Creative Live w/ Zack Arias!!

http://vimeo.com/moogaloop.swf?clip_id=12115198&server=vimeo.com&show_title=1&show_byline=1&show_portrait=0&color=00ADEF&fullscreen=1I Need Help from Rachel Thurston on Vimeo.

If you follow me on my twitter feed, you might have all ready seen this. A few days ago I put together a little video tryout for a spot at a studio lighting class Zack Arias is teaching in Seattle for Creative Live.....AND WON!

I am so excited and happy and honored and just overall freaking out. I have already learned so much from following his blog, I can only imagine what I will learn being with him in person.

Visit Creative Live to learn more about the class which will be broadcast for free. Amazing, right?

AHHHHHHHH!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Rockstars

Here's a little peak of  a fun shoot I had this week.

I've been needing to get updated photos of my neices and nephews and thought a "personality" studio shoot would be perfect.  They are my favorite models. I couldn't be more in love.

Everyone have a great and LONG weekend.

Me and my man are heading to the woods for some star gazing and campfire cooking. xo.

The Wilson Family

Bike ride, uno game, dog pile on mom and dad's bed...sounds good to me!

Wilsons, thank you for letting us invade your home.

I do have to say, after looking through these images, your kids don't look so shy to me. xo.

Natalie + Andrew

Some weddings are just really great. This was one of those.

Great details, great locations, great weather, great families, great food, great couple. It makes it hard not to have a good time on the job.

Married in the Newport Beach Temple, luncheon at Cannon's in Dana Point, Beach time at Dana Cove and their reception at the Natalie's parents home in Laguna Niguel.

One of my favorite parts of any wedding is being a part of the chaos. Chaos and problem solving bond people and wedding days are full of both. I left Natalie and Andrew's wedding and felt like a cousin of the bride.. or at the very least a next-door neighbor. I loved these families!!!

I have found myself part of a small OC community comprised of some fantastic clients. I just want to thank the Blackwelders, Hamiltons, Bournes and now the Kochs. It's like a family reunion at every wedding. It's that magic "word of mouth" that makes my world go round, and I wanted to thank all of you for supporting me and my business.

Happy first month of marriage Andrew and Natalie! Thank you for letting me be a part of the wedding festivities. xo.

ps. I made a cameo in one of the photos...can anyone find me?

(**Thank you to everyone that voted on my new blog image size!! It meant a lot and really helped me narrow down my options. 800px is the new me.)

Fig & Goat Cheese Pizza

We have made this twice this week..well.. because it's just that good.

I know the title leaves this ingredient out but the caramelized onions are really the best part. You can tell by my photo that I didn't exactly have the patience to caramelize for this pizza. Trust me. It's worth the wait.

A friend has been teaching FREE bread making classes and this tomorrow we learn how to make pizza dough. Maybe next time I will ditch buying my dough at Trader Joe's and go homemade. But, lets face it. Sometimes shortcuts are nice.

PS. I think this would make a great, impressive, last minute, guests for dinner meal. Serve with light green salad and happy people all around.

Fig & Goat Cheese Pizza

Adpated from this recipe...Rachelfied.

  • Plain pizza dough from Trader Joe's (let rest 30mins before rolling out)
  • 8 -10 figs (I used black mission figs from trader joes..next time I want to try fresh)
  • 1 medium red onion, thinly sliced
  • 1 tablespoon olive oil
  • 1 pinch salt
  • 1 teaspoon dried thyme
  • 1 teaspoon fennel seeds (I didn't have this...but I'm sure it's delicious)
  • 4 ounces goat cheese
  • 1 tablespoon olive oil, or as needed

Directions

  1. Heat 1 tablespoon of oil in a skillet over medium heat. Add the onions; cook and stir until they are wilted and soft. Reduce heat to low, and season with salt. Continue to cook and stir until the onions are a dark brown, 5 to 10 minutes. Stir in the thyme, fennel seed and figs, and remove from the heat.
  2. Preheat the oven to 450 degrees F (220 degrees C). Punch down the pizza dough, and stretch into a circle about 1/4 inch thick. Place on a lightly greased pizza pan or baking sheet (or pizza stone is even better!!) Brush the surface lightly with remaining olive oil. Spread the onion and fig mixture over the crust. It will be sparse, but there is plenty of flavor. Dot with pieces of goat cheese.
  3. Bake for 15 to 18 minutes in the preheated oven, or until the crust has turned golden brown at the edges.

Time To Vote

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(Niece Julia & nephew Jake. Sacramento is too far away.)

I already got a lot of great feed back from my previous posts but I thought I would get the final say in one place.

I am not promising that I will use the image size that gets the most votes, but I still want to know the general opinion. It matters. I don't want to have annoying images that scream at you...AND I want it to be a friendly size based on how you view them.

Voting ends Friday 6pm PST

Which size image would you prefer to see on my blog?
image 1- 900px
image 2- 850px
image 3- 800px
image 4- 750px
image 5- 700px
pollcode.com free polls

The Wiz Of Oz

I know I have talked on this blog before of my obsession with my nieces and nephews, but have I really ever talked about my obsession with their mom? Now is the time.

Stephanie is my sister in law...but can we just cut the "in law" part and call her what she is.. MY SISTER. She is my sister. From the first time we met and my brother warned her that my opinion mattered, we were sisters. We clicked. Immediately. I can't tell you a time since we first met that I have ever felt uncomfortable around her. I haven't. It's impossible. She is one of the most affable, disarming and likable people. And although she has every reason to make you feel inferior, like her 4 amazingly stunning children she made from scratch, her looks, HER LOOKS, her social skills, her sex appeal...OK now I'm just getting creepy...She NEVER makes you feel any less than her. In fact, when you are around her, you actually feel better about yourself. She makes me feel important..and the ability to make others feels important and loved is an indispensable gift.

I recently had the great pleasure of stalking her on stage as she commanded an audience with her performance as Dorthy. She and my nieces have been performing with Broadway Bound, a great, local theater company based in Orange County. Michael, the Creative Director is amazingly talented. You can tell  that everyone  REALLY likes working with him.

This is a sampling of some last minute photos I snapped for the cast. Excuse the abundance of Stephanie....but..well..she shined.

If you were part of this cast contact Michael for information on where to view all of the images and how to buy a CD.

I love you Steph. You knocked my socks off. You always do.

(And congratulations to the entire cast. Your hard work paid off. The show was fantastic!)

(Geek Facts: No tripod was used. I rarely use a tripod unless I want to do a fairly long exposure...1sec or more. Everything was hand held and stage shots were all done with my 70-200 f2.8 lens. I was sitting middle back of the auditorium and was able to still get that close! Amazing right? I love that lens. When you shoot concerts or performances I know the reaction is to bump up your ISO but I wouldn't. I never shoot above a 400iso in those conditions..otherwise it just gets really contrasty and brassy looking and your highlights will be blown out. I try and shoot as wide open as possible so I can use as high of a shutter speed as possible. most stage shots were between f2.8 - 3.5 and shutter speed fluctuated between a 1/40 and 1/125 depending on the light. Everything was exposed manually. I did bounce some flash on some of the backstage shots but NO flash on stage shots. It would do no good since I was so far away.)

The Intangible

My headphones were on and I was flipping back and forth between the food network and HDTV on the mini screen inches from my face. At this point I had been in airports and planes for 19+hrs in a matter of a few days. It had been a great and hectic few days. Highlights included traveling to two states and cities I had never been too. Shooting two very different and equally amazing weddings. Laying in the sun staring at the wind blown leaves in the Boston Common. Seeing my first ever firefly (even if it was only for a fraction of a second). Sleeping in a big bed all to myself. Meeting lots of new, interesting and kind people....and shopping for soda crackers and lemon lime gatoraide at the Piggly Wiggly.

But despite all the greatness that those few days held,  there were some complications that were not very fun. Food poisoning for one. No thanks to that ever happening again. Not traveling with an assistant...which made the possibility of sickness that much worse. On top of the night long throw-up party, I was battling a week long cold and had a head full of unmentionables...and just when I thought the physical aliments couldn't get worse, my body decided to remind me I was a girl. ARE YOU SERIOUS?! Can't eat, cramps and a nose full of snot. Great. "Hi, I'm Rachel, your photographer".  Luckily I survived and more than survived...magically was blessed by the adrenaline Gods and rocked out two weddings.

Thoughts of my whirlwind adventure played in my mind as I sat on yet another delayed flight. Just when I thought the weekend couldn't get weirder, the aging gentleman sitting in front and across the aisle from me picked his nose and wiped the contents on the leather seat back in front him. Yep. In plain few for me the see for the next 5hrs.

Can I just go home now?!

It was Mother's Day, I wasn't with my mom and now had to watch this dude's every move so I didn't accidentally retouch any surface he had come close to.

Just then out of the corner of my eye I saw some commotion. A flight attendant ran down the aisle, a few others jumped up and I slipped off my headphones in time to hear as well as see two men rip the bathroom door off and catch a man falling to the floor. There was screaming and more running and and then flight attendants and passengers alike were yelling for doctors, any doctors.

My thoughts changed. My mood changed. What matter changed.

In an instant I was no longer worried about how annoying it was that I had to watch the airplane TV in real time. I was chocking back tears and praying that the man would survive.

This caused me to reflect.  Moments before we could have for the most part cared less about the people around us. Most of us were probably thinking about ourselves, our issues, our injustices......and in an instant we were unified in one sole purpose...survival. We all wanted to do anything and everything to save this human life. We were thinking about others, and because of that became closer to the strangers next to us. This isn't the first time tragedy has caused me to notice the same shift of behaviors and actions...and every time it feels like a revelation.

Hours before this flight, I had just finished reading Corrie Ten Boom's story, which is all about human spirit, togetherness and seeing outside of yourself. I can't believe some people are so good?! So focused on others.  It filled me with the love, hope and courage of mankind. It reminded me that nothing matters more than service. It reminded me that nothing matters more than people. Nothing.

The reason I'm sharing all of this, is that it reminded me of one of the reasons I love photography so much,

PEOPLE.

Watching  how they'll react, why they make the decisions they make and that ever so slight moment when they feel so much it pours out of their eyes. The challenge of trying to work above just the technical issues of lighting and framing and color and instead try and see something more. Something that runs deeper than the facade of closeness...but instead is closeness. I want to show human spirit and those moments were we stop thinking of ourselves and instead focus on the bigger picture. I want to photograph the bathroom door being torn off and the woman holding the mans head between her knees for landing. I want see stiff physical barriers be broken down and affection and togetherness shine.  I want to see what it takes to survive and who it takes to survive. I want to see the intangible and try and share it.

This is a challenge I give myself and any other documentary photographers out there. To me it's what matters.

We had to make an emergency landing and tack on an extra 4hrs of travel time...and although I have no idea what happened to this man, I want to thank him. I want to thank him for reminding me that none of us are really strangers.

The Cottages of Napa Valley

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We loved our stay here! Individual little cottages with fluffy kind size beds, heated bathroom floors, huge tubs, kitchens AND fire pits for s'more making. Since we were celebrating our 1 yr mark we had to make s'mores in honor of the awesome marshmellow melting bonfire at our reception.

They also had bikes you can rent and DVD's for moodie time... AND Bouchon Bakery dropped breakfast in the morning on the doorstep.

Grant also had them surprise me with delicious cheeses, grape juice and a huge bouquet of flowers in our room for when we arrived. Good job husband.

I can't wait to stay here again and again.

Mustard Flowers - Napa in March

I'm doing a little experiment with the size of my images over the next few posts......

I've been worried there are too big for people viewing in reader or on smaller screened computers.

So the next few posts will be in varying sizes and then I want to take a vote and have all of you tell me which size you like viewing.

I just think if the images are too big it's obnoxious. Agreed? So be watching and tell me what you think is too big, too small and just perfect.

These images are 900px wide (except for the vertical one..)