Yoga and a game of poker are two things I’ve never shot before. I had no idea what to expect; I don’t know the first thing about yoga and I almost never play card games, not even poker. But man, what a blast Mat & Kristina were to work with on these concepts!

Those who know enough about my wedding photography know that I decided some time ago that it would be much more interesting if I shot a cohesive series that’s unique to that couple rather than aim for a series of great but disconnected imagery that don’t represent the couple in the least and looks like everyone else’s photography.

It’s more work for everyone involved, but I’ve been enjoying it a ton more than what I used to do.

Here’s what we got this time:

I was sadly unable to shoot or even attend Alisha’s wedding when she got married to her handsome husband earlier this summer. I was already booked for another wedding on her big day.

When I first met Alisha, she was one of the more depressed people I knew. Soon after we met and worked together on a few projects (all film projects at the time), she got divorced and went through a horrible separation process while I watched helplessly from the sidelines.

She was a wreck.

And I didn’t realize how much of a wreck she was until I saw her transform into the happiest version of Alisha I’ve ever known.

So what defines a person? What makes them who they are? Well. Sometimes, it’s another person.

Here’s Jeremy, Alisha and their kids:

And here’s some random model shots of both of them. Can you tell who I’ve worked with most between the two? Oh and check out the contact section of my website. It has Alisha yelling into a megaphone :)

I feel like I’m approaching being fully caught up. I wonder if I just jinxed myself and a meteor will hit my house this time tomorrow… Surely my clients would be understanding if I got hit by a meteor, right?… Right?!

Day 301/365

“Wahoooooo!!!”, said the Slough family. Thanks Heidi for letting me tag along!

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Day 302/365

Evelyn & Yuly

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Day 303/365

The Moyes family. Again, thanks Heidi for letting me tag along :)

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Day 304/365

This is what it looks like when I wind up to my first frame on either of my new film cameras (the Holga and the Diana F+). I’m REALLY excited about showing you these! I’m going to be scanning and posting images from my film rolls soon. “Soon” as in soon after I check with NASA to make sure I’m not really getting hit by a meteor. (iPhone photo)

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Day 305/365

Beads… (iPhone photo)

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Day 306/365

Ok I have to talk about my personal favorite shots of Jennifer Klekas.

First off, Jen is a beautiful and immensely talented actress. I’ve seen her perform and she’s just stunning.

She dabbled in modeling when she was younger, apparently deciding she wasn’t any good at it. I know I know, “but look how beautiful she is!!!!”. Well, yes. But believe it or not, beauty isn’t everything in modeling. How you move has a lot to do with it. You shoot enough models and you start to get a feel for how models move just by looking at their portfolio, which is filled with STILL pictures. Don’t ask me how, you just develop a feel for who’s got it and who doesn’t.

Jen was kind of rusty but more than anything lacked some of the confidence she needed to move the way I knew she could. We still managed.

Anyway, the reason I wanna talk about Jen is because I got something that I’m really proud of.

And there it is:

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In the one on the left, her hair is a bit of a mess, she looks uncomfortable in her own pristine environment, her expression looks stunned. She looks out of her element. This is before the guests arrive.

In the other, she’s poised, in control, clean as a whistle, confident; she could get you to buy her a villa in the south of France if she felt like it. This is the only face you ever see when you’re around her.

Visually, the contrast is relatively subtle. But the contrast in the mood of each image is so stark, they’re unmistakably different.

So woohoo!! I’m excited to have pulled that off :)

And here’s the rest that I loved:

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Day 307/365

The mountain range across from my house, for the bazillionth time (iPhone photo)

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Day 308/365

Trinity

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A tender mother-daughter moment… Awww…

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Day 309/365

Don’t tell ME to slow down!!! (iPhone photo)

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I forgot to write it as such, but that last post was actually Day 268/365. So today, I start with Day 269/365 in what will hopefully be the last segment and exciting conclusion to the Broken Screen Trilogy.

I’m still trying to attach Spielberg as the director for it but we’ll see.

Trilogies are psychologically satisfying. They are the basic building blocks to any good story.

Beginning, middle and end. Exciting introduction, obstacle, resolution.

You could condense a movie trilogy’s story structure into a single movie as long as you keep its three act structure and it wouldn’t lose anything except the extensive details that allow Hollywood to milk as much money out of a franchise as they possibly can. But money aside, the three act structure is as old as time. Ok the Greeks came up with it but whatever. Go read up on Aristotle :P

Here’s the story arc to my little adventure:

Act 1, I received my new monitor and started setting it up. Exciting Introduction!

Act 2, I found out it was defective. Obstacle! RAWR!!

Act 3, I received an email from HP saying they’d send a replacement. Resolution!

Ball’s in your court Mr. Spielberg! I envision a $700 million budget with me in the lead role. I’ve instructed my imaginary agent to ask for $699 million of that. Good luck making a movie for a million bucks.

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The big monitor box, sitting there waiting for its replacement to arrive, while its two significantly smaller friends hang around in the background (iPhone photo)

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Day 270/365

After a tiring downtown shoot, I went up to Ensign Peak to relax and enjoy the view. I only managed 2 shots with my iPhone before I was caught.

I really love this shot. Anonymous, natural and best of all, peaceful (iPhone photo)

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Day 271/365

Ben & Liz

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Day 272/365

I actually shot maternity pictures that day, but the subject insisted I didn’t post any pictures online. Oh well. Lightpost in a parking lot (iPhone photo)

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The beautiful Kelly Kaye!

*APPLAUSE*

Day 99/365

Where do I even start…

The fact that I wanted badly to work with Kelly goes without saying. Her portfolio is certainly stunning and even intimidating, but she seemed to like my work, so I wasn’t gonna argue.

We set a shoot date and I started thinking about what I wanted to do. I kept drawing blanks, so I went location scouting. I decided I’d had my fill of run-down, “ugly” areas of downtown and wanted to go somewhere a bit more grand, a bit more poetic; probably a canyon. I settled on Emigration Canyon and headed off.

I drove and drove, got out of my car and walked where I wanted to take a closer look, but I couldn’t find anything that really blew me away. Sure, there were options, but nothing I was uncontainably excited about.

It wasn’t until just before sunset that I found this perfect little place where I decided I wanted to take Kelly. It had a beautiful little trail made of rocks, the view was spectacular, especially at sunset, and on and on. That was the place.

And before long, I knew what I wanted to do:

Barefoot hippie.

The idea struck a chord with me in a big way. Imagining her carefully gliding over a beautiful little trail made of rocks felt right. Maybe a bit heavy-handed, but I liked the idea anyway and I already had a specific picture in my mind.

So everything was ready to go. My model was booked, I’d found the perfect location, I had a concept in mind, I knew how much time we needed for hair and makeup and when we’d have to leave to get there in time for sunset and still have enough time to shoot in different places.

Then Kelly threw me a curveball…

FOX13 – yes, THAT FOX13 – wanted to shoot a story, which, in part, involved interviewing Kelly and getting some footage of her in action, on location, with me in charge.

“Ruh roh, Raggy”, said Scooby Doo.

Ruh roh indeed, Scooby. Maybe some Scooby Snacks will calm us both down.

I was already a bit intimidated by Kelly’s very strong portfolio, now I was going to have to shine with a FOX camera pointed at me some of the time. I can’t even imagine how Kelly must have felt. This was new for her too and she was nervous just like me, except the camera would be pointed at her most of the time.

On top of that, because of FOX’s schedule for when they were planning on doing the interview and shooting the in-action footage, we needed to come up with a new location somewhere in downtown Salt Lake and shoot at around 2pm.

Worst possible lighting scenario…

2pm lighting sucks. A lot. The light is harsh, ugly and very strong. There wasn’t a cloud in the sky to shield us from this. I needed to find some shade, but in downtown Salt Lake, that meant buildings. And buildings are boring, unless of course, they’re in run-down, “ugly” areas.

So much for having had my fill of it.

Here’s my favorite of that part of the shoot:

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Kelly had the whole day to do whatever we wanted and we had a gap of a few hours between when we shot for FOX and when we needed to go out to the canyon. So we decided to fit in one more look in between, and I already knew I’d been wanting to do a shoot with a model in black lingerie, on a bed, swimming in a big fluffy comforter, so I went for it:

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And finally, my vision of the hippie when I first went out to the canyon. The first shot was the picture I was after, the second works well with the concept and the third is probably my favorite and the most spectacular. It’s very encouraging and exciting to see the gap between my vision and my results become narrower:

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This didn’t really belong in the series, but it has a robotic, plastic mannequin, Marilyn Monroe feel to it that I absolutely love:

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I can’t tell you how hard it was for me to cut these pictures down to just six. We took 686 pictures in all and I assure you, there’s a lot of them I loved enormously.

There’s an expression that is common among artists.

“Kill your babies”

It’s when you have to choose to get rid of something you love but that you know doesn’t belong in your body of work. You’ve got all these little creations that you love equally, but you know you can’t keep them all, so instead of giving your babies up for adoption, you kill your babies.

I had a hard time killing mine with this shoot.

I hope this post was worth your wait and thanks for sticking with me this long! Giant shoutout to Kelly Kaye (model) and Jaylene Barbir (makeup artist) for such fantastic work and FOX13 (giant media corporation – you may have heard of them) for allowing me to promote my business through their story. Thanks also to Kelly’s husband who helped enormously in making this possible by holding up the gold reflector, a simple job but I can’t stress how crucial a role it was in capturing the shots I did.

I’ll let you all know as soon as I find out when the story airs on FOX.

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