Photo Essay: Barn Owl Builds – The Zautke’s

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Barn Owl Builds – owned, operated and built by Casey and Joshua Zautke – let me invade one of their spaces as they prepared a conference table for a client.  It takes an immense amount of skill to form recycled pieces of wood into a solid, effective piece of furniture.  But that’s what they do.  Barn Owl Builds custom selects each piece of salvaged wood for your furniture and then commences the true art of craft, creating a piece of furniture for your office, home or party den.  More photos to come as I help them build their brand and market their business with product and environmental portrait photography.

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Cameron Karsten Photography

One Eyeland Photography Awards – Student Finalist

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I’m stoked to share this award from One Eyeland, as all the entrants were top-notch!  And with the final months of school coming to a close, these awards and recognitions only increase my passion and drive to succeed in the industry of commercial photography.  Below is the winning series titled His or Her Hands.

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The Beekeeper 2012.  Shot in my backyard as a fellow beekeeper and I harvested the honey from the hives.

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Tracy Lang transitioning from a landscaper and accomplished large-scale woodblock print artist to the art of tattooing.  Here she practices at home, surrounded by her inspirations, while her daughter watches over her shoulder.

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Kelly Foote can either be found surfing the Pacific Northwest, surfing anywhere around the world, or holed up in his shaping trailer creating the boards he loves to ride.  What he does quickly becomes second nature.

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Robert Carlson is an internationally-acclaimed glass artist, creating amazingly complex pieces of philosophical shapes, ones that emerge from the depths of his subconscious.  He peers through the mirrors of everyday life.

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Matt Kuntz spends a late summer’s afternoon working on his Ford Mustang.  There is still much work to be done.

A list of all award winners can be found here.

Cameron Karsten Photography

Photo Essay: Ryderville Ink tatts Paris Gore

 

Last week my buddy and fellow photographer Paris Gore stepped into Tracy Lang’s Ryderville Ink realm to experience his first tatt.  He wanted a skeleton cedar tree.  She designed it, sketched it, and then drew it under his skin.  It was nice watching a friend feel the pain while photographing.  It made my time under the needle more enjoyable (the beer is a prop in the above photo).

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Cameron Karsten Photography

Photo Essay: Ryderville Ink’s Tsunami Over Mt. Baker

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Tracy Lang moves from huge woodblock prints to the art of the tattoo.  Welcome the new Ryderville Ink.  Unlike any tattoo I’ve seen before, her Tsunami Over Mt. Baker wraps the right shoulder with a pinhole view of Mt. Baker as the body’s shoulder blade carries a wispy yet powerful Japanese-style tsunami over its summit.  Bad ass. And if you would ever want a piece of art on your body, it would be by Tracy Lang of Ryderville Ink.

I shot this series of images as Tracy’s friend Shelley from Whidbey Island sat through the final three hours of work.

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Cameron Karsten Photography

Photo Essay: International Rescue Committee (IRC) Seattle Chapter

CameronKarsten2013_NonProf1Having recently connected with International Rescue Committee’s (IRC) Seattle Chapter, doors opened to a host of incredibly humbling experiences.  Shooting for them takes me back to my travel roots, experiencing other cultures and the people.  The above photograph is a group of recently arrived refugees from Nepal and Bhutan who wanted to create a knitting community.  The experience being there resulted in the women erupting in traditional song and laughter, with communication spoken via hand and body gesture.

Started in Seattle in 1976, little presence is known of their existence within the city.  The continuing goal working with them is to create a library of imagery that they can utilize as posters, thank you cards, newsletters, website material and more.  Below are more images taken for IRC’s Seattle Chapter.

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A knitting community created by recent arrivals of IRC’s Seattle Chapter

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A daughter who recently arrived from Eritrea sees her father for the first time in over one year.

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A joyous father is happily reunited with his daughters after flying into SeaTac from Eritrea.

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A woman practices job training skills at an activity created by IRC for newly arrived refugees.

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A man from Burma studies basic job training skills in Tukwila, WA after arriving to the United States three months ago.

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A teacher back in Burma, now faces a new language, a new culture, and a new set of skills acquired at IRC’s job training class.

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Denis, a refugee from Bosnia under IRC from over 14 years ago, now volunteers to help new arrivals adapt to American culture and job market.

Learn more by visiting IRC Seattle Chapter

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Cameron Karsten Photography

Photo Essay: Aaron’s VW and The Sequester

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Aaron Kuester is a busy man.  With a wife and 3 year old son, work as a steel-shaper of sorts at Kitsap’s Naval base, and an enthusiastic car builder and racer.  Currently, he’s working on building a custom Volkswagon Beetle Baja Desert Racer, not necessarily for the Baja 2000 Off-Road Race, but some day… some day.

But with The Sequester approaching on March 1st, 2013, government spending-cuts will affect Aaron and his family.  As an employee repairing the steel parts of submarines and naval ships, the full-force of the $85 billion-dollar cuts would mean his 5 day work-week will crunch to 4 days within the 22-day furlough.  Anything longer will be technically a lay-off, which Aaron, as well as every other government employee, hopes will remain a distant impossibility for him, his family, and his hobby.

On a quiet President’s Day afternoon, Aaron invited me into his garage, and below are some of the images I created with four strobes, some daylight fill and a little PS6.

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Cameron Karsten Photography

Photography Essay: CannaTest, LLC. (Location – Bainbridge Island, WA)

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I had the opportunity to connect with CannaTest, LLC. to explore the new changes in Washington State regarding the passing of Initiative 502 and the legalization of recreational marijuana.  CannaTest’s tagline “What’s in your medicine?” legitimizes the professionalism of medical cannabis in the emerging industry, breaking down the percentages of Cannabinoids that are within each strain of plant.  From THC to THCV, CBD, CBG and other active ingredients, CannaTest provides qualitative numbers for accurate labeling to insure clients are receiving the necessary medicine for their specified therapy.

Visit www.Canna-Test.com for more information.

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Cameron Karsten Photography

Studio Photography: Out of Context – A Recycling Program

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America’s recycling program.  It’s fantastic in my city, sucks in others.  So I took the idea of recycling into the studio, and placed one shot in context (above) and took the other two slightly out of the box.

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Composting.  Try it, you’ll cut back on your weekly load of trash and also create a healthy garden

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CPS: Child Protective Services or the Department of Social Services.  Putting children through America’s foster care system since 1974.

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Photo Essay: Bainbridge Island Boxing Club

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I had the opportunity to shoot some promotional material for Bainbridge Island Boxing Club.  The owner, Ben (i.e. The Bear), is an ex-pro, coaching his students in both traditional boxing as well as Muay Thai, or Thai boxing.  It was thrilling to spend a couple of evenings with them, watching as they used every muscle in their bodies with agility and speed.  Next time I step foot in the gym, hopefully it will be without camera and only gloves.

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Photo Essay: Graniel’s Dreamland Product Photography, Wooden Bowl

After traveling to Ambergris Caye in Belize, photographing various artists utilizing the skill and exactitude of their hands, I purchased one of the wooden bowls from Graniel’s Dreamland as a gift, gifted, took it back and brought it into the studio… whew.  And now it’s done.

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Full bowl studio shot

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Close-up bowl studio shot combined into catalog spread with on-location workshop shot