Viewing entries in
photography

Voyage Houston: Life and Work with Allie W.

Comment

Voyage Houston: Life and Work with Allie W.

personal_photo-7-1000x600.png

Earlier this month, I was connected to the good folks at Voyage Houston, a nontraditional publication that predominantly features entrepreneurs and creatives who are on uncommon and interesting career paths. We corresponded about topics from a creative upbringing to the nature of what I do. Below, a few excerpts and a link to the main feature:


On the human aspect of photography:

In high school, my circle was full of kids who had taught themselves to create nearly professional-quality images with DSLR cameras that their families had given them. At first, I was envious of the effects they could get versus what I could do with a point-and-shoot, but then, I noticed that, more importantly, these friends were empathetic and lived in the moment in a way that drew others to them. Photography made them connect deeply to people and to what was happening around us, and in an appreciative, interpretive way
AW02.png

On the appeal of creative work:

[At the start of my creative pursuits], I noticed [...] that doing photography as favors for friends felt rewarding to me in a way that was beyond pure hobbyist enjoyment – it was also intellectually stimulating! Each project felt like a business project or puzzle with its own unique requirements, constraints, and personalities to work around.

On advice for up-and-coming creatives:

The best thing that aspiring creatives can do for themselves is to cultivate a healthy sense of realism and self-forgiveness. Are you going to be an artistic legend overnight, or at all? Probably not. Are you going to throw your hands up and decide that your art isn’t worth pursuing at all because it’s not perfect? Nothing’s perfect. Are the people around you going to trash your work because it doesn’t look like it could be in Vogue or National Geographic? Not if they’re normal, reasonable people. The worst-case scenario that could happen if you put your work out there is that the people who don’t connect with it will just pass it over… and that’s fine. That’s not a real setback. A real setback is not being willing to put your work out there in the first place.
AW03.png

For updates follow @alb.ert.ine on Instagram or check out the widget at the bottom of this site

Comment

Rainier at Dusk

Comment

Rainier at Dusk

It’s been unseasonably hot in Seattle the last few days. Thankfully temps dropped back to the 50s by this morning, but while the city baked, I sought refuge in the shade of generous foliage at Seward Park while cotton candy colors lit up the mountain. There’s something poetic - both in concept and image - about living in the shadow of a volcano like Rainier.

DSC09793.jpg
DSC09796.jpg

Comment

Comment

New in store: Oregon, Washington, Paris

Screen Shot 2019-04-18 at 7.28.18 PM.png

Slowly and not-so-steadily, I’m closing the gap between times when I take photos purely for fun and when I finally sit down to process them properly on my computer rather than my phone. When it comes to my own trips and vacations, I’m fine with letting the images take a backseat, but when shooting someone else’s event, I can never wait to edit and send them right over - I get too excited! New arrivals at the link below:

Comment