Archive for the ‘Holga Photography’ Category

Workshop Update

May 23, 2010




I’m blogging on my lunch break here at the Michelle Bates workshop at Newspace here in Portland.  I wanted to throw these three self-directed Holgaroid portraits we shot in the studio yesterday.

Michelle is a sort-of world renowned guru of all things Holga and published the book, Plastic Cameras, and is currently working on the 2nd addition set for publication this fall.

I was feeling pretty inspired after yesterday’s field work so I’ll post the results shortly.  Today is darkroom day (yikes!), honestly I haven’t been in a darkroom in five years, since I was teaching high school kids and taking naps next to the enlargers.  I mean, it’s so dark! and I get tired!  Gimme a break!

Ok back to work.









Holgas – Charreada

April 20, 2010




My skin is slightly toasted so I’m spending the day away from the sol drinking Sol and blogging.

Yes, that’s right, I’m back down in Mexico, I’m sunburnt, and in case you didn’t catch that, sol = sun and is the name of a delicious beer.

I’m kicking off wedding season and the end of my four-month wedding sabbatical with the first of a few trips to Mexico this spring.

What have I been up to besides lots-o-lax?  Well I’ve managed to complete one of the goals I outlined for my blog’s one-year anniversary.

I got a scanning set-up, I scanned all my negatives, from all my personal Holga and medium format stuff, and now, you’ll get to enjoy some sweet Lomo action before the new weddings are up.

This first set is from the Charreada I photographed in February 2009, and that I blogged about here.

I’ve blogged about one of these holgas that I scanned at a workshop back in June, but below is the whole set.

CLICK BELOW!!!  (9 Photos Total)

(more…)

Destination Wedding – Crystal + Nando’s Holgas

March 11, 2010




I shot these Holgas at Crystal and Nando’s wedding last May.  At the time I was second shooting for Elizabeth Lloyd and I would bring my Holga to the weddings for fun.  This is how it all started.  There’s only three photos here, but since I’ve shot on my own during the last year it’s amazing to see the response people have to these unique images.

If you’re a potential wedding client and you’re thinking about Holgas, check out these three links, here, here, and here, to view some more contemporary Holga work.

If you want to check out the forty-eight photos from Crystal and Nando’s original blog post follow this link.











Holga – Puerto Vallarta

March 3, 2010




You may remember these little guys from a post back in May when my sister, Michaela, and her friend, Emmalee, traveled to Vallarta for Spring-Break-Oh-Nine.

Here is the link to the earlier blog post of digital photos we took on this hike to the top of a hill overlooking the bay. These three that I’m posting today were taken on that same hike but with my Holga camera.












Holga – Guanajuato State

March 1, 2010




Thanks to the Swine Flu last May, (remember that), quite a few brides canceled on Elizabeth Lloyd, leaving me, the lowly second shooter at the time, consistently out of work.  This GLOBAL PANDEMIC and civilian population at eminent risk of death-by-cough blessed me (although not financially) with an ungodly amount of free time.

Cool, free vacation days.  I literally got on Google Earth, picked a place on the map I’d never been to and got on the first bus headed East.

A couple of bus transfers later in Guadalajara and León and I arrived in the heart of the mexican Bajío.

Located mainly in the central mexican state of Guanajuato, the Bajío was traditionally an agricultural center, and later, manufacturing.  So large industrial cities in the state like, León, Irapuato and Silao were predictably suffering from certain economic conditions you all might be aware of.

Guanajuato state is home to a lot of history; colonial cities like Guanajuato, San Miguel de Allende and Dolores Hidalgo.

The rural areas just outside of any one of these cities are also incredibly poor.  Many many Mexican immigrants to the U.S. come from this small state.

You may remember this photo I posted in July that I took on a dirt road in between two small villages outside of Silao.


Below I’ve continued with some more scanning of photos from that trip.  I have about seven more rolls to scan and edit from Guanajuato plus I’ve got some more edited Holgas coming up later this week.



These are three overlapping frames forming a panoramic view of the Bajío from on top of the Cerro del Cubilete.  Unfortunately, the image doesn’t look as bad-ass all small like this.





On top of the Cerro del Cubilete; the statue of Cristo el Rey.  The same as the top photo in this post.





The next five I shot in Silao centro.






























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