Welcome to the Bryon DeVore Photography blog. This space is a place for me to keep in touch with clients, post new work and to share bits about how I go about things here with the photography business. I generally post a few photos from each session, but after a few years of keeping this blog, I know that counting on me to be consistent or regular in any way is probably not going to work out well for anyone. I love to hear from visitors so please drop me an e-mail and be sure to come visit me on Facebook!
Back Wednesday night from 9 days in Japan... wedding tomorrow... and then leaving on Sunday for a family reunion in San Diego! Lots of wedding photos coming to the blog in the next few weeks and was also lucky to be able to squeeze this sweet session in this morning. I love photographing children as they grow. I first photographed Julia a year and a half ago when she was just learning to walk and now she's running and climbing and jumping... and looking super sweet.
ps... could the Rogue Valley been any more perfect this past couple of days? I left 90 degrees and insane mugginess in Japan and returned to paradise! I dare the San Diego beaches to be better.
I photograph people. I try to capture moments and fleeting expressions; REAL moments and REAL expressions are always the goal... easy on the "cheese" as the teenagers say. That said, I've come to believe that there is something basically untrue about "capturing" people in an image and that there in-lies the big challenge for a photographer. Real moments and expressions don't stop and can't REALLY be frozen, they are fluid and fleeting... gone before they finish happening. The camera freezes something that wasn't really meant to be stopped. But those unreal stoppages of time can be so beautiful, so emotional... and strangely to me, very, very real. How odd this art of people photography... not so much creating, but capturing, stopping the unstoppable and then surrounding that moment, that expression with the real art of the photograph, the background, the crop, the angle, the color, the parts that can be created. But being there when the moment or expression happens, having your finger on the shutter release at that exact second... that is a form of art as well.