What a Fine Arts Degree Didn’t Teach Me (And What David Hobby Did)

I have a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree in Photography from the University of Washington. Four years of critique sessions, darkroom fumes, conceptual frameworks, and endlessly fascinating discussions about whether photography as art. And to be clear — I’m grateful for all of it. Those years shaped how I see, how I think, how I …

Photography 101: Start Here!

I was watching (something online, can’t remember) recently and I saw a very famous photographer saying something like:  “Oh, I’m not a technical photographer.” while palming off their $20,000 Phase One to one of their many assistants. And every time I hear a famous photographer I admire proclaim that they are “not technical”, a little …

What to Expect for your Portraiture shoot?

  This is not a photoshoot in the traditional sense. It’s not about looking TikTok fake.  But it is about look the best you.  It’s about being present. About arriving just as you are — with your stories, your scars, your strength — and creating something meaningful from it. My Emotive Fine Art Portraiture sessions …

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Cordillera del Paine with Fujifilm X-E3 and XC 50–230mm

I’m selling a bunch of gear, so I’ll be posting some of my fav images shot with that equipment, sort of as a farewell or a homage. This one is shot using the budget XC 50-230mm lens.  It is a very underrated lens, doubly so because it suffers the ignominity of being the mk I …

A Portrait Does Not a Soul Capture

I love portraiture. It’s the kind of photography that I keep going back to, again and again — because people are endlessly fascinating. The flicker of emotion. The in-between moments. The quiet tension. The laughter right before it spills. But let’s get one thing straight: A portrait cannot capture someone’s soul. I know that’s the …

Squid Game and the Freelance Photographer: A Survival Story

Let’s be real: if you’ve ever tried to earn a living as a photographer, you’ve basically signed up for your own version of Squid Game. You may not be wearing a green tracksuit (although, hey, comfy), and there may not be a giant robot doll shouting “Red Light, Green Light!” — but emotionally? It’s basically …

The Fuji X-E3 is not a cat

Cameras are like pets — some are Labradors — loyal, helpful, but absolutely everywhere. Others are like cats — fussy, high-maintenance, and kind of judge you for existing. But the Fujifilm X-E3? It’s like a Schnoodle — small but sturdy, clever, quick and also very good looking. This little thing might just be my favorite …

Using GF50mm for Portraiture

Portrait of Mr. Phua: Making Space Where There Is None — with the GF 50mm Some portraits stay with you long after the shutter clicks. This one — of SK Phua, the master craftsman carpenter in his impossibly packed workshop — is one of them. The space was tight. Every inch of wall, floor, and …

Why GF 50mm is the Perfect GFX Lens

When people think of medium format photography, they usually imagine something big, heavy, and slow. A tripod kind of camera. A “set it up and wait” kind of experience. And sure — medium format can be all those things. (I have a Contax 645 that I love) But what if I told you there’s a …

The Quiet Romantic

Ode to the Pentax 645: The Quiet Romantic of Medium Format In the world of medium format photography, some names shout. Hasselblad — the status (or dare I say it, pretentious). Mamiya — the muscle, the dependable workhorse, all business. But then there’s Pentax.  Humble, earnest, quietly brilliant.  And among its creations, the Pentax 645 …

The Disappearing X-Pro1

Portraits Through the X-Pro1: A Camera That Disappears I’ve used many cameras over the years, but few have felt as human as the Fujifilm X-Pro1. When it comes to portraiture, it’s not always about megapixels or high-speed tracking. It’s about presence — both mine and the subject’s. And in that quiet space between connection and …

Falling in Love Again

How the Fujifilm X-Pro1 Rekindled My Love for Photography There was a time when I stopped taking pictures altogether. It wasn’t that I fell out of love with photography — I fell out of love with cameras. As the industry marched forward, chasing specs, screens, and speed, something was lost. The once intimate connection between …

An Ode to the Contax 645

Why I Still Shoot with the Contax 645 — And Why You Should Too In a world dominated by the latest mirrorless marvels and AI-powered phone camera apps, my go-to camera is a relic from a bygone era — the Contax 645. Yes, that Contax 645: heavy, film-hungry, temperamental at times, and entirely devoid of …

What to Expect for your Portraiture shoot?

  This is not a photoshoot in the traditional sense. It’s not about looking TikTok fake.  But it is about look the best you.  It’s about being present. About arriving just as you are — with your stories, your scars, your strength — and creating something meaningful from it. My Emotive Fine Art Portraiture sessions …

Photography 101: Start Here!

I was watching (something online, can’t remember) recently and I saw a very famous photographer saying something like:  “Oh, I’m not a technical photographer.” while palming off their $20,000 Phase One to one of their many assistants. And every time I hear a famous photographer I admire proclaim that they are “not technical”, a little …

What a Fine Arts Degree Didn’t Teach Me (And What David Hobby Did)

I have a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree in Photography from the University of Washington. Four years of critique sessions, darkroom fumes, conceptual frameworks, and endlessly fascinating discussions about whether photography as art. And to be clear — I’m grateful for all of it. Those years shaped how I see, how I think, how I …

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