Share Six Blog Circle | September 2017 – Reflections

Thank you for joining us for Share Six’s September Blog Circle. This month our theme is {Reflections}.

I’m sharing with you a couple of images from just a few days ago, a trip to the beach here in Massachusetts (where the wind was too strong and the water too rough to get good reflections), and (because of those choppy waters messing up my blogging plans) a few favourites from earlier this year:

Massachusetts Photographer | Share Six Collections | ©CeriHerdPhotographyMassachusetts Photographer | Share Six Collections | ©CeriHerdPhotography

Massachusetts Photographer | Share Six Collections | ©CeriHerdPhotographyMassachusetts Photographer | Share Six Collections | ©CeriHerdPhotographyMassachusetts Photographer | Share Six Collections | ©CeriHerdPhotographyMassachusetts Photographer | Share Six Collections | ©CeriHerdPhotography

Massachusetts Photographer | Share Six Collections | ©CeriHerdPhotography

This blog post is part of the Share Six Blog Circle. Please click HERE to see how the talented Tori of Roots & Twigs Photography interpreted this month’s theme.

Join us for this month’s theme by posting your {collections} images on our Facebook page at Share Six and to our Instagram gallery, by tagging #sharesix and #sharesix_reflections. A new theme will be posted on 6th October.

Share Six Contributor

Share Six Blog Circle – Collections | August 2017

Massachusetts Photographer | Share Six Collections | ©CeriHerdPhotography

It’s Share Six Blog Circle time again! Kathy has picked a fascinating theme for this month; we want to see your take on the theme {Collections}.

When I was young I collected stamps and pigs. Yep, pigs. Word.

It was a phase that lasted quite some time, but as I matured and became less of a hoarder that collection went on to pastures (or pig sty) new. As a photographer however, and I think this could be said by many if not all photographers, I am still a collector. I have phases of trying particular techniques or trying to capture the same thing in different ways, always with the unspoken idea of creating a collection for a wall or an album, or dare I hope, one day a gallery.

I’ve talked before (at some length) about how I took the leap into photography when we moved to Arizona almost exactly 3 years ago. One of my particular passions that grew out of having my steep learning curve in this particular place was using in-camera double exposures to capture the look, feel and heat of the desert. To an outsider the desert feels otherworldly so I embarked on a project to portray that essence.Massachusetts Photographer | Share Six Collections | ©CeriHerdPhotography

From that initial series came continued love for the technique, a new opportunity to display some work and a new series. I went for a walk around our neighbourhood one evening with the express intention of capturing double exposures of cacti that would be displayed together. I was aiming for something more abstract than the original series but unified and pleasing to the casual observer’s eye. I came home with a collection of about 15 images of Opuntia Santa Rita, commonly known as the violet prickly pear.

Massachusetts Photographer | Share Six Collections | ©CeriHerdPhotography

This blog post is part of the Share Six Blog Circle. Please click HERE to see how the talented Katherine of Cobert Photography interpreted this month’s theme.

Join us for this month’s theme by posting your {collections} images on our Facebook page at Share Six and to our Instagram gallery, by tagging #sharesix and #sharesix_collections. A new theme will be posted on 6th September.

Share Six Contributor

Share Six Blog Circle – Artificial Light | July 2017

Massachusetts Photographer | Share Six Artificial Light | ©CeriHerdPhotography

This month’s Share Six theme, {Artificial Light}, was my choice! OOohhhh….! Does that surprise you? I’m certainly not known for using artificial light in my images and it’s probably the area of photography where I feel least confident. I use studio lighting for my newborn work but that is always the same, a predictable, reliable and simple set up. That said, I wouldn’t be me if I wasn’t pushing myself to learn something new or to broaden my horizons. So here I am stepping outside my comfort zone, sharing images I wouldn’t normally pull from my files and dragging the rest of you along for the ride!

There are a few other reasons I chose {artificial light} for our latest theme. It might seem contrary to normal documentary shooting of the summer months, but I was living with the prospect of 120°F heat and being confined to the house during daylight hours for the summer months. That is perhaps fairly superficial reasoning, but in truth {artificial light} gives us so many options: to document in our homes, in places we visit, on the street after dark, in studio, on camera flash, off camera flash…the possibilities are endless!

This is the image that sparked the idea for the theme. I adore him:

Massachusetts Photographer | Share Six Artificial Light | ©CeriHerdPhotography

And then I found that I had a similar image of his brother! There are hi-tech kids, that’s for sure!

Massachusetts Photographer | Share Six Artificial Light | ©CeriHerdPhotography

This image was taken at the Reunion Tower in Dallas, TX. He could’ve played with the light show and “About Dallas” touch screens all night!

These next two images were taken at the same place on the same night: ‘the Dallas Skyline with the reflection of sunset’ and ‘light painting’ (which uses a slow shutter speed and intentional camera movement).

Massachusetts Photographer | Share Six Artificial Light | ©CeriHerdPhotographyMassachusetts Photographer | Share Six Artificial Light | ©CeriHerdPhotographyFor my last two images for this month’s theme I chose a couple of recent unshared favourites. There is something haunting about each of these for me. I wonder if you see it too?

Massachusetts Photographer | Share Six Artificial Light | ©CeriHerdPhotography

Massachusetts Photographer | Share Six Artificial Light | ©CeriHerdPhotography

I hope you have taken this theme as a chance to learn or experiment, to try something new or step outside your comfort zone. I’m posting this blog almost a month late, right at the end of the theme’s cycle, because personal life things got in the way. There are just a couple of days to post your {artificial light} images to the Share Six facebook wall or use #sharesix_artificiallight on Instagram. I’m really impressed with all the submissions I’ve seen so far. You have until August 5th, 2017. Keep them coming!

~Ceri

Share Six Blog Circle | Dream – June 2017

Grand Canyon Photography | Dreams | Share Six | Scottsdale Photographer | ©CeriHerdPhotography

Those of you who have explored my website and follow me on Facebook will know my story: we moved from the UK to Arizona when my husband grasped a new career opportunity in 2014. It was the move across the world and seeing everyday things with new eyes that ignited my thirst for photographic knowledge. It drove my desire to capture both our new surroundings and our new everyday. Fast-forward three years and my skills are at a place I could never have dreamed they would be and I’m photographing places I always dreamed of being.

With less than a month to go before we move to Massachusetts and our focus shifting to new adventures, we’ve been rounding out our southwest US bucket list. There are so many top attractions in this part of the world, we are not only talking about dream tourist destinations but truly photographers’ dreams come true! Last week we toured northern AZ, Zion National Park and Las Vegas, and I want share a few of those Arizona wonders with you today.

OK yes, we had visited these particular locations before, and yes, I have shared images from those previous trips with you too. But seriously, these destinations are truly spectacular and with friends visiting from the UK, how could we not take them to these incredible natural wonders!

Grand Canyon, Desert View

Grand Canyon Photography | Dreams | Share Six | Scottsdale Photographer | ©CeriHerdPhotographyGrand Canyon Photography | Dreams | Share Six | Scottsdale Photographer | ©CeriHerdPhotography

Horseshoe Bend

Horseshoe Bend | Dreams | Share Six | Scottsdale Photographer | ©CeriHerdPhotography

Antelope Canyon

Antelope Canyon Photography | Dreams | Share Six | Scottsdale Photographer | ©CeriHerdPhotographyAntelope Canyon Photography | Dreams | Share Six | Scottsdale Photographer | ©CeriHerdPhotographyAntelope Canyon Photography | Dreams | Share Six | Scottsdale Photographer | ©CeriHerdPhotography

A great friend described our road trips to me: “Stop Click Go Stop Click Go Stop Click Go…!” Considering we visited these three places in less than 24 hours and I didn’t have room in my six images to include the other destinations of our trip, I think she must be right!

This blog post is part of the Share Six Blog Circle. Please click HERE to see how the talented Kathy of KG Ledbetter Photography interpreted this month’s theme.

Join us for this month’s theme by posting your {dream} images on our Facebook page at Share Six and to our Instagram gallery, by tagging #sharesix and #sharesix_dreams or #sharesix_dreamy. A new theme will be posted on 6th July.

Share Six Contributor

Share Six Blog Circle | May 2017 – Street

Street Photography | Share Six | Scottsdale Photographer | ©CeriHerdPhotography

This month’s Share Six theme is Street. Oooh, it’s a good one!

I have appreciated the art of Street Photography for as long as I have appreciated art itself. But since I have been able to call myself a photographer, Street Photography is not an art I have mastered. So I want to take this theme as a chance to encourage anyone reading this who is new to photography and/or new to street photography in particular to say this:

“Get Out and Explore”

You may think of Street Photography is an artsy black and white image of a busker on the subway or moving depiction of homeless man sleeping in a shop doorway. Yes, but Street Photography is that and more. Street Photography is capturing passing moments and freezing them in time. In the hustle and bustle of daily life, we all need to stop for a moment and look and you don’t need to be a photographer to do that!

Whatever and wherever your “street” is, you don’t have to label yourself as a “photographer” or an “artist”, you don’t have to shoot in manual or even own a fancy dSLR, to open your eyes to your surroundings and give street photography a try. The images I’m sharing with you today are from 2014. I had an entry level dSLR and I was only just learning how to use it properly. I was a tourist in Italy, documenting our trip. I was just starting out.

Street Photography | Share Six | Scottsdale Photographer | ©CeriHerdPhotographyStreet Photography | Share Six | Scottsdale Photographer | ©CeriHerdPhotographyStreet Photography | Share Six | Scottsdale Photographer | ©CeriHerdPhotographyStreet Photography | Share Six | Scottsdale Photographer | ©CeriHerdPhotographyStreet Photography | Share Six | Scottsdale Photographer | ©CeriHerdPhotographyStreet Photography | Share Six | Scottsdale Photographer | ©CeriHerdPhotography

You too can capture images like this, simply by getting out of your house and allowing yourself time to explore. Whether it is somewhere you’ve never been or somewhere you go all the time, whether you’re taking a break and being a tourist, take these simple ideas to view it in a new way:

#1 Soak it in: how does the place make you feel? If you were a tourist, what would you see? What would stand out as different to anywhere else?

#2 Observe: watch the flow and movement of people, of traffic, of birds or flowers in the breeze. How do they enter your view, how do they move across the frame?

#3 Position yourself: think about angles and architectural leading lines, textures and framing, light and shade.

#4 Include people: don’t wait for a gap in the crowds. People give you a frame of reference. They give an image life and scale and perspective. They tell their own story.

#5 Details: if you struggle to narrow down you vision, focus on finding a particular colour or type of texture. A colour story is a wonderful way to get started and explore.

I hope these little tips help you in some small way!

Please click HERE to see how the talented Tori of Roots & Twigs Photography interpreted this month’s theme.

Join us for this month’s theme by posting your {street} images on our Facebook page at Share Six and to our Instagram gallery, by tagging #sharesix and #sharesix_street. A new theme will be posted on 6th June.

Share Six Contributor