Ariane is corporate trainer for OC Tanner and needed some headshots/portraits for speaker bios and press releases and I’m delighted she came to the studio to be photographed. She is from the Ivory Coast, speaks five languages (that’s four more than I speak) and she is poised and dignified and very cool.
Portrait of Lori Nay, the Mayor of Gunnison
Meet Lori Nay, Mayor of Gunnison, Utah.
I met Lori’s daughter Amy a few years ago when I spent three days doing headshots for all the employees at Fox 13 in Salt Lake (Amy’s one of the evening anchors, there). Then Amy, bless her heart, told her mayor mother to come to me for her official mayor portrait. She’ll choose from the images I send her which one will hang in the hall at their city office building along with all the other mayor portraits from years past. There will be one difference with this portrait, however. Lori is the first woman mayor in the town history.
We had a lovely time talking about small towns and I asked her why she’s so darn ambitious. I told her meeting people like her and being able to photograph people like her, is the reason I love being a photographer.
Musician portrait - Robert Loud
The very cool and multi-talented musician, Robbie Connolly, or if you want his stage name, it’s Robert Loud, or, if you want to just address his hair, it’s Hair Majesty (his hair doesn’t really have a name, but maybe it should and it should be Hair Majesty.
Robbie is working on new music and came to the studio to be photographed, accompanied by his wife, the also very cool Caitlin Connolly.
Caitlin had very specific ideas about what she was looking for and how she wanted these portraits to look. Her most specific request was that the whole thing be shot on film. And while I cut my teeth learning about photography back in the film days, long before anyone had heard of a digital camera, and while I still shoot film on a regular basis both for myself and for clients, it has been a few years since I shot an entire job on film, without shooting a single shot on digital. I was happy that’s what they were looking for and excited to go for it. It was also a bit like a tight-wire act, without being able to see a single frame that we had shot. .
The pictures were taken at my studio in Provo, UT. I shot four rolls of Kodak TMax 400, and the camera I used was the good old Contax G2 with both a 50mm lens and a 28mm lens, which I’ve had since back in the day when I would shoot a whole job on that thing.
Thanks Robbie for hiring me to make some album art for you, thanks Caitlin for being an inspired guide and art director through this, and thanks Scout Smith for assisting that day. We make a great team, the four of us.
Family studio portrait
I’m not sure how other family portrait photographers run things, but around here, we invite people to come to the studio to view their images a couple weeks after the pictures have been taken. We put them up on a big screen so the client can see the images big, in all their glory, instead of looking at them on a tiny screen. We offer digital files, books, and prints, and we really focus on the value of a tangible, printed piece that will last for generations.
When Brett and Beth hired me to photograph their family, they weren’t entirely sold on the print idea and mostly just wanted digital files. Well, they came back to the studio to view their family pictures and I sometimes say my goal is open weeping for people looking at their pictures. I’ll just say, that goal was achieved that day and the ended up getting a good amounts of prints including a big honker for their wall.
There’s just something about a printed photograph.
Michelle Quist
I’ve known Michelle Quist for many years, now, and have photographed her a number of times. I was so excited to hear she was running for Attorney General in Utah. She would be the absolute best. at that job. On account of her running such a campaign, she needed updated headshots to go along with all the campaign content and material she would be putting out. I was honored to photograph her and welcome her back to the studio in Provo.
The site for her campaign can be seen here, if you care to take a look: https://www.michelleforutah.com/
Musician portraits and headshots
Sonia is a musician and wanted updated headshots to help promote her music. She came to the studio in Provo and we had a hoot.
How to take family pictures.
When you take a family picture, make sure everyone is looking at the camera and smiling and everyone has to be in a straight line or sitting on a fancy sofa in an apple grove. Or…now just hear me out, you could just let them be themselves and get a good record of that magic. And then when you look back at the pictures, or better yet, when your kids or their kids look back at those pictures, the memories of real life become crystal clear.
Try that approach next time you take pictures of your kids or just call me and I’ll help you tell your family story with authenticity and meaning.
(Absolutely nothing wrong with the line up, everyone looking kinds of pictures and I do those, too. I just believe that the truer the picture to real life, the more those will resonate down the road and those are the pictures you’ll care about most).
Gabrielle Blair
Here’s Gabby Blair.
Back in 2010 or so, Gabby started a conference called Alt Design Summit. It’s been going on ever since and attracts the very best crowd, women who are both dreamers AND doers. They have great ideas and get things done.
It’s a great conference, because it was started and is led by a great person.
I’ve been at every Alt and have loved my association with it, and those who I have met, there. I used to go and photograph the whole conference, speakers and attendees interaction and what it felt like to be there. However, for the past few times I’ve been, my role has been to make portraits of the attendees and if you care to take a look, here’s one picture of everyone I photographed at the 2024 conference.
Austin Channing Brown
Here’s a portrait of the very cool Austin Channing Brown, who I was able to meet and photograph at this year’s Alt Summit. I recommend her book I’m Still Here: Black Dignity in a World Made For Whiteness
Birthday self portraits
Yesterday, on my birthday, I did what I’ve been doing on my birthday for at least ten years. I took as many self portraits as the age I turned. This year I’m 56, so I took 56 self portraits. It’s hard (for me) thinking up that many new pictures every time, so there are some repeated ideas from previous years. But there is something new. This year I wanted to ask strangers if they’d be in a picture. So, there’s some strangers in this year’s self portraits, and some familiar faces with friends. This might be my favorite year, yet. Every year, I wonder if this is the last year I’ll do this. I don’t know. I guess we’ll cross that bridge a year from now. For now, I’ll be glad I had the time to do this again.
Click any image to view it larger
If you want to see previous years, here are the images from the following ages:
That time Calvin + Olivia got married in Hawaii
In 2014 I photographed a lovely wedding in New York City. The bride, Aly Keller. She’s amazing and the wedding was perfect. A couple times since then, I’ve photographed the family and I got to spend some time around them all, including the youngest in the family, Calvin, who’s not so young any more. He’s old enough to get married, in fact. So I was pleased as punch when he texted and said he wanted me to photograph their wedding, and I wasn’t mad when he said it would be in Hawaii in February. A fun coincidence, because Hawaii is just where I would want to be in February.
To make it even better, my wife Amy was able to join me and after the wedding we stuck around for a few days to soak up some sunburns.
The wedding was at the Oahu LDS Temple and the party was at Kualoa Ranch. Because everyone involved was traveling from somewhere other than Hawaii, it was a small guest list. Very intimate and special. One of my favorite weddings of all time. Congratulations Olivia and Calvin.
Just before they got married
"Photography takes an instant out of time, altering life by holding it still." - Dorothea Lange.
I love the power a photograph can take on, and it’s ability to immortalize a moment from the past. Here’s Landon and Brinley, married now, but they weren’t just yet when these pictures were taken. Some day Landon and Brinley will have kids, and maybe those kids will look at these pictures, the beginning of their parents love story, and get a little insight into what their parents were like when they were younger.
The images are nice to view, now, but just think of what they’ll mean in 50 years from now.
I’m sure this is probably quite obvious, but I just really love photography. I know—duh! I love looking at photographs, I love taking photographs, and I particularly love family pictures because they just become more valuable as the days go by.
Some advice: Go take a picture of your family today, your phone will do, and then— and this is the important part, go make a real nice print of it and keep it somewhere safe where it will last and last, and be seen many years from now.
Shaun Johnson
If you’re not already following Shaun Johnson on Instagram then that’s really your top priority today, but only if you like to laugh.
We had a great time when he came to the studio to be photographed. And we laughed. Well, I did. Like crazy.
Headshots for actress Suzanne Pereira
Suzanne Pereira lives in NYC but was in town filing a movie. Luckily we found a time while she was in Utah when she could come to my studio in Provo to be photographed. Suzanne is a delight, just pleasant as can be, and easy to photograph. We had never met but it turns out, we know a handful of the same people. I do hope our paths cross again.
My approach and philosophy for family portraits
I’ve always loved this quote from Peter London in his book “No More Secondhand Art”, he says, “It is not beauty we are after, but meaning. Big, deep, wide meaning.” That strikes a chord. While I sure appreciate aesthetically pleasing moments with family pictures, my primary aim is to capture authenticity and something that is true, and I value that over an idealized version that might not actually exist in real life. So, I look for genuine, unscripted connections that not only look amazing, but are real. And heartfelt. So, if you are looking for a family portrait that gets at the depth of your family’s story, let’s chat. — All that said, I just got some film back from my time with Shay and Ryan and I think this image gets at the heart of what I’m talking about.
Demi Tebow
Demi Tebow is rad. (Miss Universe 2017, for one thing). She’s cheerful, kind as can be, and a real pro. She was up for whatever we asked. She made the shoot feel like a real collaboration and gave it her all to get the best images we could. This shoot was for Mixhers, a company that is made up of some of the best people I’ve ever worked with. The founders are amazing, I love the company mission, and the folks they hire are just the sort of people you’d want to spend all day with.
Kirby Heyborne portrait
I’ve known about Kirby Heyborne for a long time and always secretly wanted to be his friend because he just seems like the coolest person around. Well, as it turns out as I am so often, I was correct in my assessment. He IS the coolest person around. Here’s a portrait I made of him when he came to the studio a while ago.
Among all the other things Kirby is doing these days, he is the host on a BYUTV show called Making Good and if you want to feel like there is some goodness in the world, if you want to see something that will make you laugh and make you cry and make you feel good inside, then you should watch his show. Here’s where you can see all the episodes. www.byutv.org/making-good
Quarenteens exhibit!
The very kind and exceptional painter Pam Beach asked me if I wanted to collaborate with her on a portrait project and I said yes. I would have said yes no matter what her idea was, just so I could work on a project with Pam Beach. (https://www.pamelabeachart.com/)
For this collaboration, we interviewed ten kids who were teenagers at the time of the Covid lockdown and asked them about their experience during all that. Then we made some art in a response to what we heard them say. I took pictures, Pam painted their portrait. Last week was the opening of the show and it will be up for another month.
Happy Mother's Day
Happy Mother’s Day to all who pay attention to such things. Here’s a teeny collection of mothers with their kids from recent portrait sessions.
There's a wedding on the horizon
Last fall I drove to Ogden to make some pictures of Colin and Hailey, on the occasion of their recent engagement. We started at their house, then walked to a nearby park, and finished up walking downtown Ogden, near the location of their first date. They talked about that night “remember when you said…and then I said…”
Next week they are getting married and I’ll be there to make a visual record of their day. Hooray for love!