Thursday, October 21, 2010

TAKING STOCK




 It really doesn’t seem like it’s been over a month since I posted anything on this blog. Well, in some ways it feels like forever. My mindset has been elsewhere lately. I’ve been taking stock.


That term can mean that I’ve been spending time reviewing my life, a personal inventory of sorts, if you will. But that’s not the case here.

I’ve been taking stock . . . . photography.



I have been trying to get into stock and magazine photography for years now. Though I do enjoy photographing people’s portraits, it’s not my true photographic love. I like the shots that tell a story about a place. I get into the details of the inside of a flower. I like the things that make the view want to be or do or taste or smell.



So what I did was try again. Getting photos accepted at stock photography agencies can be a frustrating experience. You decide which images. You edit them. You upload. You title, describe, and keyword. And you submit.

Then you wait. Wait to see if the agency accepts it, and you.


For the past few years, as I’ve researched advertising and magazine photography, I’ve found that very few publishers will assign you the work. Everyone uses stock. And there are plenty of agencies out there to choose from. The concept is that instead of getting $100 for a photo that’s used once, you get $1.00 and hope to sell it a hundred times. It’s sold royalty free. They don’t have to give you any credit or even acknowledge that they’re using someone’s work.



People do make money doing this. That’s what I’ve read anyway. What I’m finding is that it takes a lot of work to get images out there. Don’t get me wrong, I’m certainly not opposed to hard work. It is time consuming work though, even when uploading existing files. Shooting stock, too, takes a different mindset and vision. Each agency seems to have its own style and criteria. Shots that are accepted at some sites are rejected at others.

So after a few weeks of doing this, I’ve got a few dozen shots out there that have been accepted and actually sold some. That was kind of exciting until you realize that your cut is 36 cents or so. But the idea is volume. So we’ll see.

Consider this my excuse and apology for not posting in so long. In the coming weeks I will be writing about some new travel experiences I’ve had in the past few months. I’ve got some stories to tell.

Here’s a link to my Stock Photography Page:  Celeste Cota Stock Photography
I’d love to get some feedback from you!

Tuesday, September 14, 2010

PHOTOGRAPHY: In the garden . . .

Fresh picked yellow pear tomatoes in the bath

I can hardly tear myself away.  My camera sits on the counter by the door when I’m home.  I watch for the right light, for the sun to hit those leaves just perfectly, bringing out the texture and fragrance, and I go out and shoot. 
I need the thyme

This garden season is winding down and I’ve been photographing the progress and bounty since the seeds hit the dirt.  From the first emergence from the soil to the time they came to the kitchen, my camera has been as much a part of my gardening tools as watering can.

fell in love with the peppers early on
I thought I’d share the results of my hard work.  Hope you enjoy each little detail as much as I do.
Lots of bee activity on the sunflowers

Tomatoes early in the summer

Soon, tiny green tomatoes
Then a nice little group
Then into the harvest basket
ready to eat . . . yum!
 
portugal hot peppers
love the little guy
after a while, they got all twisty
then they got picked
nice harvest
late summer
containers bursting with peppers, tomatoes, herbs, and flowers
pots of peppers

beautiful basil

rosemary

sage with water droplets

all comes together for some awesome salsa
pretty and fragrant lilies

row of morning glories against that blue sky

<>
and then the sunflowers bloomed

love the bright yellow against that blue sky
love how they twist and intwined
feels like you could just slide right in
just look at them so hard at work
the tomatoes and green beans ready to eat
something very satifying about eating what you grow yourself
That's the end of my self indulgent food porn for today.  I would love to hear from anyone who enjoys photographing their garden's success and harvest.  Is there anyone so obsessed? 

On to the newest thing . . . the hummingbirds.  Beware.

Tuesday, August 31, 2010

Vacation Justification

Snorkeling in Mexico

We will soon need a new roof. The stairs that lead up from the driveway tilt at an angle that’s disconcerting and frankly, dangerous when even slightly slick. Converting to natural gas would probably save us a lot of money long term. Perhaps overly sensitive to the cold, last winter I swore we would get a pellet stove insert for the inefficient fireplace in our living room.


I’ve got an 11 year old with teenage tastes. She’s got an iPhone. She wants a laptop. She’s got a fashion sense of her own now and I can’t get away with less expensive clothing anymore. Voice lessons. Gymnastics. A whole new school year ahead of us with higher after school care costs and hot lunch has gone up as well.
Build confidence.  Try new things.  It's good for you.

My point is that we have better things we should be doing with our money than thinking about vacation.

Suze Orman would scold us. Her show has a segment called “Can I afford it?” We watched it a while back as she denied a caller who made much more than we do and had quite a sum in savings. The man and his wife wanted to spend $2500 to take their two little kids to Disney World. The woman denied Disney! She said take them when they’re teenagers, a decade into the future, because they’ll remember it more. What about the creation of memories NOW? What about the value of the experience? How does that translate into an asset?

Well, that’s a good question. In search of justification – and NO I will not be calling into Suze’s show – I thought I’d do a little research into the benefits of vacation, a break from the stress and strains of daily life.

Okay. To the proof:
Don't we look healthy?  Two years ago in Mexico.

HEALTH BENEFITS

Plodding along at the office might get you brownie points with the boss, but can be detrimental to your overall health and wellbeing. Being stressed for long periods of time without a break has been shown to lead to higher blood pressure and an increase in coronary heart disease. If you are a female, taking a vacation can cut this risk by half, according to a study conducted at the State University of New York. Stress can impair hippocampus function, too, making it more difficult to acquire new information, like people’s names, meeting times and dates, and things like logins and PINs. A study quoted in Forbes.com showed that women who took vacations more frequently were less likely to become tense or depressed, and also reported being more satisfied in their marriages. Remember that your physical and mental health have a direct link to your social and psychological outlook on life. bottom line on this one is that the more you vacation, the more likely you are to be healthy and enjoy life.

From a financial perspective, being sick is expensive! Staying healthy can save you money on doctor and medical bills. Taking a vacation can reduce the stress triggered health ailments that wear you down and less money will be spent dealing with the negative consequences of poor health.

Me & my daughter at Virginia Beach.

STREGNTHEN BONDS IN YOUR RELATIONSHIPS

Vacationing together can strengthen family and marriage bonds. Traveling together is at time harrowing, and making it to your destination can bring a sense of camaraderie and accomplishment. Sharing new experiences and creating memories that can last a lifetime. Partners often reveal new sides of themselves to each other that wouldn’t have been prompted in their home environments.

A quiet moment at the beach.


GET A CREATIVE BOOST

In our day to day lives, we often find ourselves mired in patterns of behavior that don’t leave much room for inspiration. The same morning routine, the same meals, the same TV shows and the same, well, everything might be comfortable but it doesn’t provide the opportunity to explore new ways of thinking. Taking a vacation and travelling out of your regular environment can open your eyes and your mind and bring about self discovery. Being in a foreign setting, we put ourselves in an uncomfortable situation, and this allows our brains to think differently. A good vacation can help us reconnect with ourselves. It satisfies our own human curiosity about other places. It is your moment to explore the world. When was the last time you could PLAY? I mean really play, without phone calls or interruptions. Vacations let you recapture that childlike freedom.



If taking a vacation will bring us closer together, give us better physical and mental health, and promote overall well being then what’s the argument. It would seem that the benefits far outweigh the costs. I’m not suggesting that we deplete our savings to do this. If we didn’t both have steady jobs and a retirement savings going on, I might leave this on the shelf as a dream. But the justification is right there in black and white.
New experiences.

It won’t be long before my eleventeen year old really won’t want to be taking vacations with us, or if she does, no doubt that a friend will be coming along. I feel that I need to seize the opportunity to create these memories with her now, not wait for a later date. I was reminded just last night about how fast the time goes by with children.

I know from experience that when my husband or I is stressed, we tend to have less patience with each other and laugh less frequently. We find ourselves just existing together, not really enjoying each other. That’s not why I got married.

Carpe diem I say. Seize the day. Request the time off. Make the reservation. Pack it up and get away for a bit. It will do you good on so many levels.

Wednesday, August 25, 2010

PHOTOGRAPHY – High School Senior Photos: Meet Robyn


Last Saturday, I had the pleasure of meeting Robyn. She is about to voyage into her senior year in high school. What an amazing year she has ahead of her. She has so many choices to make and options available to her at this point. College. Work. Friends. Huge things that will impact her for a long time.



I am confident she can handle it all with grace.


When I shot her senior photos this past weekend, I was excited by the possibilities that shooting at the barn held. My mind was going to the red painted classic New England barn, and the visual impact of the lines of the fencing. I wasn’t prepared for the love.


My sister had a horse when we were growing up. She boarded him at a stable in the “country” part of town and to me it was this big mystery creature, somewhere out “there” that she was devoted to. I didn’t quite get it. I did gymnastics and wrote little stories that I never showed anyone. She rode horses. I did come to understand that their individual personalities and temperaments were a large part of the attraction. I just wasn’t a horse person.

Robyn is. Since she was six years old she’s been on top of a horse. The girl looks so comfortable and in control of this huge creature. She clearly has a connection.

As we walked around the field, then around the barn, the pasture and into the woods, Robyn had Shady perfectly behaved. I want to thank her for being so comfortable with him. It made me much more at ease shooting around him. I must admit I was intimidated. Between her confidence with him and mine behind the camera, the photographs turned out great.

Have a look at the whole gallery here.



If you’re a senior in the greater Bangor Maine area and are looking for someone to photograph you for your senior yearbook photos, please give me a call or email me. I can offer some great rates and some shooting options that will make this a fun experience for you. If you want to bring a friend, cool. We can photograph both of you in the same session; individual portraits and then some together for the fun of it. We can shoot at your favorite place, like the barn, or a park, or find some gritty downtown alley or beautiful garden. Whatever it is that suites YOUR personality is where we need to go.





You can reach me via email at celeste@celestecota.com or by phone at 207.991.9788 or search for me on Facebook. Let’s connect and see how great you can be. Let’s show the world who YOU are.

Wednesday, August 18, 2010

MAINE TRAVEL: SPEND THE DAY – You can BELIEVE IN FAIRIES

The past couple of weeks have been a whirlwind of sorts. It seems like I’m trying to cram in all the summer fun that I can before school starts, work gets more demanding, and the winter looms. Writing about the neat places we’ve been has two benefits; one is that by passing on information about these places, a reader or two might be inclined to check them out – kind of my pay it forward idea; the other benefit is that I get to relive the day, thereby extending the good feelings.




Here is a little info about one of our recent day trips:

COASTAL MAINE BOTANICAL GARDENS, Boothbay Maine - www.mainegardens.org/

I’ve been wanting the check this place out for some time now. It’s relatively new, and continues to grow. The Coastal Maine Botanical Gardens opened in June of 2007, after 16 years of planting and building.



The Visitor Center houses a gift shop, café, and event space for weddings and birthday parties. It’s a beautiful building and fits perfectly into the Maine Coast feeling of the location. Just outside the Visitor Center is the Great Lawn & Ledge Garden.

 
Although we hadn’t planned it, we were thrilled to find that the day we visited was part of the Maine Fairy House Festival Weekend. The Great Lawn was skirted with craft vendors offering all manner of fairy attire: wings, wands, fairy house crafts and books. Someone had ingeniously set up a step ladder rigged with a power source that propelled a wheel of bubble wands and kept a continuous flow of bubbles floating throughout the lawn area. Families picnicked and enjoyed the space. A local ice cream vendor was set up with a line of customers that didn’t dwindle the whole time we were there. I had the blueberry ice cream, in case you’re wondering. Children and adults alike frolicked. Bubbles flitted and popped.






The Burpee Kitchen Garden was not only visually stunning in its design but a sensual summer feast of scents that lingered on hands rubbed on the warm leaves of lemon basil, thyme, sage, lavender and marjoram. From there we couldn’t help but be pulled into the brand new Harold and Bibby Alfond Children’s Garden. What a fabulous place! Twisty walkways, a misting rock garden with swings, a pond with lily pads and pitcher plants, a treehouse, a Wabanaki hut, bear cave, huge vegetable garden with playful identifying signs, a weather station, and it went on and on. My daughter’s favorite part, and the place we spent the most time, was at the fairy house area.




 A small wooded section had been designated for fairy house building. Since this was the third day of the Maine Fairy House Festival, there were quite a few houses already built, and we had to search a bit for some prime fairy house real estate. There were piles of house building supplies – pine cones, tree bark, twigs, moss, any manner of natural object found in the forests, which, in Coastal Maine, includes shells, dried seaweed, and smooth beach rocks.



Children had built fairy houses of all sorts and had included walkways, hammocks, tables and chairs, bridges and fences. What amazes me about these fairy villages is the imagination of children as they design and dream of the fairies that will visit.

After spending quite a while building her fairy house, my daughter sat back, pleased with her creation. I watched kids of all ages, from toddlers to tweens hard at work and deeply entrenched in their projects. One little boy squatted near us, very interesting in the building process, and even more so in the bright green caterpillar that had dropped out of the tree overhead onto the soft moss that had become the playground.


We worked our way through the Children’s Garden and toward the trails that zig zagged their way down to the waterfront. We checked out the Haney Hillside Garden and followed the Shoreland Trail along the water. We worked our way up to Birch Allee then caught a ride on one of the Garden’s shuttles, which run around the property and deliver guests to various locations on the grounds.








We truly could have spent quite a bit more time there, having lunch and enjoying all of the 250 acres that are available to explore.


Of note here: my husband is not a gardener, nor is he a photographer and I had thought that he would be bored and anxious to leave. That was not the case at all. The Coastal Maine Botanical Gardens was exciting and vibrant, and managed to hold the interest of even the biggest of kids.


My advice: take all the kids, it’s worth the admission. Spend the day.

The Coastal Maine Botanical Gardens are open year from, every day except Thanksgiving and Christmas. If you’re a member, it’s free to enter the gardens. Non members are $10 for adults and $5 for children 3 -1 7. Under age 3 is free. Note that a family of 2adults and 2 kids under 18 can get in for $25. Groups of 10 or more are $7 per person.

Check out the calendar of events for all of the goings on at the gardens.