Share Six Blog Circle – March 2018 | Contrast

Massachusetts Photographer | © Ceri Herd Photography

Another month, another Share Six theme! This month we’re looking at {Contrast}.

I’ll admit this theme has had me drawing a blank for quite some time. I’ve come to the conclusion that that is because there are so many opportunities within the theme: high contrast, low contrast, contrast and comparison between multiple images, deep and rich black and whites, soft matte muted tones, the juxtaposition of subject through double exposures… I mean really, the possibilities are endless! Where do I begin?

Since we moved to MA last July it is safe to say that my style has evolved into two distinct parts. On the one hand I am still documenting our lives, I think in a more successful and yet less intrusive way, but on the other I have also allowed myself more creative freedom. I find myself increasingly drawn to tone and texture and away from the high contrast light that was such a dominating factor of our previous home in the desert. The monochromatic winter, the low-contrast soft light has enthralled me:

Massachusetts Photographer | © Ceri Herd Photography

Massachusetts Photographer | © Ceri Herd PhotographyMassachusetts Photographer | © Ceri Herd Photography

This next image was taken during the autumn when the leaves on the trees still dominated the view from our deck. It is a view that is so calming to me, but not because of the way that it looks. A single traditional exposure shows the number of trees, layer upon layer them, and as an image that is not calming. It is busy and unstructured. It does not capture the noise of the breeze through the trees, the smell of the pine sap or the sound of birds singing and chipmunks calling. It does not capture the easing of your breath as you relax into the surroundings.Massachusetts Photographer | © Ceri Herd Photography

Contrary to my previous statement about being drawn to low contrast light and away from deep shadows, as I took trail through woodland recently I was struck by the zebra-like stripes of shadow that lay in front of me. I wanted to capture that texture, the contrast of light and dark, in the direction that the light fell to exaggerate the rays. As photographers we often talk about how light “falls” so I wanted the viewer to see movement in that light.Massachusetts Photographer | © Ceri Herd Photography

My final image in this set was taken on the trail on the same day as the previous one no more than 5 minutes later. Technically and visually, quite the contrast but still very much me.  I have been experimenting with achieving patches of focus in-camera, and I’m enjoying the post-snow return of muted colour.Massachusetts Photographer | © Ceri Herd Photography

Thank you for joining us for another month at Share Six. Please continue around the circle by clicking HERE. I can’t wait to see how the exceptionally talented Sharleen of Sharleen Stuart Photography interpreted this month’s theme.

Join us for this month’s theme by posting your {contrast} images on our Facebook page at SHARE SIX and to our Instagram gallery, by tagging #sharesix and #sharesix_contrast. A new theme will be posted on 6th April.

Share Six Contributor

Inspired by Life Blog Circle | A month of Lensbaby

Massachusetts Photographer | © Ceri Herd Photography

I’m thrilled to be joining another group of talented photographers for a new monthly blog circle. I’m going to be using the {Inspired by Life} posts to share some of my favourites images from the previous month’s 365. I haven’t admitted it publically but I kick-started my second 365 this January. I’m yet to compile the results of my first 365 (2015-2016) so I was reluctant to start another but a new lens for Christmas and the learning curve that followed meant a solid month of practice was necessary. What better way to start a 365 than a month of the project already complete!

As many of my photographer friends know, I lusted after all the Lensbaby lenses for quite some time. It was only a matter of time until one found its way to me. Christmas 2017 my Lensbaby wishes came true and I became the proud owner of an Edge 80. Unsurprisingly, given my love of dreamy softness, it didn’t take long for it to feel like home.

Before I get around to the 365 images I thought I’d share with you my starting point: Christmas Day. We were also brought a beautiful winter storm, so my very first images with my Lensbaby were through windows out onto a snowy wonderland.

Massachusetts Photographer | © Ceri Herd Photography

Massachusetts Photographer | ©CeriHerdPhotography

With a few more days practice under my belt, 2018 rolled around and my Month of Lensbaby began:

Massachusetts Photographer | © Ceri Herd Photography

Day 1

Massachusetts Photographer | © Ceri Herd Photography

Day 2

Massachusetts Photographer | © Ceri Herd Photography

Day 3

Massachusetts Photographer | © Ceri Herd Photography

Day 4

Massachusetts Photographer | © Ceri Herd Photography

Day 5

Massachusetts Photographer | © Ceri Herd Photography

Day 6

Massachusetts Photographer | © Ceri Herd Photography

Day 7

Massachusetts Photographer | © Ceri Herd Photography

Day 8

Massachusetts Photographer | © Ceri Herd Photography

Day 9

Massachusetts Photographer | © Ceri Herd Photography

Day 10

Massachusetts Photographer | © Ceri Herd Photography

Day 11

Massachusetts Photographer | © Ceri Herd Photography

Day 12

Massachusetts Photographer | © Ceri Herd Photography

Day 13

Massachusetts Photographer | © Ceri Herd Photography

Day 14

Massachusetts Photographer | © Ceri Herd Photography

Day 15

Massachusetts Photographer | © Ceri Herd Photography

Day 16

Massachusetts Photographer | © Ceri Herd Photography

Day 17

Massachusetts Photographer | © Ceri Herd Photography

Day 18

Massachusetts Photographer | © Ceri Herd Photography

Day 19

Massachusetts Photographer | © Ceri Herd Photography

Day 20

Massachusetts Photographer | © Ceri Herd Photography

Day 21

Massachusetts Photographer | © Ceri Herd Photography

Day 22

Massachusetts Photographer | © Ceri Herd Photography

Day 23

Massachusetts Photographer | © Ceri Herd Photography

Day 24

Massachusetts Photographer | © Ceri Herd Photography

Day 25

Massachusetts Photographer | © Ceri Herd Photography

Day 26

Massachusetts Photographer | © Ceri Herd Photography

Day 27

Massachusetts Photographer | © Ceri Herd Photography

Day 28

Massachusetts Photographer | © Ceri Herd Photography

Day 29

Massachusetts Photographer | © Ceri Herd Photography

Day 30

Massachusetts Photographer | © Ceri Herd Photography

Day 31

Thank you for taking the time to scroll all the way through! If you’ve made it this far please continue around the blog circle. Click Here to see what the wonderfully talented Melissa Clemons has shared with us this month.

Until next time,

~Ceri

10 on 10 Blog Circle – February 2018 | Massachusetts Photographer

Massachusetts Photographer | 10 on 10 NYC | © Ceri Herd Photography

For this month’s 10 on 10 I want to share a collection of images from our recent trip to New York City with you. I’ve shared many images from the trip on my blog and in on social media sites, but most of these will be new to you, I hope.

My youngest son turned 6 in January. He loves all things numbers, and over the last year or so that has translated into a love of big buildings: how tall they are, how many floors they have, when they were built… it’s an all-round fascination with numerical facts. He has a real love of learning and thirst for knowledge, these facts light him up! Back in October at his first parent-teacher conference his Kindergarten teacher asked if it was true that we would be taking him to the Empire State Building for his birthday. I had mentioned it to him once, a vague possibility when the thought popped into my head, but he’d clearly taken to heart and after telling all his friends there we simply had to go! (He has since told his class that we’re moving to Dubai… because of the Burj Khalifa, obviously… which FYI is NOT happening).

So off we went to (a desperately cold) NYC!

Massachusetts Photographer | 10 on 10 NYC | © Ceri Herd Photography

Inside the Empire State Building

Massachusetts Photographer | 10 on 10 NYC | © Ceri Herd Photography

The Birthday Boy posing atop the Empire State Building, a dream come true! (This is his new posing for a photo face, a rare and beautiful thing)

Massachusetts Photographer | 10 on 10 NYC | © Ceri Herd Photography

Empire View

Massachusetts Photographer | 10 on 10 NYC | © Ceri Herd Photography

Top of the Rock (big building number two)

Massachusetts Photographer | 10 on 10 NYC | © Ceri Herd Photography

View from the Rockefeller Center

Massachusetts Photographer | 10 on 10 NYC | © Ceri Herd Photography

One World Trade Center (big building number three)

Massachusetts Photographer | 10 on 10 NYC | © Ceri Herd Photography

Manhattan : Liberty Island

Massachusetts Photographer | 10 on 10 NYC | © Ceri Herd Photography

Statue of Liberty (big building number four)

Massachusetts Photographer | 10 on 10 NYC | © Ceri Herd Photography

Walking, So Much Walking

Massachusetts Photographer | 10 on 10 NYC | © Ceri Herd Photography

Restricting my share to 10 was SO hard this month but I think heart strings and artistic stings have found an adequate balance this time!

Up next in the 10 on 10 Blog Circle is the immensely talented Jessie Wixon of Jessie Wixon Photography. CLICK HERE to see her 10 images for this month.

Thanks for stopping by!

~Ceri

Share Six Blog Circle – February 2018 | Colour

Massachusetts Photographer | Share Six Colour Color | ©CeriHerdPhotography

It’s Share Six blog circle time again. These months seem to fly by with increasingly more speed!

This month we’re looking at {Colour} or {Color} (depending on your nationality and/or location). It’s such a great theme for this time of year, and I hope it helps you, as it does for me on this unusually grey day, to look beyond the winter skies, the snow and the ice. Whether you focus on a multitude of colour or a single colour pop, the possibilities are endless. I can’t wait to be cheered through the depths of winter by the colourful happiness that will flood the Share Six FB wall and IG feed!

My images this month were all taken in January: a trip to New York City, my favourite flowers, a sunrise and a sunset. That makes up a little bit of everything and they cover a little bit of everything colourful too: some abstract, some less so; some pop, some mishmash, some gentle softness of blush. What type of colour is your favourite?

Massachusetts Photographer | Share Six Colour Color | ©CeriHerdPhotography

Statue of Liberty: reaching for the starsMassachusetts Photographer | Share Six Colour Color | ©CeriHerdPhotography

The colour of Kate Spade’s window display immediately caught my attention, but the reflection of the New York skyline in the window against their gift wrap skyline, made me stop and look a while longer.Massachusetts Photographer | Share Six Colour Color | ©CeriHerdPhotography

Rockefeller Center flagsMassachusetts Photographer | Share Six Colour Color | © Ceri Herd PhotographyMassachusetts Photographer | Share Six Colour Color | ©CeriHerdPhotography

The life cycle of cut flowersMassachusetts Photographer | Share Six Colour Color | ©CeriHerdPhotography

Sunrise from my kitchen window

Massachusetts Photographer | Share Six Colour Color | ©CeriHerdPhotographyMassachusetts Photographer | Share Six Colour Color | ©CeriHerdPhotography

Sunset

A colour theme wouldn’t be complete without a little natural monotone:Massachusetts Photographer | Share Six Colour Color | ©CeriHerdPhotography

Yet again, yes I know, there were more than six. What can I say? I’m an indecisive rule-breaker!

Thank you for joining us for another month at Share Six. Please continue around the circle by clicking HERE. I can’t wait to see how the exceptionally talented Lynne of Lynne Grant Photography interpreted this month’s theme.

Join us for this month’s theme by posting your {colour} images on our Facebook page at SHARE SIX and to our Instagram gallery, by tagging #sharesix and #sharesix_colour or #sharesix_color. A new theme will be posted on 6th March.

Share Six Contributor

10 on 10 Blog Circle | January 2018 – Massachusetts Photographer

Massachusetts Photographer | 10 on 10 Frozen Bubbles | ©CeriHerdPhotography

I’m so excited to join a new group of talented photographers to share with you 10 images on the 10th of each month.

Over the past few months I’ve been busy sharing pictures of our new life in Massachusetts, lots of my more creative work and most recently, images with my new Lensbaby Edge 80 (you can keep up-to-date with that project HERE). But I wanted my first share with this new group to be something a little different. A lot of what I do is an experiment in-camera; this was more of an experiment outside of camera, a little bit of a science experiment!

Massachusetts Photographer | 10 on 10 Frozen Bubbles | ©CeriHerdPhotography

Massachusetts Photographer | 10 on 10 Frozen Bubbles | ©CeriHerdPhotography

I first saw images of frozen bubbles about a year ago. From the warmth of our AZ winter it seemed like something only photographers living in galacticly cold climates could ever do and of course that would never be me so I didn’t give it too much thought. But fast forward a year and here we are! New England has had (what I consider to be) a really cold cold snap this past week, temperatures well into the minus Fs, a wind chill of -23F and over a foot of snow on the ground. If I was going to try frozen bubbles now was surely the time!

Massachusetts Photographer | 10 on 10 Frozen Bubbles | ©CeriHerdPhotography

Massachusetts Photographer | 10 on 10 Frozen Bubbles | ©CeriHerdPhotographyMassachusetts Photographer | 10 on 10 Frozen Bubbles | ©CeriHerdPhotography

I was just going to use my children’s bubble juice, but unfortunately it turns out bubble juice becomes completely frozen if you leave it in the garage in winter in MA! So if you’d like to try making frozen bubbles for yourself and find your bubble juice is already frozen too, here’s the recipe that worked for me:

1 cup water
2 tbsp sugar
2 tbsp dish soap / washing-up liquid
2 tbsp corn syrup

Mix it up!

I used a regular bubble wand and a wand with lots of holes to get a variety of different bubble sizes and combos. I’ve heard paper straws work well too.

Massachusetts Photographer | 10 on 10 Frozen Bubbles | ©CeriHerdPhotography

Massachusetts Photographer | 10 on 10 Frozen Bubbles | ©CeriHerdPhotographyMassachusetts Photographer | 10 on 10 Frozen Bubbles | ©CeriHerdPhotographyMassachusetts Photographer | 10 on 10 Frozen Bubbles | ©CeriHerdPhotographyMassachusetts Photographer | 10 on 10 Frozen Bubbles | ©CeriHerdPhotography

Getting the bubbles to land where I wanted and not pop (remember that wind chill of -23F? It was blowing!) was far from easy! I wouldn’t mind trying again so I can focus more on the photography and less on the bubble production. I definitely recommend you giving it a go too; you don’t have to be a photographer to enjoy watching the patterns form in the ice!

Up next in the 10 on 10 Blog Circle is the immensely talented Christine Wright of Greenscapes Photography. Click Here to see her 10 images for this month.

Thanks for stopping by!

~Ceri