky. It took seven takes, and this was the 3rd one, I think? I just told her to “look at me” and then hit the remote (that was inside the bowl). It was pure LUCK to catch that expression on her face. She was a total trooper for this one!

Debra asked …

Right after I purchased my preowned D40 last summer, I decided I HAD to have a prime lens and bought a 35 mm 1:1.8.

I of course researched it at the time & settled on that one, but now it seems like everyone’s ‘Cannot Live Without’ lens is the 50 mm 1.8.

I understand they’re both ‘primes’ so you have to use your feet to zoom in and out, but beyond that I don’t have a clue. It looks like the 35 mm 1.8 is slightly more expensive than the 50 mm 1.8.

Which one would you buy of those two?

Well, I have the Canon 50mm f/1.8, and the 35mm is on my list of lenses that I would like to have. So I’m the wrong person to ask! {wink wink} I love my 50mm so so much, but I’d love to have the 35mm solely for the wider angle. Basically, you’re getting “more shot” with your 35mm … the 50mm is a little more “zoomed in.” However, it really depends on how you’re using it … if you do a lot of portraits of one or two people, then the 50mm is probably your best lens. But if you prefer landscapes or group portraits or entire room shots, then the 35mm would be better. BUT they are both cheap (for camera lenses) – so why not have them both? I’m an enabler.

Also, in looking at the pictures on your blog and your style, I think you would really love the 50mm, so you should add it to your Mother’s Day wish list. You’re welcome.

Edited to add: please read the comments for more information about this … I shoot with a Canon, so I didn’t know that the 50mm 1.8 will not auto focus on the Nikon D40. So sorry!!! There is some good information shared by some awesome readers in the comments.

IMG_6994

Okay, I’m going to end with that and get the rest of them another day. This is super fun!! If you missed the “ask me anything” post the first time around, please feel free to ask me something here. I’m always willing to put off writing actual blog posts from my imagination.

{ 15 comments }

How do you get that vintage look?

How do you do that haze thing that’s on all of your pictures?

What you are using when you edit for your washed vintage look?

I get those questions (or a variation) once or twice a week, either on the blog or via email or on facebook.

IMG_1805

I mean, you’d THINK that the most frequently asked question of me would be, “How did you get to be so awesome?” but strangely enough, no one has ever asked me that before.

Huh.

Anyway, I always blush whenever I read an email that says something along those lines. ALWAYS. I can’t even believe people look at my pictures, much less care about how I edit them! I still consider myself just a mom who likes to take pictures.

IMG_1762

And I usually call Ken or send him an email saying, “Dude! You will NOT believe this!!!”

Yes, I call my husband dude. I call everyone dude.

It really just blows my mind and makes me giddy and flattered and blushy when I get an email or comment asking about my photography.

feb 19

So it makes it really hard to say, “I can’t tell you.”

IMG_1801

It’s not that I don’t WANT to tell you … it’s that I really don’t have a full-proof recipe. I truly don’t. I played around for years to come up with a handful of presets that I use regularly. And I guarantee you, what works on one picture does NOT work on another. So I still have to play around sometimes.

Here is what I will tell you …

  • I edit in Lightroom almost exclusively.
  • I use my own presets pretty much all of the time. (But I do love the new black and white presets from Kellie Hatcher).
  • I’ve worked on my presets for a couple of years and am still working on some.
  • I use a lot of yellow/tan/cream highlights and purple/royal blue highlights.
  • I over-expose pretty much every single picture I take by a couple of clicks on the exposure bar (if you don’t know what I’m talking about, just hang tight for a week or two).
  • I use all natural light when I can help it (unlike every picture in this post, which was taken inside of a paint-your-own pottery studio).
  • I am not planning on selling or giving away my presets anytime soon. I’ve had them tested, but that’s about as far as I’ve gotten. I feel like they just aren’t good enough to put out into the world, especially when there are so many amazing presets already out there!

 

IMG_1807

I know, that’s not really all that helpful.

But honestly? While I don’t think that my presets are “all that and a bag of chips,” I also want to be a little selfish and hang on tight to the things I’ve learned to do in Lightroom. I guess it’s a little narcissistic to keep people guessing, but … well, yeah. It IS narcissistic.

But if you follow me long enough, you’ll get bits and pieces of my editing "secrets” throughout my blog posts … on here and on I Heart Faces Fix-it Fridays.

IMG_1737

Okay, this whole post has made me uncomfortable. I’ve been sitting on it for a while, because I just feel silly publishing this … like I’m some big shot who actually warrants a post explaining how I do things.

So here are some more things you need to know …

  • I am not a big shot.
  • I am a better photographer than I was last year, but I’m not as good as I’ll be next year.
  • I love you for loving me.

 

IMG_1767

All photos were taken at Emma’s preschool friend’s fourth birthday party – I won’t be sharing any other pictures, because they have children’s faces in them, and I am not their mother.

{ 27 comments }

I’m moving my photos for the Joy of Love project to Flickr … I really want to keep doing it, but I just can’t keep blogging about it. Blogging about each image creates too much pressure to say lots of stuff when I don’t have much time these days.

Why, you ask? Well…

Emma is producing more snot than a Mucinex commercial. And while she can blow, she can’t wipe it away. Just imagine that for a second. Blowing snot out of her nose, not wiping it away. Yes, it’s just as gross as it sounds.

Lucy has her first ear infection. And this is after having to wait 2 weeks for her reflux medicine to climb out from under the snow in Missouri, filling a $90 prescription that doesn’t work that well in the meantime.

Trying to book our vacation has become a calamity of epic proportions. When they say owning a timeshare makes things easier, they are apparently 84 year olds who are bored and have plenty of time to sit on the phone and chat with various resorts.

Our house is a wreck because of the above issues.

I’m trying … I’m really really trying to find positives, so here we go.

My girls are awesome.

IMG_0171

My Emma is loads of fun, even when she’s sick.

IMG_9834

IMG_9824

My Lucy is growing and changing and becoming so much more active, and I adore every chubby lubby inch of her.

IMG_0335

Sometimes, I actually get a nap from both girls at once. It’s like the heavens open up and angels start singing.

IMG_0375

I don’t have to rearrange work schedules or caretakers or daycare when my girls are sick. I get to stay home and snuggle with them and watch movies and nurse the sick baby around the clock without having to worry about anything else. I am so very very lucky to be able to do that.

IMG_0412

{I hate my hair right now}

I love the gobs of natural light in my house. I wouldn’t know what to do with a flash if it walked up and slapped me in the face. Of course, if a flash could walk and slap, then maybe I wouldn’t have to know what I’m doing … maybe he would just do everything. But anyway, I couldn’t get half of the everyday shots I get without our light.

IMG_0356

I have the opportunity to test some amaaaaaazing black and white Lightroom presets from Kellie Hatcher, and they are fabulous. All of the b&w images (except for the first picture of the girls in their tubs) are processed with her presets. LOVE.

IMG_0398

So there we go. I’m feeling better already.

{ 19 comments }

I knew this would happen … I would do so well with the joy of love project, and then life would get in the way. Emma’s still got some sick and Lucy was super sick the other night. I don’t know when we’ll get a break from this, but I’m remaining positive. Or rather, I’m trying.

The prompt for day 7 was generations. Since I had to take the milk monster with me to Georgia this past weekend, I was able to get this picture with her grandparents (my parents).

jol feb7

It really hit me … my big brother and I both have 2 kids. TWO KIDS. I mean, it was yesterday that we were playing in the woods behind our house, riding our motorcycles down the dirt roads, and going to school in his old pickup truck.

Anyway, on to the prompt for day 8, which was gift from the heart.

I’ll be honest, Ken and I are not very romantic. We don’t do froofy cards and letters and rose petals … we don’t do stuffed animals and chocolates and flowers. We are usually very practical when it comes to gifts. We pretty much buy each other what the other one asked for – like, he wanted a kayak for his last birthday, and guess what he got? A kayak. Wham bam, thank you ma’am.

Even when we got engaged, I picked out my ring and put it on hold – he went and paid for it and picked it up. That’s just how we roll.

But when we got married, he had this waiting for me.

jol feb8

ISO 400 • 39mm • f/2.8 • 1/50 sec

A beautiful painting of historic Faith Chapel on Jekyll Island, Georgia, which is where we got married {we didn’t get married at the church; we got married on the beach … it was perfect}. It was something that he did without my prompting or hinting or emailing him links. A complete surprise. A total gift from the heart.

{ 8 comments }

Today’s joy of love prompt is who they love.

jol feb6a

My immediate thought was Emma and her daddy.

jol feb6d

Oh man, Emma loves Ken. And he loves her. And she has him completely wrapped around her tiny little fingers.

jol feb6c

I mean, she usually asks me to stay home when we’re all supposed to be going out. {um, thanks}

jol feb6b

They definitely have a special relationship that I will never be able to hold a candle to.

IMG_0097

But you know what? I have Lucy. She is a momma’s girl. Poor Ken will fight and fight and fight to get her to go to sleep – singing every song he knows, rocking, swaying, bouncing, walking, cooing. But she fights every second.

Then I take her, sit down in the rocker, lay her on my chest, sing “You Are My Sunshine” and she’s out within a minute or two.

I guess it comes from her being the 2nd kid, and us passing her off to anyone who will take her whenever we’re around other people. Even when I’m dropping Emma off at preschool, I dump Lucy into the arms of whoever is standing nearby so I can help Emma get her jacket off, hang her book bag up, etc. The other day, I actually had to hunt her down because the director’s assistant toted her off somewhere. And it didn’t bother me at all.

To be fair to Ken, she loves everyone. It’s not that she doesn’t love him …

IMG_0197

… she just loves me more.

Okay, okay. I think it’s because I have the … food.

jol feb6e

So it may change in a couple of years, but for now? I’ll take it.

{ 17 comments }