Wednesday, December 14, 2011

A Shift in Perspective (the Accidental Compliment)

 

I’ve been negligent about keeping up with my blogging. Sometimes just trying to think about what to share makes my head hurt. So I blow it off and do something else!

But several days ago I got an email from a fellow photographer that made me think. Don’t get me wrong, I’m introspective to begin with, but this made me consider how I view myself and my art. It also gave me a  nice little boost, which I really needed at the time.

I was asking this photographer about an organization I’m considering joining and I wanted to get a photographer’s perspective on it.  She had taken a look at my website and in her email reply to me she referenced my "high end fashion photography". 

This surprised me and the phrase ran through my head: “but I don't do high end fashion photography!”

I photograph normal people with jobs, families, pets, PTA meetings, mortgages, car troubles and everything else that goes with a “normal” life.  I just try to make them look spectacular through posing and lighting (not by taking years or pounds off them via Photoshop!) Okay, I have photographed a few models/aspiring models, but we didn’t do anything fancy at all, mainly on street photography using existing light.

But this did get me thinking about our self-perceptions.  Not counting somebody with a really distorted image of themselves (such as an anorexic), the visions we have of ourselves often aren’t what other people see.

I think we all know classic beauties who scrutinize “flaws” that nobody else can even see.  Or the guy who clearly has above average intelligence but he just keeps working in a menial job.  Or the person who always sells himself short and has never recognized that they have an incredible talent for something.

I certainly never considered any of my photos as “high end fashion photography”.  So I’m taking another look with a different eye. I can see similarities and I do try to make many of my clients look like models, but I think I consider my photography to be more artistic. As a result of this “new perspective”, I am emphasizing the artistic aspects of my photography more than I have in the past. It makes sense anyhow, since I’m also a painter.

How do you see yourself and your talents? Do you need to take a second view or to pay closer attention to what the people around you are saying? An old year is coming to an end and a new one is beginning, so now might be the time to take another look at yourself.

To repeat some wise words: “Change your perspective and you change your life.”

 

Photos by Colleen D. Gjefle / © 2011 / GJFOTO.com

302581_277423635617103_157799830912818_1154855_5805391_n

298685_277427345616732_157799830912818_1154898_6396978_n

IMG0081-L

IMG_0140

renehelen-56-L

310681_277427362283397_157799830912818_1154899_4022360_n

1151829984_img_3266

gjefle-amberlee-244-L

Thursday, November 17, 2011

Capture Memories, Save Money - HOLIDAY PORTRAIT SPECIAL

LIMITED TIME HOLIDAY PORTRAIT SPECIAL

sample2 It's that time of the year again! I know - it came up fast. Before you know it, Santa will have come and gone. But not to worry (yet!) - there's still time to get holiday portraits taken.

Space is limited and time's running short, so call me now to book your slot.

215.483.4027

The last date I will be booking sessions is Dec. 18, but if you want your photo cards in time to mail out, the time to book is now!

Packages available:

  1. $99* - 25 cards + (1) 5x7 print + 3 low-resolution digital photos
  2. $99* - (3) 8x10 prints + 3 low-resolution digital photos (NO CARDS)
  3. $135* - 40 cards + (2) 5x7 prints + 5 low-resolution digital photos
  4. $135* - 40 cards + (1) 8x10 print + 5 low-resolution digital photos
  5. $165* - 65 cards + (1) 5x7 + (1) 8x10 prints + 1 high-res photo + 5 low-res digital photos

* plus 8% PA & Phila tax
All sessions require a non-refundable deposit of $50 to be paid at the time of booking.

WANT TO EARN SOME EASY MONEY?  Refer your friends and family!
If they purchase a Holiday  portrait package, you'll get paid a referral fee of $15. (That means if you pass this offer along to 10 people and they all invest in a Holiday portrait session, you'll have earned an easy $150!). Forward this email to them. I'll be sending out referral rewards right before Christmas.

Select from several different designs for your Holiday cards. Click here to see the different cards available.

Friday, October 28, 2011

Appeasing the Ghosts: Resurrecting Moriah

307452_296936606999139_157799830912818_1237562_444163284_nEarlier this month I had my first visit to the massive (approximately 380 acres) Mount Moriah Cemetery located in Philadelphia and Yeadon, PA.  I attending a volunteer clean up day to photographically document the efforts of the volunteers, the condition of the cemetery and some of the magnificent, though horribly neglected, monuments and memorials.

A couple weeks later was the second volunteer day that I attended, and I brought my camera with once again.  I pretty much knew during my first day there that I was going to be hooked.  The second visit completely confirmed it. 

After decades of neglect, there are some great people dedicated to resurrecting Mount Moriah and bringing it back to its glory. In particular, the Friends of Mount Moriah Cemetery are taking the lead. I’ve been made to feel very welcomed by members of this organization (special thanks to Haunted Mt. Moriah and Paulette for that warm welcome).

Mount Moriah’s sordid history of neglect has recently been brought to public attention, with even the city of Philadelphia going to court to determine ownership of the cemetery. It seems to be quite a unique and complex situation that surrounds this huge, historic cemetery.  I won’t go into much detail as this information is readily available on  the  Friends of Mount Moriah Cemetery’s website and elsewhere on the web.

Here are two galleries with photos of the volunteers : Oct 8, 2011 and Oct. 22, 2011. You can see more images I photographed here -  http://gjfoto.smugmug.com/Cemeteries/Mt-Moriah-Cemetery 

I also have several special fine art prints available of my favorite Mt. Moriah scenes. Purchases of these prints will benefit the Friends of Mount Moriah Cemetery.  Fine art prints are available on metallic paper or metal prints with float mountings.  These fine art prints are available here - http://gjfoto.smugmug.com/PrintsforPurchase/Mt-Moriah-Cemetery

I’m just starting to do a little with the high-def video feature on my Canon EOS 5D Mark II camera, so I also have a few short videos  up on my YouTube page. I’m not a videographer (yet!) so don’t judge my first videos too harshly!

The first photos below are of the incredible, though now decrepit, Gate House designed by Stephen Decatur Button.

Photos by Colleen D. Gjefle / © 2011 / GJFOTO.com

301142_296925390333594_157799830912818_1237339_1435715824_n

308695_296926650333468_157799830912818_1237381_1768387968_n

308129_296926310333502_157799830912818_1237371_305637643_n

315063_296928040333329_157799830912818_1237408_1249566707_n

310644_296929336999866_157799830912818_1237434_1275771939_n

305196_296931976999602_157799830912818_1237490_1057509198_n

302133_296931740332959_157799830912818_1237485_1837625055_n 

310123_296940243665442_157799830912818_1237683_977504028_n

291933_296940310332102_157799830912818_1237684_1654411071_n

293986_296936690332464_157799830912818_1237565_18075010_n

307452_296936606999139_157799830912818_1237562_444163284_n

Friday, October 7, 2011

Would you grab a DVD when running out of a burning building?

My best photographer’s general advise to people – find those really special, favorite digital photos and print them out!

Don’t get me wrong – I love technology and digital images, music and movies. BUT….
When the flood waters were hitting the northeast US a few weeks ago, people grabbed Grandma, the dog and the photo album. If the house is on fire, who the hell is going to rummage through the drawer where they store the DVDs with all their photos?  But it’s possible to grab the family album. You might bitch about that big, bulky old-fashioned album whenever you’re doing the dusting, but – God forbid – comes a fire, it’s probably going to be a no-brainer to grab it.

I was recently watching a documentary on life after the earthquake and tsunami that hit Japan a few months ago. There was a scene of tables and tables full of photos that were found in the debris. People found photos of strangers, brought them to this make-shift memory lane in the chance someone would claim the fragile pieces of paper. These same people then looked through the photos themselves, hoping to find some of their precious memories. When they finally did find a photograph, they inevitably and understandably cried.

broken_cdThere weren’t piles of CDs or DVDs on those tables. Who would have even picked one up out of the muck and debris? Even if they did, what’s the chance that disc wasn’t damaged beyond retrieval?

I can list several other really good reasons for printing out some of those digital photos: gramophone, Victrola, super-8, Betamax, laser disc, 8-track, floppy disc, etc. Let’s remember that the VHS tape was king of the hill for roughly 2 decades. But then came DVDs and it didn’t take long for VHS to start disappearing – and fast.

CD’s and DVD’s have had the upper hand for the last several years, but Blue Ray has been gaining strength and now there’s the encroaching wave of 3D for the home theater. So what’s next down the road and how long until the DVD with all of those wedding photos on will be obsolete and unreadable?

Sure, you can keep everything on a hard drive, but you’ll eventually have to replace that old computer and hard drives do fail.

So that’s the lecture for today. Memories fade, as do the pictures. But better a faded photo than nothing.




Monday, October 3, 2011

Revisiting an Old Ruin: Van Slyke Castle

This evening I felt like taking a second look at an old ruin I had visited several years ago. It's called Van Slyke Castle and it's located on top of a mountain in Ramapo Mountain State Forest in northern New Jersey. From what I've read, Van Slyke was a mansion built around the turn of the century, passed through a few different hands, but eventually abandoned after an ugly divorce. It was apparently torched by vandals during the 1950s and nature took over from there.


Apparently, this is what the mansion originally looked like.
Photos courtesty of http://www.users.nac.net/axtell/History.htm

It was tough to find, but there are better directions to be found online now, unlike when I first found my way there in 2005/6. You can find some good directions here - http://thefranklinlakesjournal.com/uncategorized/van-slyke-castle/ and here - http://www.localhikesbeta.com/Hikes/Ramapo-Mt-St-ForestCastle-Pt-Todd-Loop-732. I went in summer, when the greenery was in full force, so I think the time to visit this place would be in the winter, when you'll get a better chance to actually see what's there instead of fighting with nature.

If you think this looks cool and would like to visit Van Slyke Castle yourself, be prepared for lots of walking, including up and down mountains! Depending on what time of the year you go, you should also plan on close encounters with wood ticks and poison ivy (yuck!). But you also get some great views of the castle, the lake below and NYC in the distance.

These first photos are of the ruin itself, followed by other photos of this scenic New Jersey park.

All photos © Colleen D. Gjefle, gjfoto.com