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Cosa Buena in VOGUE Mexico
It brings great excitement and joy reflecting on projects that are not only culturally enriching, but visually stunning and successful. Our friend Vera Claire, founder of Cosa Buena, reached new heights networking and promoting their community-based work after getting published in VOGUE Mexico (as well as Architecture Digest and MEDIUM, among others). Below is a link to the article published in print and online, as well as a selection of other images from our time exploring the artisan-cooperatives of Oaxaca, Mexico. Someday, we’ll return.
PERFIL COSA BUENA-VOGUE MEXICO

© Cameron Karsten Photography in Oaxaca, Mexico

© Cameron Karsten Photography in Oaxaca, Mexico

© Cameron Karsten Photography in Oaxaca, Mexico

© Cameron Karsten Photography in Oaxaca, Mexico

© Cameron Karsten Photography in Oaxaca, Mexico

© Cameron Karsten Photography in Oaxaca, Mexico

© Cameron Karsten Photography in Oaxaca, Mexico

© Cameron Karsten Photography in Oaxaca, Mexico

© Cameron Karsten Photography in Oaxaca, Mexico
Nathan Myhrvold for French “Les Echos”
Nathan Myhrvold’s reactions are as unusual as the man himself. His bursts of laughter would awaken the dead. His voice soars to high registers with each burst of enthusiasm – and these are frequent because the number of passions he holds boggles the mind (Anois Moutot for Les Echos).
A fascinating man following his dreams and helping the world one can of canned bread at a time. Assignment for French newspaper Les Echos earlier this year at Myhrvold’s Intellectual Ventures compound in Bellevue, WA.

Intellectual Ventures with Nathan Myhrvold in Bellevue, WA

Intellectual Ventures with Nathan Myhrvold in Bellevue, WA

Intellectual Ventures with Nathan Myhrvold in Bellevue, WA

Intellectual Ventures with Nathan Myhrvold in Bellevue, WA

Intellectual Ventures with Nathan Myhrvold in Bellevue, WA

Intellectual Ventures with Nathan Myhrvold in Bellevue, WA

Intellectual Ventures with Nathan Myhrvold in Bellevue, WA

Intellectual Ventures with Nathan Myhrvold in Bellevue, WA

Intellectual Ventures with Nathan Myhrvold in Bellevue, WA

Intellectual Ventures with Nathan Myhrvold in Bellevue, WA

Intellectual Ventures with Nathan Myhrvold in Bellevue, WA

Intellectual Ventures with Nathan Myhrvold in Bellevue, WA
Amazon HQ for Handelsblatt
An interesting assignment for a new client… Handelsblatt… I don’t know what the article reads, but it was fun to see the insides of Amazon HQ in downtown Seattle, and learn the future of automation with Alexa. I’m out.
Bloomberg Businessweek Shoot: Willapa Bay’s Future w/Neonicotinoids
Last week I was called by Bloomberg and headed to Willapa Bay in southwestern Washington to photograph WSU scientist Kim Patten and the surrounding environment of Bay Center, WA. Waking up at 2:30am on Monday, I spent the morning driving 3hrs to catch a clear sunrise over the waters, which have been the center of Washington’s oyster industry for generations. At over 260 square miles, the bay nearly empties at low tide, creating the second largest estuary on the U.S.’s west coast. But a local shrimp has been disrupting the area’s economy for too long, suffocating oyster beds as the crustacean burrows 1 to 2 feet beneath the surface, turning mudflats into quicksand. The published article is available in the link and the selects from the morning’s shoot are below.
Bloomberg Businessweek: Washington State Turns to Neurotoxins to Save Its Oysters
A pile of discarded oyster shells are left in the sun so organic matter can decompose before being bagged and placed back in the water as a refuge for young oyster seed.
Long-line oyster beds stretch across the tidal flats of Willapa Bay as a front of morning fog recedes westward.
Old oyster shells wrapped in bags ready for delivery outside an oyster nursery
WSU scientist and researcher Kim Patten uses a clam digger to pull out an invasive shrimp from one to two feet beneath the mud.
A male and female shrimp (the female is carrying orange egg sacks)
An oyster shucker in Bay Center, WA
Studio Photography: Out of Context – A Recycling Program
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.
Composting. Try it, you’ll cut back on your weekly load of trash and also create a healthy garden
CPS: Child Protective Services or the Department of Social Services. Putting children through America’s foster care system since 1974.