Those Hurricanes that Blow Everything to Pieces

I sit in the middle of the room after the hurricane has ripped through.

Esther Generation

There are

fabric pieces

and crayons

and half completed drawings

and bits of things that should be in my recycling bin

and toys

and food underneath the table

and books strewn across every floor of the house.

I ask the three little whirlwinds to pick it up.  We wrestle hard over the work. I’m trying to teach them that they are blessed beyond all measure but are entitled to none of it.  All these toys are grace.

Across the world a different Hurricane is pushing itself ashore in the Philipines.  Walls of water 10 feet high, winds at 195 mph and with gusts up to 235 mph, and flash flooding pound this little third world country.  Hurricane Katrina looks like a mere hyena compared to the lion of Haiyan.

The Philippines is being torn to shreds like a library book in the hands of my two year old as I wrestle these three kids of mine to help keep a tidy house.

When I was a girl, I remember the fire chief knocking on our boarded up door.  “It’s mandatory evacuation east of the Intercoastal waterway,” he reminded us just hours before the landfall of Hurricane Hugo. My sister and I were coloring that plywood with bright crayons and writing “Gone Fishing” in 5 year old scrawl.

My parents disobeyed this command. We pulled the mattresses to the living room floor.  We drank virgin daiquiris and watched the transformers blow fuses with eerie green light. I felt the heat seep into our normally air conditioned home right through those layers of plywood and glass.  I fell asleep to the sound of the rain blasting across the house in intermittent waves.  I awoke late in the night to the haunting crack and crash of a loblolly pine tree in our back yard as it landed on a shed just a few feet from our home.  It was a long time before I fell asleep again after peeking out our backdoor at that giant tree just crushed there.

16 years later I awoke under a tarp deep in the heart of the Blue Ridge Mountains.  The wind gusts and rain seemed oddly out of place hundreds of miles from the ocean.  It was early and long before the sun had risen.  Half an hour passed before I announced to my tarp mates that I was pretty sure we were all awake. We giggled nervously and started packing up our gear. Yards away we heard the boys tarp stirring and our backpacking instructor pops her head into our tarp.

“You guys are up super early.” Amy stated the obvious.

“We couldn’t fall back asleep.” Whitney confessed.

“It’s this eerie weather.” Jessica said.

“It’s almost like…”I pause looking for the right word when I remember that childhood night so long ago. “… a hurricane.”

Amy winks.  We walk up over 300 stairs as we hike up and away from Lake Jocassee while Hurricane Katrina blows the last of her fury across our soaked rain coats.

I lived through Hugo, and I lived through Katrina’s remnants, and I will live through this season of teaching my little hurricanes to clean up the gifts that they have been given.  But I can hardly live with myself if I do nothing in response to Haiyan.

What if I am here, living in my palace of messy toys, for such a time as this? 

What if you and I, the North American church, are blessed beyond measure not to enjoy our numerous gifts but to give them away?

And as we herd our rich children out the exit of the Compassion Experience, I pause and stare at this quote there high on the wall.

Esther Generation

 

Oh, church, it’s time to act.  It’s time to rise above a faith of nothing and really love.  Consider partnering with me and Compassion International in reaching the poor affected by Hurrican Haiyan? Just click below and donate what you can.

Help Children Affected by Philippines Typhoon

Fun Family Photography Greenville SC

When I volunteered to do mini-sessions at Julia’s house in St. Louis, I had no idea what to expect. I didn’t know where I would be shooting. I didn’t know if anyone would book. I didn’t know if the families who chose to book me would share my vision for fun family photography in a documentary style.

Fun Family Photography

Alice was the first to book and she soothed all my fears.

Fun Family Photography

Her favorite images are my favorite images.

Fun Family Photography

Her boys were the most loved and well behaved little boys I have ever met.

Fun Family Photography

But most of all, Alice took the time to thank me and tell me which images were her favorite. That was a huge gift to my soul.

Fun Family Photography Authentic Documentary Family Photography

Fun Family Photography

Calling

There’s so much weight in that word.

Calling.

The weight of everything we are made to be.

It’s something I think everyone wrestles with at some point (or multiple points, or daily).

I think I’m more in the daily crowd.

Who am I?  What am I meant to be?  What should I be doing with my life?  My hands?  My gifts?

And that whispered fear {am I failing?}.

Oh, but with a God sovereign over all how can I fail?  He knows what he created me to be.  I’m here to discover His plan and to give Him glory.  And that brings comfort.  No matter what role I dip my toes in.

Yet, still there are so many roles I step into daily.
Wife.
Mother.
Daughter.
Sister.
Photographer.
Writer.
Encourager.
Small-group(s) Leader.
Quilter.
Garment maker.
Painter (at least of walls… very regularly)

It’s those roles that weaken my contentment with my calling to be His.
Those roles that cause the tears to fall when they become more important than savoring the fact that He is Worthy.
Of all the roles.  All the callings.

Photo Editing Software Overview {Free Beginner Photography Class}

We’ve worked all year on trying to take the best Straight out of the Camera (SOOC) images that we possibly can.  Today, I’m going to give you a brief overview of the editing software on the market.

After all this work to make almost perfect SOOC images, it sort of feels weird to be pointing you toward software to make things look even better.  Yet, even the great film photographers played with their images in the darkroom: dodging, burning, contrast filters, and extra or less developing time for darker or brighter images were all used to improve on the original.  I’m not saying it’s necessary by any means.  If you don’t want to use editing software, go right ahead and ignore this series.

Gimp

GIMP

Gimp is a free graphics manipulation program. It provides a lot of the same functions as Photoshop Elements, but I’ve read that the interface is less intuitive the PSE.  I know very little about it (although I do believe I used it prior to purchasing Elements 9).

Photoshop Elements


Photoshop Elements  costs around $80 dollars . This is the program that I use currently for all of my editing.  I’m just now starting to outgrow it and hunger for a few more capabilities in Lightroom or full Photoshop.  All around I think PSE is a great investment for the beginner photographer. Like GIMP, I feel that PSE isn’t extremely intuitive to learn and it took me over a year to feel proficient.  Most of my PSE learning came from Amanda at Everyday Elements.

Adobe Lightroom


Adobe Lightroom  costs twice as much as PSE at around $140.  Lighroom is beyond amazing at a few things: cataloging all your files, editing multiple files from the same series all at one time (a huge time saver), working with RAW files, and some specific editing like skin smoothing and such. Combine Lightroom with PSE and I think most professional photographers would find this a very powerful combination.  I just bit the bullet and purchased LR because it’s taking me so long to do each file individually rather than doing some things in a batch.

Photoshop Creative Suite or Creative Cloud


Photoshop just went to a model they’re calling Creative Cloud.  Basically, full Photoshop will only be available through a subscription service rather than as a software that you’ve purchased and owned.  This has created a ton of outrage in the photography and graphic design communities. Creative Cloud is cheaper for a full year than purchasing the last software copy Photoshop Creative Suite 6, but most PS users didn’t upgrade for 2-5 years which is the cause of the outrage in the photography/design communities.

Is full PS better than a PSE/Lightroom combination?  Yes.  Would I recommend this software for a beginner photographer? No.  Therefore, this will be the only discussion on this software during this series.  If you have Photoshop (even an ancient version) I recommend reading 10 Essential Photoshop Skills if you’d like to learn to use it better.

Editing Posts

I’ll be writing a short series of editing posts through November/December while ya’ll work on your Final Projects.  There will be no assignments, but feel free to use what you learn however you would like.  All of my editing posts will be written using Photoshop Elements 9 or 12 as my visual guide. I just purchased LR so I may toss in a few tutorials from there: especially when I’m talking about black and white conversions.  If you don’t have PSE and are using GIMP or Lightroom or Photoshop, feel free to Google the topic I’m talking about.  Maybe “How to use Levels in GIMP/Lightroom/Photoshop?”  I’m sure a quick and easy visual tutorial to using that function in your program will arise 🙂

***Disclosure: links in this post to Amazon and FlatBooks are affiliate links.  If you purchase software or a book, I will receive minor compensation.  Maybe enough to buy a back up camera battery, but not enough to buy a Sony a99. 😉 I have linked to these products because I think they’re helpful for you.  Thank you for supporting me through purchasing or just reading my thoughts 🙂

Free Beginner Photography Class Progress Reports

Progress reports sounds kind of threatening, huh? Well, I didn’t mean for it to be that way. After all I was supposed to write this post on Wednesday. 😉

This humble photography class has whittled down to just two lovely participants. Amber and Teddy. However, I’m so thankful that Amber and Teddy have stayed the course and encouraged me to keep at it.

If you’re still following along, I’d love to see how your work has changed so drop some images in the Flickr Group.  I’m also considering a private Facebook group: would it be quicker and easier for you to share imagery and critique on Facebook? Comment and let me know.

Teddy and Amber are currently turning in a mixture of manual mode, lighting, and final project images. So I’m going to keep this simple and showcase a brief spattering of their best images with a few comments on my favorite parts of their images.

Amber

Final Project

 

I love the narrow depth of field that lets us focus right on this little gift of childhood.

Catchlights

 

Beautiful lighting.  A wonderful expression.  Love the skin tones.  Love that this is straight out of camera.

Final Project

 

Love this!  Love that you were looking for the light and the catchlights.  The lens distortion (where her body is tiny and her head huge) makes me smile and really captures her well from the perspective an an adult looking down on her.  I think this one needs to go on the wall.

Final Project

 

I had to put this up here because I can’t believe how much he’s grown already!  I love the contrast of the bright jacket on the drab background colors and the beautiful expression.  The weird crop is my only critique… but when I’m shooting fast moving children… I get lots of weird crops… so well done!

Open Shade

 

This might be your capstone image.  I can see how much thought went into it.  The colors, the moment, the leading line of the fishing pole connecting the two image parts and creating interest.  It’s breath taking.  It elevates this normal moment of childhood to true beauty.

Teddy

House of God

 

When I saw this my first thought was that there’s almost complete lack of distortion in this photo. Teddy chose his crop/focal length/shot location/angles so well!  He loves this sort of high contrast night work and I love watching him do it.  My only wish: I want to see it in black and white because I love high contrast night work in black and white.  Ha!

Creeping

 

Again: I covet the black and white.  🙂  But for me this feels hopeful: it’s dark and yet still the greenery is growing.

Hide and Seek

 

I just love this.  The playfulness.  The forty stories I could tell about this one image (the people pleaser, the abused, the unnoticed, the grown up child).  The light and the shadow of the pole.  I just like this.

Coffee Artist

 

I’ve been reading and writing and going to a conference about how our ever day life is art.  And here is this man working this low wage job and creating art right where he is. Powerful.