 James McGinnis
(K=6045) - Comment Date 1/4/2004
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Current Day Job: Captain, United States Army, serving with the Combined Joint Task Force-Horn of Africa. Reserve officer called to active duty.
"Normal" Day Job: Physician Assistant in an Emergency Room; Associate Professor of Clinical Medicine, Methodist College Physician Assistant Program; Breeder and Trainer of American Quarter Horses.
Why Photography?: I have no creative talent in any other arena! I can't paint, I can't play an instrument, I don't act, My writing style is crap...need I go on? By nature, I'm an outdoors kind of a guy and photography allows me to share that with others. I'd like to start working on some photographic art...thought provoking stuff.
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 Robert Höhne
(K=4290) - Comment Date 1/4/2004
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My day job ( and night ) is electronic engineering, I tinker and create. I try to do the same with photography and even so I enjoy it my tinkering does not seem to create anything of greatness.
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 Kurt Pas
(K=2267) - Comment Date 1/4/2004
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Day job: Software Engineer 'process Automation' for oil distribution depots.
Why Photography? Well I started to be interested a long while ago. Because it appeared to me as magic what my father did in his Dark Room. Too young to understand lot photography I turned more in shooting memories from holiday's (landscape) and events.
After a few friends telling me they liked my slideshows and asked me for their wedding and, especially, the inspiring talk with a real photo amateur I guided up the 'Gran Paradiso' (unfortunately he died last summer after a fall during hiking http://www.paulvandepitte.be) I became more interested in photography and see it as a kind of art.
You can select details in a pose/landscape, select the settings of the camera and create an image, emotion that is different from the reality. But your emotions from that day will influence the way you modify reality.
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 Chris Lauritzen
(K=14949) - Comment Date 1/4/2004
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Day Job: IT Manager Second Day Job: Photographer
Why Photography? After twenty years in the IT world I needed a creative outlet. I have been involved in photography since I was 10 so it was a natural progression to a new career.
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 Barbara Burton
(K=240) - Comment Date 1/4/2004
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Day Job: Waitress and full time student at the Art Institute of Atlanta. I just got paid for photography for the first time 2 weeks ago! A portrait.
I love film and learning about how to make an image that I see in my head appear on paper. I call myself a photography whore. I will shoot a picture of anything that anyone wants to pay me for (as long as it dosen't harm children or animals), so that I can afford to do what I love for myself.
Ultimate goal: war photographer.
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 Rich B
(K=553) - Comment Date 1/4/2004
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Day Job: Pharmacist/Buying Cooperative Manager.
I have absolutely no artistic talent...have trouble drawing stick figues, and am partly color blind. (This is a good thing as it allow me to save time on PhotoShop since I don't do color adjustments.)
I love photography since it allows me to create something that someone can look at & say "WOW", or "you should sell that" (no they weren't talking about my camera!). I'm just getting to the point where I have gained enough confidence in my work to put it online. Due to my non-artitistic nature, my shots tend to reflect the reallity of what I've seen, however, I do strive for composition and lighting effect.
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 Michael Goldfarb
(K=629) - Comment Date 1/5/2004
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Technical writer/documentation specialist, working on online manuals for mega-boring mainframe software.
I've *always* been a photographer. My parents are retired pros, and I grew up working in the family biz back in the 60s and 70s. I came back to it in a big way nearly a decade ago, and now the only time that my folks' state-of-the-art-1960 darkroom gets any action is for my stuff. (But my dad still keeps his hand in with some digital shooting.)
So, for me, photography functions as a creative outlet, a connection back to my youth, and (as a documentation specialist) a means of documenting my kids, travels, and life in general...
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 Christine Campbell
(K=2693) - Comment Date 1/5/2004
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I am a web developer/graphic artist for a Federal regulatory agency (DOL). Sounds boring, but it rocks!
I've always enjoyed photography, but just recently decided I was going to learn how to take more than just a snapshot. I suppose I'm somewhat sentimental though. I don't want just photographs, I want memories. I have 2 daughters; a 14 yr old and a 2 year old, and I wonder how they have gotten so big, so fast! If I didn't have photos from their early days, I'd probably forget that those 2 holy terrors were once sweet little angels... Seriously though, they're both pretty good kids... when they're asleep.
For me, Christmas isn't Christmas without a camera! There's always something I want to remember or something I can use as blackmail at a later date. ;-)
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 Tim Bronkhorst
(K=9391) - Comment Date 1/5/2004
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Hey Paul. It's kind of fun to hear what all of you do in dayly life, so diffrent and yet the same intrest. For a dayly 'job': I'am still at highschool, I do the so called vwo and mostley mathics and fysics. I also have 'side jobs' I'am a lifeguard at a swimmingpool and help the father of a friend of mine, he's a plumber. Why photographie: well I just started last summer. I constantly told the ones I was whit wow look at that, or have you seen this. But they all didn't see it. I wanted to frame what others didn't see and so I rolled in. These day's it's so extreme that I don't even leave the house whitout my camera.
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 Roger Williams
(K=86139) - Comment Date 1/5/2004
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All day long I try to keep a small web-page design and production company afloat in Japan's abysmal economy. It's considerably less fun than I would like. I'd been thinking of taking up photography again when I retired, 'cos then "I might have time for it." But I married late, still have children in school although I'm past retiring age, and can't afford to retire. Fortunately there are no rules that say I have to retire just because I'm 66! So I decided to take it up again BEFORE I retired. Now I make time for it. The pleasures far outweigh the problems...
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 Wouter van Noort
(K=4369) - Comment Date 1/6/2004
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Day job: Software engineer Why photography? May be it's in the genes. My father made photographs on al kinds of ocasions, so it seemed natural to follow that example.
Photography can take possession of you: Once you've noticed that you can do more than making a snapshot to remember that nice vacation, you start hunting to make the perfect image.
Some time ago, I had a discussion with a former art student (now working as an IT consultant) if the creativity needed for making artwork is the same as the creativity needed to be a good programmer or software designer. I think there is a relation, but may be that has to do more with the ability to think abstract.
By the way, Paul, what's your daytime job?
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 Kurt Pas
(K=2267) - Comment Date 1/6/2004
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Sorry for being of topic but:
Hey Wauter,
I med a nice photo amateur a few years ago. On his website he posted an essay about photography being art yes or not. For those not understanding Dutch, I think he even has an English version on his site.
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 Kurt Pas
(K=2267) - Comment Date 1/6/2004
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Sorry forgot the URL English http://users.skynet.be/am249958/onphotography.htm Dutch http://users.skynet.be/am249958/overfotografie.htm
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 Titia Geertman
(K=5572) - Comment Date 1/6/2004
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Day job: Dutch Government's Tax office employee, sounds dull,but it isn't, though I'm very pleased that this probably will be my last year on the job.
I'm thrilled getting off the job, because then I can devote my time to all those other things I like to do, as making photos of this beautiful area I'm living in, writing my English poems (http://titia.netpoets.net), take up my gardening again (about 200 roses there)and breeding my very rare Dutch Drenthen Heathsheep.
See, I just don't have the time to have a day job (ha ha)
All I want to do with my photography is capture moments of nature's beauty.
Titia
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 Robert Stokes
(K=4509) - Comment Date 1/6/2004
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Day or night I get paid for being a Paramedic. Sounds exciting but it's usually pretty routine. Heart attacks, car wrecks, gun shots, you get used to it pretty quick. I'm also a volunteer firefighter.
Why photography? Well, I have always taken a camera with me on my various outdoor adventures ( skiing, mtn. biking, rock climbing, caving, kayaking, hiking, ect...) and I have always enjoyed looking at good photos, so I figured why not take it to the next level and try to be a little creative as well. Besides, I needed another expensive hobby to suck my bank account dry.
I also find it to be great at relieving the stress and boredome of my job. Most of the job stress isn't from the emergency calls but just from the hours we work. Our regular shift is 24 hours but I have worked as much as 144 straight hours. Kinda wears you down after a while. Hmm, I hear that some folks get paid to take pictures. That might be cool.
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 Dai Hunter
(K=2028) - Comment Date 1/7/2004
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My day job? I am an independent photo-journalist working mainly for...and I am not kidding you...an international nudist/naturist monthly magazine. I also do other work for trade and industrial journals.
Sounds like nice work if you can get it, but, alas, I cover many of their stories on mundane subjects - general news; health and medicine; human rights and law; nudity in the arts and media; fashion and technology; - but - unfortunately I don't get many travel or destination assignments so I don't get to hang around nude or clothes optional beaches, resorts or nudist clubs.
Photography, generally? When not working on a story I shoot everything and anything that takes my fancy... architecture and places of interest; ships and boats; street work; people at work; ect. I also get to explore studio work off the job and often shoot models, dancers, singers, and other performing arts type people half for fun and half for other reasons, mostly that's small commission work but of completely different styles then I do for publication. I really enjoy the one-on-one interaction in the studio. There is not the pressure, off the job, of shooting to spec to support a specific story - and so I find it a good stress reliever to explore and experiment with the "art" of photography without the pressure of meeting deadlines or the worry of missing the "money shot"...that makes it a LOT more fun than work.
Hunter
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 Jeroen Wenting
(K=25317) - Comment Date 1/7/2004
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dayjob: software engineer for an independent software house specialising in Java based web/intranet applications and databases.
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 Dave Arnold
(K=55680) - Comment Date 1/9/2004
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Day Job: Expert witness in vehicle accident reconstruction. I also run a couple of web-based businesses though it's more like a hobby.
Photography: I read above where it was because he wasn't talented at anything else. I am talented at some things and some things I'm not. I just chose photography because I like to see the results. Photographers have always fascinated me, including the great talent here on usefilm.
I get to use my camera a lot for work but it's not in a creative way. It's just documentation and I find it boring. To be able to search and find interesting subjects is something that is enjoyable to me.
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 Bartlomiej Rozanski
(K=133) - Comment Date 1/12/2004
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day job: Ph.D Student at Technical University of Wroclaw I also work as webmaster administrating several websites.
the reason for shooting photos is just the ability of creating something and sharing it with other people. and this art also trains eye and brain.
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 Austin Hill
(K=104) - Comment Date 1/12/2004
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Day Job: Software Engineer for defense contractor
Why Photography? It offers a creative outlet that I desperately needed. On a whim, I took a photography class last year, and it opened up an entirely new world to me. It offers a break from normal life, and gives me an excuse to go explore the world.
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 Neil Dolman
(K=26883) - Comment Date 1/13/2004
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Day Job: Video Editor for Swiss Television, this means I'm usually stuck inside a darkened room, surrounded by television monitors and hi-tech computers for hours on end!
Why Photography: Because it gives me a balance to the above. That is why I like to concentrate on "Nature" subjects. Being out and about in the fresh air, enjoying nature at it's best. Just wish i was better at the photgraphy though, always learning :-)
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 El Blura
(K=854) - Comment Date 2/6/2004
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Day job: I?m the owner of a small, but very good ;), marketing/graphic design company. It?s hard to get bored, when you have to run that kind of company. Well, Images and Photos are, at most times, a "tool" when you work in the Graphic Design.
I always liked to view photos... I enjoy to see the different points of view that people have about things.
When i borrow a rangefinder Canon Canonet QL19, that my parents bought in 1976 (to take photos of their first son... Me!), I felt the need to shoot (don?t get me wrong, i?m a nice guy, lol) everything i saw. I don?t pretend to be called a "good photographer", i?m only interested in learning, to make it easier getting good pictures.
The power of "freezing" time, it?s very attractive to me...
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 Shoot Mike
(K=3255) - Comment Date 2/6/2004
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Day job, Transportation Maintenance Superintendent on a turnpike in Oklahoma. What that means is I'm in charge of an adult daycare center...
Why photography, since I was a kid I have always had an artsy side but never had the time to focus enough to be good at anything. I have always enjoyed looking at old pictures and trying to imagine what life was like when the picture was taken so now I'm the one making the pictures that someday will be old and someone will be looking at wonder what I was doing when the picture was made.
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 Liz Chaffin
(K=546) - Comment Date 2/6/2004
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Day job, playing Night job, bartending Why I love to take photos, the same reason I love to look at them. Guess it is like when the waitress brings out the desert tray and I can't just look I must partake.
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 David Morris
(K=1404) - Comment Date 2/7/2004
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Great question. I have wondered what many people do when I look at their photos.
During the day I work as an Executive Administrative Assistant at a Jesuit Catholic University in Milwaukee, WI.
Why photography? The day job is pretty hectic and stressfull so I use photography as a means to get out, relax and take my time doing something.
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 Kim Culbert
(K=37070) - Comment Date 2/9/2004
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Day Job: Production Coordinator for a TV station Why Photography: What a great excuse to get out and see the world(or at least Canada), and have something to share with people when its all over.
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 Steve Bowen
(K=234) - Comment Date 2/9/2004
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I manage international PR for Kia Motors. Actually, I will only be doing that for another 24 hours, as this is may last week on the job. After that I'm going back into agency life. Why photography? Like other people who have already responded to the question, I have a strong creative drive but absolutely no talent. I can barely draw breath. I got into photography when I was 18 and enjoyed the process of finding and taking interesting pictures. I was always disappointed that the results never quite matched what I saw through the viewfinder. Comes of using commercial printing services and never having the money to get a really professional job done. Now that I've switched to digital I can do all my own "darkroom" work in the computer and have really got back into taking pictures and turning them into images that I can be proud of.
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 Chris Wenzel
(K=1165) - Comment Date 2/9/2004
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Day Job: Selling Beer....in Florida. My family runs the local Anheuser-Busch/Corona distributorship. Yeah, life's tough.
Why photography...day job isn't as great as it sounds. People down here are old! Really, really, old. Photography is an escape for me, a stress relief, and an opportunity to be intellectual in the land of the under-educated (I'm not a snob, I just live in one of those towns where those with ambition, and a college degree, flee like rats from a doomed ship).
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 Steven Downs
(K=39) - Comment Date 2/12/2004
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Day job: Website Admin for a service-oriented company.
I like photography because it allows me to record a moment or image, one that I've noticed but that many other people would not be able to see if not for the photo. I only have one photo up on this site so far, but I love the fact that 20 or so other people have seen the same thing I did on that particular day, and how magical it was. Its also very interesting to me to see how objects relate to one another within the confines of a frame.
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 Jason Diltz
(K=213) - Comment Date 2/22/2004
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Day job: Professional Dad. I have three daughters (two little ones still at home). I also breed, sell, and do shows in the Seattle area, revolving around spiders...(tarantulas and widows). Why Photography: I enjoy the creativity. I do paint (oil), and write (fiction), but only recently did I discover the "camera." The most important aspect about photography to me is that there is no "messy clean-up" Oil painting is wonderful, however, it takes me at least 1 hour to scrub brushes when i am done. Writing is physically and emotionally draining.....enough said.
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 This space for rent.
(K=313) - Comment Date 2/22/2004
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 Effie White
(K=1147) - Comment Date 3/15/2004
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I talk to stupid people for a living!
Actually, I do computer and internet technical support and it seems that about 90% of my calls are dealing with people who have nothing better to do than scream at someone or those who lack the intelligence of a dead mouse.
However, to pass the time I often shoot still life of the objects on my desk, which is part of a series I'm posting currently on this site.
It's perhaps not the most PRODUCTIVE thing to do, but it helps contain the screams of frustration.
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 Jon Slater
(K=1340) - Comment Date 3/17/2004
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Day job: Consulting general pediatrician. I can't say that the work is ever boring - I really enjoy it. The biggest stresses are the need to be available 24/7(I'm a country doc) and working with extremely sick kids in a centre that's hours away from a children's hospital.
why photography? Because I'm too young to play golf! Composing a photo is a very relaxing thing todo for me.
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 David Morris
(K=1404) - Comment Date 3/18/2004
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Day Job: Executive Assistant to the Vice President of Alumni Relations.
Why photography? In my day job, I spend a lot of time rushing to get one thing or another done. Photography helps me slow down.
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 John J Stafford
(K=423) - Comment Date 3/22/2004
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Graphic design, videographer, editor, web author, writer, camera builder, and software implementation person who assists university faculty. My graduate education was in philosophy. Note the conspicuous absence of still photogaphy in my present day job. :)
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 Mark - MarkMedia -
(K=1062) - Comment Date 4/3/2004
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Day job: Wireless RF engineer for a cellular carrier. It is frustrating to spend most of my day at a computer, then to do digital photography at my home computer....makes for a sore back !!! Ive been into photography since 1973.
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 Bikramadittya G. Roy
(K=7202) - Comment Date 4/3/2004
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Hi Paul. Day job-nightjob? I work as a multimedia production consultant.
Why photography? Well it's my religion and I practice it because I've faith.
Cheers
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 Robert Frank Green
(K=1039) - Comment Date 4/3/2004
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Hey Paul and all! I'm a comercial photographer, and I assist two other photographers on their projects. So I guess I'm the junior photographer in the group. My first photographic memory was my father telling me to stop taking so many *@!# pictures with my old Argus 110. I was five and in Florida on a family vacation clicking away at everything in sight. I have always been shooting and now after several years, am starting to redevelop a bond again with nature photography for fun and maybe some profit. As for boredom, luckily it's few and far between. As for the relieving stress, if it's shooting for business there is always some stress, as for walking around the lake or in the woods NEVER! Good Luck! Bob
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 tom rumland
(K=14874) - Comment Date 4/5/2004
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job? network engineer. been in computer networking for 10+ years. currently on the pre-sales side. i hate it but it pay the bills.
photography? i've always been a geek. i'm especially fascinated with electronic and mechanical things. engineering does not really offer very many creative (in the artistic sense) outlets so i never had one. photography combines both my love for things technical and my need for a creative outlet that does not require hand-eye coordination ;^) it's interesting to find out after so many years that i do have a creative side.
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 tom rumland
(K=14874) - Comment Date 4/5/2004
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 James Philip Pegg
(K=10138) - Comment Date 4/7/2004
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"Photography is nature seen from the eyes outwards. Painting is nature seen from the eyes inwards. I am a painter & photographer, and film maker." - James
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 Luke Luther
(K=14693) - Comment Date 4/10/2004
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Day Job: Child Protection Social Worker
The camera does not have an opinion that I have to take into consideration. I have started using my cameras for making photographs of the children and families with whom I work. There is no boredom in my job - ever.
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 Aris Michalopoulos / OsirisiS
(K=1916) - Comment Date 4/14/2004
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Yes my friend, of course it relieves stress. Actually I am a photographer, video artist and the last 2 years i teach some people the basics in photography. Create images is the major purpose in my life. I love still and moving images. Video and photography, two different means but i use them to explore or to create worlds. My own worlds. Greetings from Greece.
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 Stefan Werth
(K=307) - Comment Date 4/14/2004
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I work as head teacher of a german "Gymnasium" (secondary school). Sometimes use own pictures in my lessons.
Photographing - at least when you do it with an artistic attitude - teaches you viewing. The more I take pictures and manipulate them, the more I become sensitive for structures, patterns, views and so on. Makes me richer...
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 Jonathan Wollin
(K=958) - Comment Date 4/23/2004
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If you ever reach your goal aways remember to keep your safety on for you might shoot yourself of your foot :) ok it was more funny before I started to type
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 Jonathan Wollin
(K=958) - Comment Date 4/23/2004
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Hey Chris I work on a fashion photo crew that's going down to Miami South Beach 4/25/04 lets make a trade film for beer :)
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 Jonathan Wollin
(K=958) - Comment Date 4/23/2004
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I work for a Dept. Store's in house fashion studio
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 Çetin Lütfi Baydar
(K=1291) - Comment Date 5/5/2004
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assist.prof. in forensic medicine (MD) I really have a tiresome job in spirit, I prefer Usefilm cause it was the first one I met, maybe I want to let a soft trace on time, this will be meaningful for my children
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 vaidotas
(K=218) - Comment Date 5/7/2004
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Telecom products development manager. Moneymaking is not blended with photography to me.
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 Jim Goldstein
(K=21230) - Comment Date 5/9/2004
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Current Day Job: Marketing Director, Business Development Director, CEO & Founder of ArtBeacon.com 2nd Day Job: Looking for corporate employment (previous day job was Manager of Media Development at a Biotech firm) 3rd Job: Night Owl & Photographer
Photography not only relieves stress, but is an unexpected outlet for my creative side. It's also a good excuse for me to get out of the house and hang out in odd places.
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 Kara Yerex
(K=66) - Comment Date 5/17/2004
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Day job: user interface designer for a software company
Why photography? I tried it once and it felt really natural, so I realized it was what I was supposed to do. I wouldn't do it for money though because it would change the reason I do it and the images wouldn't be for me anymore.
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 Gene Curtis
(K=62) - Comment Date 6/16/2004
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During the day I'm a Quality Control Inspector for a company that builds rooftop Heating/AC units. And to anyone who actually finished reading that sentence without dozing off, you may have guessed why I need a hobby that's a little more artistically stimulating.
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 José Azevedo
(K=9845) - Comment Date 6/21/2004
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I'm an advertising art director who was first a copywriter. The first thing I remember I wanted to be was a photographer. At home there were lots of Vogues, Bazaars, National Geographics and many other magazines that priviledged images, so I grew up influenced by their power and beauty. I never had a camera until I was 28, maybe I was the first photographer without a camera... I used to borrow cameras from friends to photograph. Meanwhile I collected french PHOTOs, which also helped a lot on my visual education. Well, since I didn't had a camera but had to make a living, I started to work as an advertising copywriter. But never let my passion for photography. I used to go to every session I could, and that allowed me to learn from pros. Later I got tired of writing for advertising and became an art director. Actually, I believe more and more these two "functions" will merge into one - the "creative". Sometimes I do it all - copy and layout. Advertising is becoming more and more only a job. It has long lost its charm. But my love for photography still remains. And is stronger than ever. After many years resumed on an amazing point and shoot (Pentax 280P) and a lovely digital (Canon S100), I decide it was time to return to it. Be it as a stress reliever, a creative escape from dumb jobs at work or a form of expression and discovery. Over the years I believe my eye and mind got more educated. So, as soon as my new old (F2A, 4 lenses, no zooms) equipment return from maintenance I intend to dedicate more time to it.
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 Raquel Osorio
(K=947) - Comment Date 6/27/2004
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I teach chemistry and physics in portuguese highschools... at least I would like to every year, but it is realy hard to get a job as a teacher in my small lovely country... Still, there's nothing I would love more to do. I think time has this terrible characteristic... it passes by! :) This is how my love for photography was born: I wanted to remenber forever certain things I saw. Then, I also came to realise that many people didn't notice some things as I did, and so I started taking some photos to show others how I saw some things they could have missed. And if I enjoy seeing them, why wouldn't other people too? I'm only sorry sometimes it doesn't come out as I saw it when I took the photo, but I keep trying! :)
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 Luis Vieira
(K=1772) - Comment Date 6/28/2004
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I work as a photojournalist in a portuguese daily sports newspaper. At this time, i have a lot of work because of the Euro2004, but at the rest of the year is not much better - I shoot 90% soccer (unfortunatly, becouse i also enjoy photographing other sports), i travel a lot covering the matchs where portuguese teams are involved (Champions League and Uefa championships), but the daily work is mostly trainings, press conferences, interviews and other boring assignments.
My story is no diferent from the regular photographer - always loved photograpy and photojournalism, i was always the guy with a camera in parties of friends and family and photography is, for me, more than a way of expression, it is a way of life - photographing is defeating time, is imortalizing a personal vision and sharing it with others - there?s no sense in photographing something and not show it to others. Photography has to be comunication.
A few years ago, when i arrived home worried or sad about something, i used to grab my bag with all the equipment and go for a walk alone, shooting diferent subjects - people, places, events, etc... Today, i arrived home after being all day shooting and sending pictures to my newspaper, with my back hurting becouse of the heavy equipment i always have to carry. A decent meal, a hot bath and a massage is what i want, not going out again with more weight! so i can say: my job as a photojournalist is killing my passion for photography - i?m trying to avoid that and sometimes, even exausted, i go for a walk with a camera (i have a G3 Canon compact, witch is lighter than the 1D's) and when i returned i always feel better with myself - i have a new photo to share.
Photography is a part of me and a part of my way to comunicate with others and in a certain way, I prefer the silence of my pictures - they speak much better than i could possibly do.
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 Raquel Osorio
(K=947) - Comment Date 6/29/2004
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É bom ver que algumas coisas, afinal, não mudam com o tempo... :)
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