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

White Sands National Monument | Documentary Photography

White Sands Photography | Scottsdale Photographer | ©CeriHerdPhotography

Spring Break has a wonderful habit of coinciding with my birthday, so lucky me has a habit of making celebratory road trip plans. This year, somewhat selfishly, I decided we should visit Texas. I’d be lying if I didn’t say the entire purpose of the trip was to go to Waco, the home of Chip and Joanna Gaines of Magnolia Market and of Fixer Upper fame. BUT that also meant I searched out all the places to visit on along the route that we might never have otherwise seen.  I’d also be lying if I didn’t say that many of our destinations, regardless of the trip, are chosen on their photographic merits. Oh boy, did I have had high hopes for our first port of call!

The first day of our Texas Road Trip 2017 didn’t actually get us to Texas however; it was nonetheless a long day of driving, from Arizona to White Sands National Monument in New Mexico. When I mentioned this plan to my dad he said, “oh, they test missiles there!” (yes, White Sands Missile Range is nearby) but there is more to it than that! Here’s how the National Park Service website describes White Sands:

“Rising from the heart of the Tularosa Basin is one of the world’s great natural wonders – the glistening white sands of New Mexico. Great wave-like dunes of gypsum sand have engulfed 275 square miles of desert, creating the world’s largest gypsum dunefield. White Sands National Monument preserves a major portion of this unique dunefield, along with the plants and animals that live here.”

We arrived shortly before sunset, just in time to play on the dunes and watch the sun dip below the distant Organ Mountains.

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We spent the night in Alamogordo and returned the following morning to do some sledging. The Park Service sell used sledges and buy them back from you once you’re done; you have no time restriction and can keep them if you have so much fun you can’t bear to part with it. There is no restrictions about where you can go on the dunes so we had plenty of space and our choice of dune despite the other visitors in the park. Although there is no photographic evidence that I joined in, I assure you I did! Despite my reservations about the height and acute angle of the slope, it was so much fun!

We had such a great time and we were still picking sand out of deep dark “places” a week later!White Sands Photography | Scottsdale Photographer | ©CeriHerdPhotographyWhite Sands Photography | Scottsdale Photographer | ©CeriHerdPhotographyWhite Sands Photography | Scottsdale Photographer | ©CeriHerdPhotographyWhite Sands Photography | Scottsdale Photographer | ©CeriHerdPhotographyWhite Sands Photography | Scottsdale Photographer | ©CeriHerdPhotographyWhite Sands Photography | Scottsdale Photographer | ©CeriHerdPhotographyWhite Sands Photography | Scottsdale Photographer | ©CeriHerdPhotographyWhite Sands Photography | Scottsdale Photographer | ©CeriHerdPhotographyWhite Sands Photography | Scottsdale Photographer | ©CeriHerdPhotographyWhite Sands Photography | Scottsdale Photographer | ©CeriHerdPhotographyWhite Sands Photography | Scottsdale Photographer | ©CeriHerdPhotographyWhite Sands Photography | Scottsdale Photographer | ©CeriHerdPhotographyWhite Sands Photography | Scottsdale Photographer | ©CeriHerdPhotographyWhite Sands Photography | Scottsdale Photographer | ©CeriHerdPhotographyWhite Sands Photography | Scottsdale Photographer | ©CeriHerdPhotographyWhite Sands Photography | Scottsdale Photographer | ©CeriHerdPhotography

After the sledging we took a walk along a boardwalk to see more of the ecosystem. I imagine the area looks quite astounding when the wildflowers are in bloom and is unbearable in the heat of the summer. White Sands Photography | Scottsdale Photographer | ©CeriHerdPhotographyWhite Sands Photography | Scottsdale Photographer | ©CeriHerdPhotographyWhite Sands Photography | Scottsdale Photographer | ©CeriHerdPhotography

Understandably, the kids were exhausted after all the sledging. Walking up sand dunes is a tiring business, let me tell you!

If you’re ever in New Mexico I would definitely recommend a visit to White Sands. Whether you’re a photographer or there just to have fun, there is so much beauty to be seen and enjoyed.

After our morning at the dunes we visited the Space Museum in Alamogordo (just the outside of the museum actually, but even that was worth it) and then hit the road again. The next stop on our trip was Carlsbad Caverns; a place worthy of it’s own blog post!

~Ceri

Share Six Blog Circle | March 2017 – Restore

Scottsdale Creative Photographer | ©CeriHerdPhotography

I am thrilled and honoured to be to joining the talented Share Six team! Share Six is a group of photographers who blog 6 images each month; each month is a different theme. This month our theme is {restore} and what a wonderful theme to kick start my involvement!

As 2016 came to a close I was competing my 365 (in fact 365 + 3 months). I was completely burnt out from the pre-Christmas rush and the endless months of daily shooting. In the last days of December and moving into the New Year,  I was not thrilled with anything I produced. I couldn’t find any artistry or *see* what I was looking for. At all.

As January passed by and I took some time away from the camera, I continued with the struggle. My desire to create was still strong but my fear of failing stopped me from picking up my camera.

At the beginning of February I had a sudden realisation that I needed to make an effort to change my mood. This funk was not going to go away by itself.

In order to love the final image, I need to love the process of creating it.

In these past few weeks I have been attempting to {restore} myself. I took some time to focus on the specific aim of “creating.” My Share Six images where not specifically taken for this blog but they were taken specifically to restore my artistic soul. I played with each of my favourite creative techniques, techniques that push me technically and artistically. All of these images (apart from one) was taken within a one hour time frame around noon on a bright and sunny day. You’ll will see which is a different time of day (it was the following afternoon, with much lower and more golden light).

Scottsdale Creative Photographer | ©CeriHerdPhotography

Freelensing

Scottsdale Creative Photographer | ©CeriHerdPhotography

ICM – Intentional Camera Movement

Scottsdale Creative Photographer | ©CeriHerdPhotography

In-Camera Double Exposure

Scottsdale Creative Photographer | ©CeriHerdPhotography

Shooting Through : Prism

Scottsdale Creative Photographer | ©CeriHerdPhotographyMacro

Scottsdale Creative Photographer | ©CeriHerdPhotography

Shooting Through: Convex Lens

Over the coming months I’ll be doing a series of “how to” blog posts explaining how and why I do these different techniques. If you’d like to keep up to date with those posts make sure you subscribe to have them delivered them directly to your inbox >>

I hope you enjoyed seeing how I {restore} my creative soul. Time to stop being burned out and overwhelmed with the catch-up task ahead!

Please click HERE to see the talented Aubrey Dettmer of Applewood Photography’s interpretation of this months theme.

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

Share Six Contributor

Artists Inspired Blog Circle | September 2016 – Gold

©CeriHerdPhotography

What does {gold} mean to you? Wealth, prosperity, pretty shiny things? Gold for me, and photographers all over the globe (and a large chunk of this blog circle I expect), means golden light and the golden hour, that short window of time where the sun is low enough in the sky to bathe everything with a delicious, warm, golden glow.

Last month I took images specifically for the Artists Inspired Blog Circle; this month I want to look back at my most favourite ever golden hour images. More specifically, I want to share with you one of my passions: my creative take on golden hour at the beach.

As I approach the end of my first Project 365 (goodness, I can hardly believe it) I find myself searching for ways to stay inspired. I am constantly thinking about what I can do to step it up creatively, be it in-camera double exposures, freelensing, intentional camera movement or shooting through objects. As you’ll see from the selection below, in the past few months I have rarely taken an image at the beach that is just ‘what you see is what you get.’

A word frequently used to describe my photographic style, and a metaphor I certainly aspire to, is ‘dreamy’. I aim to create images that feel like they’re part of a dream, that are memories before they have even departed, where the sound of the waves and the colour of the sky sweep you away and you feel like you’re floating in the moment. My aim is to capture that in-camera in a single image, using layers and textures to give you the sense of how a scene looks and feels. I hope to create a visual depiction of a memory, not purely what that memory looks like, and certainly not simply what it looks like now, but how it will look and feel after the blur of time. I want these images to hold the viewers gaze, to capture their imagination, to send them on a nostalgic journey, to make them feel the moment a little longer and a little more sincerely. I hope that the images I’m sharing now do that for you.

 

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This blog is part of the Artists Inspired Blog Circle series. Click here to continue the circle and see how talented photographer, Channon Williamson, interpreted this month’s theme. Be sure to follow the links all the way round to complete the full circle.

The Artists Inspired Blog Circle is made up of an exceptionally talented group of photographers from all walks of life, from all over the world. They are wives, mothers, friends, daughters and visual storytellers who draw from their own experiences to create art that is inspiring, unique, beautiful and thought-provoking.

Artists Inspired Blog Circle Contributor