Archive for the ‘Photography’ Category

I remember the first time we walked into Chintz, we talked about how much we liked what they sold and how cool it would be to have them as a client, so I handed someone a business card and told them I would really like to produce work for them.  Three months later, I was asked to produce their advertising for Christmas.

As always, we came up with a positioning statement first and began work on the creative from there. It’s a Beautiful Thing was easy to come up with… everything in the store was.

We knew we wanted to approach the subject in a fashion that would elevate the small business to a national level, so the ads were designed to feature product with lots of white space and clever but limited copy.

Over a period of the next 12 -16 weeks, we conceived, designed, photographed, wrote and placed advertisement on a national scope with full page color ads in the Globe and Mail, National Post and other major papers in Edmonton, Vancouver, Calgay and Victoria. At the end of their Christmas, Boxing Day and annual January Sales, their sales were up 17% over the previous year.

This year we finally visited Kauai… Wow !

After much reading, we chose to stay along the North Shore and to visit in July. The North Shore town of Haena sounded perfect to us and the books we read all said it rained considerably in the winter so we chose July and rented a small cottage about a five minute walk to Haena Point.

One of the few life guarded beaches on the North shore, Haena beach park apparently offers good swimming when the ocean is calm. That was never the case while we were visiting… the waves were steady and a lot of fun for me but not so much fun for Yim, who is not as comfortable in the water as I am but I had a ball walking straight in to five and six foot waves and having them hurl me up on the beach and body surfing on a small boogie board.

The beach break can often be temperamental, and many tourists find themselves walking 15 minutes up the beach to the section know as Tunnels, an area offering excellent snorkeling.

Tunnels Beach, located on Haena Point on Kauai’s north shore, is a postcard-perfect, two-mile (3.2 km) stretch of golden sand fringed with ironwood trees and tropical palms. Tunnels Beach is one of the north shore’s most popular beaches.

One of the main attractions is the large reef offshore. The beach is unique for having an inner and an outer reef. About an eighth of a mile offshore is a half-moon shaped reef. Within this, lies the inner reef.  This area is ideal for families with kids and novice snorkelers, while advanced divers and snorkelers can enjoy and explore the outer reef, which has lava tubes, arches and coral formations. Apparently, during the winter months or times of high surf, the water conditions are hazardous at Tunnels Beach and swimming and snorkeling are very dangerous, but since we visited in July, conditions were very calm and enjoyable.

The journey further along the north shore of Kauai ends at one of the most popular beaches on Kaua‘i – Ke‘e Beach. The beach marks the end of Highway 560 and the portion of Kaua‘i that can be seen by car. More than likely, the beach should be renamed ‘Beach of Extremely Rare Parking Spots’… We visited a couple of times but were not impressed. There were too many people and too many of the irritating roosters and chickens that populate the island everywhere you go, buy K’ee Beach was particularly annoying, so we visited oncem came back to watch the sunset you see above and concentrated on the less popular sopts which dot the entire island.

One of the most striking aspects of this beach is its breathtaking view of the Na Pali Coast, which begins here. When you are facing the ocean, Na Pali can be glimpsed to your left. The best time for photographs is early morning (on a clear day) or right at sunset.

From here on in, the rest of north Kaua‘i is occupied by the Na Pali Coast, a series of rugged seaside cliffs stretching along the northwest shore that is not navigable by vehicle.


The male, or bull, Stellar Sea Lion is a huge animal, growing up to three metres in length and weighing up to 900 kilograms.

In contrast, the females are only about a third as large, and give birth to one pup after a gestation period of one year.

There are three Stellar Sea Lion breeding rookeries in British Columbia, and many haul-out sites located throughout coastal B.C. A prominent local haul-out site is at Race Rocks, off the Western Communities of Greater Victoria.

I took this photograph while traveling through the Broken Island Group in Barkley Sound.


Parrotfish, which are abundant almost everywhere I have ever dived, are named for their oral dentition, as you can see above.

Their numerous teeth are arranged in a tightly packed mosaic on the external surface of the jaw bones, forming a parrot-like beak which is used to scrape algae from coral and other rocky substrates.

Most of the Parrotfish I have seen have been brightly coloured in shades of blue, green, red and yellow. Although they are considered to be herbivores, parrotfish eat a wide variety of organisms that live on coral reefs and some species may include corals polyps in their diet.

Their feeding activity is important for the production and distribution of coral sands in the reef and can prevent algae from choking coral. Ingested during feeding, coral rock is ground up by their teeth. After they digest this it is excreted as sand thus at times creating small islands and the sandy beaches of the Bahamas and Caribbean.

Maximum sizes vary widely within the family, from 20 cm in the smallest species, such as the green parrotfish to 1.5 m in the largest species, the bumphead Parrotfish.

Parrotfishes are diurnal and stay within shallow waters of no more than about 70 meters in depth. By night they cram themselves into crevices, some species secreting a thick coat of mucus, like a little surrounding bubble. The mucus is thought to mask their scent from nocturnal predators such as the moray eel and may serve to protect the fish from infection by parasites.

At this point, they are fairly easy to spot when night diving and on more than one occasion, I have picked one up and placed it in Yim’s hands and motioned for her to shake it just a bit and the Parrotfish will wake up and swim away, in a bit of a dash.

What’s also interesting is that after a massive die-out of the sea urchins in the Caribbeans, parrotfish now are the main grazers in the area. While underwater, it is often easy to hear Parrotfish before you see them as you can hear them crunching the coral reef. In fact, protecting parrotfish is proposed as a way of saving Caribbean coral reefs from being overgrown with seaweed, since Parrotfish are such productive producers of sand.


I love photography. A great photo can make all the difference to great marketing materials.

When working on Chrysler’s brochure, Curt Clayton and I were faced with the challenge of ‘adding’ three cars to the photographs supplied by the US for the Canadian market.

Chrysler made certain we had the opportunity to produce great photography for them and it showed in all their print materials.


The Athabasca Glacier is one of the six principal toes of the Columbia Icefield, located in the Canadian Rockies.

Due to the warming climate, the glacier has receded more than 1.5 km in the past 125 years and lost over half of its volume.

The glacier moves down from the icefield at a rate of several centimetres per day. Due to its close proximity to the Icefields Parkway, between the Alberta towns of Banff and Jasper, and rather easy accessibility, it is the most visited glacier in North America.

And the drive there is spectacular.

The leading edge of the glacier is within easy walking distance; however, travel onto the glacier is not recommended unless properly equipped.

Book a hotel room in advance and we suggest staying on site at the lodge for easy access.