I had to drastically reduce the amount of photos I have on here when Flickr ill-advisedly limited their non-paying members to 1000 pictures. They probably think that will make more people buy pro accounts, but I think it will instead drive people away. Flickr doesn't even get much traffic to start with, these days.
My manual camera is a Minolta X-370N, which I've had since circa 1990. It was a gift from my brother. The original lens went kaput, so I started using a Vivitar 28-70mm around 1995. I finally caved in and got myself a digital SLR at the end of 2010. It's a Canon T2i.
My main photographic loves are nature, and an aesthetic called wabi-sabi, which is about finding beauty in the imperfect, the impermanent, and the incomplete. Note that the Japanese word for rust is pronounced "sabi". Oh, and I'm also kind of obsessed with taking pictures of men I find attractive.
I'm old-fashioned when it comes to photography. I used to call my manual camera my "real" camera and use my digital point-and-shoot just for snapshots. But eventually I found myself getting lulled by how cheap and convenient it is to use a digital. I remain conflicted on this issue. One of the major drawbacks of digital photography is that its cheapness and flexibility make it too easy, encouraging conceptual laziness and self-indulgence more often than inspired experimentation (I paraphrased this last bit from a comment by critic Scott Tobias). There's a great article on this topic here.
Beyond some cropping and gamma correction, I'm not a big fan of manipulating photographs. If a photo only becomes interesting through manipulation, the technology is to be praised, not the photographer.
I know the watermark is disruptive, but I have to protect my work.
Showcase
- JoinedMarch 2007
- Current cityToronto
- CountryCanada
Most popular photos
Testimonials
A hunger for the sexually meaty, his menu is about as good as it gets with me. Bellies, butts, beards, big thick men always in his crosshair, and his weapon is the camera. Oh if the guys he shoots only knew how good they taste on his plate. I love his eyes. Thank you Claude!