Personal work – personal growth
I’ve been sitting in front of this computer for a half an hour now trying to figure out what it is I’m wanting to write and I my brain just doesn’t seem interested in forming words right now. Truth be told, I’ve been in a major creative phase over the last two weeks. I’ve been incredibly inspired by Brooke Shaden’s work and I’ll be honest I’ve been “stealing” a lot from her style lately. Of course, the ultimate goal in copying someones work is to learn from them, take what you’ve learned a fold it into the stuff that you already know – pushing yourself to grow and to refine your own style. We learn a lot from copying others (in life as well as photography) and it’s not so much about trying to pass off the images as our own as it is about using those images as a vehicle for personal growth. My copying of her style is more about learning to tell a story, something I’ve felt my work has needed for a long time. Pretty images are all well and good, but if they don’t speak to my audience, I kind of feel like I failed. To that end, I’ve got some new stuff to show you:



I’m kind of obsessing over the levitation images. Again, it’s blatant copying, but I’m using these images as a launching pad to take my own work in a very different direction. It’s sort of like using a crutch until you can walk on your own. I kind of think as photographers we have several periods in our careers where we spend time “on crutches”, so to speak. And not just in the beginning. When we’ve spent several years creating images in one style but want to grow, we sort of hobble ourselves as we take those first few baby steps in a different direction until we blend our old style with our new direction.
And I’m continuing to love the journey.




















