Category Archives: photography

Summer’s Serenity

Seascape Photography Summers Serenity Summers Serenity

Summer’s Serenity, Seascape Photography

Eeeek! I can’t believe I haven’t officially shared this photograph with you yet! It’s one I made last summer, I guess things got a little crazy with my artist in residency at Beausoleil Island that it slipped through the blogging cracks. You probably recognize it from our May desktop calendar plus it was the cover image for both our 2013 wall calendar and 5×7 calendar.

I just wanted to share with you a few details from this early morning session in Bayfield. I’d seen these rocks during my location scout, and as you can see, they’re in the water. I remember the water level was up and down that week with rain and hot dry spells so I had no idea what I’d be in for when I showed up at the beach. Luckily the rock in the foreground was just at the water’s edge so I was still able to get some of the coarse beach sand in the bottom left, then a band of foggy water fading out into the smoothness of the lake. For those of you just tuning in you can click through to read all about how I create the look of calm water in my seascape photographs, hint – it’s done entirely in camera.

Here’s how my schedule looked that day:

2:50 am – wake up call

3:20 am – load car and leave for Bayfield, gear was packed the night before

4:45 am – arrive at the beach in Bayfield, set up and begin photographing in pre-sunrise light

5:48 am – sunrise, keep shooting

6:00 am – wrap shoot and head back to the studio

7:30 am – arrive back at the studio and unpack the car

7:45 am – begin downloading and backing up files

8:00 am – breakfast

~ Spent the morning tending to client orders ~

1:45 pm - choose selects, tweak images for colour, contrast, lightness, and darkness, process raw files

2:15 pm – retouch

3:00 pm – send test prints to the lab and archive final image

And here’s a little video so you can get a sense of how beautiful it was out on the beach {if you’re reading via email or RSS you’ll likely need to click through to our blog to see it}:

Days like these can be busy and long but they’re oh so rewarding I’d never trade them in. Plus, it’s awesome to start my day on the beach!

Leave a comment

Tags - , , , , , , , , , , ,

Published – Delicious. Magazine, The Netherlands

Delicious Magazine Photographs 201304 009 Published   Delicious. Magazine, The Netherlands

When Maaike Koorman from Delicious. magazine emailed me in November I was thrilled! She wanted to use Elviage Pearl for the introduction image to the appetizer section of their Christmas issue. Heck ya! Count me in!

Delicious Magazine Photographs 201304 017 Published   Delicious. Magazine, The Netherlands

The Christmas issue is stunning! I’m so used to seeing food photographed on a white background I had no idea it could be so gorgeous on rich dark grey. And the food looks, well, delicious! The magazine is entirely in dutch but I may have to translate a few of these recipes.

What are your favourite food magazines? And what do you like best about them? Is it the diversity of recipes? Loads of gorgeous photographs? Or the easy to follow instructions?

4 Comments

Tags - , , , , ,

Anita’s Kitchener Stairway

stairway photos 4 Anitas Kitchener Stairway

Anita spent six months choosing the perfect shade of white for her stairway. Saturday Paper by Valspar. Talk about a girl after my own heart. She’s drawn to natural things and wanted to create a casual collection of winter photography to hang in her stairway, a mix of professional images and a few she made herself.

Anita’s frames are a mix of Ikea, thrift store, and re-purposed frames that she already had, all in varying sizes. She kept the Ikea Ribba frames their original black and sprayed the rest silver using a combination of Rustoleum’s Silver and Stainless Steel paints. She had her local Framing & Art store cut mats so everything matched, plus because some of the pieces were so small they were able to use off-cuts, which ended up being less expensive than buying them pre-cut.

stairway photos 6 Anitas Kitchener Stairway

She scoured sites like Pinterest and magazines including Canadian House + Home and Style at Home looking for gallery wall ideas and quickly learnt what her tastes were. Anita’s a page ripper, whenever she sees something she likes she tears the page out of the magazine and puts it in a file. She prefers Canadian decorating magazines for their real life style, American mags tend to be over the top and clearly only filled with homes of lottery winners.

When she had a rough idea of her design she cut out paper templates for each frame and started taping them to her wall, which was a big help, tweaking things as she went. Once she got the layout the way she wanted it she started hanging her photographs at the top of the stairs, leaving three inches between the pieces vertically and four inches horizontally.

stairway photos 1 Anitas Kitchener Stairway

See anything there that looks familiar? Anita framed two of our notecards to include in her collection – Vanilla Dream and Cornsilk Glaze

Anita’s best advice?

Measure, measure, and measure one more time. It really does make a difference with how it looks. Having lived with it for a few days now I’m really happy I took the time in planning it.

Have you  hung any artwork lately? A gallery wall or a stand alone piece? Or are you planning an art attack in the next few months?

Leave a comment

Tags - , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Blushing Bog

landscape photography london ontario canada sifton bog blushing bog Blushing Bog

Blushing Bog, Landscape Photography

I woke up to another beautifully foggy morning this past fall. It hung heavy over the city creating a cozy blanket of wonderfully soft light. My early dawn walk through the Sifton Bog was filled with woodland magic, deer and all. One of the nice things about fall frosts is that it casts a thin layer of white on all the brown leaves turning them a soft pink, making a chilly day less bleak.

landscape photography london ontario canada sifton bog 018 Blushing Bog

landscape photography london ontario canada sifton bog 011 Blushing Bog

Where are your favourite places to go in the fog?

Leave a comment

Tags - , ,

Landscape Photography – A Foggy Season in London

Fog Landscape Photography Morning Delight Landscape Photography   A Foggy Season in London

Morning Delight, Landscape Photography

This winter has certainly been a rough go for minimalist tree photographs, we’ll get a dumping of snow then it warms up the next day and the bulk of it disappears. So my choices are no visibility and poor road conditions or patchy snow that doesn’t do much to hide the grass or the background.

Fog Landscape Photography Unbridled Wonder Landscape Photography   A Foggy Season in London

Unbridled Wonder, Landscape Photography

{You may recognize Unbridled Wonder from our March 2013 Desktop Calendar, if you haven’t downloaded yours yet you can do so here.}

Fog Landscape Photography Orchard Fog Landscape Photography   A Foggy Season in London

Orchard Fog, Landscape Photography

Fog Landscape Photography Fledgling Landscape Photography   A Foggy Season in London

Fledgling, Landscape Photography

Fog Landscape Photography Vanilla Dream Autumn Fog Landscape Photography   A Foggy Season in London

Vanilla Dream, Autumn Fog, , Landscape Photography

So I’m left to play in the fog, which we’ve had quite a bit of. It makes driving visibility terrible for getting to locations but at least the roads tend to be dry. I click to the Weather Network each morning to see the prospects for the coming days and snow still seems like a distant dream.

What do you think? Do you still prefer my Winter Tree Photographs? Or is the style too distinctly different that they can’t even be compared? And how do you like the black and white? Too eerie?

1 Comment

Tags - , , , , , , , ,

Winter Pinterest Photo Project – Sweet Caramelly Tarts

20130225 ChocolateCaramelTarts 217 comparison1 Winter Pinterest Photo Project   Sweet Caramelly Tarts

Hi everyone! Sorry I’m late! The past two days have been a mess of technical issues around here with software problems topping the list. I had the bulk of this post ready to go then other things took priority and here we are. But now I’m ready to share the results of my Pinterest Photo Project – and let me tell you, I learnt a lot.

20130221 pinterestfoodinspirationboard Winter Pinterest Photo Project   Sweet Caramelly Tarts

Looking through my Food Photography Inspiration pins I decided it was a good time to experiment more with photographing on a rich, dark background instead of my usual bright whites and the like. When I was in college one of our assignments was to find a photograph in a magazine and reproduce it. Ya, I know some people think it’s blatant copying but as long as I give credit where credit’s due and I’m not trying to sell it then I’m all for reproductions as a learning experience.

My image of choice was the Salted Chocolate Caramel Tarts from Sweet Paul Magazine (image on page 59 and recipe on page 63, in case you were wondering), with original photography by Linda Pugliese and Food Styling by Paul Lowe. It was a long, sticky process, and I made lots of mistakes along the way, and it re-affirmed to me that photographing fussy food really isn’t my thing. Real food is where my heart is, the messier the better.

20130225 ChocolateCaramelTarts 010 Winter Pinterest Photo Project   Sweet Caramelly Tarts

I started by making the tart shells which was when I realized that all may not be what it seemed. In unbaked form mine were quite a bit darker than the ones pictured. Hmmm… Interesting. And since I didn’t have tart pans I just used our muffin pans with silicone liners. Clearly I should have spent more time fussing with the outer edges so they looked all nicey-nice like in their image. I thought it might just work out and give me a corrugated effect once they were baked but that didn’t really happen.

Next I whipped up the caramel. I’ve made it a number of times before but it’s been a while because Darren can’t shouldn’t have eggs or dairy and I haven’t really thought about how to make it without. I cooked it as per the recipe but I guess I should have let it simmer longer since mine didn’t get nearly as golden as the stuff pictured. I poured it into my shells and got busy with the chocolate.

20130225 ChocolateCaramelTarts 131 Winter Pinterest Photo Project   Sweet Caramelly Tarts

My chocolate seized. Or it started to anyways. It went all lumpy. I don’t know what happened, maybe I overcooked it or maybe some water splashed into it. So I pulled it off the double boiler, transferred it to a cool bowl, stuck it in the freezer for five minutes to cool down, added a bit more milk, and tried heating it again. Nadda. Nothing. Still a lumpy mess, and we don’t even need to talk about what it looks like… Since I’d used the last of my whipping cream I decided to just melt some dark chocolate and drizzle with that – bingo!

Now onto the photography…

20130225 ChocolateCaramelTarts 041 Winter Pinterest Photo Project   Sweet Caramelly Tarts

I used my empty silicone muffin cups and the composition tool in Capture One Pro 7 to line up the shot. I don’t get a chance to overlay my work with a layout very often and I’m always amazed at how awesome it works. I shot tethered, positioned my camera, and nudged the cups around until everything lined up. Fantastic.

20130225 ChocolateCaramelTarts 062 Winter Pinterest Photo Project   Sweet Caramelly Tarts

Next I swapped out the cups for the tart shells just to see how they’d look and to get them into position so I could fill them. Again, overlay = awesome! At this point I was able to start working the light a bit, lowering the shade on my main light (a nice big window) and adding in a black reflector to the left to help deepen the shadows.

20130225 ChocolateCaramelTarts 116 Winter Pinterest Photo Project   Sweet Caramelly Tarts

I spooned in the caramel and adjusted the lighting further to make the top of the filling look good, added a few grains of salt around the tarts, and drizzled on the melted chocolate.

20130225 ChocolateCaramelTarts 120 Winter Pinterest Photo Project   Sweet Caramelly Tarts

Only a few minutes passed before my caramel lost what little lustre it had. Interesting. It took a bit of tweaking to make the chocolate look good, smoothing it over with a warm spoon, and touching up the edges with a metal skewer. I had to work fast too so everything was in place before it started to set.

20130225 ChocolateCaramelTarts 125 Winter Pinterest Photo Project   Sweet Caramelly Tarts

I added several grains of salt to the centre of the tarts and everything was looking as good as it could given the bumps I’d hit along the way. Then it was the moment of truth, cutting open those babies.

20130225 ChocolateCaramelTarts 126 Winter Pinterest Photo Project   Sweet Caramelly Tarts

20130225 ChocolateCaramelTarts 128 Winter Pinterest Photo Project   Sweet Caramelly Tarts

I guess I was excited. I wasn’t really thinking. I’ve photographed honey and other gooey things lots of times before but I failed to remember that these things need to set. I had carefully marked where the breaks were going to be and as soon as I started to cut, a caramelly tidal wave ensued and all I could do was stand back and photograph it.

20130225 ChocolateCaramelTarts 140 Winter Pinterest Photo Project   Sweet Caramelly Tarts

20130225 ChocolateCaramelTarts 161 Winter Pinterest Photo Project   Sweet Caramelly Tarts

It was definitely time for a cup of tea and to rethink this whole process. I needed a brain break. So I played around with a silicone muffin liner and some cacao nibs on the dark background, while my spare tarts were in the fridge firming up. Unfortunately I had already drizzled my extras with chocolate so that would be firming up too, not exactly the look I was going for but definitely something to keep in mind next time.

20130225 ChocolateCaramelTarts 212 Winter Pinterest Photo Project   Sweet Caramelly Tarts

I got everything all lined up again, just like the first time.

20130225 ChocolateCaramelTarts 216 Winter Pinterest Photo Project   Sweet Caramelly Tarts

Sprinkled on the salt at the last.

20130225 ChocolateCaramelTarts 217 Winter Pinterest Photo Project   Sweet Caramelly Tarts

20130225 ChocolateCaramelTarts 218 Winter Pinterest Photo Project   Sweet Caramelly Tarts

And I held my breath as I cut into it. This time I chose to cut the bottom edge. I figured there was a very good chance of another caramelly tidal wave and it would make the most visual sense if it flowed downward. And it did.

20130225 ChocolateCaramelTarts 217 hero Winter Pinterest Photo Project   Sweet Caramelly Tarts

After a little bit of work in Photoshop here’s where we stand. I prefer to use Photoshop as a last resort, getting everything as right as rain in camera and making only the smallest of tweaks after, but with the way things went with this shoot it ended up being my best bet.

It’s as though everything that could have gone wrong with these tarts did. Welcome to delicate fussy foods, clearly it pays to have a food stylist.

How did your Pinterest Photo Project fare? We’d love to hear all about it! Post links to your blog, Flickr, or wherever you’ve posted your images publicly online for us all to take a peek at. It would be great if you could link back to us and to the original image on Pinterest that inspired you. I’m soooo excited to see what you’ve been up to!

2 Comments

Tags -

Pinterest Photo Project

20130221 pinterestfoodinspirationboard Pinterest Photo Project

I’ve been a loyal Young House Love reader for some time now and when I saw it was time for their Winter Pinterest Challenge I was both inspired and disheartened. I sooooo wanted to be a part of it but we have so many house projects on the go, plus we’re in the middle of a studio redo, that I can’t even imagine taking on something else right now. But I want to play too! So after much brainstorming with Darren last night the Pinterest Photo Project was born {B-O-R-N Born!}.

Our Pinterest Photo Project is meant to inspire me to look through my pins of photographs I’ve been dying to make or new techniques I’ve been yearning to try and stop drooling and start shooting. Wanna play too? Your project can be as big as styling a hotel in an exotic location (and if that’s the case, bring me along!) or as small as trying out a new technique when snapping pictures of your kids. When you’re done write a blog post about it and link back to the original source of your inspiration, then pat yourself on the back for a mission accomplished.

Go forth into the world with your cameras in hand! And come on back here next Thursday (the 28th) to share your photographs and see what we’ve been up to.

As you can see from my board, I’ve been anxious to work on some new food photographs. My plan is to pick up any props and ingredients over the weekend and get into the photography on Monday. Some of those dishes look tast-y so I’m a little concerned that my subject will never make it to the plate, and instead head straight for my belly… What type of photo project would you like to try? Sports? Food? A self portrait? Or is there a technique you’d like to test out? Maybe macro, long exposures, or using flash?

* Oh, and for those of you that I know will ask, this project is not sponsored or endorsed by Pinterest, just a little something I want to do to stop planning and take action. *

1 Comment

Tags -

Foggy Landscapes – Gibbons Park

Landscape Photography A Place To Dream Foggy Landscapes   Gibbons Park

A Place to Dream, Landscape Photography

Landscape Photography Whisper To Me Foggy Landscapes   Gibbons Park

Whisper To Me, Landscape Photography

Landscape Photography An Unexpected Journey Foggy Landscapes   Gibbons Park

An Unexpected Journey, Landscape Photography

Landscape Photography Morning Run Foggy Landscapes   Gibbons Park

Morning Run, Landscape Photography

Fog, oh beautiful, elusive fog. You always take me by surprise. How I love playing in your wake. You make the light soft and beautiful, put smiles on people’s faces, and fill the morning with magic.

More to come.

6 Comments

Tags - , , , , , , ,

Newfoundland Landscape Photography

Newfoundland Landscape Photography Romp Newfoundland Landscape Photography

Romp, Newfoundland Landscape Photography

Late last summer, just two short weeks after our stint on Beausoleil Island, Darren and I took a last minute trip to Bell Island, Newfoundland to visit my family and walk the land that my Dad grew up on. I hadn’t been there since 2004, the year before he passed away, and I knew it was going to be hard but worth it tenfold. A few of my aunts were going so we tagged along, it was such an amazing way to get to know them better.

Evenings on Bell Island are beautiful! Big family dinner with my aunts and cousins then winding down with Darren on the cliff’s edge for sunset. I remember visiting this spot with my Dad the last time we were there, not the most glamorous walk to get here but the view makes you forget about it completely. Take a deep breath, inhale the fresh air off the sea, and relax, because you’re home.

Newfoundland Landscape Photography Generations Newfoundland Landscape PhotographyGenerations, Newfoundland Landscape Photography

I come here almost every time I’m in Newfoundland. See that tiny white building on the horizon? It’s Bell Island’s lighthouse. I remember going there with my Dad and hearing about how this is the new lighthouse. The old one was more traditional but it was too close to the cliff’s edge and tests showed the ground there was slowly becoming unstable.

My Dad loved looking out over the cliff’s edge, I mean, how could you not. Check out those stripes in the rock, there’s so much to look at, so much natural history. And the colour that evening was amazing. Photographing the lighthouse was high on my list of image priorities, but it was more of a souvenir for myself and the details weren’t important, so I chose to step way back and get it all – the vastness of the landscape, the strange rocky pillars that surround the island, the cliffs, the layers of earth, the sea, and a nod to my Dad and his stories of the lighthouse.

Newfoundland Landscape Photography The Beach Newfoundland Landscape Photography

Bell Island Beach, Newfoundland Landscape Photography

Darren and I always make a point of spending some time on the beach, skipping stones, daring each other into the ice cold water, and watching the ferries go back and forth. Aren’t you just dying to know what’s in that opening in the rock? Me too.

Newfoundland Landscape Photography The Watch Newfoundland Landscape Photography

The Watch, Cape Spear, Newfoundland Landscape Photography

On this trip we ventured off Bell Island a few times, something we never did when we went with my Dad. He just wanted to spend time at the house he grew up in. My cousin drove us out to Cape Spear, the most easterly point in North America, where we got to check out the oldest surviving lighthouse in Newfoundland and Labrador, built way back in 1839. It’s no longer in operation and just sits on the cliff’s edge for us to bask in it’s charm.

Newfoundland Landscape Photography Cape Spear Lighthouse In Fog Newfoundland Landscape PhotographyCape Spear Lighthouse in Fog, Newfoundland Landscape Photography

Newfoundland Landscape Photography Other World Newfoundland Landscape Photography

Other World, Newfoundland Fog Photography

The old lighthouse was taken out of service in 1955 when a new concrete one was built in a more modern iconic lighthouse style. As soon as we arrived the fog rolled in like a house on fire, blanketing the cliff like a cloud on a mountain top. So we didn’t get to revel in the view from up there but it definitely gave me a chance to play with my camera in the fog Newfoundland is known for.

20120920 newfoundland 090 Newfoundland Landscape Photography

What comes to your mind when you think of Newfoundland? The cliffs, the sea, the rock? Or jellybean row and lighthouses?

2 Comments

Tags - , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Displaying Photography Like Christie

Displaying Photography 2 Framed 11x14s of Beach Scenes Displaying Photography Like Christie

Christie from Calgary sent me the nicest email along with photos of my work hanging in her home and she’s agreed to let me share them with you. Thanks Christie!

The 8×10 beach photographs (shown above) are displayed in large square brushed silver frames from Crate and Barrel measuring 14.75 x 14.75 inches and are a nice 1.38 inches deep – don’t you just love deep frames? Plus they come with a pre-cut 8×10 off-white mat so all she needed to do was insert the landscape and hang. Easy as pie, huh?

Displaying Photography 2 Framed 8x10s of Winter Trees Displaying Photography Like Christie

Christie also has two winter tree photographs in her living room, don’t you just love the presentation? Symmetry makes my heart flutter… I’m totally digging the snowy pinecone, it works perfectly with the colour palette and I love the idea of bringing the outdoors in, especially in the winter months. As for the framing, Christie writes:

The bright white frames are from Chapters, while the mats are a more subdued neutral white and they both contrast nicely with the photo content. Working on a very clean, flat work surface – measure, measure, measure! I used acid free linen hanging tape just at the top of the photo to hang it within the frame. I used equal borders on the top and sides, and a slightly weighted border at the bottom. The print size allowed ample room to accomplish this within the mat window, and allowed comfortable spacing to display the signature.

The frames themselves are one inch wide, so the two are hung about 1 1/4 inches apart. As the two now make a grouping, I hung them on the wall so that the centre of the grouping (which includes the space between the frames) is 60″ off the floor. Although some art hanging guidelines offer 57″ as a rule of thumb, the 60″ measure (as suggested by Canadian House and Home) looks right in this context and it’s the one I most often use. It’s only a guideline though, and much depends on the wall height, any furniture beneath or beside the work which can make up a composition, and whether people will be sitting or standing when viewing it. Context is more important than numbers.

As for actually hanging them on the wall in the right place – math! Oh, the math! Or trial and error.

What have you hung on your walls recently? And where did you get your frames from? Are you doing it yourself or having a framer take care of it for you?

Leave a comment

Tags - , , , , , ,