Archive for the 'photos' Category

Redwood
Saturday, August 21st, 2004

If I promise to start taking better photographs, will you promise to keep looking at them?

Parkish
Sunday, August 15th, 2004

These are getting closer to exposing what I see.

Night In Black
Friday, July 30th, 2004

I tried retouching the last set of photographs to compensate for the peculiar coloration, but wasn’t particularly satisfied with the results. However, since it was mostly an issue of saturation, I just dropped the set to greyscale instead. I’m much happier with the pictures this way…

Beach Pictures
Monday, July 26th, 2004

San Francisco isn’t that bad. I was able to spend a few hours shooting pictures at a little beach a few minutes away from my apartment. I used a Nikon D70 on these, but only had a 24-85 lens, which wasn’t really what I needed at all. And before you comment, the D70 (and that [...]

Pattern Recognition 1
Friday, June 4th, 2004

William Gibson’s last book, Pattern Recognition has a passage that reads:
On the wall to her left is a triptych by a Japanese artist whose name she forgets, three four by eight panels of plywood hung side by side. On these have been silk-screened, in layers, logos and big-eyed manga girls, but each [...]

Illiterals, NYC 2
Thursday, September 18th, 2003

These images were shot on a low resolution digital camera around new york city.

Illiterals, NYC 1
Wednesday, September 17th, 2003

These images were shot on a low resolution digital camera around new york city.

Abstracts 4
Thursday, July 3rd, 2003

These photographs were inspired by the young Japanese photographer, Shimpei Takeda. Similar to Takeda’s work, the images were shot on a low resolution digital camera and not altered beyond cropping.

Abstracts 3
Wednesday, July 2nd, 2003

These photographs were inspired by the young Japanese photographer, Shimpei Takeda. Similar to Takeda’s work, the images were shot on a low resolution digital camera and not altered beyond cropping.

Abstracts 2
Tuesday, July 1st, 2003

These photographs were inspired by the young Japanese photographer, Shimpei Takeda. Similar to Takeda’s work, the images were shot on a low resolution digital camera and not altered beyond cropping.