Archive for ‘Life’

January 16, 2012

Broadening My Horizons

I’ve always had an interest in design and a new opportunity at work has given me some extra motivation to spend more time pursuing this interest. I haven’t quite decided if I’ll add any design related categories to Chasing Creativity, but this new pursuit will likely reduce the time I have to focus on writing and photography. I’m afraid the posts here will continue to be infrequent and will likely consists of more images and fewer words, but I do plan on posting as often as I can. I hope everyone’s new year is off to a fantastic start and I’ll keep you all posted on my latest new journey.

Before I go, I wanted to share one more image from my trip to Hawaii in December; this was taken at the end of the Waimea Canyon that overlooks the Na Pali Coast. Truly one of the most beautiful landscapes I have ever seen; and one that images just don’t do justice.

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November 23, 2011

Lens Therapy

With the year winding down and the holidays fast approaching, we decided to head down to the beach for me to enjoy some lens therapy. I haven’t had much time this month for photography or posting to the blog so it was great to get out to see the world through a lens. I’m always amazed how quickly all my stress seems to ease simply by focusing on the act of making pictures. I’ve realized at times like these, that it’s more important to get out with my camera than it is to come home with great images. I guess sometimes it’s more about the act of making pictures than the pictures themselves, at least for me. Well, that’s all for now. I hope you all have a happy Thanksgiving.

November 14, 2011

Be Back Soon

Last Friday marked the end of a crazy couple weeks for me at work and I’m still in a bit of a daze. I’m trying to get back into the swing of things this morning and wanted to share a black and white photograph I made over the weekend. I hope to be back with more words and images real soon.

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October 12, 2011

Bridging the Gap

I came across this video of Ira Glass talking about Storytelling sometime last year. It resonated with me quite a bit at that time because I had just put my creative pursuits on hold. I thought about what he was saying for a couple days and filed it away as something to revisit later. I had all but forgotten about the video until I came across the following quote taken from it not once, but twice last week on Google+.

Nobody tells this to people who are beginners, I wish someone told me. All of us who do creative work, we get into it because we have good taste. But there is this gap. For the first couple years you make stuff, it’s just not that good. It’s trying to be good, it has potential, but it’s not. But your taste, the thing that got you into the game, is still killer. And your taste is why your work disappoints you. A lot of people never get past this phase, they quit. Most people I know who do interesting, creative work went through years of this. We know our work doesn’t have this special thing that we want it to have. We all go through this. And if you are just starting out or you are still in this phase, you gotta know its normal and the most important thing you can do is do a lot of work. Put yourself on a deadline so that every week you will finish one story. It is only by going through a volume of work that you will close that gap, and your work will be as good as your ambitions. And I took longer to figure out how to do this than anyone I’ve ever met. It’s gonna take awhile. It’s normal to take awhile. You’ve just gotta fight your way through.

Sitting there reading the quote and then re-watching the video left me with a really great feeling. It makes me feel good about picking up a camera again and diving back into my creative pursuits. While I originally put all this on hold because life got too busy, I always had those feelings of my work not being any good while I was knee deep in photography. I would shoot and shoot and shoot and come home disappointed because the images I brought back didn’t live up to my expectations. They weren’t as good as all the awesome work I saw online and that left me feeling discouraged. Now that I think about it, this discouragement likely made it easier for me to put my creative work on hold. I could focus on real life and forget about the fact that I wasn’t any good at photography, at least in my own eyes.

Coming across this again now just seems too timely to be a coincidence; it helps reaffirm the confidence I have now which I lacked a year ago. I still see a huge gap between my work and my taste, but I’m okay with that. I’m okay with the fact that the pictures I make don’t get a hundred comments on Flickr or any likes on Facebook. I’m okay with the fact that my work doesn’t stand up to the work of those I admire. I can now honestly say that I like the pictures I make and that’s what matters most. Because at the end of the day, I’m not pursuing anyone else’s vision, only my own. So I plan to keep making pictures and to keep writing because I love it and it makes me happier now then it did a year ago. And I’ll be okay if I never ever manage to completely close the gap between my work and my taste as long as I continue to love what I’m doing.

October 6, 2011

A Life without Apple

The news of Steve Jobs’ passing and one particular article I read from NPR got me thinking about the role Apple, as a consumer electronics company, and Jobs, as the genius behind many of the products I use daily, played in my life. While I’m not suggesting Apple or Jobs are the reason I am who I am today, I am certain that my life would be much different without Apple the company or Steve Jobs the visionary.

Image by Jonathan Mak

As I sit down to write this post on my MacBook Pro, I am surrounded by Apple products; I use my Mac laptop daily and my iPhone or iPad are almost always within arms reach. I find this to be the case for many Apple users; once an Apple product enters their life, they find it nearly impossible to remember what life was like before that product. This was the case with my first Apple computer, with the original iPhone, and most recently with the iPad. Most people who know me know I’ve been a diehard Mac user for nearly five years now; but I wasn’t always an Apple user or even much of a technology enthusiast.

There was a time when I was someone who simply tolerated computers. I worked on a Windows computer during the day and came home to a Dell laptop that I used begrudgingly to surf the Internet. One day, after growing tired of constant updates for Windows and anti-virus software, I decided to make the switch. Yes, Apple computers were more expensive, but oh so cool looking; and the promise of a virus-free world was simply too hard to ignore. I eventually settled on a white MacBook and haven’t looked back since. Five years later, I am typing this blog post from my second Mac, a 15″ MacBook Pro that is still going strong after 3+ use of near daily use.

Not only am I now a total Mac evangelist, but I’ve also managed to go from working as an environmental engineer to working on the product development team for a software company. Granted I use a Dell laptop begrudgingly during the day, but I’ve been able to go from a career I tolerate to one I truly enjoy.

Don’t get me wrong, I’m not saying switching to a Mac changed my life nor am I suggesting buying Apple products will change yours. But switching to a Mac did change my perspective on technology. Instead of fighting with my computer, I began to actually enjoy using one. I started using iPhoto to manage and edit pictures from my vacations and iTunes to download and listen to music and podcasts. The combination of these two applications (that come free with every Mac) changed the way I interacted with my computer and the activities I enjoyed away from it.

It wasn’t the products themselves that changed my perspective on technology, but the user experience that is central to every Apple product. Without that little detail that Jobs and Apple worked so hard to build into product, I may not have bought into the Apple experience. And without the Apple experience, I may very well be sitting in my living room somewhere not writing this blog post on a Dell laptop and not having found photography or any of the other creative endeavors that are so central to my life today.

October 2, 2011

Why I’m Back on WordPress

I started my first photography blog in 2008 on WordPress.com; less than a year later, I moved to Squarespace. I was looking for more customization options and Squarespace provided that up until I took my blog down in 2010. So when I started Chasing Creativity last month, I naturally went back to what I knew, Squarespace. But as I thought more about what I wanted for this blog, I questioned my decision and revisited WordPress.

I began by importing my existing posts to WordPress and browsing for a theme. The more I looked into WordPress, the more I liked what I found. Not only did it make sense financially, ($12/year for domain mapping on WordPress versus $13/month for Squarespace) but WordPress just seemed a better choice for me; and here’s why.

Workflow

One of the most important things for me was to find something that suited my mobile workflow. Even though the Squarespace iOS App worked fine with the iPad, I just couldn’t find a way to create posts with images without having to make changes on a computer. The WordPress iOS App, however, just worked. After importing pictures onto the iPad and making edits with SnapSeed, I was able to upload images with the WordPress iOS App and create posts without fixing layout issues on a computer. Since I’m hoping to do more traveling in the near future, the ability to share the images I make on the road was key.

WordPress iOS App

Simplicity

While I initially left WordPress for the lack of customization options, this time around, I found the simplicity refreshing. Instead of spending days customizing every detail on Squarespace, I spent a few hours finding and tweaking a theme I liked on WordPress to get what you now see. The limited choice for theme options with most WordPress themes was actually a plus and I felt it would let me focus more on content and less on the look of my blog. Even though all the bells and whistles available with Squarespace were great, they just didn’t seem necessary for what I wanted now for my blog.

Adaptability

Another thing that sold me on WordPress, and the reason I wanted to focus on content, was the built-in support for mobile and iPad versions of my blog. Without any work on my part, I was able to provide a clean and simple experience for smartphones or an elegant and smooth interface for iPads. I’m sure I could have provide similar versions with a little work in Squarespace, but the fact that I didn’t have to do a thing on WordPress was just icing on the cake.

iPad Version by Onswipe

So those are the reasons I’m back on WordPress. I know it may be unfair to compare the free version of WordPress with a paid service like Squarespace because Squarespace provides hosting. But for someone like me that’s rebuilding my blog and my audience, WordPress.com is just a better choice.

September 8, 2011

Onward

In September of 2010, I made the decision to take down a photography blog I authored for two years. I had started a new job in a totally new field and was taking classes to help with the transition. The combination of the two left little time for photography or personal writing. On top of that, returning to work full time provided some perspective on life beyond my creative pursuits. While I knew photography and personal writing were both vital for expressing myself creatively, I had to first re-focus on the bigger picture and get re-acclimated with a life I knew before I discovered the joy of either. Thus, creativity took a back seat and the blog became a memory.

During the past year, I continued making pictures (mostly with my iPhone) and posting them to my random creativity blog. For most of that time, I was satisfied with sharing occasionally on Tumblr or Instagram. However, as I became more settled in my new life, I found myself really starting to miss photography and having a personal writing project. Couple that with time well spent reading Craft & Vision eBooks from one of my favorite photographers/writers, David duChemin, and the wheels starting turning for ideas on a new project. I initially toyed with the idea of reviving my old photography blog, but ultimately thought it was better to start fresh.

Soon after, Chasing Creativity was born. What you’ll find here are words detailing my experiences as I explore my creativity through a lens and thoughts about the topics that interest me most. Being a photo-centric blog, I’ll also share words and images that document my photographic journeys locally and abroad.

So with that, I’ll leave to you to browse. I hope to post regularly and to have more to share soon.

-Steve

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