You may have noticed that things have changed around here. In fact, you're not even "here" anymore, if "here" was The Light Without. Since the new year is about new beginnings, I've decided to make one. Not just a new web site, but a new look at where I'm going with my photography and how I want to share that with you. Simply put, you'll see my work here, on this site. If it's published elsewhere, I'll be sure to mention it, but this is the place to discover what I'm doing and what I have to say about it. I think that makes it much easier for everyone. I'll also continue to blog here, and hopefully a little more frequently than I have been recently. I think I have some interesting topics to cover, so stay tuned.

This means that a few other things will be changing, too. The Light Without will also disappear from Facebook and I'll be using my social network accounts (Facebook, Google+, Twitter) simply as a way to make connections, which I think is what they're best at. My Flickr account will also change and become simply a way to share some of the photographs I make with friends and family. My 500px and Zenfolio accounts will go away, as will any other photo sharing accounts I have. Again, you'll find my work here.

As well as this web site, my photographic life has changed significantly since I first started The Light Without blog over two years ago. I've sold prints, written a book, taught classes, and led a workshop—all of which has been extremely gratifying. And I have bigger plans for 2012 and beyond, which hopefully, you'll begin to see shortly. This site, of course, is one of those new things, but there are others in the works. I'm excited to be working with the folks at Rear Curtain and looking forward to helping with the site and the next issue of the magazine. I'm in the process of writing a new book for Craft & Vision (no, really), and I'm beginning a new semester teaching at the Cornerstone Center for the Arts. All in all, 2012 is looking very promising.

Mostly, though, I'm simply excited about photography. I've learned so much over the last couple of years and I think I've grown more as a photographer than I ever have. Most of that is due to you. Yes, you—everyone who is reading these words. My friends, my colleagues, my mentors, my family, and so many more have made me think and feel and stretch and grow to become a better photographer and a better human being.

My sincere thanks to all of you and my fondest wishes for a rewarding 2012.

 

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Close to Home group picture I've been struggling a bit over what to say about the Close to Home workshop in Port Townsend this past weekend. As both a learner and a teacher, I've always felt that workshops like these are about the students and not the instructor(s), but I've had several people ask me how I felt the workshop went, so I thought I'd give you my take on it.

Admittedly, I was nervous. About a lot of things, really. It was, after all, the first Close to Home workshop and the first workshop I'd ever led. As with the book, I was about 80% excited and 20% terrified. Most of all, though, I was worried that it would be flat—an adequate workshop, but without the kind of dynamic interaction that I've experienced at the Italy Within the Frame workshop and at the Artists' Round Table.

To counter this, I wrote little notes to myself, planting some of them in my initial presentation and afterward sending myself electronic reminders—all to say, "Keep focused on the students. It's their workshop, not yours." And I think it worked.

Now before you think I'm patting myself on the back, the real credit for making it work belongs to the students themselves. Sure, Ray and I spent a lot of time planning and pulling off this workshop and I don't discount that, but it would have never happened at all without Dorothy, Franz, Duncan, Don, Mike, Daniel, Cami, Ellie, Sabrina, and Eligis. The greatest reward a teacher can have is to see his students focused on and excited about their work and these folks gave me that in spades—along with some pretty amazing work.

(There's a Flickr group where I hope they will eventually share their work with you. It's at http://www.flickr.com/groups/cthpt if you'd like to take a peek.)

I'd also like to again thank our terrific sponsors: Craft and Vision, ThinkTANK Photo, OnOneSoftware, Luma Labs, and Laura Shoe for their generous support of this initial effort. I hope to work with all of you again in the future.

Also, of course, my sincere gratitude to Ray Ketcham for co-hosting the workshop with me. As our students found out, Ray is a terrific teacher and a special guy to know (and that a clipboard and a hard hat from Walmart might get you access to a few places).

Finally, though she won't want me to single her out, I'm also especially grateful to Sabrina Henry for doing a lot of the legwork in organizing this workshop and trying her best to keep Ray and I on track, which as anyone who knows us will tell you is a nearly impossible task.

There are things I can do better… and I will. There will be more of these in other places and with a different people. But this one will always hold a special place for me as the one where ten people took a chance on learning something from me. I'm grateful for that.

So keep an eye out here and the rest of the Internets for future versions of the workshop. I hope you'll consider coming to one sometime when I'm close to your home.

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[Photography] is putting one's head, one's eye and one's heart on the same axis. – Henri Cartier-Bresson

I've spent a some time here recently telling you about the Close to Home workshop and the great sponsors we're working with to bring it to you, and I am certainly grateful for their participation and their support. I personally use many of their products on a daily basis and I highly recommend you try them, too.

Day is done

But workshops are not just about the sponsors or the prizes they've donated for participants. I think it's important for you to know what it is you're getting yourself into so you can decide if a particular workshop is right for you. I always look at workshops and seminars as opportunities to do two things: a) learn from other photographers I respect and b) grow as a photographer by learning something new. Some workshops and seminars are designed to further your off-camera flash skills or post-processing techniques and they are certainly valuable to photographers of all levels. There comes a time, however, when you find yourself dissatisfied with simply learning new "tips and tricks." There's that voice in your head that says, "I want to do more. I want my photography to mean something more." That's where I've found myself recently and that's where Ray and I plan to take you.

Now, of course I want you to come to the workshop to experience this for yourself, simply because there's nothing like the kind of energy that a group of photographers focused on the same goal can bring, but I think I can give you enough information to help you decide if this workshop is right for you.

Essentially, the Close to Home workshop is about seeing. Seeing photographs, seeing stories and helping you tie your photography to your life—in both small and big ways. The book, Close to Home: Finding Great Photographs in Your Own Back Yard, is really a smaller discussion of a big idea—that great photography comes from within you, not where you live or travel . Ray and I are going to help you get closer to this idea through a series of discussions and exercises designed to slow you down and help you see the world around you more clearly. Then, once we've gotten you used to this approach, we'll give you an individual assignment for the rest of the workshop so you can put these ideas into practice, and ask you to show the rest of the group your results at the end.

This may seem a bit like navel-gazing Zen meditation—and sometimes it is—but there are definitely practical results that you'll see. You will understand better why you make photographs and how to make all of the photographic skills and techniques you've already acquired better serve your particular kind of seeing. It doesn't matter if portraits or landscapes or abstracts are your thing, and it doesn't matter what your skill level is. We want to help you connect your photography with your life.

I hope you'll join us.


Don't forget that early registration ends tonight, Sept. 6, at midnight PST, where you can save 10% off of the regular workshop fee of $299. If you register and pay by the deadline, you'll be eligible for a chance to win one of two copies of Laura Shoe's Lightroom Fundamentals DVD. Register today!

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