I grew up learning about the concepts and methods of photography with the help of the 4-H Youth Development Program. I became very passionate about photography, and it became a good portion of my life. It all began in 1995. In the later end of 1996 and into 1997, my dad began teaching me off of my parents 35mm 137 MA Quartz Contax Camera. I learned how to study light in a scene, learned how to use the spot light meter, learned how to use the f-stop settings, and how to change the ASA. Along with learning these new photography concepts, I began doing a study into black and white photography, and I fell in love with shooting black and white photography. We were lucky enough to know a developer in downtown San Bernardino who developed black and white film, and he also made us proofs from the negatives. I returned with better photographs to the San Bernardino County Fair, and had a photograph that I took at Kimberly Crest Historical State Monument in Redlands that won Best of Show. My Best of Show photograph continued on to the California State Fair in Sacramento to compete against all the other Best of Show photographs in the state. That photograph won third place in the Best of Show Competition, and I was lucky enough to have traveled up to Sacramento to see my photo be displayed. Little did I know, I will return a few years down the road. Over the next few years, I began slowing down in photography, and began to focus on other different items in the 4-H program, mostly focusing on citizenship and leadership. With me being more busy with 4-H in those aspects, we didn’t have much funding for traveling since I was beginning to go to 4-H conferences throughout the state. The main part of my photography career in 4-H was put on hold until 2005. In between 2001 and 2005, I mainly focused on helping my dad teach photography to my local club project members and on the side take photos myself and still enter in the fairs. Which I would seem to get my share of first place, second place, and third place awards. In January of 2003, my family moved from film to digital, with the purchase of an S602Zoom 6 Mega Pixel FinePix Digital Camera. It took me sometime before I comfortably began to use the digital camera over film. Once I switched over to digital, my photography activity began to rise again, but not till I learned a few things about digital. I began taking photographs at many 4-H events, and I was hired to be a photographer at a local 4-H/FFA fair called the Chino Junior Livestock Fair. At the end of 2003, I was old enough to enter a State 4-H Record Book, and it was only natural to enter in Photography, which I won in that category that year, which was the biggest accomplishment I could have with photography in the 4-H program. In 2004, I was introduced to the computer software Adobe Photoshop Elements, and then in 2005 I was introduced to Adobe Photoshop 7, which was one of the best things digitally that could happen in my photography career ut the 4-H Program state wide. I created a full workshop and presented at many different 4-H conferences on Digital Photography. With digital photography beginning to be an interest in the general public, I thought it was time to teach people all they need to know about digital photography. A year later, I moved my attentions to a new technology, GPS and GIS, and put my photography on the back burner. I mainly took photos at conferences and 4-H events, and posted them online as well as create a afterglow photo slideshow at each conference. At this time, I stopped entering in the local fairs, and my photography came to a standstill other then teaching what I know. In 2007, I began getting more serious about my photography again, and it started with a camping trip to Yosemite National Park in June. I then decided I would have to get my own camera equipment, so I don’t have to keep borrowing my parents camera. In 2009, I purchased a Nikon D90 DSLR camera, and with that purchase, I began studying the advanced concepts of photography once again. I also began a switch back to photography on the Computer Corps, and created an entire new presentation, which is split in half. The first half is called “The Art of Photography” and the second half doesn’t have a name, but I teach how to edit photographs digitally. Currently, I am traveling to every state wide conference and a few other 4-H conferences and events teaching photography. On the side when I have time between school, work, and 4-H, I go out on photo shoots capturing what I see into a photograph. I plan on returning to entering my photographs in the fair in the future. For 2009, I am working on a few projects that take me away from my usual nature photography. I plan on working with different types of photography to help my learning process, and over time, I shall post the results on here. |


