Category Archives: Other

More thoughts, same week…

In the past few weeks, I have been diligently working on printing, matting and framing my pictures for a new show. During this time, i have often wondered if “outsourcing” these things would have been easier on me.  Being a perfectionist (or seemingly so) – I wear white gloves, inspect the mats under strong light

Boundaries…

In the purest sense, Photography refers to those that somehow involves a the usage of a “Camera” somewhere in the Workflow (a.k.a process of creating the image). Times has however changed. We see use of Computers & Software – blur the lines, along with the use of digital cameras. Computers have in fact become indispensable

The making of this website

Well, technically speaking – this post is not about Photography. This is a post on the making of this blog. I believe there are several photographers out there – who might benefit from knowing how i created this website.

Mac Disk Panic!

Well, this happens to everyone…mine happened yesterday night. The Main mac stopped working. It simply stopped booting up – got stuck at login window and the kernel crashed. I found that the disk itself is doing just fine. but somehow, the OS had gotten corrupted – either due to a bad Apple update, or some

Its been a while post..

So, its been a long while since i wrote anything on this blog….fact of the matter is that; while the blog was kinda great thing in the beginning – I have found that maintaining it is very difficult. It takes a lot of dedication and most importantly “material”! Anyhoo – here is an update on

Thoughts for the week

What do you do if someone asks you to explain your image? As an artist, how do you explain your image? When i first saw Edward Weston’s Pepper #33, to me, it was everything else but “a pepper”. It was sensual and moody. In fact, the absence of color made no difference to the fact

Work of Love

There are several great images on flickr! and other various online sources, and the trend is that people often print very few images from their collection. Edward Weston, Ansel Adams, Henri Cartier-Bresson and other great photographers all printed their own images, and in a way, were known for their prints, not online scans. I personally