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Power Women Portraits in Naples FL.

So some of my most recent photographs were a series of photos about Power Women in Naples FL. for Gulfshore Life Magazine.  The advetorial will be featured in the March issue of Gulfshore Life.  I had the pleasure of shooting two wonderful and beautiful women for the upcoming issue, Susan Scholz, Chief Operating Officer for Specialist in Urology and Dr. Barbara Reed. Each were truly a joy to shoot. In Susan’s case we decided to shoot her on location at their building on U.S. 41 in Naples, across from The Naples Beach Hotel and Golf Club.  It was kind of a gray day but with the use of some carefully balanced flash I was able to get some very nice photos.   Barbara I shot in the studio with the help make-up artist and stylist Holly Pergola and my assistant Connor Garrett.  We shot two outfits with Barbara and decided the black was our best choice for the feature about her.

Erik Kellar Portrait Commercial Photgrapher

Susan Scholz, Chief Operating Officer for Specialist in Urology in Naples Fl. Erik Kellar Photography

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The Changing Face of Cuba


Special Report

THE CHANGING FACE OF CUBA

From a schoolteacher in Las Terrazas to a professor from Southwest Florida, from a flower vendor in Havana to a businessman from Naples, the common citizens of Cuba and the United States are forging friendships while their governments remain at odds

STORY BY RALF KIRCHER

PHOTOGRAPHY BY ERIK KELLAR

A YELLOW THREE-LEGGED DOG AWOKE as witness to international politics hitting home.

On an early Sunday morning in mid- November, near the entrance of the provincial airport of Cienfuegos in south central Cuba, a crowd gathered in the warming sun. Diesel fumes, cigarette smoke, heat, sweat, the clatter of luggage carts on rough asphalt and the blare of musical notes from two tinny sets of speakers playing competing songs thickened the still air.

Fathers, mothers, children, police officers, baggage handlers, grandfathers, grandmothers, uncles, aunts and cousins milled about on foot, several in wheel- chairs. They were standing, pacing, driving up quick- ly, sitting below shade tents next to trailers that sold Buccanero beer, Hollywood brand cigarettes, Havana Club rum.

It was here among the families hugging their good- byes the effects of two countries at odds politically for more than 40 years were reduced to a personal level.

Here were tears of joy and excitement for those Cubans lucky enough to win the lottery to secure visas to visit family in the United States. Here were tears of division from families saying so long to loved ones who had fled the communist regime of Fidel Castro and had been able to return, however briefly, for a rare visit. And here were tears of drunken mourning from a father who lived in Key West who had come home for the funeral of his son.

At this entrance to the airport in Cienfuegos an awakened yellow three-legged dog who had seen it all before quickly tired of the scene and loped off in his own direction.

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24th Annual Naples Fitness Challenge

The 24th Annual Naples Fitness Challenge departed from Naples Beach Hotel and Golf Resort in Naples, Florida, on Sunday morning June 6, 2010. A field of 850 took off for the reverse triathlon which starts with a 3.1 mile run, 9.3 mile bike and a ¼ mile swim.  A hot morning did not slow down returning champion Kurt Roeser, who won the overall men’s event while Sara Weaver repeated her victory as well for the overall women’s. Marc Damon won second place in a close finish. Roeser graduated from Naples High School five years ago and helped the Golden Eagles obtain three state cross country titles.

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Gracie’s Cupcakes

A new taste and a new magazine.


Gracie’s Cupcakes – Images by Erik Kellar

I recently was contacted by La Vie Claire magazine. It is associated with Claire Murray, a national lifestyle store and catalog that was founded by Claire Murray, a designer and entrepreneur who left New York City to open an inn on Nantucket. The company specializes in traditional crafts of rug hooking and the needle arts, and features crafts people from all over the world.  I was hired to cover Gracie’s Cupcakes across from Coastland Mall in Naples, Florida. It is owned and operated by Grace Bolen. What a great place and a great person; we had gone to Naples High School together, not really knowing each other at school.

Anyway, Gracie’s a small cupcake and ice cream shop with some spectacular designs and specializing in decorative cupcakes for every occasion. If you get a chance, check out the images attached to this post and swing by Gracie’s.

There were a couple of things I was going for with the photos. I had this Andy Warhol inspiration moment after doing some preliminary scouting. So to give the designer of the magazine some choices I shot several combinations of cupcakes on different color backgrounds. Also, part of the directive of the magazine is to feature people’s lifestyles so I caught up with the Bolen family as they made cookies at home and then a walk on the beach.

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Google: Desktops Will Be Irrelevant in Three Years’ Time

Google: Desktops Will Be Irrelevant in Three Years’ Time

From Mashable

Speaking at the Digital Landscapes conference at UCD, European Director of Google’s online sales John Herlihy saidthat Google is mostly oriented towards mobile devices, claiming they’ll become more important than desktop PCs.

“In three years time, desktops will be irrelevant. In Japan, most research is done today on smart phones, not PCs,” he said.

True, with Android and Nexus One Google has shown a commitment to extend its dominance from the online world to the mobile world. But will desktop PCs really become irrelevant? Depends on how you look at it. Google isn’t really interested in how we edit our photos; it’s interested in where we store them, and increasingly, we do that at a place is a part of their domain — the cloud.

And if your data moves to the cloud, and most of your daily online activities are done on devices such as the Nexus One and the iPad, where simple, widget-style applications cater to your precise needs, then yes, desktop PCs as we know them now will become a lot less important. On the other hand, not many users are ready to ditch the desktop just yet; we’ll see if it all pans out according to Google’s plans.

http://mashable.com/2010/03/04/google-desktops-irrelevant/

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Lake Okeechobee: Liquid Heart – Images | Erik Kellar Photographer

Balancing act

No quick fix to Lake Okeechobee’s water problems

By Kate Spinner

http://www.naplesnews.com/news/2006/mar/07/balancing_act/

Managing water in South Florida is like trying to make all sides of a Rubik’s Cube match.

That’s how Col. Robert Carpenter, head of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Jacksonville District, describes the problem with water flow and pollution in Lake Okeechobee, the Everglades, the Kissimmee River and the Caloosahatchee and St. Lucie estuaries.

People flock to South Florida because of the climate, but without the artificial controls woven into the landscape over the past 100 years, this Eden would be swamped in the summer and raging with fire in the winter. Taming the environment made modern settlement in South Florida possible, but it exacerbated the extremes for the plants and animals that had adapted to the fluctuations.

Creating a system that works for flood control and restoring the habitat of the ecosystem will take a balancing act that will feature birds and fish, dairy cows and sugar cane, conservation groups and agribusiness corporations. It also will involve more than $11 billion and a lot of patience.

Summers send floodwaters rushing across the grime-soaked pavement of Orlando and the manure-sodden farm fields of Okeechobee and Highlands counties, sweeping pollutants directly into the straightened Kissimmee River. The soiled water rushes into Lake Okeechobee and the lake rises within the confines of the Herbert Hoover Dike.

To avoid dike failure, the Army Corps lifts the lake’s spillways to the Caloosahatchee and St. Lucie rivers and dirty water gushes to the east and west coast estuaries.

When Carpenter explains how government agencies are trying to change water flow in South Florida to stop harming the estuaries and the Everglades, he says the system is broken. But the system of canals, levees and pumps has not stopped working as it was intended to work.

The system’s dependence on storing water in the lake during the dry season and moving water quickly in the wet season has brought about unforeseen consequences. At the same time, the needs of South Floridians have changed. The growing population requires more water for taps and crops and the population also demands healthy habitat for everything from blue crabs and manatees to apple snails and largemouth bass.

Agencies are now looking outside the lake to replicate the water storage that drainage projects removed and to an array of treatment marshes to clean the water of sediments and fertilizers.

Susan Gray, head of the Lake Okeechobee division for South Florida Water Management District, said studies are also under way to evaluate whether to remove 300 million cubic yards of phosphorus-laden mud that has accumulated on the lake’s bottom since the dike’s construction.

More mud started to enter the lake after the Army Corps finished straightening the Kissimmee River, in the process destroying 27,000 acres of marshlands that had provided water filtration and water storage. To create the Everglades Agricultural Area south of the lake, about 700,000 acres of sawgrass marshes were drained.

Marshes retain water much longer than drained agricultural lands and paved surfaces and the grasses help filter polluted water. Before drainage projects nearly eliminated South Florida’s water storage capacity, water flowed year-round through wetlands that ranged from the Kissimmee chain of lakes to Florida Bay.

Last July, releases jumped to as high as 70,000 gallons per second. After Hurricane Wilma, the lake rose to 17.1 feet and the Army Corps released about 48,000 gallons per second for more than two months.

This year the agency is following the same course of action as last year and the year before. Only this year, the corps and the water management district are less optimistic that the lake will drop to 14 feet by May 1.

The plans

Standing in the blazing heat on Okeechobee Beach in October, Gov. Jeb Bush announced a $200 million plan to help Lake Okeechobee and the estuaries. Most of the projects he outlined weren’t new. They were part of the $10.8 billion Comprehensive Everglades Restoration Plan, or CERP.

A year earlier, the water management district gave a similar boost to the restoration plan. The district called its plans Acceler8.

These programs, which include building water storage reservoirs along the St. Lucie and Caloosahatchee rivers, building and expanding stormwater treatment areas, back-filling unnecessary canals in the Everglades, strengthening pollution laws and altering the water regulation schedule, are the state’s way of moving forward with – and in some cases adding onto – the plan to restore the Everglades.

The federal government and the state agreed to split the cost of the restoration plan when it was passed in 2000, but the state has had to dig much deeper into its own coffers to start the work. The state has paid $1.5 billion toward restoration so far, while the federal government has pitched in $300 million, said Ernie Barnett, director of policy and legislation for the district.

The projects aim to add 1.7 billion gallons a day of storage back into the Greater Everglades system through the construction of reservoirs and by injecting water deep into the earth. The additional storage is supposed to help water managers reduce flows to the estuaries and keep the lake no higher than 15 feet by the end of the wet season and no lower than 12 feet by the end of the dry season. A shallower lake will allow grassy fish habitat to grow back and reduce the need for emergency releases.

Part of Bush’s October announcement also coincided with the Lake Okeechobee Protection Plan, which calls for land management laws to reduce phosphorus run-off from farms and urban areas north of the lake.

Native plants and beneficial algae in Lake Okeechobee can use about 140 tons of phosphorus a year, but water spilling in from the northern watershed dumps about 500 tons of phosphorus into the lake a year. That means 350 tons are left over to sink to the mud or feed algae blooms and invasive plants such as cattails and torpedo grass. Making matters worse, an estimated 5,000 tons of phosphorus from fertilizer and animal waste are added to the watershed north of Lake Okeechobee every year, said Paul Gray of Aubudon.

To reduce pollution and the flow of water to the lake, the governor, the Army Corps and the district are focusing attention north of the lake.

The Kissimmee River Restoration Project, for instance, is now in progress and will return 27,000 acres of marsh and 82 miles of bends and eddies to the river that once meandered for 103 miles.

“If we don’t capture that water north of the lake and treat it north of the lake, we will continue to have high water flows and dirty water flows,” said Susan Gray.

Will the plans work?

Critics of restoration plans say the project, which is unprecedented in scope worldwide, still isn’t big enough.

The Audubon Society suggests tripling the amount of water storage the plan calls for in the Everglades Agricultural Area, from 360,000 acre-feet to 1 million acre-feet.

Paul Gray also said more storage needs to be built north of the lake.

North of the lake, current restoration plans would add seven inches of water storage to the basin.

“During the hurricanes last summer, the lake rose 5.5 feet. So if you store seven inches of that, big deal,” Gray said. “We need to store two feet of water north of Okeechobee, not just seven inches.”

If farmers in the 4,000-square mile northern watershed all set aside about 3 percent of their property for small ponds or reservoirs, Audubon estimates 400,000 acre-feet of water storage could be added north of the lake.

Environmental groups also criticize restoration plans for relying on Aquifer Storage and Recovery, which involves injecting excess water deep into the earth for later use. About a third of the plan’s water storage depends on such technology.

To increase sheet flow to the Everglades, which would also divert excessive water flows from the estuaries, the Sierra Club is urging the Army Corps to elevate 11 miles of the Tamiami Trail. Current plans call for a 1-mile bridge and a 2-mile bridge.

Additionally, only about half of the needed land has been purchased.

Meanwhile, land costs are rising and the need to buy more land than anticipated is growing more apparent.

The challenges and the waiting has caused some of the people who have been working on restoration for years to lose their optimism.

Herb Zebuth, a former Department of Environmental Protection scientist who worked on formulating the Everglades restoration plan, said efforts still cater too much to monied businesses, such as agriculture.

“You need to have statesmen, instead of politicians, that can’t think further than their next campaign and the funds they need to win it, and how you get those people, I don’t know,” Zebuth said. “I blame the people of Florida that they haven’t risen up in outrage that this crime against the environment has gone on for decades.”

Wayne Nelson, head of Fishermen Against the Destruction of the Environment, has been working for two decades to save Lake Okeechobee.

He said there have been too many failed plans and too many inaccurate studies for him to believe restoration will work.

“I don’t think we’re going to save the lake. I wouldn’t have said that two or three years ago, but I’ve been at this for 20 years now,” Nelson said. “Do I have hope that we can still save the lake? Yeah, I have hope. But there’s a lot of difference between hope and belief.”

Data used to arrive at everything from the amount of phosphorus the lake can handle to the amount of water that can flow through the system has, at times, been questionable.

For instance, the first phosphorus standards for the lake were set too high because scientists failed to account for phosphorus already present in the lake’s mud bottom.

Now water calculations are under fire because most of the years used in the modeling for the Army Corp’s water regulation schedule fell during a cycle of dry weather.

Despite criticism and pessimism, there are those who plug along with patience. The restoration plan, after all, is designed to be flexible as science and technology becomes more advanced.

Dennis Duke, restoration program manager for the Army Corps, said stormwater treatment areas were probably built to handle dry cycle flows. He suggested their capacity may need to be doubled and that canals will need to be widened to allow more water to travel south to the Everglades.

If the Corps determines such measures are necessary and cost effective, they can be fitted into the plan.

With that flexibility in mind, environmental groups are constantly chiming in on ways to make restoration plans better.

“I tell people we’re in a marathon and not a sprint. We’ve been messing this lake up for a century and it’s going to take decades to turn it around,” said Paul Gray.

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“If your pictures aren’t good enough, you’re not close enough.”

Robert Capa, a famous war photographer, once said, “If your pictures aren’t good enough, you’re not close enough.” Often, people think they should have an arsenal of lenses to get great photos, from a super wide-angle, 15mm lens to the $8000, 400mm f2.8. Nothing could be more wrong. Capa is not saying to spend a lot of dough on long lenses; what he is saying is to spend the time to get to know your subject and find the best way to portray it. The best lens you have is the one on the camera, your creativity and your own two feet. In other words if you don’t like what you see, move and recompose your photo or look for a better moment.

To boil it down, there are three basic lenses you really need: A wide-angle lens, 24-35mm; a medium focal length, 50mm; and long-focal length lens, such as a 200mm.  Also, two zoom lenses that cover this focal length would work.  Anything else is a specialty lens and nine times out of ten you don’t need them.

There are some key things to remember when taking photos. Take the time to wait for the right moment. If that means getting up early to take advantage of the morning light or getting close in to your children playing in the sand, do it. Lastly, a good photograph is not what is in the center of the photo but what is in the entire frame of the viewfinder or printed photograph. Pay attention to what is happening inside the whole image and don’t be afraid to fill it up with your subject.

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Looking for moments!

Preparing for her wedding

Jan Fernandez, left, gets some help from her sister, Yamile, preparing for her wedding.

What I do as a photojournalist or a wedding photographer is look for moments. It is looking for those subtle moments of an expression, a touch or shared joy or in some cases sadness. A trained eye looks for the tenderness in the moment or the admiration in a person eyes.  When you truly open your eyes to people’s body language then you begin to able to read what is going to happen and anticipate it.   Also listening to what people are saying helps as well. True wedding photojournalism is a spontaneous thing and is never planned.

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9 things to do with your engagement pictures

engagement portrait wedding photographer naples florida

  • Use them on your save the date cards
  • Post them on your facebook page
  • Create a guest sign in book for your wedding
  • Use them for a formal wedding annoucnement in the local paper
  • Add them to your wedding website
  • Get prints made to display on your cake table, or around the wedding
  • Add them to your signature on message boards
  • Create a fun blurb book of your wedding
  • Put them on a cake at your wedding shower

An engagement session is a great way to “try out” a wedding photographer.  Once you contact me to learn more (I’m way better than your friend with a camera, and not that expensive), I’ll provide tips on what to wear, amazing location ideas, and posing tips for you and your fiancée.  I’ll give you a mix of color and B&W pictures, tons of different poses (both fun and some formal), and teach you all the ins and outs of posing so you can look your best.

An engagement session is a great way to “try out” a wedding photographer.  Once you contact me to learn more (I’m way better than your friend with a camera, and not that expensive), I’ll provide tips on what to wear, amazing location ideas, and posing tips for you and your fiancée.  I’ll give you a mix of color and B&W pictures, tons of different poses (both fun and some formal), and teach you all the ins and outs of posing so you can look your best.

The sessions last about an hour, and when we are done, you will get an on-line gallery for 3 months, a CD with the original high-resolution images, and a print release so you can do whatever you want with them.

This post is from ERIC HEGWER an Austin Based Photographer. If you are in the Austin area check him out.

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The future of photobooks?

This is pretty cool. This is an excerpt from lensculture.

Our friends at LiveBooks.com and Flakphoto.com have initiated a spirited and intelligent online discussion that asks us to imagine the future of photobooks. There are lots of thoughtful ideas and insights to be garnered in this ongoing discussion, and you can take part, too.

Certainly there are two tracks that dominate the discussions: technology and creativity. What will the photobook of the future look like? How will we distribute and receive and store it? And what can a photobook aspire to be, creatively? Can anyone top the inventive, visual brilliance of William Klein’s book Tokyo, from 1964? All of these are topics of great interest to people, like me, who are happily addicted to photobooks in all of their forms. Fore more got to. www.lensculture.com

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