There's Something Going on in Seattle

Comments (6)

After Macworld, I didn't head directly home. Oh no. Instead, I zipped straight past Portland and ended up in Seattle just in time to check out the MSE Garage Shoot put on by the Seattle Flickrites, organized in great part by my friend Ted Leung, and sponsored by Chase Jarvis. Chase provided the location in the form of renting out Hangar 30 at Sand Point in Seattle. Ted and Jeremy put in loads of organization work including securing models. Everyone else brought their equipment. By everyone, I mean the 50 people that managed to sign up in some insanely small amount of time. It filled fast. Really fast. Like rock concert fast. To top things off, David Hobby--Mr. Strobist himself--was also there as a surprise guest.

Hangar 30 Strobist Shoot

So why was I there? Well my friends, there's something going on in Seattle. David noted that out of all the Strobist groups all over the world, Seattle was the most active and was generating the an incredible amount of interesting work. In addition, Chase's involvement is interesting to me. He's a super jet setting pro who's taking a bit of time from his schedule and giving back to his local scene. And, he's bringing along his crew to help. I think it's working in a catalyzing fashion. When you have a bunch of photo geeks playing around with lights online, it's interesting. When you get 50 of them together in a huge hangar with enough space to try out all sorts of techniques and learn from each other as well as professionals, it's beyond interesting. Gathering lots of creative people in one place and letting them swap ideas is how entire movements in art have been fueled. Is this the start of something major? I don't know. But I wanted to see it for myself.

Hangar 30 Strobist Shoot

In the photo above, Ted shoots while Chase and Scott (Chase's right hand man) assist with lighting. You can see the result in Ted's Flickr stream. It may be just me, but I think that this kind of learning opportunity equals months of school time in a single concentrated packaged dose. The entire four hours that the hangar shoot was going on, I walked around and watched people work and gave some of my own input where I could. At times, I really wanted to jump in and shoot a setup of my own, but I was so busy drinking in the vibe. I didn't want to miss something. So I shot mostly documentary shots, conversed, and talked a lot of lighting. The next time I get this chance, however, I've already promised myself that I'll cook up some interesting setups and do some teaching myself.

After the shoot was over, a big subset of us wandered over to Chase's studio and socialized till the early hours of the AM. Beverages were had. Guitar Hero was played. Great conversations happened. And the scene continued to gel. I'm in awe of what the Seattle Flickrites have accomplished and can't wait to see what comes next. It's an inspiration, to be sure. Thanks Ted and Chase for the opportunity to drop in and witness this thing.

6 Comments

Carlos d'Avis on January 23, 2008 10:07 AM

I enjoyed the story and the photographs to which you linked but the word you would like is ‘hangar,’ not ‘hanger.’

Duncan Davidson on January 23, 2008 10:59 AM

Doh. Fixed. Thanks for the typo catch. I propagated that one _everywhere_.

David Hobby on January 23, 2008 2:41 PM

JDD-

Great to see you again—glad you stuck around for the fun after MacWorld!

Til next time,
DH

Not sure if I met you during the event or not.  I saw so many new faces.  Thanks for stopping by and checking us out.  It looks like you had a good time.  Come back again soon!

chwb aka love.mom on January 31, 2008 1:46 AM

There is something truly energizing about getting a group of creative minds together.  I enjoyed reading about it!

Mark Griffith on February 2, 2008 3:42 PM

bummer dude, you should have looked me up ;)

Leave a comment

Recent Entries

Why Auto White Balance Isn't Perfect
Every digital camera made comes with a promise of making perfect pictures with the click of a button. The algorithms used to deliver on this promise, however, are by no means perfect, including the auto white balance algorithm.
Print Store Update
On April 2nd, I was pretty optimistic that I was just a couple of weeks away from launching an online store with the first of my prints for sale. As you know, I asked for a bit of help from all of you to help out. That process turned out to be a fantastic experience and resulted in a lot of feedback.
Ignite SF April 2008
As part of Web 2.0 Expo SF 2008, Brady Forrest and company hosted an Ignite SF at the DNA Lounge last night. Ignite nights are always a good time. What's Ignite? Take 14 or so speakers, give them 5 minutes each to talk, and see what happens. The result is almost universally fun. And, thanks to the format, if somebody's talk is a dud, well, you only have to wait 5 minutes for the next one.