برچسب: Stories

  • Everyday Stories, Abstract Flowers – The Weekly Light Stalking Community Roundup

    Everyday Stories, Abstract Flowers – The Weekly Light Stalking Community Roundup

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    Welcome to our weekly community wrap-up.  It’s been another very exciting week on the Light Stalking forums with great photography by the community and with new members joining in. The photos and discussions in the forums have been amazing and very inspiring the past few weeks, which makes it even more exciting. A lot is happening with members sharing images from their travels, projects, etc.

    Here is the Photo Of The Week that is judged by Federico every week. This week’s photo of the week is by Tersha and you can read what Federico had to say about this photo in the link here – Photo of the Week – October 3rd

    Copyright Tersha

    The weekend photography challenge from last week was “Everyday Stories” and members had their creative take on the theme with very interesting shots – some of them are shared below.

    This week, we have a new challenge that has some very beautiful submissions already. Join the challenge here – Patterns of Life

    Here are some storytelling shots from the past week’s challenge that we thought were great and should be included here:

    Elderly gentleman making maple syrup in his hand built sugar shack – Copyright Michael
    Remembering – Copyright Patrick
    Every step you take, Every move you make I’ll be watching you – Copyright Patrick
    Life imitates art – Copyright Click
    Copyright Lon Davis
    Always searching for the next frame – Copyright Patrick
    Long walks – Copyright Patrick
    Beauty surrounds us, technology can absorb us – Copyright Pat Garrett
    Hands, tying flies for fishing – Copyright Tersha
    Copyright Frogdaily

    Here are photos shared by members in other forums like General Photo Chit Chat, Landscape Photography, Macro Photography, etc.

    Dail shared a beautiful abstract photo of a flower that she shot when she was at the sunflower farm in the rain.

    Copyright Dail F

    Daniel shared an interesting post here – In Just 9 Days – The Sun and Moon Celestial Dancing! It is so interesting to see the comparison where the moon is illuminated differently during various phases.

    September 17, 2025, Moon leading sun after moon rise – Copyright Daniel
    September 26, 2025, Sun leading moon at sunset – Copyright Daniel

    Tersha shared an almost surreal photo of a wasp on a flower here:

    Copyright Tersha

    And a photo of a French Red-legged partridge here.

    Copyright Tersha

    Patrick is working on a new series of artworks and has photographed them creatively. Take a look at the photos here.

    Copyright Patrick

    Robert shared a powerful photo of a buffalo. Read about how he captured it here.

    Copyright Robert Apple

    Robert also shared a photo of a lonely tree in a vast landscape. Check it out here.

    Copyright Robert Apple

    An image of a lost place

    Copyright Robert Apple

    And a gorgeous stormy landscape here:

    Copyright Robert Apple

    Robert shared another photo of a wolf lichen, shot with a shallow depth of field here.

    Copyright Robert Apple

    Steve shared a minimal photo of a vine trying to make its way up a wall:

    Take joy in small things – Copyright Steve

    And a photo of people fishing

    Copyright Steve

    Patrick shared photos of soap bubbles. Check out the rest of the images here:

    Copyright Patrick

    Discussions:

    • How do you improve? – Rob started a very interesting discussion on how photographers may fall into a few different groups. Join it here.
    • Steve started a discussion on Magnetic Filters. Join over here to participate.

    If you are someone who captures images with your smartphone, we have a Mobile Photography Challenge where you can post your mobile photos and also check out the works by other photographers. The images must be captured and edited on a smartphone. Join to submit the photos over here. Here are some interesting photos captured on a smartphone:

    Copyright Rob Wood

    Michael shared a very interesting photo that he shot when waiting at the doctor’s office.. He said that he started chuckling when he saw the sharp’s box and empty glove box looking like some little medical elf winking and laughing at him.

    Copyright Michael

    Patrick’s urge for chocolate and therefore a visit to the shop gave him an opportunity to capture this photo on his way back home.

    Copyright Patrick

    There are also some members’ picks that are featured. These can be chosen by any of the members and are put in a whole new thread of their own and called out as being a great addition and shot for the forums. Check out those stunning captures here.

    Patrick started a thread late last year – “Community Inspired Photo Story Challenge” – capture a story in 3 to 6 photos that hold personal significance and post them with a brief description. While that thread was started to be completed within a week, it has been open with ongoing submissions for the past year and is still open where members can post their stories.

    Here are some throwdowns to follow and post your own photos, or you can start your own throwdown too.

    • Trees That Go Bump In The Night – Robert has started a throwdown and invited members to share their unusual photos of trees (Not Your Normal tree photos)
    • 2025 Reflections Throwdown – a unique way to capture your own reflection, whether abstract or otherwise. There are many beautiful images to go through for some inspiration.

    Patrick shared a very compelling reflection image:

    Copyright Patrick
    • Your Pets – Share photos of your pets here.
    • Rob started a new throwdown – “Abstract Flowers” – a very interesting one and it has some very creative and absolutely stunning shots already. You can participate here and we have shared some images below.
    Copyright Rob Wood
    Copyright Robert Apple
    Copyright Patrick
    Copyright Marty E
    Copyright Tersha
    Copyright Steve
    Copyright Frogdaily

    And, there are images posted in the Shark Tank forum where members request for constructive criticism/feedback on their photos.

     If you’d like to join in with our members, feel free to join us on the forums.  We’d love to see you there, and we are a friendly bunch.



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  • The Daily Edit – Yogan Müller talks about photobooks and stories hiding in plain sight – A Photo Editor

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    Tracy Hills, Outrigger scaffolding kit, June 2022.


    Tracy Hills, Independent Construction Water Truck, August 2021.


    Newly-Paved Streets at Sunset Southwest of the I-580, Tracy Hills, CA, December 2023.

    Heidi: Your Tracy Hills imagery highlights ecological crises—like water access and wildfire risk—in a New Topographics context. What visual strategies did you use to balance documentary clarity with emotion?

    Yogan: What I discovered in Tracy Hills took what I’ve been exploring for the past 10 years to a whole new level. In 2015, I documented a similar development in SW Iceland. Think new streets encroaching on rough lava terrain. Iceland prepared me for Tracy Hills, where scales were multiplied by 10.

    On the first trip to Tracy Hills in August 2021, the entire Central Valley was shrouded in smoke from the Dixie Fire, which became one of the most devastating wildfires in California’s history. Setting foot in Tracy Hills, the noonday sun was filtering through the high-altitude haze, all the while casting an incredibly bright light on hundreds of houses under construction. It was 100°F. The raging fire up north and the marching construction enterprise seemed so dichotomous.

    It was hard not to feel emotional when photographing this material, because it was a 1:1 reflection of the developments The New Topographics photographed in the region fifty years ago. That, of course, became a huge photographic challenge. However, for someone who hails from France and had the opportunity to further the conversation laid forth by the New Topographics was something very special. All the landscape books and photobooks I had poured myself into, all the sprawl pictures I’d avidly studied, had found a contemporary manifestation in Tracy Hills.

    Walking the landscape made me feel solastalgic. Solastalgia refers to the emotions we feel when we know we are seriously altering the climate without taking sufficient action, despite the unequivocal evidence of change. At the same time, I felt the urge to photograph everything around me. I was shooting like a crazy fool. That was wonderful. So much material for my art laid around in the form of objects, textures, colors, and materials. I couldn’t stop.

    The clarity you mentioned is crucial to me. In my recent projects, I have strived to distill complexity into cohesive pictures. If I think about it, it comes from my math background. Mathematics is so elegant, abstract, and simultaneously practical. Theorems, for example, often compress extremely complex concepts into a single proposition or, better, one absolute formula, from which the most vivid representations emerge. I like this idea. It informs large swaths of my work from the past several years.

    All those concepts, concerns, and emotions are baked into the book, which launches this fall with Radius Books. Britt Salvesen and Greg Foster-Rice generously wrote two essays for the book. I am beyond grateful. With Radius Director David Chickey, we decided to shortcut some of the pages. That strategy creates powerful visual encounters and collisions between images and spreads. You can visibly see Tracy Hills sprawl into the edges of the ecosystem that supports the sprawling development, which has been my ultimate goal while photographing there.


    Tracy Hills, double-page spread, photo courtesy of Radius Books.

       

    Drones and LA Water Narratives, self-published book, UCLA Design Media Arts, March 2024.

    Tell us about your self-published water-infrastructure book?
    This self-published book is the culmination of my winter 2024 undergraduate class at UCLA Design Media Arts, where I introduced drone photography.
    Students learned FAA rules, safety, and how to fly. They utilized this knowledge to focus on the Los Angeles Aqueduct that brings life to Southern California. By happenstance, my class convened shortly after the 110th anniversary of the Los Angeles Aqueduct inauguration on November 5, 1913.

    I’ve always thought of drones as tools to enrich our sensory perception. I want to embrace this positive outlook and steer clear of all the other negative connotations drones are associated with.

    We surveyed the aqueduct from Sylmar to Owens Lake, CA. Sylmar is where the aqueduct enters the city. The Cascades, visible from the I-5, are rather spectacular. Owens Lake, on the other hand, is, historically, the first source of fresh water for Los Angeles. Today, however, it is an engineered behemoth where the LADWP conducts dust mitigation experiments called “Best Available Control Measures.” I spent time flying there to


    Airborne view of one of LADWP’s dust mitigation techniques (sprinkler irrigation), Owens Lake, CA, February 2024.

    Downstream, the self-published book is a collection of diverse voices, co-designed, printed, and hand-bound by my students. I led the design and printing, and we had a lot of fun working together. This water class, survey, and book inaugurated a long-term project with the LA-based 501(c)3 Pando Populus. I will be glad to share more when the opportunity arises.

    What unique storytelling potentials do photography books offer compared to exhibitions or online platforms?
    A photobook is, in and of itself, a magical device and an art form. Once a show is done, it’s done. It may endure in installation pictures, memory, and sales, but it’s fundamentally done. Whereas a book circulates, reemerges, can be subject to awards, new printings, and pops up in fairs and shops far from its place of production, and years after its release. In other words, a book lasts longer and may reach a wider audience over time.

    When pictures, pacing, typography, and paper work in unison, a whole world unfolds in a photobook. The very act of turning pages elicits strong visual relationships between pictures and spreads. The viewer is taken on a journey of visual encounters, emotions, and perception.

    For me, a photobook opens a space for an intimate relationship between the viewer and the content. Turning pages is a sensual experience. A freshly printed book smells good. The paper has a texture that rubs on your fingertips. And pictures are visual stimuli. A photobook transforms distant subjects into an up close, felt, and even embodied experience.

    I think it’s anthropologist Tim Ingold who, somewhere, wrote about the words printed in the silent pages of a book. This holds true for a photobook. I like to populate this silence with pictures that visibly encapsulate sound. Flipthrough video here

    Online will always be a place in flux. For me, it’s a good space to design complementary, immersive experiences through full-screen galleries and otheri nteractive interfaces. As such, a website can be a wonderful space to share the research and creative decisions that shaped a photobook.

    Your practice includes photogrammetry, drones, AI, and book design. How do these tools influence your creative process and storytelling in both personal and editorial work?
    Embracing photogrammetry, drones, and AI pushed me to undertake a profound overhaul of how I use photography.
    That came from teaching and engaging with faculty, students, and staff at UCLA Design Media Arts. Our department embraces new technologies wholeheartedly. Over time, I increasingly saw and used photography as an expanding field, and a medium porous to rapid, often radical technological advances–think of generative AI, for example–and a medium that has never ceased to shapeshift since 1839.

    Teaching these tools and topics had me learn them inside out, which naturally pushed me to stay curious, alert, and hungry for the newest iterations. That’s one of the wonderful gifts of teaching.

    Now, bearing the ecological crisis in mind, I can’t help but ponder the overlap of exponential technology and our exponential environmental footprint, a hallmark of the Anthropocene. I guess both are rooted in the idea that there are no limits to what we can do, which is, in a way, true – human ingenuity often seems unlimited – although it’s clearer and clearer that this is undermining the very conditions limitless endeavors are predicated on.

    Practically, photogrammetry has thrust photography into the third dimension. Drones take it to the skies. AI taps into the enormous visual archive that is the Internet. Books open photographs to a fuller sensory pictorial appreciation that is tactile and intimate. It’s incredible to think we have easy access to such tools. At the same time, they have a dark side that can’t be ignored. That’s what artists have been doing: using the tools while critically engaging with their underlying problematic dynamics and foundations.

    I am really into drones at the moment. Flying high, you decenter yourself by seeing the complexity of the world around you. I am here, on my feet, immersed in the world, piloting, and simultaneously aloft, contemplating it in flux, 50, 200, 350ft in the air. That’s what I mean by “drones enrich our sensory perception.” I am fascinated by the artistic and technical possibilities of remote sensing, so much so that I’ve launched a drone photography business called Topographica. I serve architecture, construction, and public art clients in SoCal. Drones are incredible tools to contextualize and elevate installations and constructions. They are also incredible tools to create 3D, 1:1 digital twins of real-world projects through photogrammetry. With them, artists and operators can document, map, archive, and tell stories based on data-rich, airborne images.

    “Overshoot” launched in 2025 how did this idea come about?
    I am grateful to Aline Smithson, Founder and Director of Lenscratch, for letting me create a dedicated space for ecologically-minded visual practices and conversations. Overshoot stems from a deep care and love for the environment, ecological arts and justice. We live in ecological overshoot. That is the central premise of the column. In homage to Donna Haraway, I want to “stay with the trouble”.

    Overshoot also stems from the central claim of my practice-based PhD thesis–completed in 2018: photography is one of the tools that brought us into the Anthropocene. In hindsight, this line of inquiry, which I’ve explored in my manuscript and fieldwork in SW Iceland, was a reaction to what I learned when studying photography in Brussels. I’d often hear: “That’s just an image,” which always resonated as “photography is nothing more than an image.” That not only seemed at odds with all the time and care I’ve always put into planning trips to Iceland and making photographs there, but also didn’t take into consideration the historic and metabolic ties between photography and energy.

    Overshoot holds space for conversations, portfolios, and scholarly essays that directly engage with this moment of ecological overshoot. Ecologically-minded works and practices abound and are incredibly diverse. My goal is to offer artists a platform to share, discuss, and promote their work. I am also curious to know how they’ve come to grapple with the ramifications of ecological overshoot.

    I’ve just interviewed Siobhan Angus. Siobhan published an important book with Duke University Press last year titled “Camera Geologica. An Elemental History of Photography,” in which she traces the mineral extraction, use, and flows that have shaped photography over space and time. That is a fascinating and richly-layered history I’d encourage everyone to read. Her interview will be out on September 12. As a brand, Overshoot attempts to capture the exponential rise and use of photography. We still say we “shoot” images, and frequently mention the information and visual overload we experience online every day. That is also what informed Overshoot’s visual identity.



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  • A Real Wedding In Kenya :: Nairobi Creative Photographers Stories

    A Real Wedding In Kenya :: Nairobi Creative Photographers Stories

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    A Real Wedding In Kenya :: Nairobi Creative Photographers Stories Florienta Garden Rosslyn LonetreeKarura House Runda Nairobi

    Eileen And Brian’s Florienta Gardens And Karura House Wedding Celebration

     From the moment we met this sweet couple, we knew their wedding was going to be something special. The two of them were so in love and had such a positive outlook on life, that it was impossible not to get swept up in their happiness. Their wedding day was truly beautiful, full of warm smiles and heartfelt laughter. We are so grateful that we were able to be a part of it! We are absolutely thrilled to showcase here a few highlights from Eileen and Brian’s big day! A Real Wedding In Kenya.

      Band | Weavers Band
    Outdoors Garden Church Location| Florienta Gardens
    Nairobi Wedding Photographer | Antony Trivet Photography
    Assistant Photographer | Nashon Otieno Ariff Kuppah
    Bridesmaids Wedding Dresses Designer | Ellen Design Designer Helen Tolbert
    Photo-shoot Location| Karura House Runda
    Food | Ak Goko De Chef Of Delicious Cuisines Caterers
    Makeup Artist | Bayaa’stouch
    Hairstylist | Priscah The Hairstylist
    Tent and Decor | Ecoworld Events Management Company
    Mc | Mc Saada Fateh

    A Real Wedding In Kenya A Real Wedding In Kenya A Real Wedding In Kenya A Real Wedding In Kenya A Real Wedding In Kenya A Real Wedding In Kenya


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  • African Safari Wedding In Kenya :: Bush Wild Destinations Stories

    African Safari Wedding In Kenya :: Bush Wild Destinations Stories

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    African Safari Wedding In Kenya :: Bush Wild Destinations Stories – Elewana Collection Elsa’s Kopje – Meru National Park Weddings

    All destination wedding photographers in Kenya know about The Elewana Collection Elsa’s Kopje. It’s a wild bush hotel inside Meru National Park surrounded by Nyambene Hills’ storied background. I have wanted to photograph at this venue for quite some time so you can imagine when Sara And Kyle reached out to us, I was elated to be able to travel to Meru to capture this amazing event for them.

     I can go on and on about how beautiful The Elewana Collection Elsa’s Kopje is. As a Nairobi City County Wedding Photographer for over 10 years, I have photographed at nearly every major venue in Nairobi and its environs. We simply don’t have many properties in Nairobi that are comparable from a photography perspective. While the architecture is beautiful, the beautiful architecture alone is not unique to this wild bush environs. What makes this property ideal for weddings and events from a photographer’s eye is the magical perfect circular sunrise light. The light in every corner of this venue was easy to work with.

    Sara and Kyle got married at Elewana Collection Elsa’s Kopje in Meru National Park. This was the first of a series of weddings we are photographing at the beautiful Elewana Collection Elsa’s Kopje over the next year. I loved the architecture and opulence of this wedding venue. The beginning of day started off in a wild bush chasing the magical sunrise. We photographed Sara’s bridal prep in her family room. This was my first trip to Meru since 2019 (we typically would go 3-4 times a year prior to the pandemic). Sara and Kyle placed a high value on photography, and I wanted to make sure that we captured this day in a monumental way for them both. We cannot wait to capture more of their family over the years to come! 

    Are you getting married at Elewana Collection Elsa’s Kopje? Get in touch with us here



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