Bringing the newsletter back

In this day and age, sharing your work online is easier than ever. Making meaningful connections is getting harder, though.

Social media has changed the world in many ways, some good, some not so good. Thanks to these platforms, I was able to reach thousands of people, connect with other photographers and artists, and discover so much great art.

I like to use social media. I don’t like when that happens the other way around. I don’t want to spend a second trying to figure out how to beat the algorithm and reach those who followed me because they were interested in what I create.

It’s time to bring the newsletter back. It might sound old-fashion at this point, but I believe it’s the best way we have to really connect with each other. No middlemen involved, humans and non-humans.

One email, once a week, where I’ll share all the work I publish on my Instagram, Twitter and YouTube. So you don’t have to use those platforms to see what I’m up to, and even less, to connect with me. Simply reply to that email and we’ll be talking!

And of course, you can unsubscribe at any time.

If you are interested, please join us:

Safety when photographing in the outdoors

I like to get out in nature, away from the crowds. Even though I’ve been pretty far from civilization at times, I’m aware that you don’t need to be in a remote place for something bad to happen to you. Anything could happen at any moment, anywhere. If you get hurt and can’t walk, 1 mile becomes 1,000.

In this video, I talk about some of the safety measures I take when I photograph in the great outdoors.

Always keeping in mind that there’s no such thing as a risk-free life and we must embrace some degree risk, this is about minimizing the chances of something happening and increasing the odds of us getting of that situation in one piece.

Photographing colorful landscapes in Black & White

Today’s video is from Canyonlands National Park, in Utah. A landscape that is mostly about the colors: the red rocks, the green vegetation, the sunrises and sunsets… how do we photograph all of that in black and white?

As I explore the park, I share some tips and ideas to create good monochrome images in places where color is king.

Update: second part of this mini series is now available. I share a few more tips and ideas, this time from Arches National Park.

Photography as a lifestyle, from Zion National Park

I breathe photography, it’s my life. I always have a camera with me, ready to create something at any moment. If photography were to be done only from beautiful and stunning places, I wouldn’t be doing it. I believe photography should be done anywhere, at all times. There’s an image to be made everywhere.

In this video from beautiful Zion, I talk about this approach to photography.

How I manage my photos and videos on the road

As you know, I don’t have a permanent home. I spend a few months a year in Spain, a few months a year in the USA, and the rest on the road.

The traditional solutions (local hard drives) to manage all the photos and videos I take don’t really work for me, I need something flexible, accessible from anywhere, and safe.

That’s why I use the cloud as my only storage for my photography work. It is more expensive than local hard drives and it takes longer to back everything up, but once it’s done, there’s nothing more convenient and safer than the cloud. It also requires no maintenance at all.

I don’t format the memory cards until everything is backed up in the cloud. In the meanwhile, I copy everything to my iPad so I have at least two copies, just in case something happens to the memory card.

It’s different for video, though. I record everything in 4k, and those files take a lot of space. I think I produce around 2TB of 4k video every year, I wouldn’t be able to afford storing all my raw footage in the cloud.

Up until recently, I was using Google Photos for this. It compresses the video files down to 1080p, but it’s completely free. Or it used to be. Google has changed its mind and the service will be paid after June 1st, 2021. Even compressed, it will become too expensive for my videos really quick.

I’m not sure about what to do just yet. I might have to revert to hard drives for video, or just delete the footage after I’m done with whatever YouTube video they belong to.

I’d love to hear from you and your solutions for photo and video storage.

Can photography be taught?

I was wondering this on my way to the beautiful Alabama Hills, in California. Can we learn photograph from someone else?

The technical side of photography, sure: settings, composition rules… but what about the story?

That, we might need to figure out ourselves.

In this video, I share my thoughts on this and some of the images and footage I made in the Eastern Sierras. Please feel free to share your opinion in the comments, here or on YouTube.

Pushing myself in Lake Tahoe, Nevada

I don’t usually struggle with motivation when it comes to getting out and making images. I’m generally very excited to take my camera out there and start shooting.

My time in Nevada was different. I was still adjusting to being alone on the road, and with the contested elections all over the news, I got distracted and lost my momentum. I had to push myself, force myself to get out even if I didn’t feel like doing it.

And as you might have expected, it was totally worth it.

Where the Pacific meets the Cascades, and other recent videos

Still catching up after my road trip. I never shared the video I made in Northern Washington here, and that’d be a mistake. Washington is probably my favorite state (sorry, Oregon), and the coast and mountains north of Seattle are my favorite part of it. Beauty everywhere.

But there are some other recent videos I never got to share here:

That’s quite a few videos, I guess I’ve been busy lately. And there are many more coming soon. I’ll be sharing them here, but don’t forget to subscribe to my YouTube channel. It really does help.

One night alone in Mt Hood

I visited, hiked and photographed Mt Hood more times than I can count during the 6 years I lived in Portland. It’s a place where I’d go in search of peace and calm. Seeing that magnificent mountain helps to put things in perspective, how small we and our problems are.

But I’d never spent the night up there. I guess that having a comfortable bed just one hour away didn’t make it sound very attractive. I took it for granted, as I prioritized farther away locations.

This time, though, I wanted to fix that. I wanted to do the Timberline Trail over 4 days and 3 nights, but the amount of downed trees on the trail from a recent windstorm made that option almost impossible. I still wanted to spend a night up there, so I hiked as far as I could in one day, set up camp, and enjoyed the views.

It was perfect: there was no wind, it wasn’t too cold, clear skies, an almost full moon, and the whole place for myself.

Why we photograph

Why do we go through such hardship for a few images? Why do we wake up so early? Why do we face the elements? Why are we willing to be cold, hot, wet, burnt, exhausted... all for an image? Why do we keep trying, over and over?

Why?

It's because we need it, as much as we need to breathe.

It's because it makes us feel in peace.

It's because we can see.

It's because we want to feel alive.

The world reveals itself when you pay attention. Our duty is to witness the beauty and show it to others, to become their eyes.

We are half crazy, or full crazy.

We pour our souls and hearts, we are obsessed, dedicated, passionate.

We want to show what needs to be seen, what needs to be known.

A day spent making images makes us feel. Calm, excited, exhausted and happy. Part of something much bigger than ourselves.

We wander, we are free.

When the time comes to pack and head back home, we are not the same. We are changed, every shot, every photo, every place, every subject is now part of us, they make us who we are. But the fire never goes away, AND we are excited because we know we get to do it again tomorrow.

Video was filmed at Dog Mountain, Washington.