Archive for the ‘Photos’ Category

Goodbye, 2009

Wednesday, January 6th, 2010

After an awesome, surprise-filled, and at times exhausting year, it was high time I took a nice, long break. I took two weeks off from pretty much everything, and led a fairly unscheduled existence with a lot of family and friends, some amazing edibles, and very little internet. ;)

Part of that break had me driving down to the central coast of California–yes, that’s approximately 12 hours of driving–to visit family. It’s a drive I’ve done during the holidays for the past several years, so long hauls in the car aren’t exactly new for me. Timing my departures to avoid snowstorms in the mountains? Also not new.

This time around, I found myself rushing northward on the 30th, trying to get through the mountains before the big snows came in, but I passed near Shasta Lake and opportunity screamed at me through my car window. I’d driven over that bridge so many times and marveled at the view, but I’d always been too short on time, or driving with companions who weren’t down for a random pit stop.

This time, however, I couldn’t resist it anymore. I got off at the next exit, and took 5 minutes to shoot a few frames, before continuing my journey up I-5 towards Portland.

I honestly couldn’t have timed it better. The forecast was stormy and snowy, and I wasn’t even certain that I’d be able to go through the Siskiyou pass when I’d left that morning. But, when I got up into the mountain passes, it was gorgeous. WORTH IT.

Adios, 2009.

Help-Portrait Project

Friday, December 18th, 2009

I’ve had a ridiculously busy few weeks recently, but I somehow still found room in my schedule to be a part of the Help-Portrait event held here in Portland last Saturday. The mission of Help-Portrait? Find a needy person, take their portrait, create a print and give it to that person. Helping one person just wasn’t enough, though, and after several planning meetings and a flurry of e-mails and Google spreadsheets, we had over 30 volunteers coming together to shoot portraits for dozens of people in need!

I could only stay for the first half of the day, but the energy of the experience lifted my spirits all weekend. The atmosphere was warm and collaborative, and considering how many professional photographers were in the room, the space was ego-free. We’d share tips and chat about gear, lend a hand holding a reflector or testing lights, and back each other up whenever someone needed an assist. The volunteers who weren’t photographers were on-point and ready to help with hair and makeup, contacting organizations, sorting through images, or even just staying with folks who were waiting to have their portrait taken, so they wouldn’t feel lost in the shuffle. It was all about the people we were helping, and making it a positive experience for them.

No matter how many times I see it, it’s always a little surprising for me, to see the faces of the less-fortunate. When I visited China back in the summertime, I found myself shocked at the extreme circumstances of some of the disadvantaged people I encountered on the streets. At Help-Portrait, however, those less-fortunate faces didn’t look much different from my own. A lot of people, from all walks of life, have come up on tough circumstances these days, and it’s not hard to see it, if you look around you. Still, there were some very sweet families and freakin’ adorable kids who came to get their portraits done, and it was a lot of fun to meet all of these people, and watch them truly enjoying with their photo sessions and interacting with all the volunteers who came out.

Honestly, it’s hard to know what else to say that would even begin to encompass this experience, for someone who wasn’t there… it was just an amazing event all around, and watching the slideshow this morning was such a treat. I’m absolutely doing this again next year, and I know it’s only going to grow bigger and better!

Here’s the slideshow, with plenty of photos (including quite a few of my own) documenting the events of the day. It’s always enjoyable for me to simply watch people being themselves, and capture the bright moments. :)

Southern flavor

Tuesday, July 28th, 2009

SO! I’m looking at submitting a photo or three from my trip to this year’s State Fair. I’ve never had my work entered into a competition setting, so it’s going to be new territory for me. If you’ve seen a photo on here that you think is worthy, do let me know! I’d be interested to hear opinions from other folks. :)

As of now, I think my current frontrunner is this image from QuFu, but I’ve been known to change my mind as often as my underwear when it comes to my own work. I’m also not sure what will play well with the Fair judges, so we’ll see where I end up with my entry.

Anyhoo, a fellow wushu enthusiast recently pointed out some awesome videos, so I thought I’d talk a little about a style of wushu I hold near and dear: the lesser-known style of Nanquan, or Southern Fist. The wushu you’ve most likely seen before is of the light, graceful, high-flying variety, which is Changquan, or Long Fist. It’s the kind you see in Crouching Tiger, and for good reason, because it’s just gorgeous to watch.

Nanquan also has its acrobatic moves, sure, but it’s different from the Long Fist style in most other aspects. With nanquan, the strikes and stances are shorter than Long Fist, but the style has a more upright structure in how you carry yourself, and the stances and steps are very rooted with the ground. You also tend to see bigger guys doing nanquan, so if you’re seeing a guy with a sleeveless silk uniform and deltoids the size of his head, chances are he’s about to do Southern style.

The style also calls for a lot of speed and a LOT of intensity! You have to retract your punches and kicks quickly, and explosiveness in your strikes is even more important in nanquan than in long fist. There are also points during a given nanquan form where you’re supposed to yell, and as far as I’m concerned, that’s when you bust out the crazy eyes, and scare the little kids in the audience. ;) There’s a raw energy that you bring out when you’re doing nanquan, and that’s part of the fun of it. I’ve been doing it for 3 1/2 years now, and I’ve yet to find a changquan form that wears me out as much as my southern form.

Here’s a video of Yang Shi Wen, who’s one of the best nanquan athletes ever. With so much incredible power, speed, intensity, he’s a tough act to follow! If I could be even half as quick as this guy, I’d probably die happy. :)

The Photography Side

Thursday, July 16th, 2009

It occurs to me that some of y’all might not know my photography background, so here’s the skinny!

I currently have a photography business known as Enko Photography with Ben, who is also an awesome photographer and mixmaster of lighting. We do weddings, as well as events, portraits, commercial work, even fashion. Basically, we do whatever pays and sounds like a fun challenge. :)

If you’d like to book with us or recommend us to your friends, we’d love you for it! We’ve only been in Portland for 2 years, so although we’re doing pretty well so far, there are still a lot of folks who haven’t heard about us yet. ;) We also work with some truly awesome people in areas like makeup, hair, floral, framing, wedding planning, musicians, and we’d love to share them with you, if you need it. Connecting great people with other great people is something I’m always happy to do.

You can also add us on Facebook:

Enko Photography on Facebook

As for me, I’m largely self-taught, having only taken one college course in black-and-white film photography… which, of course, is a very different animal from digital! Having mad Photoshop skills from my design and web education certainly hasn’t hurt me, though, and learning the science of lighting has been an interesting ride. I think I’ve learned a lot pretty quickly, though, and I’m always absorbing new information whenever I can.

Oh, and we also have a photography blog, where you can see a lot of our other work! I do most of the talking there, too. ;) Hit us up at enkophoto.wordpress.com.

Stateside

Thursday, July 9th, 2009

As you might’ve guessed by now, I’m back in the States, and valiantly trying to get back into the swing of normal life. I slept for 14 hours after I got home, and that still didn’t feel like enough! I used to scoff a bit at people who whined about jet lag, but now it looks like I’m one of them. ;)

I’m still processing a lot of what went on while I was there. Maybe it’s just the sleep deprivation talking, but everything I remember thus far comes to me in fits and starts, as some offshoot of a completely unrelated conversation… when people ask me point-blank how it was, I really can’t begin to encompass it, or even know where to start.

I have around 1500 photos to pick through, and there’s a lot that I didn’t get a chance to blog about… maybe when I’m better rested, I can yammer on about other things, such as:

Visiting the Temple of Heaven

The incredible, in-your-face relentlessness of street vendors and panhandlers

The contrast of modern metal-and-glass skyscrapers, and the dilapidated, falling-down remnants of the old hutongs just a few feet away from said skyscrapers

Clubbing on Saturday night with folks we met at Shichahai, including Beijing wushu luminary Wu Di (!!!). (haven’t seen any pictures yet, and I didn’t take any… really, would you bring your dSLR to a nightclub where you intend to dance until you fall over?)

Seeing the Shaolin Monk show… no photography allowed during that, unfortunately, but I did steal a shot or two. ;)

Observing the rigorous, nationalized sports system at work… where else would you see kids this age trained so hard?

My childish amusement over various attempts at English turns of phrase on the signage around town

The Beijing subway system… a train every 2 minutes!

The hell of trying to hail a cab, and get a ride back to your hotel, without also getting ripped off because you’re white and don’t speak enough Chinese to be useful.

A pretty darned amazing acrobat show!

Delicious, nutritious tea. Seriously, the Chinese know what they’re doing.

The ubiquity of American brands (I kid you not: the first thing I saw exiting the Beijing airport terminal? It was a Starbuck’s.)

The happy(?) workers littered throughout the various monuments and attractions we visited

Pearls, jade, and silk… possibly the most boring part of the trip for me, because shopping was probably the last thing I came to China for, but at least I got some pretty pictures, and we learned a little about how these items are produced and refined.

Gorgeously landscaped parks that always seemed to be bustling with people practicing various forms of movement, meditation, and exercise

My not-so-secret love affair with Chinese bakery goods. (and also red bean paste… <3)

Our last day in Shandong province–where Tai’an is located–when we visited a farming village of ~1900 people, and found a few eye-opening surprises

And, of course, I’ll never completely stop blabbing about wushu ;)

So, yeah, there are plenty of tales yet to be told… I’m still pooped out from all of this! But, I hope you’ve enjoyed the ride. :)

Confucius Says

Saturday, July 4th, 2009

Near Tai’an and Mt. Taishan is Qu’fu, where Confucius made his home. (”near” meaning about an hour’s drive away) I know y’all know who Confucius was, so I won’t bother explaining that. We visited Confucius’ house and temple, and also visited the grounds where he and his family are all buried. Tai’an is smaller than Xi’an or Beijing, but it still feels like a city. Qu’fu is even smaller than Tai’an, however, and it definitely had a grungier, more rural feel to it.

People like us are also quite a spectacle in Tai’an and Qu’fu, and I’ve caught more than a few people snapping pictures of people in my group since we’ve been here. We have a little redhead kid and his parents traveling with us, and the people here especially want to take pictures with him… you’d think the kid was a leprechaun or something. ;) People in town have been really friendly, though, and they seem genuinely excited to have us visiting them.


Meat! It’s what’s for dinner.


People passing through the old city wall, to the inner part of Qu’fu where Confucius lived.


This sign asks that everyone dismount their horses (or cars) before entering the grounds of Confucius’ home.


The structures at Confucius’ home definitely have an older and more weathered look to them than the monuments in Beijing.


One of the interior rooms at Confucius’ home.


Mister Ma, our guide for our stay in the Tai’an area, explains some of the finer points of Confucius’ home.


These animal sculptures are built into the roof, as protection for the house.


Praying at the altar in Confucius’ temple.


Believers often come to Confucius’ temple to pray that their children do well on their college entrance exams, and there are thousands of these tags left behind at the temple. The one I found written in Spanish (?) is pretty curious.


A lotus flower, in one of the awesome gardens on the grounds. Can’t say I often see these in an up-close, natural state. :)


Men making gravestones, presumably for descendants of Confucius’ family.


Confucius’ grave. His ashes are buried in the mound of grass behind the stone marker.


This woman came begging for money. When we tried to tell her we didn’t have any, she pointed to her ear, so we think she might’ve been deaf.

Warrior Life

Saturday, July 4th, 2009

Goodbye to Beijing meant Hello to Xi’an, a city to the southeast of Beijing. I begrudgingly roused myself at 5am to catch an early, early flight to Xi’an, and we spent a whirlwind 36 hours there before returning to Beijing and braving the dreaded train station.

This was just the first part of our second day there. Our first stop was at a facility where they make replicas of Terra Cotta Warriors, and also some really gorgeous lacquered furniture and keepsakes that are inlaid with jade. We got to see some different phases of the process, so that was pretty cool.

The mold gets the basic details in place for the larger replicas, but then a craftsman adds more detail and texture to it after it’s molded.

Every good warrior needs a horse… so here’s the mold for one. :)

This woman is molding a smaller replica of the warrior.

Some of the finished product.

Oh yeah, they also weave rugs at this place, too.

INTERMISSION!:

Barbara made a silly comment during the first couple days in Beijing, about how she hadn’t seen a dog since we got to China, except for one that looked like it was about to be dinner. So, I’ve been taking pictures of dogs every time I see one here. ;)

See? Just two friends saying howdy. D’aaawww. ;)

Anyhoo, since the Terra Cotta Warriors are local to Xi’an, it’d be pretty silly to see replicas being made, without actually seeing the real thing. ;) So, we went to the site where the Warriors were first discovered. They were first found in the 1970s, by a farmer who happened to find them while digging ditches, and now it’s grown into a huge dig site with three separate pits.

This is just Pit 1! This pit showed the largest quantity of intact Warriors.

The dig site stretches out quite a ways, and all of these warriors used to have a wood-and-earthen roof over them.

If I heard correctly, Pits 1 and 2 are sometimes still worked on by archaeologists.

This guy was on display in the building that housed Pit 2. The rank of the warriors is, apparently, easiest to differentiate by their hair: warriors have one knot, mid-ranking officers have a flat-topped hairstyle, and generals have two knots.

Horses and chariots were found at the dig site, too. There were, obviously, ones made with terra cotta, but these guys were made of bronze.

Gone Shopping

Wednesday, July 1st, 2009

Shopping on the streets is one of the signs that tradition is still alive and well in Beijing. Open air markets can be found next to high-rise hotels, and side streets and alleyways are littered with small shops selling crafts and antiques. And, of course, there’s the process of haggling that’s become tradition in street shops, and that also gets pretty entertaining.

This is a taste of Liulichang, where all kinds of artwork, calligraphy brushes, and other handcrafts are lurking in the little shops.

One of the ladies I’m traveling with has been to China before, so we stopped in a shop where she’d been before, and they remembered her. :) Another guy in our group asked her to get him a painting of a rooster, but they didn’t have the one he liked on hand, and we were leaving Beijing early the next day, so we couldn’t come back and pick it up. Then, the painter basically said, “oh, I’ll just do one right now, it’ll take 15 minutes,” and then whipped out his brush and started painting!

This fan is hand-painted :)

This was at a tea shop one of my travelmates had found the previous day. She served us a lot of *very* good tea for free, and was freely giving out discounts once she found out who had told us about her shop. I still managed to haggle her down a bit farther on a tea set, though ;)

Forbidden City

Wednesday, July 1st, 2009

I have to head out for dinner with the group soon, so here’s another less-talky-more-looky photo post. :) These are from our jaunt to the Forbidden City… after our morning of training that day, we spent hours walking through the place, in blistering heat, and we were pretty exhausted, but it was worth the time. The exhibits in this place mainly focused on the last Emperor, and his interest in modern things (well, modern for his time, anyway), and blending Western and Eastern cultures.

Once again, you’ll have to pardon the hazy sky, and my lack of a wide-angle lens on the more landscape-ish shots. (had to leave the mid-range zoom at home for Ben, so the widest I have here is my 50mm f/1.8) Blown-out skies drive me bonkers, but there wasn’t much way around it. Just trust me when I say that the views are *nuts* in person.

The details in the rooftops and eaves are just crazy.

See how well you sleep with this guy on your ceiling. ;)

Yep, Chinese doorknobs are cooler than yours.

Fine China in China! (hurhurhur)

This carving ran all the way up the stairs, on the building shown in the previous shot.

Yes, that’s a cleaning lady. The grounds were very tidy.

The police were out in force to make sure we didn’t use this tunnel to exit. I’m assuming it’s because there were three tunnels, and the one in the center was intended only for use by the Emperor. Old habits die hard, apparently. ;)

Goodbye Shichahai

Tuesday, June 30th, 2009

Today was our last day of training at Shichahai, which makes me an unhappy monkey. We’re repacking and consolidating our things tonight, because we’re leaving Beijing early tomorrow, and heading to Xi’an, and then we’ll be off to Tai’an a couple days after that. It *is* cool that we’ll get to see other parts of China outside of Beijing, but we could’ve easily spent the whole trip in Beijing and had plenty of things to do… and more awesome training, of course ;)

I’m very, very glad that I did this now, at this point in my life, because I don’t know that I’d have held up as well, even one year from now. I had a fairly normal run of soreness on Thursday and Friday, but on Saturday’s practice, my hip flexors were basically dead. I couldn’t go as low in drop stances, my crescent kicks weren’t as fast, and cartwheels… eugh. Trying to do too much on any hip-opening moves still hurts like a mother. It’s a rough reminder that, athletically speaking, I’m not exactly the springiest of spring chickens.

It’s definitely motivation to train harder at home, though. I’ve surprised myself with how much I’ve been able to keep improving, even as I approach the dreaded 3-0, and I guess I still believe that I haven’t reached my peak yet.  And, just yesterday, I saw Zhao Chang Jun doing a crazy squat drill in the weight room, and then I was informed that he’s 31 years old and still competing among the best that Beijing wushu has to offer. Sure, he did have a 15-year-or-so head-start on me with the training, but it’s a glimmer of hope, nonetheless. ;)

This was most definitely worth it, pain and all. It’s been educational, and it was the extra kick in the ass I needed to keep going. I hope I can come back here later (not *too* much later), and for longer, when I’m both wiser and stronger.


Me on China carpet! (thanks go to Goo for taking the shots of me)


After doing southern fist for all of our other practices, I surprised our teacher by doing my old intermediate long fist form on my last day. Combo X FTW ;)


Goo is faster than a speeding camera!


Our teacher for our practices at Shichahai explaining a move. (even though it looks like she’s going for a nose pick)


One of the other students from my school works on eagle claw.


Taken as I passed through the doors of the Shichahai lobby for the last time. :(