Posts Tagged ‘photographer’

India: A cacophonous mixture in Sadar Bazaar

India: A cacophonous mixture in Sadar Bazaar

Sadar Bazaar is a virtual gridlock of humanity, erupting in an explosion that impacts all the senses. A cacophonous mixture of hawkers, porters, rickshaw wallahs and traffic-trapped motorists add a sense of urgency and thrill to the mesmerizing turmoil. Aromatic spices of vendors peddling food waft in and out of the congested, overflowing labyrinth of [...]


India: 525 children living in a tiger preserve

India: 525 children living in a tiger preserve

In the middle of a tiger preserve, eighty miles from medical facilities, in an area frequented by Maoist terrorists, live 525 orphans and children at risk. They have no electricity and live in mud and straw homes. Yet, Central India Christian Mission provides food and education for them in the best way their current resources [...]


India: Daily life-wheat harvest

India: Daily life-wheat harvest

Last fall, while traveling throughout India, I hoped to happen upon a woman in a colorful sari working in the lush green of a rice paddy. It did not happen. This spring, on a return trip, wheat was being harvested and I began to wistfully search for a red sari in one of the amazingly [...]


India: Creative jumpstart

India: Creative jumpstart

This most recent trip to India was the first time I really used the iPhone, along with the apps Instagram and Snapseed, to produce images that are worth sharing and archiving. My travel companions @jonsturdevant and @Andrewtuce and I were constantly comparing the images we produced in our downtime. The term we used when scouting [...]


India: Cemetery sunrise on Easter

India: Cemetery sunrise on Easter

Sakshi, 8, sprinkles flower petals on her brother’s grave on Easter morning in central India. Four-thirty on Easter Sunday morning, the cool pre-dawn air in the cemetery is infused with the sweet smells of incense and candle smoke. The cacophony of morning traffic and the dry heat of 100+ afternoons is still hours away. Stillness [...]


World: The Begging Conundrum

World: The Begging Conundrum

Begging. It makes us nervous. We squirm. We try to look away. We attempt to ignore. But many places I go in the world I can’t ignore those that are begging. My heart screams to help. My head, in frantic fits of logic tells me why helping is a bad idea. While the poverty is [...]


Hawaii: Teaching Amid the Palms

Hawaii: Teaching Amid the Palms

Vivian and I love being guest teachers in Hawaii, at the University of the Nations in Kona. That’s easy to believe, right? For more than a decade now, we’ve had the opportunity to teach here for one week each January. Ok, it’s an awesome gig spending a week in a tropical paradise, but even if [...]


University of North Carolina: Energized by Students

University of North Carolina: Energized by Students

Vivian and I appreciate photography lovers of of all kinds. We especially love talking with college and university students who are launching their photo careers. This year we’ve spoken at several schools where we’ve had the privilege of reviewing portfolios, and listening to the unique stories that have shaped these students’ path. It’s energizing and [...]


India-Nepal: Four Faiths and a Lot of Questions

India-Nepal: Four Faiths and a Lot of Questions

Four faiths all leading to the same place? The same end? Can everyone be right? Are there multiple roads to eternity that all join together as they near a place called heaven? Can I do enough good works to merit a place in heaven? What do I really deserve? Is it us vs them…a fight [...]


India-Nepal: Choosing the “right” lenses…at least for me…right now…until next trip!

India-Nepal: Choosing the "right" lenses...at least for me...right now...until next trip!

The combination of lenses I use when I travel is constantly changing. On one trip I will go super light, so light that I, on purpose, don’t look like a pro. Other times I will carry everything from 14mm up to 300 and throw in a tilt shift and an extender just to test airline [...]


Rwanda: Portraits Under Pressure

Have you ever felt the almost paralyzing fear of realizing you have 5 minutes to pull off a story-telling, engaging portrait and nothing seems to be working in your favor? There is no time to set up the lights you brought, even though you ditched your mantra of “carry-on luggage only” to bring the extra [...]


Rwanda: Farmers of Mbilima

While in Rwanda, working for Land of a Thousand Hills Coffee in Atlanta, I had the privilege of spending time with a group of coffee farmers that were thrilled with their harvest and excited to be working with the Atlanta based company. Before this trip, I knew little about coffee and only occasionally drank it. [...]


Home: Simplify

  Simplify. Throw away. Give away. Sell. And above all…think before buying anything else. This has been our mandate for the last several months. Vivian and I tossed twenty-five full, black garbage bags of prints, transparencies, tear-sheets and photo album pages in the trash. Things once precious had become an anchor. We decided to get [...]


Atlanta: Under the Bridges

Matt Brandon of The Digital Trekker once asked me during an interview if I ever did any humanitarian photographic work in my own backyard, Atlanta. I was stumped. I have traveled days to get to a remote village in many of the 60+ countries I have photographed in. But I have never had  an assignment [...]


Israel: The Art of War

I have only been to Israel once and harbor no pretense of truly understanding the horrors of the conflict between Israelis and Palestinians in and near Gaza. On a recent trip, I was shown the remains of the more than 6,000 rockets that were launched from Gaza into the Israeli border town of Sderot over [...]


Pakistan: Brick-maker Image Overlooked

During the process of looking through our archived images of Pakistan for another grant proposal we are making, I came across this image that I had totally overlooked. I normally mark images with one, two or three stars in the editing phase. This image had none. Yet, it tells so much about the poor laborers [...]


Home: Alone and not liking it!

Normally, I am the one to go out of the country while my wife Vivian, who only sometimes travels with me, minds all of the day to day “stuff” of the home. This week I have not been adding loads of frequent flyer miles to my account. I have been at home by myself and [...]


Puerto Rico: Travel Glamour

It all seems glamorous…shooting a sunset of El Morro in Puerto Rico while enjoying warm tropical breezes. But behind that image are also the unglamorous underpinnings of travel: airline cancelations, rebooking and cancelations again…scrambling to find a last minute and expensive hotel…3:30 a.m. wakeup calls for a 6 a.m. flight that may or not happen [...]


Humanitarian Photographers Day 3

And now, for the final three, I want to introduce you to you Matt Powell, Matt Brandon and Esther Havens. If you read Day 1 or Day 2 just skip to the photos!  Here is what I said yesterday. It still stands! “How in the world do you make a living as a humanitarian photographer?” [...]


Humanitarian Photographers Day 2

Today I want to introduce you to you Austin Mann, Lindsay Branham and David Johnson. Come back tomorrow for the last three photographers. No use laboring over saying something new. Here is what I said yesterday. It still stands! “How in the world do you make a living as a humanitarian photographer?” That is the [...]


Humanitarian Photographers Day 1

“How in the world do you make a living as a humanitarian photographer?” That is the question, implied or direct, that I get asked almost every week. My answers don’t always satisfy, so I asked nine photographers that specialize in humanitarian photography if and/or how they augment their earnings from this type of photography to [...]


Football: Entrance to the World

Soccer is the world’s game. It is a universal language. But don’t call it soccer. Call it football. Carry a ball with you to almost any part of the world, and once you bring it out you will be surrounded by kids. If you play the game well, you will be given immediate entrance to [...]


Panama: Teaching

Just returned from three days of teaching for Panama Photo Workshops. A teacher’s job is made so much easier when students ask great questions and draw from the teacher. This was a great class. Thanks to Tito Herrera and all of the students! This time-lapse of the class was shot at one frame every second [...]


Jerusalem: Christian

Tourist traps are anathema to me. I had never wanted to visit Jerusalem because of the envisioned legions of tourist buses crowding the historic sites. I was predisposed to look on cynically as thousands of Christians from all over the world come to the Old City of Jerusalem to “walk where Jesus walked.” And thousands [...]