Category: uncategorized

  • Alaska Aviation Trade Show ’08

    Dreams of flight at the Alaska Aviation Trade Show 2008After first hearing about the Alaska Airmen’s aviation trade show last year I looked forward to attending this spring. Last month I attended, photographed, and had a booth at the show. With such a concentration of aviation types and businesses, it was a good opportunity for me to get to know the aviation market for photography in Alaska a little better.

    The event is all about aviation with lots of airplanes on display ranging from historical and modern military aircraft, helicopters, cargo jets, sea planes, experimental bush planes, and private jets. Dick Rutan tells the story of his non-stop flight around the world in voyager IAlong with the airplanes is a hangar full of manufacturers and dealers of aviation supplies displaying their wares. As a bit of an aviation nut myself I really enjoyed the weekend there in the hangar chatting with other flying enthusiasts and oogling over all the fancy toys that make my cameras look cheap for a change!

    A highlight of the show was hearing Dick Rutan tell the story of his non-stop flight around the world in Voyager I, an aircaft designed by his brother Burt Rutan.

    A few photos from the weekend:




  • AlaskaFolio in The Surfer’s Path

    Alaska surfing photo copyright Scott Dickerson. Magazine layout copyright \"The Surfer\'s Path\"

    The surf has owned me since I was a youngster. Even after I started photographing professionally I never actually thought I would stay on the beach during one of those very rare and precious surf days in my Alaskan hometown. Sure, I loved making photos, but as I told my friends, when pressuring them for some company in the water, ‘the surf waits for nobody.’ It was about half way through last year that I had to break the news to my surfing obsession that yes, I had fallen for another. Now don’t take this wrong, it’s still all about the waves, I just found my hypothermic brain wandering at times, thinking about what an amazing photo I was in. Wondering if I captured an image of this moment, could it be traded for a warmer wetsuit?

    The paragraph above introduces the “AlaskaFolio” – an eight page spread that was published in The Surfer’s Path issue 65 (March/April 2008). This marks the real debut of my Alaskan surfing photos, and I’m proud to have them released in such a respectable surfing magazine with a strong commitment to environmental sustainability.

    I’m eagerly looking forward to more surfing adventures in the ‘Last Frontier’ and may the excruciating decision of whether to surf or photograph live on!

    Alaska surfing photo copyright Scott Dickerson. Magazine layout copyright \"The Surfer\'s Path\"

    Alaska surfing photo copyright Scott Dickerson. Magazine layout copyright \"The Surfer\'s Path\"

    Alaska surfing photo copyright Scott Dickerson. Magazine layout copyright \"The Surfer\'s Path\"

  • 1% For the Planet

     
    One Percent for the planet has a proud new member.

    Scott Dickerson Photography has just joined the ranks of over 700 other businesses who “embrace the notion that the sustainability of the natural environment is fundamental to the sustainability of business” by being members of 1% for the planet.

    My fellow members and I have made a commitment to invest 1% of gross sales to preserve our natural environments. This is 1% of sales before expenses, for every $1,000 that I bill a customer this year $10 of that will be donated to an environmental non-profit of my choice. This is great, I can now quit donating randomly throughout the year and I’ll have a great answer for those phone money requests.

    1% for the Planet has a simple mission statement: “Use market forces to drive positive environmental change by inspiring companies to give.”

    Joining forces with the many respected 1% member companies is exciting and an honor. My customers will now clearly know that I have a real commitment to conservation. It’s also my hope to encourage other business owners to consider joining me in this resolution of giving back to our environment.

    In that spirit I would like to suggest that you take a moment to check out the very nice OnePercentForThePlanet.org website. If you operate a business I hope you will join me, if you operate a non-profit that works to protect and preserve our environment I suggest you look into becoming a member also.

     

  • Sea kayak surfing Alaska

    Sea kayak surfing in winter, Kachemak Bay, Alaska.

    Yours truly punching through a winter wave in 2005.

    After a long day of photo editing yesterday I was weighing my options on the evenings outdoor exercise and fresh air activity. The wind was laying down on Kachemak Bay and from my house I can just barely see the beach- the waves didn’t look big enough for a good surf session on a surf board but the sea kayak is less demanding, AND it had been just over two years since I last surfed the big boat.

    Loaded the sea kayak, drove to beach and had second thoughts about my choice of activity as I watched a few 5ft beach break waves crash into the gravel. Definitely worth the drive back home for that helmet that I forgot.

    Back at the beach I waited for a lull between sets and happily slid out without any hydro-poundings in the shorebreak. What fun to paddle a slippery fast 18ft kayak through the waves. It’s a totally different experience from paddling out on a 7ft surfboard. I headed down the beach to where a few surfing buddies where out on their longboards riding the mushy wind swell. While the waves were a bit too soft for good surf board rides they were awesome for my re-introduction to sea kayak surfing. The faces on the set waves were roughly 4-5ft high, and the rides were plenty long with the speed of the long kayak allowing me to catch the waves far from the shore and ride them for a couple hundred yards until I was either spat out or slipped off them before getting too close to the boulder strewn beach.

    It’s always fun to get back out doing a sport that you haven’t for a while. The thrills are all exciting again, but the muscle memory is still there to make it possible without the learning curve. I used to sea kayak a lot, even instructed with a friend who runs the Alaska Kayak School, but the last couple years my sea kayak mostly collected dust. With a new surf (underwater) housing in my arsenal this summer I plan to develope some new angles on Alaskan sea kayaking. I’ll keep you posted.

    The shot below is me once again, this time after paddling backwards over a wave we figured to be about 25ft high on the face. As you might imagine this photo has a story of it’s own.

    Both the above photos were taken by a friend, Josiah Pisel, who occasionally joins me on adventures. When I have an idea for a shot that I can’t talk him into modeling for me, he’s usually gracious enough to operate the camera while I do my own modeling.

    I’ll leave you with a shot of Josiah heading out for a winters surf kayak during a snow storm in December 2002.

  • A thought on photo success

    forestry processing in vietnamBack home in Alaska I have been spending hours, no days, editing photos from my recent 2.5 week assignment to Vietnam. While editing this morning a couple photos got me thinking about what I do as a professional photographer. What am I looking for in these thousands of images?

    My task was to “photographically document priority areas.” With such a vague assignment I had the opportunity to constantly decide what specifically to photograph and how, in order to best document the issues. This basically meant looking for photographs that would help a World Wildlife Fund publication or staff person explain the forestry industry in Vietnam.

    As a photographer my desire is to use the photographs to not just tell a story, but to present the visual elements in such a way that the photo is attractive. I want the photos to be engaging in some way that will hold the viewers attention and create interest in the subject.

    I believe this familiar effort to document something with photos that draw and hold attention is my greatest value as a professional photographer. When touring a furniture plant with limited time and harsh mid-day light I use all the experience and talent I can muster to make photos that show the subject in an interesting and engaging way.

    The photo above I consider a success because it grabs my attention and asks me stop and think about the story it tells.  I won’t struggle to describe why it attracts me or why I think it’s ‘artistic’ that is better left to writers. For my part I’ll continue striving to make images that contain these mysterious qualities and perhaps you can explain them to me.