Peter J. Crowley

Fine Art Photographer

  • Portraits
  • Figures
    • Abstracts
  • Galleries
    • Black and White Fine Art
    • Color Fine Art
    • The Seventies
    • Flora, Flowers, Nature
    • Performing Arts
  • Services
  • Prices
  • About
    • Contact

Search Results for: Between Here and There

Working With Peter

05.18.2017 by Peter J. Crowley // 7 Comments

Hi again, Molly here, Peter’s intern and editor.  I have been working with him for fourteen months and exciting things are starting to come to fruition.  After many hours of compiling, sorting, editing and more editing, we now have a chapter proof done, chronicling Peter’s photographic fascination of doors titled Another Door Entered:  A Life in Photographic Art.  It is available on Amazon and we are so excited with how it came out. Signed copies available through the site details

Another Door Entered

Peter and I are now energized and ready to tackle the next item on our agenda:  the big retrospective book.  This book is going to be a behemoth.  How do you condense 40 years’ worth of photographs, stories, poems, and musings into 200 pages?  That is the task set before us, and it is now time to dive in.

Curating the images and stories for this book is going to be such a challenge, because for every image, there is a story, relationship or memory associated with it.  When I am with Peter, I almost feel like I have found a time machine, because of his photographs and endless well of stories.  When we are working, we often have a band of the late 60’s, think The Rolling Stones, Lou Reed or The Grateful Dead, on in the background to complete the transformation to another time.  When I listen to Peter’s stories and see his photographs of older times, of Vietnam War protests, and music festival adventures I hardly believe a world Peter describes existed, and yet it also feels like I have lived it.

Peter has a hard time not telling the story of how every image was created and I have a hard time not being fascinated not only by the story, but also how Peter can perfectly remember every detail.  Just last week he was telling me how the backdrop on a black and white photo from 1983 was actually a dark red drop.  Even though Peter claims he has no memory, I am impressed by his recall.

Although we don’t always travel to exotic locales (unless you count the Tumwater Safeway as an exotic locale), I still feel like working with Peter is always an adventure with the rich history I learn and see (through his photographs) whenever I am with him.

And to show you this adventure, I assembled a photographic tour chronicling how we spend our time together while working to compile the book.  Hopefully this is a small glimpse into who Peter is and the memories and photographs he hopes to soon share.

As I walk through the door to Peter’s place, I find him at his computer, scanning, surrounded by boxes of slides and negatives.

PJC consulting his “mind.”  His mind contains the day’s agenda and reminds us of what we need to get done.  His mind is to never leave his side, yet sometimes escapes him and it’s a scavenger hunt to find.

Years of previous “minds.”

Today, he unearthed a batch of slides from the 70’s that he hasn’t seen for close to 40 years.

And there are so many more slides to explore!

Good snacks are always a must around here!

Diet Pepsi is, too….

A departure from the 70’s , Peter is recounting tales of dance and theater photography in the 1980’s.

Music is always playing around here, and listening is usually evenly split between The Rolling Stones, Lou Reed and The Grateful Dead, with some classical jazz thrown in for good measure.

Everything gets written down!

Looking through negatives to eventually scan is a daily task.  Some have never even been printed or scanned and there are so many to discover.  We were actually talking about how it’s funny that when we first get a sheet of negatives back, we may pick a few and think the other pictures aren’t worth printing…then a chunk of time passes and we see that sheet of negatives again and the images that we thought weren’t worth printing seem amazing the second time around!  There is always something that isn’t seen the first time.

A life’s work.  These boxes are all filled to the brim with sheets of negatives.  All this somehow needs to be sorted through and condensed to 150 images for the final book….

And new images are always being added.

Seriously, everything gets written down.

Peter’s reflecting on life in the late 1960’s….

It’s actually sunny today.  I am trying to convince Peter to take a little break and go for a walk and shoot…

Success!  Peter in his natural habitat.

Photographic Art 

Categories // A Life in Photographic Art, Artist Portrait, Documentary, Fine Art Photographs, Olympia Wa. Tags // Blending the past and the present, Olympia, Photographic Art

Film, Digital, Composition, Negative Space, Simplicity

05.26.2016 by Peter J. Crowley // Leave a Comment

A life in Photographic Art my second book

A Life in Photographic Art will have some thoughts on composition, technique but more words on emotion and seeing. Composing with and sharing you soul. A few poems, essays sarcasm and humor it is after all my life.

Subject Photography sure it is important to get your subject correctly but does that mean in the center of the frame? What about the rest of the image? Now you have your subject where you want them beautiful smiling face legs cut off by the bottom of the

frame a few inches of nothing above. But she looks great. What surrounds the subject is at least 50% of the images importance. The negative space directs the viewers eye creating eye motion resulting in a longer look.

Motion the image may be still but by implying motion and understanding eye movement your images will speak with a more compelling voice.

Where to crop when composing Never at wrists or ankles, an arm cut at the wrist leading out of the frame will take the viewers eyes with it, same with ankles. 

When the subject is moving…..

DSC_0414 OHS Juggers example for composition post.Like here walking down North St. Digital camera and 85mm F1.8 Nikkor lens. Manual Glass. A test for my eyes and Technique see the light on hair frame focus expose. I miss the shot, lens is sharp and my quickness is good BUT where do the runners step next? When subject is moving there must be landing space.

CDT Conn. Dance Theater The Web Mary M. Giannone
CDT Conn. Dance Theater The Web Mary M. Giannone  Choreographer 1978

Here she has a space to land and the feel is much better. The runners neg space is also interrupted by the arrow sigh growing from the head of one of them. Yes I could take it out but that is not me. I see and shoot full frame what is in the image I put there. It is a way of seeing the way I see. The dancers negative space the web carries the same motion as the leg holding the viewers eye in the frame. A series of triangles moves your eye around the photo blocking you from moving to the next page.

bwFigureE-53-05-27Sharp15More triangles and DOF hold the attention. I have been seeing lots of soft focus lately Bokeh catchy new term DOF. Many images are just out of focus but online never say anything except wow great Bokeh yes a missed focus still impresses your FB Friend. I think some company is now selling not sharp lenses to create an “effect.” In the 70’s when soft focus was popular you could buy filters. I used to compose by breathing on my skylight filter and shoot as the moisture dried. If I wanted center focus I would put a dime on the filter then breath. Thought problem solving but there is an App for that.

DSC_0094 carl and Me 10-12-14An early digital conversion to B+W muddy gray and gray with a slight color cast. The first post of this was quite black and blue as the whites went to blue. Still when posted it was the most popular post in a long time. Better now but still with a magenta cast to whites and still muddy. I asked for guidance to improve my B+W. The consensus was $$$$ buy a program or two get an app. I pondered and thought read and some blogs and viewed a few tutorials most telling me to buy $$$.  

Deschutes River at Tumwater Falls 6/16/15
Deschutes River at Tumwater Falls 6/16/15

The River here is Digital the figure above is film both printed warm tone as I would in the darkroom it is close but it isn’t art till it is on paper. This is how I prep B+W images for the web. Be it a film scan, a digital shot in color or in B+W I open the image in PS Elements 10 and convert to B+W, open enhance click on adjust color and color variations move slider to left the smallest adjustment. Then take out 2-4 Blues why cause they are there despite what the scan being B+W or image created in Mono mode it is still color. Take a sheet of white paper and hold it next to the highlight of your image. If my wandering around the internet reviewing photos can be believed that highlight will be light blue in 80% or a few % magenta. Contrast and tonal range  to get a black and a white and 5-7 tones in between. I use the modified Zone system for 35mm. Adams set the zone for 10 grades using an 8×10 negative. Thirty Five mm film will most likely hold 7 zones. Is your monitor calibrated? Not cause the kid at Best Buy said so but is it? Of course you can buy software to do this I was lucky to have a friend with a spider. So a few years back my desktop was done. I know it is still good because I have this to compare a gray scale from Gerald at the Black and white forum http://www.bwphotographyforum.com/index.htm see bottom of page. On my laptop I have a portrait of me down on 8×10 film I measure from the top of the screen to the J on the keyboard which is the correct angle of view to see a calibrated image. This angle is critical so your process is repeatable and reliable. As in film process exact repetition creates consistent results.   

The Zone System is about controlling correct  exposure. Recently I saw a program being touted as the Zone System for light room? I laughed another program BANDAID, for photographers too busy to get exposure right. I’m waiting for the cell phone app.

Auto photography and zoom lenses causing faulty technique. At first I thought it was digital and auto everything that was the starting point for this problem but the more I ponder the more I see blame spread out. Example you are photographing a portrait with a 28-105 zoom you stand in one place and focus on subject full length just zoom out just face zoom in never moving hence never looking beyond the subject. Not realizing the prospective and DOF change and when focal length changes or the changes in the negative space keeping your sights locked on the eyes. Failing to experience 50% of the image. By using prime lenses you are forced to see the surroundings as you walk closer. Here you are forced to see the interaction between the subject and the environment/negative space. You create this relationship you make an image.  

 

Photographic Art    More thoughts on composing

enjoy pjc

Categories // Digital and Film, Figures, Film, Film 35mm, Fine Art Photographs, Full Frame, Motion, Movement, Negative Space, Nikon, Olympia Wa., Technique, Thought, Uncategorized Tags // B+W Fine Art Photography, Olympia, Photographic Art, Silver Gelatin, Simplicity, Technique

Old Roads, Traveled Again 2016

01.08.2016 by Peter J. Crowley // Leave a Comment

Retrospective the word for 2016 a year to be spent reviewing and scanning 45 years of images. 

057 Lebonan Pond on way to Cars 11-18-13 This from November 18th 2013 Rt. 87 the road to Carl and Maarit’s. I could take the highway be there quicker but Rt. 87 just drives well. Sunday radio on Patriots game and Jets or Giants game poking along at the speed limit how rude. It was my road there were areas that I stopped so often the people would wave occasionally come and ask what I see? This pond in Lebanon during Autumn had spectacular light sheering across the plants and dead trees. 

Image made on Canon Rebel from the turn of century. Thanks Scott for the introduction.

enjoy pjc

Photographic Art   Thoughts on Rt. 87 a lifetime of travel real and metaphoric.    

Categories // Autumn, Between Here and There, Close to home, Fall, Fine Art Photographs, Nature, Poem, Simplicity, Texture

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • …
  • 19
  • 20
  • 21
  • 22
  • 23
  • …
  • 27
  • Next Page »

Copyright © 2025 · Peter J. Crowley