Tag Archives: Michael E. Frye

Farewell, Not So Much

So I’m bidding farewell to PhotoCapM for now. It may rise from the ashes one day, but for now it plagues me a little. Closing it was a hard decision to make.

Why? Some may ask. Well, my interests in photography have changed a little. No, I’m not leaving photography. I’m just redirecting my efforts a little and PhotoCapM has really become something that nags me more than inspires me in that redirection.

Things have changed a little with my desires related to the craft and the art world in general. Although I love photography, it is not my great love and so spending time forcing it to BE my great love is really counter productive. This does not mean that I won’t have a web presence. I certainly will. Its unveiling is coming very soon, so look for that announced here.

On November 1, 2011 I will check the box that says, “Hide”, for this site and no one will be able to access it anymore. As I said, a new site is coming. Actually several new sites. These will truly reflect the great love have in the art form that has suited and serves me best.

I hope you all understand and hope that you will follow me to my new sites when they are up and running. This has been a great trip and thanks for traveling with me. Look for that new site soon. I will announce it here, as well as on the social networks.

Best wishes to all of you!

Mike


FAIL

I should not promise an article with a major holiday coming up. It simply never turns out that way I expect. I conveyed to you early last week that there would be a couple of articles up by the end of last week. However, you can see that they did not go up. That is a FAIL on my part.

I will be getting them out this week for sure. Things are winding down now and coming back to a semblance of normality. So…. Look for these articles this week.

Until then get out there and shoot a little. While you are at it, have a good time.


Just a Heads Up!

Just a heads up to those of you who read PhotoCapM. There are a boatload of changes coming. PhotoCapM has always focused primarily on photography and that will not change. It will always be here with new content regarding the world of photography. At least mine and my guest writer’s thoughts on it.

Did you know I am a writer too? Some of you do. Hence the need for some changes. I would really like to introduce you to the writing world as well. One more thing…

Something special is coming toward the end of this year and I am very excited about it. I just know you would love for me to tell what it is, but I don’t “roll” that way. Sorry…

Just a tease.

I will keep you in the loop as changes are made and hope they will provide for you broader experience with the things we all enjoy talking about.

New posts coming out tomorrow and Saturday on the last City of Rocks National Reserve trip last weekend, so look for those. Until then keep your camera handy and SHOOT!


Struggling and Starving Artist

IMG_0180 How many trips does it take to the same location to get the photographs you want? The answer is, as many as it takes. When one’s desire to accomplish the completion of a photography related project becomes an obsession with perfection, one forgets that sometimes nature does not cooperate.

I am struggling “big time” with photography at City of Rocks, Idaho. Why? Because Mother Nature has not been in a cooperative mood lately.

I am starving for the right set of photographs from this area for a project I am working on with Dave Seeram. It is our first major project together and my hope has been to provide him with my very best work. The problem? A hang up related to getting just the right photos from my perspective.

In my journal I have noted this frustration and will visit the entry often. Here is why. With this trip I took my good friend and fellow photographer Paul Dennison.

We ventured out in to the “wild”, which “ain’t really so wild”, and found it beautiful. However, the drama I looked for in the scenery that surrounded us failed me. Part of the failure is found in me, because I set expectations for myself way too high.

Paul and I had a great time. We made photographs like crazy. We stayed up late for a sunset that never transpired and got up early for a daybreak that broke our hearts.

IMG_0114So what does one do when these types of circumstances arise? One goes back until he or she gets it right. In this case City of Rocks is very close, so I really am able to return to it multiple times to get what I am looking for in the way of dramatic scenery.

There is a question, however. What of the places I will travel to soon where I will not be able to return multiple times? I believe a change in the way I prepare my attitude to visit a location is in order.

I must begin taking in to account that the weather, environmental conditions, and scenery may not live up to my expectations. I scold myself on this point, and then laugh, because although I know I cannot control these things, I still become frustrated with them when they do not turn out the way I think they should. Arrogance? Naw… Dumb thinking and the fact that I am still an amateur.

We struggling and starving artists, me in particular, need to get over the frustrations found in making photographs. “Life ain’t perfect” and neither is the process by which we capture the scenery around us. It is a good lesson and one that I am taking with me in the future for all photographic adventures.

Planning and preparation are a necessity, but remember that when shooting in a place you cannot always control what is happening in that place. As matter of fact, you cannot control it at all if you are relying on nature to fill the area with dramatic moments. That is just the way it is and we must, I must, make the best of it by seeking out those things that we believe are not dramatic when they really are.

Later this week there will be two more articles on the latest trip to City of Rocks. There is a tale to be told in what Paul and I experienced. Some of that tale is related to self-inflicted pain and sleeplessness. It was simply AWESOME! I will be sharing a few of these moments, so look for them later this week.

In the meantime, stop being so hard on yourself. More for me than you, but maybe you too.

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Featured in the photographs above is Paul Dennison. Good friend and fellow traveler.


Calling All Writers! Photographers or Not, Scriptito!

Scriptitio Just as the title of this article emphatically states, “Calling all writers!”, there is a special call to those who have a hard time organizing their writing. If you are like me, sometimes the best laid plans in your written work fall well behind schedule due to a lack of organization. I have great news for you and that news comes by way of a product.

It is called Scriptito. I have been using it to assist me in my writing projects and it is one of the best organizers I have ever used. It is a web based program, so I am able to access them from just about anywhere I have a computer or laptop.

Scriptito was developed by Chad Standsbury who had “several ideas for novels”, but needed a program he could use “early in the morning to write from home” and “over his lunch hour to write at work”. His solution was to develop an online platform that could be accessed from both places. His solution has become the solution for many who desire to write during whatever spare time they may have.

The system itself is comprised of online index style note cards that allow the author to build chapter summaries, chapters, characters, locations, and research, which can then be tied together for quick access to each component for reference. The index cards can be easily dragged and dropped for reorder where needed and the word processor has many of the same functions you find in a standard writing platform. For photographers and illustrators this is good news, because images can be incorporated in to document you are writing.

Scriptito’s mission and goals are two fold. Both relate to supporting you, the writer. First, their mission.

“Scriptito wants to enable writers of all skill levels tell their stories – and we think we can do this better than anyone…”

Their goals support their mission 100%.

“We want to enable you to write any time, any where.”

“We want to eliminate the distractions so that you can focus on your writing.”

You can read more about their mission and goals on their About Us Page.

I highly recommend Scriptito. I have been using it for months now and found that I am better organized, as well as more comfortable in the creative processes associated with writing. I used to worry about losing my train of thought as I wrote, but with this great product that worry has gone away.

Here is one more little bit of great news about this fantastic product. It is free. Yes, FREE.

Of course there is an option to upgrade, which I was quick to do. Not because it granted me greater access, which it did do, rather I wanted to support their efforts in maintaining this helpful site. I believe this to be an excellent investment in my future as a writer.

Check out Scriptito and see if it does not fill the organizational and creative gap for you in writing. If you have always wanted to write, but have not taken that first step, it is a great place to get started. If you are a seasoned writer, consider it for your next writing venture.

While you are trying to decide as to whether Scriptito is right for you, check out Chad Standbury’s Project Workspace Overview. Allow him a moment of your time. Then explore Scriptito’s website. I hope you find its potential to assist you with your writing as crucial as I did.

Here is Chad’s Overview.

Scriptito Project Workspace Overview from Chad Stansbury on Vimeo.


City of Rocks Planned Revisit

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Tomorrow morning The Wog (Paul Dennison) and I will venture to City of Rocks National Reserve in Idaho. My first there was just several weeks ago and Paul’s first will be this trip. It will not be like the last venture I made into that area. We will be spending a full weekend there.

I am looking forward to this revisit. Why? There are a few reasons, but first is simply spending time out photographing with a buddy. Second is a desire to capture the golden and blue hours of the area. I was not able to do that on my last trip.

Finally, I am working on a project with my good friend and colleague Dave Seeram and the photographs from this visit will be used in it. It is important to have significant projects to work on in life. It is not that they give you full meaning in life, it is rather that they give deeper meaning.

It is going to be a great trip with great moments to make wonderful images. I will try to update everyone on Twitter and Facebook as we go. I hope you will take time and go do a little photography over the weekend. It might renew your spirit and soul in doing so.

Tweet you on the go soon, so look for it.


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