Thursday, January 2, 2014

Kentucky Wedding

This is belated and I apologize to those waiting to see new photos, but I am in school and it just got away from me.

In September I shot a wedding for a high school friend and her husband in Berea, Kentucky at the gorgeous Boone Tavern. The town itself is an accomplishment in progress as it is home to one of the first interracial universities in the world and the first in the Southern United States built in 1855, five years before the civil war began. Beyond that the University charges NO tuition and instead works with largely low income students from Appalachia where they work on campus and in the community to pay for their costs of attendance.

Boone Tavern was built as a tavern for visitors in 1909 and holds gorgeous rooms and hosts wonderful small weddings for an affordable rate. It was truly wonderful to get to shoot at the location and stay the night there due to its beauty, history, and character. Not to mention Southern hospitality is a real and truly wonderful thing.

Back to the reason I was there. The wedding was wonderful, sweet, loving and a hoot and a half. Not only did I get to take photos of a loving, fun and charming couple but I also got to spend time with a dear friend and her new family. Along with her daughter who I hadn't seen since she was a baby, and her two step-daughters.

Bride Amanda getting ready

Mom and Bridesmaid Nikki help with getting the dress on.


Tardis groom's cake anyone?

Wedding Cake 


The kiss! Bride Amanda, Groom Luke





Family Pose

Wedding Party

Pose outside the tavern


The Bride and her sister's

gorgeous rings

The BEAUTIFUL shoes!

New Year Resolutions

We all make resolutions, some of us keep them, some of us fail miserably. I usually fall somewhere in between, and every year I decide to exercise more. I usually don't and usually end up falling into bad lazy habits as I get busy with school and cleaning. I also promise to write more every year...and that often doesn't work so well. I also say I'll eat better and stick within my food restrictions most the time and since this summer I have been so bad about avoiding dairy that I am really paying for it. I mean I just love pizza so very much!!!

So here we are January 2nd. I have exercised today, yoga for 20 minutes, and am eating only healthy things in my diet, and in smaller portions. I believe I weigh about 145 and I am 5' 2" so that puts me right at the overweight marker, which I am not too worried about, I am pretty strong as well, and muscle weighs more than fat, and all that jazz. So I guess I want to see what comes from exercising almost daily and eating better.

I know that in October I was doing yoga almost daily, and I felt AMAZING. Less back pain, more energy, I slept better at night, then I got a cold at the end of the month and yoga left me coughing for an hour afterwards, I was sick for about four weeks, had to be on an inhaler. No fun, but now we are here and let's try again.

I also have an anxiety disorder so doing yoga helps a lot, since it is a form of meditation, it clears my head through breathing but also through the endorphin's and focusing on what my body needs in that moment.

I would encourage all of you to really try and plan around accomplishing your goals, in the past I have been successful so this year, this needs to be a success, not just another "thing" I give up on.

Today: noticeable changes from exercising

-more energy
-my back and hips don't hurt as much or feel as stiff
-I feel calmer and happier

GOALS:
-lose some weight
-be stronger/healthier
-be trimmer
-less body pain
-better sleep
-more relaxed
-HAPPY



What are your goals this year?

~Rebecca

Thursday, November 21, 2013

HOLI-DAZE

Howdy people!

It's November, the 21st to be exact and like most of you I deep in the trenches of the holidays!

Today is my anniversary to my dear boyfriend, three years! But I have known him more than eight and now is when I start to feel time on me and how fast it moves and that I am very quickly approaching my mid twenties when yesterday it felt like I was turning 21. Then there is Ryan's daughter who went from a wobbly 3.5 years of age and will be 7 in May. Which gets me thinking about my impending graduation in a year, and what I am doing after and if I get two year-long masters degrees like I am planning Lily will be 10 by the time I am done, Ryan 30 and I will be 26! My mom already had three kids at 26! Granted she started young....but still! I guess I am taking the other path of career then babies, maybe? Do I even want babies? Why is it plural? (bangs head on keyboard)

results:
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BACK TO THE IMMEDIATE FUTURE

Thankgiving is in a week, and somehow me having a comfy family gathering is now including many friends and has almost reached 20 guests! So I had to rent en event space at my apartment unit, because I only like in 800 square feet, a little cozy if people only get about 5 feet per person. However, through planning and patience I think I will somehow pull it off, and everyone is bringing some type of food which helps a ton.

Then Christmas is a whole 26 days after that and we will be travelling to see family that day.

The GREAT news is that I am finished with GIFT SHOPPING! finished, done, happy and everything is wrapped!

You say "how the hell, Rebecca"

I say "year-round shopping!"

I start picking up stuff in October usually, order books for set family members from work at the same time (I work at an independent bookstore) and then I get a few things at local stores to add to the presents, consult with siblings to go in on big gifts and VOILA I am finished baby. The last thing to do is convince the boyfriend to take a NICE holiday photo with me and then we can make our cards and get then on their way (he hates photos and makes faces as a result).

That's about that. My holiday blurb, comment below if you want more shopping tips.


Friday, October 25, 2013

Merida Costume Complete! :D

I finished my Merida costume and thanks to some great friends I actually got photos of myself in it.Image
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Got my boyfriend in on the action as well.
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Some issues with the back, since I had to tie it myself, (the men in my life don't get corset strings)
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Sunday, September 15, 2013

Sew baby Sew!

Sew. Well the actual stitching part hasn't happened yet. But I am getting somewhere. Since it has been rainy and stressful I not only finished the book I was reading and I REALLY worked on costumes for Halloween.

I bought my fabric a few weeks ago online to a few problems. 1 the wool I ordered was SUIT wool not wool for making a cape, so instead I went to the store and actually bought a black wool/polyester blend for only about $9/yard, I got less than recommended for my pattern, but I knew I didn't want it way long on me, and too much wool becomes really heavy really fast. Especially on all the other layers I will be wearing.

black felt for cape

I also was not super fond of the color of linen I ordered, I wanted it to have a little more GREEN in it, so I bought a packet of forest green Dylon fabric dye to alter the color slightly, which I let my linen sit in for about an hour and got some great results.
Dylon

dye job- use the sick for easy clean up and rubber mixer so as not to stain

LEFT: original color                            RIGHT: after dying


Other than that my white fabric for my chemise is perfect, white and a good sort of wrinkly, I'm excited about the results of that as well, but slightly concerned over if the sleeves will be long enough.
Gauzy white

I'm using these patterns, with slight revisions:




Ryan's costume is SO simple. If you want to do a GREAT KILT for Halloween, buy 10 yards of fabric, look up a tutorial and GO. That's it. Granted Ryan already has a shirt from when we did the Princess Bride and we ordered some simply boots he can wear with socks and voila.

NOTE ON WIDTH: I couldn't find 60" wide plaid material ANYWHERE unless I wanted to buy a kilt, the cheapest was $220. So I went to Joann, bought 44" wide cotton flannel (like for shirts) and made sure to get something close to a traditional tartan (Stuart Hunting) , which as far as I trust should be just fine. NOTE ON YARDS: you may not need 5 yards, less may work just fine, it all depends on how much you want to spent and how big your kilt wearer is.


This tutorial was very helpful for me.


When done I hope to look as awesome as this!







Tuesday, September 10, 2013

Back to the Basics

When I was 9 my dad was going to swap meets, gun shows, antique stores etc. Same as he does today, same as he always will. Yet at one of these events he found something that would change my life forever. At one of these little meets he found a Canon 1980 AE-1 35mm camera. The body was in pristine shape, and the basic lens was also functional, it even had a cap that alluded to the sponsorship of the 1980 Olympics by Canon. My dad bought this camera with its hideous rad and yellow strap, and sentimental lens cap; he took it home, he dusted it off, he bought a camera bag and presented me this for my 10th birthday.

http://www4.images.coolspotters.com/photos/120648/1980-canon-ae-1-profile.jpg
What my baby looks like


I was ecstatic at this gift, and to this day I think it was the best present I ever got as a child. This meant I would no longer waste film and energy with my grandma's ole and clunky point and shoot and that I too could have an SLR, just like my dad's Pentax and take photos. Lots of photos.

Yet it was not just taking photos it was everything that came with the responsibility of owning and using an SLR. It meant that my first roll of film was ruined when I tried to wind it up because I didn't understand the method of pushing one little black button on the bottom of the camera, shredding my work. It meant that I had to learn how to patiently adjust lighting, shutter speed, focus etc. It meant walking around outside and in my house with a piece of cardboard with a square cut out of it to see what framed well or not. It meant months of waiting to save up money to develop film. It meant being the weird kid in middle school always taking pictures on her SLR or a throw away. This was before smart phones, and the time when it was cool to be shutter happy.

So why bring this up?

Well in Italy this summer another student at my school, a professional photographer that owns his own business and has since he was a teenager (now 24) was going back to basics. He was going to art school for photography to get an actual degree. Granted it seemed that he knew about 95% of what he was relearning, but he felt happy learning it all over again.

So, here I am, back at Colorado State, 22 years old, meaning I have about 12 years of experience, I've shot two weddings, I have another on the way. I have a decent portfolio and I believe a lot of talent and experience but I am taking a bare-bones basic photography class, where I am relearning most of what I know or instinctively do when I am taking photos.

Yet, there is something thrilling about relearning these little things, or reminding yourself about all the little functions of a camera or the importance of aperture. As frustrated as I was in my first two weeks of a game of repetition all the sudden today I feel refreshed. It is not as if I am learning something new, or having a major life change as a result, I just feel excited again.

Not only am I going to be shooting some neat things for the class, which is a minor challenge and mentally stimulating, something I need in a course, but I am getting to slowly sink into a pool of photography. I don't have to explain to people, I can just do photos, I don't have to be perfect for a client, I can just do photos and once again I am tasting what it was to be 10 years old taking photos of plastic dinosaurs.

I can breath in the smell of equipment, and though the gelatin plastic sweetness of film is tucked in the back of my closet, there is so much with digital that I can be excited about.

Which brings me to my point. Maybe we can all use to go back to basics. Maybe just baking sugar cookies until they're perfect, or doodling, or sewing draw string bags. Because I am finding a thrill in relearning, in being more present, in going slowly. I am also learning to not look down on "the simple" because there is some chunk in there for us to gain something from. So experts and professionals, where did you start? What could you go back to to reclaim part of you?

~Rebecca Lee Robinson

Sunday, September 8, 2013

Steam Punk Wedding

This happened a few weeks ago but with the start of school and what not I did not get to post anything, but better late than never.

A few weeks ago some friends from high school for married in Woodland Park, where we all went to high school together. Town of maybe 7,000 mountainous, pretty and a good chance to catch up with people.

They had the wedding at the local golf club, and with only minor problems the day was a success, the couple was happy and I got some great images for themselves and myself to enjoy.

Book-page flowers for centerpieces

The officiants

Grooms party

Such beautiful landscape

The groom

Happy couple!

Bridal Party

Bridal Party

Beautiful Bride

Happy Couple shot.