It’s nothing to complain about now

2010 January 25
by Kevin Sherman

Another Throwback post! This time, from 2007!

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Volkman Hall, 2007. This is actually one of the first images I ever took with a digital SLR. I had gotten a Canon EOS 20D about halfway through my film photography class after being frustrated with the whole developing process. I just wanted to shoot without worrying about wasting money and time on film… Someday maybe I’ll get an old Leica film camera, otherwise I don’t plan to shoot film ever again.

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This is a composite/panoramic from two shoots of downtown Chicago. Really would love to go back down and do a better one, though this one came out pretty nicely.

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Ha, I just learned about doing the whole long-exposure-while-zooming trick. Reminds me of the Twilight Zone.

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Ah, Randy Stonehill. I grew up on his music. This was at a concert he did at Judson while I was on Chapel Tech. An I got a tour of his tour bus. woop!

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Lil’ sister Rachel playing with my venerable Canon PowerShot SD450, most pictures from my last post where done with that camera. Sadly, lens mechanism is dead, so the camera is effectively done for.

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My friend Lynsey holding my long-time friend Shiloh’s first daughter… Hard to believe she’s getting close to being three years old!

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Ian Simkins! This is from the early days when I started working with him at the Matchbox for my Youth Min practicum. I think he was trying to part the Red Sea.

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Of course, a photographer isn’t a photographer if he/she doesn’t test their new gear on pets. Eddie is the first cat, George the second. Pretty sure these were both with the Canon EF 100mm f2.8 Macro lens. Solid piece of glass, too bad I didn’t keep it around longer.

Another stroll down Compact Flash Memory lane! There are a TON of pictures from the early days of VIP that I didn’t post, mostly the beginnings of my Sports Action days. While this year wasn’t formative/epiphany ridden like 2006 was, BUT this year I learned a truck load about how to use my camera. I started shooting for Visual Image Photography, based out of Wisconsin in 2007 as well, which meant that I was getting paid to take pictures. This was HUGE, it let me buy new and better gear eventually and got me shooting a lot more than if I wasn’t working for them. They also put me in a wide variety of situations and I did a lot of learning  on-the-job which is my favorite. All-in-all, 2007 was a hoot!

Peace
- KS

Today’s post title is brought to you by Relient K’s “I Don’t Need a Soul (To Hold)” from their album entitled Forget and Not Slow Down.

Once Upon a Time, You Dressed So Fine

2010 January 13
by Kevin Sherman

In honor (not really) of Pepsi Throwback, I am doing my own little set of “throwbacks” and posting some really old stuff. Kinda funny, going through 3,000+ pictures from my old point-and-shoot Canon SD450.

First set here are from a trip to Mississippi to help with hurricane relief efforts when I was a part of campus life. This was really sort of a life-changing trip, but not in the usual way and not something I realized until recently. It wasn’t so much the destruction and the trip’s goal itself that changed me, it was that I first realized that photography (and videography) can be used to tell a story. The Daily Herald (probably the start of my endearing love for that paper) sent a reporter and a photographer down with us. I got a chance to talk with Laura Stoecker, the photog that went down, a bit here and there and it was really the first time I had ever heard of ‘photojournalism’. Sort of that little seed was planted and I was hooked.

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That last one of my little sisters from 2006 cracks me up. They both look soooooo pissed. Maggie on the right (she’s 12 now!!) and Rachel on the left (9??!).

So here was a little look at 2006. What I wouldn’t give to be able to go back on that trip to Mississippi with a legit camera and experience.. Looking through the 1,200 pictures I took down there, I couldn’t help but laugh at where I choose to shoot from. Lots of the backs of people’s heads and such. It was also funny to see how much I had learned in a week; pictures from the last half of the trip were still LEAGUES better then the first half. Still not great of course. Lolz.

Peace
- KS

Today’s title is taken from the Bob Dylan song “Like a Rolling Stone”.

And When We Rebuild it, All of the Details Fade

2010 January 12
by Kevin Sherman

Another post?! What the deuce?! Well, today’s images are actually almost two years old. Way back, I went out to get some pictures of a project we did at work for our portfolio and I also sold five of them to the general contractor for their own portfolio. I never showed them here, well because here didn’t quite exist. So take a gander.

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I apologize for the water marks. I just recently re-discovered these from my ftp site. As I might have mentioned, I had a horrid hard drive debacle in late 2008 and I haven’t quite organizationally recovered. Well, now that I have some more free time (ha!) I am planning to go back through my drives and check out the situation. As such, I might actually be posting old stuff from time to time. Always a blast looking back. I hope I don’t repost anything. If so, what ever. Deal. :-) Man, I’m hanging out with Robb too much! Also might be interesting to note that this was about two weeks after I got my 5D with the 24-105L. One or two of these might also have been with the Sigma 12-24mm lens I had for a few months. Wow, that feels like forever ago.

Architectural photography is one of my favorite forms of photography. Being that I work in the industry (BTW, for those that don’t get what I do, I make the drawings for projects like this so the guys in the shop know what to build. Ballin’), its always a blast seeing the talented work of the guys back in the shop. Its easy for me to draw crap up, but they really are the masters, turning those line drawings into a spectacular product. On top of that, there are architects and owners with their own visions for the project; plumbers and electricians and other trades have touched a project like this, all working together to come up with a result like this. Truly incredible when you think about it.

Anyway, I really hope to get out pretty soon to do more architectural photography for my company’s portfolio. This really was the last one I did. Sad, I know.

Peace
- KS

This post’s title comes from the song “Chandeliers” by Sleeping at Last from their recent album Storyboards.

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