Two versions, two languages.

Two versions, two languages.

Halekulani Living Magazine, the hotel’s in-house publication, published my spread on the beautiful Valley of the Temples in Kaneohe for their most recent issue.  The magazine is published both in English and Japanese hence I have two spreads in two languages published.  Its always impressive to see your work with unfamiliar text and scribbles.

Of course the top spread, my favorite, is the Japanese version while the other is the  more prominent English version.  I found my shot of the Rev. Hosen Fukuhara in the doorway graphically more appealing to me but the photo editor loved the idea of having the bokeh’d temple ceiling as the text page.  Its a hard edit to make but both spreads are fantastic.

Deep in the heart of …

Deep in the heart of ...

1728 miles into the deep heart of Texas.  Like a crossword puzzle, up and down, left and right.

We had the best barbeque in two small Texas towns.  Saw the rarely seen or known Branch Davidian memorial outside of Waco.  And we got great seats at Rangers Stadium to see Darvish pitch and win against the A’s.

 

There’s a lot more I’ll be covering including the massive disappointment of a town called Austin and other tidbits of this and that.

A few tearsheets

A few tearsheets

Its been a very busy few weeks and I just wanted to post a few new tear sheets to my growing list of clients and images.

The above shot was the Spring issue of Modern Luxury.  I sat atop a secret hill top and shot the city at dusk and waited for magic.  I had to do this three times as one day was good, the second day was cloudy, and the last day was magic.  Its just amazing how much we can’t control when we do outdoor shots.  A cloud rolls in and the day is over.  These things take time, luck and a little skill.  Not much skill, but a little.

I’ve had the chance to photograph the owners from Fighting Eel a few times and this shot happens to be one of my favorites.  I’ve not had the easiest time photographing them as they seem at times, slightly uncomfortable with themselves (or maybe it was just me) and I haven’t nailed a great shot of the pair.  But this pix seems to really be what I would call the shot.  I like it.  Thanks Rona and Lan.

Having been dressed by the Hawaii Five O duo for my shining start on the Rick Springfield episode, Five O costume designers Michelle and Anthony, were surprised I put them behind the camera this time.  Erika, the handler of all handlers, coordinated a great time, location, and helped set a great image of the two.  I think of the shot, along with the Fighting Eel girls as a portfolio piece.  Its another great environmental shot.  Both shots were for the Spring issue of Modern Luxury.

My last tear sheet is actual an image from the LPGA Lotte Championship Golf tournament held in April at Ko Olina.  The winner happened to be Japanese golfer Ai Miyazato.  She led the last round and kept steady and focused.  She stayed par the entire time but nailed the last few holds to win the four day tourney.  Unbeknown to anyone, even her, she started doing a hula with the hula dancers during the award ceremony.  She danced really well and surely deserved the dance.

 

 

 

Los Angeles Times goes organic.

Los Angeles Times goes organic.

Just a quick posting of tearsheets from a travel piece I shot for the LA Times and the new travel trend of Agrotourism in Hawaii.  Well traveled tourists are now recognizing the value of eating off the resort and eating and shopping locally.  Fresh fruits, vegetables, and produce can be pretty good albeit rather pricey at times.  But on an island, everything can be pricey.

So some have asked how much certain things cost here so here is a quick rundown:

gallon of milk:  around $6 for mainland, $8 to $9 for locally produced.

gallon of gas:  HNL:  $4.45, outer island $4.70+

lb of bananas:  local apple bananas are about $1.30, imported are around $1.09

pineapple:  Costco price is $3.29 or so, tourist price at fruit stand, $6

lb of ground beef:  $3-4

locally grown tomatoes:  $5/lb, imported are about $2.99/lb

But some of these costs didn’t surprise me from New York but they are shocking when you go to a place like San Antonio where you pay like $1 for 10 limes/lemons where at Safeway locally you get a lemon for like $1.29 EACH.

But to get back to the shopping locally at local farmer’s markets, things are obviously fresher and more unique and you will get a taste of the small farm as opposed to the corporations growing produce on the west coast.  You can’t buy mangosteens or rambutans at Safeway but you’ll pay for it at the farmer’s markets but the tastes and joy of eating something exotic really do make you feel like you are in the middle of the Pacific.

Lots of the exotic fruits and produce grown here are not native but they do add flavor to the local cuisine.  Its great tourists are now recognizing the value of having a sustainable trip where things are sourced locally rather than imported at high costs.  This creates local jobs, demonstrates we shouldn’t convert every inch of ag land into condos and resorts, and sustains a better way of life for everyone one on the Islands.  The drawbacks…well the major one is the costs of doing business, and the costs of labor.  Hawaii has no access to cheap immigrant labor to work in the fields, labor laws are strict and surely add to the costs of doing business, and Hawaii is clearly not business friendly.  Costs and taxes are high enough to drive small and start ups off the Islands.  Historically, the plantations took advantage of the labor here which drove a rise in unionism and now housekeepers at the big hotels are paid as much as the night managers.  How the hotels survive is by passing that cost onto you.

Regardless of my ranting, locally grown whatevahs is the trend across the country.  I’m glad we’re pushing more of this into our lifestyle even if it does costs a little more.  A locally grown avocado is pretty tasty.  Locally grown greens are crisper and its always neat to know I got an egg from a local chicken and not off a boat.

Oh, the above picture of the farm girl, Norah Hoover.  Ah, what a beauty.  She was working on the Kauai farm that produces stuff for Common Grounds in Kilauea.  As the staff was walking me around showing me parts of the farm and gardens which produce a good portion of the food for their restaurant, Norah walks over, barefoot no less, to plant kale into the field.  I immediately was drawn to her as her off the shoulder shirt, overalls, and bed head red hair fit my image of what organic farming and life is like on Kauai.  Sure enough, the LA Times and others have used that picture to be the lead for the story.  She made a great picture.