Starbuck’s Joins Flickr and 10 Reasons Why As a Photographer I’m a Fan

You and All That Caffeine

I was pleased today to learn that Starbuck’s has joined Flickr. I’ve been a big Starbucks fan for a while and have personally consumed thousands of their beverages over the years. It is great to see them join Flickr where they can participate in social media with photographers.

One of the first threads in their new Starbucks group was one questioning their photo policy. I’ve been told not to take photos inside Starbucks several times so I was very interested in this. It turns out that Starbucks has no prohibition on amateur photography in their stores. It was nice to see this clarified today.

I also presented an idea to them that I’ve had for a series of portraits of Starbuck baristas. I’m not sure if they are interested in collaborating on this project with me or not, but I’d love to pursue it formally with them. I think I could do a really cool series of 100 portraits or so of baristas. For the past year or so I’ve been trying to get out on the road about once a month or once every other month to spend intense days shooting new towns and cities. So far this year I’ve been able to visit Chicago, Los Angeles, Reno, Las Vegas, Eureka, Redding, Sacramento and several other towns.

As I do my out of town shoots Starbucks has become incredibly instrumental for me. I almost think of them as sort of a homebase for my shoots out in the field away from home. I was posting why I’m such a fan of Starbucks as a photographer in a group on Flickr and I thought I’d post it here on my blog as well.

I thought I’d do it in the form of a top 10 list. The top 10 reasons why as a photographer I’m a fan of Starbucks.

1. I’m addicted to caffeine and they deliver a powerful punch. I saw an analysis on their coffee a ways back that indicated that they had higher caffeine levels than competitors.

2. When I’m on the road I can count on Starbucks for reliability. Getting a consistent known experience vs. an unknown experience from a local coffee shop is huge. What do I mean by this?

3. Almost every Starbucks has a bathroom. When you are committing to photographing 20 hours straight in a strange city this in invaluable to count on. This is actually the most important reason why I count on them I think.

4. Starbucks offers free wifi through my UVerse account. I can count on the fact that I’ll be able to log on for a brief break from shooting and take care of internet business.

5. Starbucks almost always has available power outlets to recharge my camera batteries, my iPhone, and laptop while I enjoy my beverage. I can also use the down time to offload images off my memory cards and on to my Mac clearing up more space for the next leg of my shoot.

6. Starbucks has comfortable seating. Sometimes you want a soft leather chair. Other times you want a chair and a table. I’ve found almost always that the accomodations at Starbucks are comfortable.

7. They are everywhere. Most everyplace I go to shoot I can simply type Starbucks into my iPhone and usually find one very close.

8. The coffee tastes great.

9. I can always count on a big glass of ice water with lots of ice from them when I order my beverage. This is so much nicer (as I can often get very dehydrated while shooting) than the piddly little water cups that they give you at places like McDonalds.

10. Getting all of the above for the price of $3.25 or so for a grande non-fat latte is a *huge* bargain. Starbucks delivers tremendous value and they do it with consistency that I can count on vs. other coffee houses where I might not get the same experience.

I’ve only just started my Starbuck’s set, but if you’d like to see (I’m sure it will be growing over time) it’s here.

Note, I was not paid in any way for this post, I’m just a fan.

DMU Visits Byron Hot Springs

Swinging From the Chandeliers

On Saturday night I joined six other photographers from the DeleteMe Uncensored Group on Flickr and spent the evening exploring the former Byron Hot Springs Resort in Byron, CA. This was our fifth recent DMU outing and one of the best yet. Plug1, Jeremy Brooks, Ivan Makarov, DLH65, Rumnose, funkandjazz, and myself all spent several hours shooting the abandoned and rumored haunted resort.

The Byron Hot Springs used to be a resort where movie stars and superstar athletes (including Fatty Arbuckle and Clark Gable) used to resort in the early 1900’s. The SF Seals held training camp at the location and SF socialites would frequent the resort in the early century for the hot springs and golf. Early versions of the resort were destroyed in fires, but the last resort built (in 1913) was built as a four story structure out of bricks and the structure is largely intact, albeit abandoned, still today.

Apparently the resort was abandoned shortly after the Great Depression due to financial difficulty. The resort was later leased to the United States government in 1941 where it was renamed Camp Tracy and used by the military as a POW camp to interrogate Japanese and German POWs, according to wikipedia.

Troy Paiva (aka Lost America) has a good write up and an early set of images on the Hot Springs and cites 1,500 POWs as having gone through the facility during WW2. Apparently the militiary didn’t like the smell of sulfur at the Hot Springs so at that time the Springs were sealed.

After WW2 the resort was sold to the Greek Orthodox Church who purchased it for $105,000 in 1947 and used it for several years as Monastery St. Paul. Bearings has an interesting write up on this era of the resort here.

More recently a developer has purchased the property with plans to restore and rebuild the resort. You can find the new page on the resort here, which also includes more history on the location.

DLH65 served as our guide out there having shot the resort several times in the past. DLH65’s got some great photos (including some amazing infrared photos) of the resort as well that you can check out here. There’s a short documentary on the site on YouTube focusing on it’s haunted status here . There is also a book out on the resort here.

Mostly we focused our outing on light painting while at the resort using colored gels and flashlights to paint long exposure photographs. The resort, which is covered in graffiti, has a beautiful master staircase and balconies in the main lobby, a ktichen, a crashed elevator shaft and a fair number of hotel rooms worth exploring. Cattle graze around the resort which features a fountain at the entrance to the hotel.

Night photography takes a lot of time. Most of the exposures I shot ranged from 20 seconds to 3 minutes in length. When you screw up on a shot it’s painful because you have to wait so long to try it again. I used three mag flashlights and colored gels that I got from a theatrical supply store. Rumnose brought some magnesium fire starters and did some experimenting with them that turned out great.

Final ScoreRoom ServiceNo BodyStacks

While we were shooting the site several teenagers showed up to explore the haunted resort. The place seems to be a popular place with the local kids who show up there to hang out and explore. The resort itself is about half a mile in off the main road.

I will say that Byron was one of the more interesting abandoned locations I’ve shot recently. I plan on heading back several times in the future and hope to shoot it both during the day and definitely at night many more times. I put together a small set of 11 of my images from Saturday night here. I’ll add more as I have time to process them.

It was really cool also to finally meet funkandjazz. I’ve admired his stuff online for a long time. He’s probably the most prolific graffiti photographer on the web today. There wasn’t much serious graffiti out at the Hot Springs. He told me that the sort of gang/youth/tag scrawl that was mostly out there was called pedestrian graffiti. I’ve wanted to meet funkandjazz for a while and it was great to finally do that.

Thanks to all who came out. We’ll do another DMU meet up in October. In addition to my own shots, check out the DMUmeetup092609 tag on flickr to see more great shots from our evening.

My 30,000th Photograph on Flickr

My 30,000th Photograh on Flickr

The photo above represents my 30,000th photograph published to Flickr. It’s a milestone and part of my continuing goal to publish 1,000,000 photos to Flickr before I die. This photograph is from one of my favorite shoots. A shoot I did with my wife and children a ways back in this storm drain in Big Tujunga Canyon.

DMU Hangs Out on Mare Island

Lights Went Out

Well I had a great time hanging out last night on Mare Island for the first time. Mare Island is a decommissioned naval base in Vallejo. I’ve been wanting to shoot Mare Island for a while and Ivan Makarov helped organize an official DMU outing out there. Always being prepared, Ivan even briefed security ahead of time that we would be there and the entire great outing was completely hassle free of security.

We met at 7pm near the middle of the island and spent most of the evening night shooting more of the grungy industrial stuff down off of Nimitz Street. Mare Island is huge and I feel like last night I barely scratched the surface there and I’m sure both DMU and myself will be back many times in the future.

Meta CodyNukinFutsSuisunShims

It was fun meeting more folks from DMU who I hadn’t met before. I can now confirm that the elusive Cody Robertson, aka SFlights, aka sfso is in fact a real to live person. Sometimes with internet folks you can’t be so sure. 😉 In addition to Ivan and Cody, Shims and NukinFuts made the drive up, Rumnose actually brought his girlfriend Heather, Dave, StefanB, suisun and G Dan Mitchell, who had shot there in the past with the Nocturnes and knew the lay of the land a bit showed up as well. Unfortunately my photos of Dave and Heather didn’t turn out.

Before the FloodIvan MakarovG Dan MitchellRumnose

Stefan had a really cool laser that he used to assist him with his focusing in the dark. StefanbI’d never thought of using a laser pointer that way but it seemed to work really well for him. I just may have to get one of those at some point. For the most part I was able to use my flashlights to get my autofocus to lock in on things, but there were a few cranes that I couldn’t quite get with my 135 where it might have been nice to have one of those.

The weather was perfect out there last night, the moon was just right, and we got some great wind/clouds for those long exposure night shots.

Sleeping GiantThe outing was pretty much injury free, although I did scrape my hand up on once fence and unfortunately tripped a motion sensor alarm at one point that lit up a whole building like jiminy christmas. The moon provided great ambient light to go with the cranes and we saw some huge bats. There was also this weird animal screaming on the island. It sounded crazy, almost human like, and wild. It sounded like some wild animal or something was birthing or some other sort of crazy thing. Added just the right eerie feel to the night.

Mare Island is remarkably open. It reminded me of Treasure Island in a lot of ways that way, but with a bit more development and a lot more cranes and dry docks. If you want to check out some of the photos from the outing check out these photos tagged DMU Meet Up 083009 on Flickr.

Anyways, great meeting up with a great group of dudes (and Heather, who’s great too) and look forward to the next DMU outing that gets organized. I wouldn’t be surprised if it’s back out on Mare Island yet again.

The Smoothest Dude Alive, Daniel Krieger, Starts A Photography Blog

Daniel Krieger's New Blog

My Pal Daniel Krieger, AKA Smoothdude on Flickr, just started a photography blog. Daniel’s a talented professional photographer who does a lot of wedding work and other work for hire in New York. He’s got a great eye and if you shoot weddings or other jobs I think you might enjoy following what he’s up to and his style.

You can get to his new blog here.
Smoothie tells me that he’s going to be posting new photography related posts every Tuesday and Friday. Check him out.

A Podcast Interview Robert Scoble and I Did With Photography Site F-Stop Beyond

My Pal Robert Scoble and I did a podcast interview with Ron Dawson over at F-Stop Beyond that just went up. It was an engaging conversation about a lot of different topics related to photography and online photography. We talk about how both Scoble and I got started in photography, talk about how Scoble and I met, as well as terms of service issues with photo sharing sites, censorship issues with photo sharing sites and definitely spend a bit of time on the show pimping our favorite site FriendFeed.

You can check the podcast our here.

East Bay Signs and Scenes Show This Friday Night in the East Bay

This Friday!! 7-9pm

mrsth and I are looking forward to heading out to the opening of The Vintage Eye, East Bay Signs and Scenes show opening tomorrow night from 7-9pm at the Fingado Art Gallery in El Cerrito.

The group show features five Bay Area photographers: Devil Doll, Ken Duffy, Lila Banuelos, Neo Serafimidis and Doug Donaldson.

The show will be on display at the gallery through August 21st. The address of the gallery is 7025 Stockton Avenue in El Cerrito. As an avid photographer of neon signs myself, I’m looking forward to seeing the printed work of these other great photographers.

NY Attorney General Andrew Cuomo Goes After New York Camera Rip Off Stores

Back in November of 2005 I posted a widely circulated blog post about Brooklyn Camera retailer Price Rite Photo. Price Rite Photo had tried to bait and switch me on the purchase of a new Canon 5D and then threatened me when I objected. My blogging helped provide a lot of publicity against these scam artists. The Good news is that this publicity helped get Price Rite Photo shut down as well as national mainstream press about the problem. Subsequent to that I’ve blogged about a number of these other shady retailers including Broadway Photo who was named today in an article over at the Consumerist about the New York Attorney General finally going after these scam artists.

According to the Consumerist, the NY Attorney General’s office announced recently that it has closed down two stores completely, fined seven different shady retailers a total of $655,000 plus $100,000 legal fees, and forced more stores to overhaul their work practices with future monitoring.

More details from the NY BBB here.

The complaint by the Attorney General pretty much accurately described my own experience with Price Rite Photo back in 2005.

“Attorney General Cuomo’s investigation revealed that these seven companies would advertise consumer electronics, such as cameras, camcorders, projectors, and related accessories online at prices significantly lower than their competitors to induce consumers to place orders via the internet. Once an order was placed, the companies would call consumers and try to sell them additional or “upgraded” merchandise at inflated prices. If the consumer refused to purchase the additional merchandise, the companies would cancel the sale or claim the item was backordered for months. If the consumer did agree to purchase the additional merchandise, the companies would send them lower quality merchandise than what was promised, or merchandise that the consumer never ordered in the first place. When customers tried to return the items, they would either be denied or be slammed with undisclosed fees. “

Good work on the part of the NYAG.

Thanks, Eddy!

Cooliris Just Became The Coolest New Way to Browse Flickr

Cooliris Just Became The Coolest New Way to Browse Flickr

I’ve been watching Cooliris over the past few years and have been super excited about the technology that they’ve been developing. If you haven’t seen Cooliris yet, let me just say it is the most stunning way to browse photos available on the web today hands down. I have seen no other browsing tool that is as beautiful as Cooliris. When you view a page in Cooliris the photos from the page just float by. You easily move the mouse to browse in a wave like motion across the sea photos and use your scroll wheel or trackpad to zoom in and out seeing photos in their full high res glory.

It’s sort of like coverflow for the Mac, but only 100x better.

But as much as I’ve enjoyed *browsing* photos with Cooliris in the past, in the end I found that experience to be lacking. I want to do a lot more with photos than just browse. I want to interact. And in the past there was no easy way to interact with photos on Cooliris except in Cooliris’ own proprietary playground. That was until this past weekend. This past weekend Cooliris released Cooliris v. 1.11 and with this release they’ve moved the Cooliris experience into a browser tab. What does this mean? This means that rather than having Cooliris take over your whole computer screen and computer, you can now browse using it and fully utilize all the power of your browser.

More specifically, this means that as I browse photos using Cooliris that I can cmd-click (or ctl-click for those of you on PCs) on an image’s link page and Firefox (or IE if you’re on a PC — joking, folks, joking) will open that photo’s page in a background tab. This means that you can use the power of Cooliris to browse, and then select photos as you go that you’d like to fave, comment on, etc. and once you are done browsing they’ll already be opened in new tabs for you where you can go interact with them directly.

This is exactly the feature that I was waiting for from CoolIris to begin using it full time as my primary way to browse photos. No more crappy little thumbnail pages from flickr, or even their small photo sized alternative, now simply load up your favorite photostream or search term or group pool or set and browse with full high res large sized glory while still being able to easily load images you’d like to interact with in background tabs. The Cooliris view for sets even looks far better than Flickr’s own slideshow view.

Once you find a page on Flickr that you want to browse, simply click on the little CoolIris icon as you hover over a photo and it will launch a Cooliris version in a new tab.

Cooliris has also made some additional enhancements for Flickr including giving you the ability to make a hyperlink of a Cooliris view of a particular set/stream/pool etc. and then share that with others. To see what I’m talking about feel free to click on this Cooliris view of my 10 faves or more set on Flickr. Pretty damn slick huh? Want to fave a few of these? You know you do 😉 Just cmd-click on the go to photo page when you select a photo and it will load it in a background tab for you.

You can get and install Cooliris here.

A video of how Cooliris works here. Cooliris’ blog post announcing the new version here.

Nice work Cooliris. Congrats on the release!

Oh and once you install Cooliris definitely go fave diving in some of your favorite Flickr user’s streams. Emma’s favorites knock my socks off. Go see them here.

365 Portraits, The Book

365 Portraits The Book

In 2007 Photographer Bill Wadman traveled around the United States and Europe with a single mission. Each day he photographed, edited and posted online a different portrait of a different person. It was a mammoth effort meticulously followed that resulted in one of the most authentic collection of portraits I’ve ever seen. The result, entitled simply 365 Portraits is a significant and beautiful collection of images. I was honored to have been included as a subject in Bill’s Project and think the photo that he took of me is one of the best I’ve ever seen. While Bill shot some famous people in his book (like Astronaut Buzz Aldrin) I found some of his most compelling portraits to be those of everyday people as part of their everyday lives. Here are some of my favorites:

Land Surveyor A.J. MacBrien
A nude of Sarah Lizbet
Teacher Barrie Mann
Writer/Poet Sarah Herrington
Lover and Contrast of Graph Paper Regina Sampels
Racer Beth O’Brien
Photographer Smoothdude
Baby Jonah Max
Octogenarian Hiker Betty New
Singer Songwriter Jocelyn Ryder
Overthinker Alexis Levinson
Video Blogger Ze Frank
Editor of Poz Magazine Regan Hoffman
Workaholic Amy Prole

Bill has now finally released his book of these portraits. The book will be an initial limited edition run of 500 numbered and signed copies. The book is hard cover with about 250 pages showcasing these amazing portraits and Bill is selling them for $120 each. There is a July 20th pre-order deadline. Here is your opportunity to own a unique and interesting early edition work of art from an emerging American photographer and to support an artist directly as well. I just ordered mine 30 minutes ago. Congrats on your project Bill and congrats now on the book — a remarkable work and a labor of love for sure.