This is going to be my last post of 2008 and likely my last for this blog in this format, so I wanted to take the opportunity to post my favorite photos from this year. I traveled quite a bit this year and that is certainly reflected in the images here, but what is also represented is how up and down a year it has been.
10. Depth
Taken at the Art Guys 25the Reunion in Discovery Green, this photo shows my love of depth of field. The subject is an older reggae singer working solo and I purposefully used the stage in the foreground as my point of focus making the image look, I think, a little more dramatic and lonely.
9. Antique
One of the first photos I took in 2008, this one was a shot of a model at the inaugural Dr. Sketchy event at Avante Garden. Every month since, I’ve had a scheduling conflict. I liked the vintage look of this photo and I loved working with the bright backlight and being forced to overexpose the window light. I have since fallen in love with overexposing background light for effect.
8. Caught
One of three weddings I shot this year (all represented in my top 10), this one was on the campus of Rice University. The couple, old friends of mine, were more than happy to oblige Katya and I in our ideas like this one, which I think turned out great.
7. Brother to Brother
Probably one of my favorite wedding photos ever not for the shot, but for the image contained therein. This was just outside Boston for the wedding of my step-brother, Michael. Next to him is my other step-brother, Andrew, and the rest of Michael’s groomsmen. I told them to act silly and this was the result. Joy.
6. Dry Dock
One of a number of photos I took in the aftermath of Hurricane Ike, this just happened to be my favorite. Ike took its toll on Houston and Galveston in more ways than one. Seeing boats like these tossed up onto land just helped to illustrate how helpless we really are against mother nature and just how destructive she can be.
5. Paris, Over Here!
One of MANY photos I took on two trips to New York City this year, this is Paris Hilton outside the stage door of David Letterman. This turned out far better than I could have imagined. I really did not want to be one of the paparrazi - you can see them in front of Ms. Hilton. I just wanted to capture the mayhem that ensues when celebrities and the media mix. The fortunate timing of this and the perfection that is that flash at the right second reminds me that photos are as much about timing as they are about knowing how to work a camera and frame a shot.
4. Rose Petal Shower
Like the Paris Hilton shot, this was all about timing and VERY little to do with skill. I was honestly lucky to be in this position and pull the trigger at the right time. So many things come together to make this shot work and it is one of the best wedding photos I’ve ever taken.
3. Home on the Range
This was a part of the beautiful farm land I visited in Iowa this past summer. I was driving around with a friend and slammed on the breaks when I saw the light and the cattle. This is one of the few favorites I took all year that I really thought about as I was shooting - framing, exposure, etc. Iowa surprised me in a lot of ways - especially in just how beautiful it was, people and landscape.
2. Oh Happy Day
There are lots of shots I could’ve chosen as my favorite from NYC (this one or this one, for example), but nothing quite sums up how I feel about my time spent there like this one. The best thing about New York isn’t the iconic scenery, the food, the exciting night life. The best thing about The City is the people - visitors and residents. Despite many claims to the contrary (my own previously among them), the people of New York are some of the nicest, most helpful and most gracious I’ve met and they seem to have an energy and love of life you don’t find in most places. This little boy is a perfect example.
1. Winder Wonder[land]
In case you didn’t hear, it snowed in Houston this year, and I mean REALLY snowed. Naturally, Katya headed out with camera and me in tow. We proceeded to Discovery Green where the frozen lake ice skating was never more appropriate. I took other shots I liked, but nothing felt more like the snow night we had than this one. The little girl, the snow flakes in the foreground, the blurred lights and skaters whizzed by…it was like being in a different city for a few hours. It was wonder[ful].









![Winter Wonder[land]](http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3101/3099903724_73d2d32611.jpg)

