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About the work

   

The images here weren't taken in extraordinary settings or under extraordinary circumstances. More often than not, they were taken on ordinary days, doing ordinary things: watching the dancing reflections from waves of passing boat traffic; a sunday afternoon drive through wheat and canola fields in eastern washington; looking at the corroded, rusty back-end of an old tugboat; an early morning walk on the beach, watching the moon set and finding a pile of fishing nets laying on the sand.

This blog is attached to my main photography site, h3images.com and is mostly about...photography. Fair warning though: because photography is about so much more than pointing a camera at something and firing the shutter, other topics and features that may not seem to be 100% photography related will seep in. Hopefully that won't be off-putting. If it is, just click "home" on the navigation bar above and go back to looking at images.

I hope what you see and read here will inspire and raise your awareness for all of the extraordinarily ordinary beauty which, as the old hymn says, “…over and around us lies...” Look around - it's everywhere!

Happy imaging -- bill

Grace Unbound - Get a Copy Here

By Kayce & Bill Hughlett

You can order a copy here or send me an email for more information

gear & workflow

Cameras: nearly all images on the site were taken with Nikon film and digital cameras; most native film images are from slides which were later scanned; digital images are generally shot using nikon's RAW file format.  Look here for a good discussion of why RAW is such a great way to shoot.

Workflow: my images aren't manipulated beyond basic levels, curves, white balance and sometimes slight saturation adjustments. my goal is to present images that are as close to original scene as possible. 

Printing: all printing is done with Epson printers using archival inks and matte papers, usually from Epson and Moab.

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Thursday
17Jan2008

Top 3 Favorite Shots of 2007: #3 Splendor of Spring

looking back on 2007, i wanted to share my top-three favorite shots and the stories behind them. i named this picture 'splendor of spring' and its story is one of my favorites of the year.

in may i was driving from seattle to lind for my 30-year high school class reunion. it wasn’t much a reunion; turns out i was one of only two people who showed up...and I didn't even see the other guy until it was over - he was sitting at another table with his wife who graduated in a different year....our class of 18 was not, shall we say, really tight. but i digress.

highway 26 is a long, straight, two-lane highway that begins at the columbia river and cuts through miles of irrigated and dry-land farms before terminating in the roaring metropolis of 'dusty'. just west of royal city, i saw this tree calling to me, about a mile north of the highway. it looked spectacular, even from a distance. i turned onto the nearest dirt road and with a little winding through fields and over canals, managed to get right next to the tree. after a half hour "working" the scene i got back into my car and......it wouldn't start - the battery was completely dead!

i walked a half-mile to a complex of trailer houses with a machine shop and found a mechanic working on a tractor. in my broken spanish I asked him for help and he, in not very good english but using extraordinarily clear communication told me 'no'; actually, 'hell no' would be a better translation. shocked and discouraged, i walked a mile in the other direction and eventually waved down a little guy driving an irrigation pickup. his name was antonio mayorga and he was as happy to help me as the mechanic wasn't - not only 'yes', but 'hell yes'! in a few minutes i was on the road again, lighter by three nice cigars and a promise to send him a custom print of the tree, that he also thought was very beautiful in its spring colors. a couple of weeks later I sent antonio the print and another small collection of cigars.

everytime i see this image i'm reminded of how easy it is to blow off those that may need a helping hand, even in the simplest of ways.....and how equally easy it can be to take just a few minutes out of a busy day to do something for someone else. the mechanic's adamant 'no' didn't anger me; it shamed me because i recognized an all too familiar part of myself in his reaction.

it may sound cliché, but i think of antonio often, like when i'm asked for a couple of bucks from a guy on the corner selling the 'real change' newspaper or an occasional telephone sales person that gets past the front desk in the middle of an urgent project. it's a great choice....take a few minutes to be kind....just because you can.

Reader Comments (2)

great story bill, and a gorgeous photo. Love the new website too and thanks for mentioning SiteGrinder.

I'd love to post the interview with you next Thursday 1/24 if you're up for answering those questions. :-) Blessings, Christine

January 17, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterAbbey of the Arts

Love this one, too! I can feel the force behind this image. Sunny

February 23, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterAnonymous

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