Not to be too short, but ok, here’s the deal: 30 minutes, on location, you, your family, fur babies, friends, dress up, or don’t. It’s up to you. Be you. Let’s get some pictures ready for holiday cards. $125, 10-25 final high-resolution digital files. All November long. Contact me to set up an appointment. Offer expires November 30, 2019.
Family photo time!
Recently, a photographer friend of mine noted that “children and animals are the worst things to try and photograph.” I was like, “What. Are. You. Talking About?!” I think that this common sentiment is rooted in an old school mentality that children should be seen and not heard, should behave, and should fit into a rigid ideal for what society deems “appropriate behavior.” While I’m all for perfectly posed toddler photos, and the rare unicorn that they are, I think that it’s time we get real about who these little people are that we share our lives with. I don’t want to capture a picture of your little tiny kid doing anything other than being exactly who they are meant to be in that very moment that I’m with them. I don’t mind getting my clothes dirty, getting in the grass, playing in the leaves, or chasing them around. Photography is about freezing a moment in time, one that we will never get back. Why would we want to remember that as anything other than it truly is?
So here it is, the end of summer sale!! 30 minutes, 15-25 high definition digital files. At a location of your choosing (within 25 miles of South Portland.) For $115! Book between Friday August 15th and September 1st to take advantage of this price!!
You, your family, fur babies, friends, chosen family, or just you, doing something you love to do.
My favorite photo of Jessie, doing one of the things she loves.
Springtime Refresh
“What am I supposed to do?” Is a common question when I’m shooting. Everyone from new mothers to professionals getting a head shot for their website have insecurity surrounding being photographed. Feeling like we should be doing something worthy of being photographed or mimicking what we’ve seen a million times in fashion magazines is normal, but it’s not good, because it isn’t true. Those ideas we have about what we are supposed to look like on camera are lies, often ones that aim to sell us something.
“I’m not photogenic.” Is another one that I’ve heard more times than I can count, from nearly everyone I’ve ever photographed, even the ones that are clearly incredible on camera, which is literally EVERYONE. You are incredible on camera. The camera loves you. Yes it does. Yes. YOU!
What makes a good photo of you?
YOU. Being you. Doing the things that make you feel like you. There is no product, makeup, photoshop effect, or instagram filter that can take the place of who you uniquely are and what you bring to this world.
This is why I love taking photos of people in their homes, doing things that they love, spending time with their families and pets.
As we continue to lean towards an ever increasing “gig-economy” how we represent ourselves online becomes more important. More is at stake. I have worked in the wellness and entertainment industries for years, where people are putting an emphasis on working for themselves in many capacities, and I see how having good quality photos of who you are and what you do can make a difference in your life. How are you representing yourself? Is every photo of you a dark iphone photo or a blurry selfie? Or are you showing the world who you are and what you do with beautiful images that help you find more gigs, clients, or opportunities?
Do you need photos for your website, instagram, or facebook campaign? Or do you need to get photos of you and your family, your bff, your furbaby? Don’t wait to get photos of you and the people and things you love, the world is crazy, time is unrelenting, memories fade, but photos can bring you back immediately.
Lucky you, here I am, your photographer.
Send me a message to set up a session to get some fresh photos. It can be you, doing anything. How do you want the world to see you?
Let’s make something memorable.
Smize for the camera, smiiiiize.
Hello 2019, you are quite the trickster
Welcome to 2019, now we have just entered February, my birthday month and things have been going, well, um, not so smoothly. Just as I was finding my stride here, working a steady job, while also filling my calendar with teaching, dance performance, and photography gigs as well as starting to look at summer and fall weddings, a thing happened. I injured myself, really, really seriously. A torn medial meniscus, as well as a devastatingly torn ACL. So, for the last three weeks I have been incapacitated. I cannot bend or straighten my leg more than a small degree, I cannot walk, I cannot drive a car. we have been to urgent care and doctors and orthopedic surgeons, I have had x rays and MRIs. This week I will be going in for reconstructive surgery to hopefully put things back into order so that I can start physical therapy and get on my way to functioning again.
It has been humbling to say the least. So, quite suddenly I have found myself without a job and all of the things I have lined up for myself are dependent on my physical wellness. I have never had an injury of this magnitude before. I have always danced, participated in sports, and lived as a very, very physical person. My doctors are being realistic with me, which is to say, there is a chance that I will be able to do all of these things again, and there is also a chance that I will not. There is no way to know until we are there. I also realized how incredibly lucky I am. This is a setback, yes, but I will heal, and there are many people in this world who cannot say that. I am so thankful for all of the support we have received so far. From meals, to donations, to kind words at all hours of the night. It means so much, every little bit of it. If you’d like to help we could really use it right now, I plan on spending the rest of my life making good on all of this.
Here is our GoFundMe - (Link no longer active - thank you for your support.)
Best,
Kerry
Happy Holidays and a little sale on Mini Sessions!!
Christmas is my favorite holiday. I’m one of those people who you find singing carols at random occasions, getting overly excited about decorating the Christmas tree, and going a bit overboard on the Christmas lights. I love celebrating during this darkest time of year and I love coming together with friends and family to give gifts. I just got to photograph this brand new baby, decked out in his tiny Santa Suit and I couldn’t have been more joyful. Welcome to the world, little one!
To celebrate the holiday season, I’d love to do a little sale on in home, or on location, mini sessions. Normally a mini Session is $150, takes up to 30 minutes and you receive up to 20 high resolution digital files. For the next 4 weeks, if you book a mini between now 12/10/18 and 1/10/19, you will get 15% off!
Let’s come together and take some awesome photos for you to share and cherish!
Joy at Sunflower Farm
It was a beautiful, sunny day, so we decided to take a short drive north to Cumberland to visit Sunflower Farm. They have a herd of Nigerian Dwarf Goats who are quite possibly the sweetest, mellowest, friendliest goats I have ever encountered. As we were getting ready to leave, we decided to pick up some fresh chevre from the self serve farm stand. While we were there, one of the owners of the farm, Hope Hall said, "Hey, if you want, I'm making some fresh herb cheese right now, if you can wait a minute, it's almost done." Then, we watched her pick a sprig of rosemary and take it with her into the kitchen where she finished making the cheese. "This cheese is made from yesterday's milking." She said. My husband and I looked at eachother, how have we ended up in this happy little goat farm, foodie, paradise? I happened to just have a package of crackers in my bag, because with two small children I never leave the house without snacks, so as we drove off into the beautiful, Maine Indian Summer, we ate a delicious snack from some of the freshest cheese made with milk from goats we got to meet and pet. It was so joyful.
photo by N. Constantino 2018
New events for Spring 2018!
Dancers, friends, dear ones...SPRING IS HERE and I have been loving the change in seasons. The pace of things begins to pick up as getting out and around town gets easier and easier. Goodbye snowsuits, pants, hats, gloves, and mittens. Adios to piles of boots and grit accumulating in our entryways. Farewell to the trying and failing to keep toddlers and babies from being cooped up and going stir crazy. So long to the cold, cold misery that seeps into our cores, stiffening our muscles and shivering our bones. Hello Spring… you marvelous thing, you! Glad to have you back in the fold.
Well, this past winter I kept myself busy with a community performance project at The Living Room Dance Collective in South Portland - thank you to all of you who came out and danced during the darkest time of the year, it meant so much to me and made the time really fly by. And now it is on to the next project: May 27, 2018, through June 17, 2018, I will be teaching a four-week modern dance series titled “Multilayered Modern” at The Living Room (408 Broadway, South Portland, ME) every Sunday from 1:00-3:00 pm ET.
I’d love for you to join me, I can’t wait to dive in and get moving with you. During every class we will:
Connect with breath.
Ground ourselves.
Explore guided movement.
Practice classical “modern” technique and experiment with applying it to our own bodies.
Tune in and sense our multi-layered physical selves.
Use fundamentals of modern dance to help us articulate our movement.
Learn choreography.
Experience how moving fully can alter our perceptions of our body.
Sense, discover, improvise, and experiment.
Sweat it out.
Leave everything on the dance floor.
Every class is open and welcomes drop-in students. The choreography will develop from week to week, culminating in a long-phrase composition that we will manipulate in class. Participating in the whole series is encouraged but not required.
Feel free to send me any questions that you may have and I can’t wait to see you in the studio!
Check out all of the incredible things happening at The Living Room dance collective via their website or by visiting their Instagram feed.
New England in the Fall
I lived in the desert for a long time, five years in the high desert of New Mexico and nine years in the coastal desert of Southern California. Words can't really describe the strange cravings that I would have every September and October. Not for any food, but an intense, primal craving for weather. A change of things. How fortunate I am to now live in a place where the fall is so rich with color, so varied, so crisp. Fall isn't just something you witness here, it engulfs you, you breathe it, drink it, absorb it. Here, some fall photos from one of my favorite families, shot here in Portland.
Newness
When I began studying photography I had no ambitions for ever turning it into something I would make a living from. It was a hobby and I liked it that way. My hopes with photography were a very personal exploration, sometimes ritualistic, and always more about the process rather than the product, which is basically the opposite of most photographers. Then, after a few years, people started asking me to take pictures for them at different events and I kept turning them down. I couldn't very well show up to a paying photography gig with a toy camera and expired film that would take a few weeks to get back from processing. I told my photography teacher at the time that I kept turning down work and he said "Christ, Kerry, never say no! Borrow a camera or rent a camera, but do you know how many people are trying really hard to get work as photographers? Say yes!" I knew he was right, I was holding myself back, feeling like I wasn't good enough, not ready, a fraud. Despite my fears I started saying yes, embracing how uncomfortable I felt, I have been following photography down the rabbit hole ever since.
I got a job as a hospital newborn photographer when I moved to Maine last year. It is a wonderful job working for a really great company and I am so thankful that I get to do this work. The only thing that could be seen as a professional drawback is that due to privacy laws it is rare that people other than the families I photograph get to see my work. At this point I have photographed over 300 families and while those families can share the photos, I cannot due to HIPAA. So, when I had my own baby I had the opportunity to take my own hospital photos that I can share with you.
Meet my son, Atlas Leviathan Constantino. Born August 11th, 2017 at 4:59 PM. Here is a selection from our own hospital photo shoot. There are so many more moments to capture with my beautiful children, but here are some of those sweet moments from the first few days. Enjoy!
Moving Forward, classes and summer in 2017
As we move forward into the busy summer months, there are a few big events happening in our lives. The biggest, is that our family trio will shortly become a quartet, as baby number two is due to arrive later in the season. I have decided to dedicate the next few months to spending a little more time at home, resting, planning, and readying our family for this next transition, so as of now, I am on a hiatus from teaching dance.
Taking a break from teaching feels a little early, to be honest, but time has been flying by. I have had such an amazing winter and spring, beginning to find my place in the dance community here in Portland, Maine, meeting so many wonderful dancers, and seeing all the work that they make and vibrant energy that they bring to my class every week. Stepping away for a bit has been a difficult decision, but one that I had to make.
I hope to return to teaching this fall, so please don't hesitate to contact me with questions about my upcoming schedule, classes, and workshops, and keep moving this summer!!
Make sure you check in with Studio 408 to get schedule updates and learn about the amazing workshops and events that are going on there! There is so much to take part in here in our wonderful city!
Spring!
As I look hopefully towards spring, after my first winter in many, many years, I am so eager to share what I have been working on this past few months. One of the most challenging photo subjects that I continue to attempt to shoot are dancers. Movement can be thrilling, frustrating, rewarding, and addicting all at once. While shooting in a controlled studio setting, or even a bright outdoor shoot can yield incredible results, it isn't the way that dancers always want to be captured. So, you shoot in-performance, which can add a whole world of layers and challenges to the process. Dramatic lighting with stubborn focal points, the position and interaction of audience members, and the unpredictability that accompanies each are just a few of the many surprises that live performance can provide.
So when I was recently asked to come and document performances at the local dance studio and venue here in South Portland, Maine called Studio 408, I leaped at the opportunity. It was such an awesome showing of thoughtful performance by artists that are crafting not only performances in the traditional sense, but experiences for the audience to participate in as well. The evening left me feeling full in all the best ways. Here are a few of my favorite and most successful shots of the evening.
As I move further into spring and grow to know my dance community more and more here, I hope to continue shooting and featuring local performers in my photography. It is so rewarding, I just love it!
Generosity and the Imperfection of Antiquated Mediums.
Fall may be my favorite season. There is something so refreshing to me about letting things go, clearing them, and readying yourself for a new year. This year, as the fall colors began to make their appearance, I had the opportunity to learn a technique that I've been dreaming about for years.
I first became interested in photography because of film. Film intrigued me. The literal freezing of a moment of time, what one of my college professors used to refer to as a "visual absence." For practical purposes, my work that I do now is all digital, but I still shoot film often, and if I am given an opportunity to shoot film, I take it, because there is just something about those chemicals, that silver, the tangible realness of film that I can't divorce. I love it too much. When I began learning about film and different processes, I was introduced to the work of Sally Mann. I scoured the internet and the library searching for information about her and found a documentary, broken into parts, on Youtube. I was fascinated with how she worked, transforming her suburban into a mobile darkroom, preparing glass plates, and pouring the collodion just so, all out in the field, so she could get her shots on her large format camera. I decided years ago that I would learn this, try it at least once, and if it was too hard, or I hated it I never had to do it again, but a part of me knew that wouldn't be the case.
I was fortunate enough to have some help getting to a collodion workshop this last September. I had initially began fundraising because I had been accepted into another workshop entirely, but it was too expensive, and even with the generous gifts of my donors, there was just no way it was going to happen. I found out that not too far from my home, I would have the chance to study, gaining hands on experience in collodion process.
I am so glad I attended this workshop. Maine Media workshop is a gem, and I hope to attend more workshops there in the future. My teacher, Brenton Hamilton, and his assistant Harrison, were exceptional. I have to just take a moment to talk about them, because it is rare to find a teachers that are so generous. They must have been just exhausted after this workshop because for two full days, 9-5, they made every students' vision, ideas, and inspiration happen. This isn't just a matter of helping us take a picture, it is a matter of staging a shot, placing the camera, preparing the plates, exposing the shot, and developing it. I watched Harrison move a huge 8x10 wet plate camera and its enormous tripod across campus several times. They gave us individual attention, they gave us as much or as little information as we wanted, they didn't flinch at even the most repetitive series of questions. They endured extended periods of time in a darkroom, with some serious chemicals, (ether, anyone?) and they did all of this without any hesitation. I'll say it again, it is RARE to find teachers that are so generous. It was inspiring.
Collodion process is finicky and difficult, you must coat and prepare your plate precisely or you will ruin it, you need to expose your plate within just a few minutes, or the collodion will dry, or again, it is a waste. It is incredibly EASY to destroy your work. It was far more stressful than I had initially thought. You have to really and I mean really let go of the reigns in this process. Part of the beauty of these exposures is that they have an incredible spectral range, there are literally more grays to be seen. Even really amazing digital cameras just don't get quite the same effect. The trade off is that there are imperfections in all of them, specks of dust and tiny spots. On one of my favorite exposures, despite my best efforts, some of the collodion must have coated the plate wrong, leading to some spots I didn't intend. I was lucky enough to be able to make four exposures. I really love them.
It made me realize that the artists whose work I have admired who use collodion process are far more amazing and skilled than I had initially realized. I plan to keep learning as much as I can about this process, and hopefully I'll get the chance to do more of it.
Here are the images I created that weekend. I hope you love them as much as I do.
Gypsy
November 29,2022. A note: at the time I rescued my old dog, I was not aware of the derogatory nature of her name. It was meant to be a celebratory one, of a culture whose music and dance I had studied and loved, for an animal who had been cast away by society but was the greatest character and kindest nature I have ever encountered. Now, in retrospect, I would choose a better name for her, one that doesn’t represent harm to a group of people. I am sorry if my ignorance to the hateful origins of this word have caused hurt.
Today we said goodbye to my sweetest old friend. My dog, the Tijuana Special, Gypsy, the super-mutt. She was given to us by a couple of kids on the street.
"That's such a cute puppy." I said.
"Do you want her? We can't keep her, we'll lose our apartment, and we just got this apartment, and we can't get kicked out." This youngish looking girl looked up at me, pleading.
So we took her home. She destroyed my husbands house, his roomates' rug, she drove the older dog crazy, she tested the boundaries of friendship, and if it weren't for the fact that Kneeko's roommates were his REALLY good friends, we would have been kicked out too. But after the adjustment, she showed us that she was sweet, and loving. When I took her to the vet for the first time, she got a parvo vaccination and as soon as we were home, had an allergic reaction, her face swelled up and I held her in my arms, rushing her back to the vet. We looked in each other's eyes, and that was it, I was hers.
She was a gentle soul. She loved everything. She once met my sister's cat, and spent the entire time trying to convince the cat she wasn't a threat, the cat didn't want to hear it. She ate kale and would beg at me feet every time I'd open up a fresh bag of salad mix. We would always say that she was a friend to all creatures, great and small. She was my sweetie pie, my confidant, my protector, and my friend. She was always there. Days were spent with her at my side, while I hammered away at jewelry projects. She never let me be alone, not even for a second, sometimes she drove me crazy, but she just had so much love to give, she never made me sad.
When she was a puppy, she found a tennis ball at the park, and from there, she was fetching champion. I threw and she brought it back. Sometimes I would think that it was her, that she loved the ball and loved to fetch, but then sometimes, I would wonder if she was only doing it only because she thought that it made me happy.
A few weeks ago she began walking with a limp. I thought she had hurt herself leaping off the porch playing fetch, but it didn't heal, and just kept getting worse. I thought perhaps she had jammed a paw. So, I was shocked when I heard the diagnosis that she had stage 4 bone cancer, and even if we chose to have surgery, to do dog chemo, that it wouldn't really do much good. It was like a puzzle piece I didn't know was missing, the last few months, sometimes she would cry at night, or inexplicably she would yelp. She had always been a sensitive dog, who needed a lot of boundaries, but lately, she was extra touchy. So, when I realized that she had been hurting, for probably much longer than I had thought possible, I knew it was time for me to let go.
So today, we said goodbye. At home, with her ball, and us, and all the bacon a dog could ever dream of. She went peacefully, to that big old dog park in the sky.
Across the US
It took us years to work up the courage to finally move away from Southern California. I felt like such a cliche', the person I had grown up resenting, the "Californian" that flees to another state and ends up ruining their new home, driving up the cost of living, paying too much for rent, or a mortgage. I grew up in Montana, a place that prides itself on being the last best place, the only place left that hasn't been ruined by developers, until it was, and now it is just like everywhere else. Growing up it wasn't strange to see old Ford truck with a bumper sticker reading "Welcome to Montana, now go home" or "keep Missoula weird" on it.
This is the story I grew up with; a place is good, has everything its residents need, people are happy. Then, like locusts, Californians come in and destroy it. You could say that I felt conflicted as a Californian. I was. In fact I always held deep inside of my heart, a tiny sparkling gem, a reminder, that I wasn't "one of them."
The people I befriended in San Diego are so dear to me, but I was always guarded, held people at arms' length. I knew that someday, I would be leaving them. Now, people are really only a mouse click away and I keep all my long lost friends in my pocket and can look at their highlight reel any time, day or night, but still. That is so strange, when I think about it, I'm old enough to remember the world before 9/11, cell phones, and facebook and I'm okay with that.
Before we finally made the decision to really leave, we searched desperately for a better living situation in San Diego. When I tell people how much rent we paid to live in our tiny studio apartment, they usually shake their heads, it's embarrassing. We would hear about people we knew moving and would try to get on their landlord's waiting list, we contacted rental companies, we tried everything we could think of. We were stuck, everything we found was either too expensive, or wouldn't take our dogs, or was just too far away. I would post our search on Facebook, hoping someone may have a lead, but no. At one point, an acquaintance (who I am convinced just really never liked me that much and was gunning for me to leave) sent me a link to some really affordable rental listings, of course, they were in El Centro, which if you have any access to a map is over two hours east of San Diego. El Centro? Its a real shit-hole that literally smells like death and decay. That was it, the straw that broke the camel's back. We stopped looking to stay and started planning to leave.
A few months later we left. It was hard; emotionally, the actual act of packing everything after living in a place for so long, the driving for a week with two dogs and a baby, the uncertainty of starting over, everything was hard. Some days, it still is.
I miss San Diego a little, I was never in love with it so I don't feel really sad that I left it. Really, I miss my friends there.
On our way from one far corner of the United States to the other, we took a lot of pictures.
So here they are, some are not really my best photography work, but they are a record of this huge leap that we took as a family.
Pretty Darned Grand
New Mexican Truck Stop Ponies
Somewhere In Texas.
Zelda and her Grampa in Eureka Springs
All of my pictures of Niagara Falls were terrible. My only defense is that I could not stop screaming. I have seriously never been somewhere quite as thrilling.
Portland Maine, our new home, at Sunset.
Lastly, a goodbye, to one of our oldest friends. My husband's dog Beezle had to be put down a few weeks ago. She was beautiful, she made everyone happy, and she loved us beyond the limits that human love could ever extend and our brains can comprehend. After years of apartment and city living, I had one dream for my dogs, and that was to give them a big yard to run in before they died. So, even though it wasn't very long, Beez got to have a home with a yard, and see where we ended up. We miss her.
Beez is one of the only dogs I know that has been to both the West and East Coast.
Salvation Mountain and the Salton Sea
Before we left the West coast on our big move to the East Coast, I wanted to go one last place. The Salton Sea.
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