Finally getting organized at StorybyVideo.com. We launched the site in a rush last year and, busy with many projects, let it flounder. But, we know we do good work and we need to put ourselves out there, so we’re gearing up and reaching out — looking for work. Tell a friend.
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Sunny day football: ODU at URI
Three yards and a cloud of shadows
It had been a while (10 years or so?) since I last photographed a football game, so when The Virginian-Pilot called about photographing Old Dominion University at University of Rhode Island, I jumped at the chance. But wait, ODU football? When I lived in Norfolk, ODU didn’t have a football team? But, they do now, and they’re pretty good. ODU 31, URI 23.
A little rusty, under-lensed and cursing the clear blue sky, it was a nice challenge and a great way to spend a Saturday afternoon.
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AScottWeddings.com — Photojournalistic Wedding Photography in Newport, Providence RI and nearby Massachusetts is Launched
AScottWeddings.com is open for business. The WordPress site uses a new theme called Sidewinder — and a boatload of excellent customer support — by GraphPaperPress.com. GPP and Sidewinder in particular, work hard to maintain a minimalist design, emphasizing the photographs. Maybe it’s a little too minimal — the little link icons in the lower right corner of the opening page photos a little understated. If you click that link, the galleries open up, sliding left to right, displaying that gallery. Beneath that gallery you will see navigation arrows taking the viewer (brides!) to more galleries in the collection.
Footer links and menu links direct viewers to a pricing page, information about albums, how to purchase prints, answers to wedding questions and an availability calendar — you gotta love Google.
In the not too distant future, there will be password-protected Your Wedding pages, where brides and grooms, family members and friends can post and retrieve information — itineraries, directions, to-do lists and reminders, view album layouts and video, links to the gallery to purchase prints without pestering the newlyweds and more. A menu link called Wisdom is a place for couples, let’s be honest, mostly brides, can offer advice, coupon codes or other wedding wisdom. The Wisdom section and the Your Wedding pages will be developed in the coming months.
Thank you to my Facebook friends who offered guidance about whether or not to use “kick-ass.” (Not!) But, I have adopted that phrase as a state of mind and will let the brides decide. After all, what couple wouldn’t want a kick [butt] wedding photographer?
We are ready for some comments — remember, just click those little links?
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GraphPaperPress Link Love For AScottWeddings
Thank you to Thad Allender and Graph Paper Press for a mention in a blog post about early adopters to their themes.
For the past couple weeks — with much help from the incredibly responsive GPP support forum — I have been working on a new wedding photography website, ascottweddings.com which uses a spanking-new GPP WordPress theme called Sidewinder. Wedding Photography by Scott Kingsley is almost ready for primetime, so please check it out. Any suggestions, please comment here or there.
And of course, take a look at the other very cool GPP Sidewinder sites:
A tribute to early theme adopters
Users who adopt version 1.0 of anything deserve serious respect. Without these early adopters, software developers would be permanently stuck in beta testing mode. So, today we’re paying homage to these pioneering users who have adopted early releases of our themes as a way to say thanks. Sit back and enjoy!
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AS220 Photo Grand Opening Party
It’s tonight. But hey, it’s free!
- AS220 Photo Grand Opening Party
- Saturday, February 5, 2011
- 7-10 PM
- The Mercantile Block, 131 Washington Street, Providence RI
- (Entrance on Martha Street, Mercantile building rear)
- Free
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Is It OK To Use Kick-Ass in a Wedding Photography Website Description?
To Kick-Ass or Not to Kick-Ass
I’m working on a new wedding-only website — using a WordPress theme by Graph Paper Press, a side-slider called Sidewinder — but what do you care about that?
The question is the use of the hyphenation — kick-ass — on the About page in the site description and in the site description meta data. Will brides be offended by someone who is, or claims to be, a kick-ass wedding photographer? If I were a bride, I would definitely want a kick-ass wedding photographer.
What should I claim to be? Awesome? Really, really good? Better than average? Superb? Super-duper? Nice?
I’m looking for some help here — what’s better than kick-ass? Kick-butt, perhaps, but that’s just backin’ away from it without taking the heat. If you’re kick-ass, you can take the heat, you know? Please, brides especially, what do you think? Leave a comment!
Take a look. Weddings.ascottkingsley.com is a work in progress so don’t believe everything you read there yet, but I think you’ll see that Graph Paper Press is a kick-ass theme producer, and, well, I don’t mean to brag, but I’m pretty good too.
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Warning: Blatantly Promotional Post for Digital Photography Classes in Bristol
New Camera for Christmas? Want to Learn How to Make It Do Your Bidding?
The good people at Bristol Workshops and Oggi Photography in Bristol, Rhode Island can help you learn how to use that new-fangled digital camera that you just had to have for Christmas. Here’s co-owner, Julie Brigidi‘s invitation:
How many times have you wished that you knew how to work that new digital camera (or not so new!)? Do all those buttons and dials do things that you understand or are you getting out of focus, overexposed images that are useless? (Don’t you LOVE photographing your children and pets?)
The recent digital technology is a gift if you know how to use it. There are websites and books that can teach and are very helpful if you are able to learn by reading. I’m not one of those people. I need a teacher, a patient, real person that can explain things to me – sometimes a few times in a few different ways until I “get it”. So that’s what I wanted for those of you that have asked us countless times, “Where can I take a class that will help me learn how to use my new camera?”
Our parent company, Bristol Workshops in Photography is offering classes that teach you how to use your camera! Mark Abbott teaches the classes. He’s patient, really really smart and funny. In short, he’s a terrific teacher. (You can read about him and see some of his beautiful photos on our Oggi website.)
Read about the classes on the Bristol Workshops website for details or call us at 401-253-2351
Classes are:
January 23, 2011 – Intro to Digital Photo. Bring your camera and a manual.
February 6, 2011 – Intro to Photoshop. Bring a laptop if you have one.
February 26, 2011 – Intro to Digital photo.
Check the Bristol Workshops website for more dates.
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The Whites of His Eyes at JWU
Uncommonly Snowy
The baby snowman with owl-like eyes, nestled in the statue’s lap, was reason enough, I guess, for me to make this photograph of the statue of longtime JWU Chancellor, Morris W. Gaebe. But what I really liked was the snow sticking to the “whites” of his eyes and the rolling-his-eyes impression those little bits of snow create.
Mr. Gaebe sits at the entrance to Gaebe Commons on the JWU campus in downtown Providence, Rhode Island.
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Tackling a Nagging Web Video Task
Motivated by Free LinkedIn Ads
I’m not sure why I am surprised that after I responded to the LinkedIn offer of $100 worth of free self-service ads, people actually are clicking on them.
My ad is for website video and, following the advice in the LinkedIn ad guidelines, I’m sending my clicks to a page that shows what I’m offering. And boy, was that page ugly! So I’ve spent the evening trying to figure out the web-ubiquitous JW Player, adding video and thumbnails and getting organized. I knew it had to be done sooner or later, but who likes to organize their sock drawer, you know?
It’s all looking good enough now, so here’s hoping some folks spend the oncoming snow storm viewing the vids. I’d be overjoyed if someone could tell me why the control bar insists on shortening and hopping up into the video, as in the example here:
At least the socks stay where you put them.
If you’d like to use the free ad coupon code, just let me know, it’s good for a few more weeks — until 2/9ish.
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Portrait: Meet Mr. Ambassador, Patrick Lynch, Former AG
Great Power and a Really Sweet Jump Shot
Former Rhode Island Attorney General Patrick Lynch is famously fond of the Stan Lee/Spider Man movie line: “With great power comes great responsibility.” All of the power and responsibility that comes with serving two terms as the RI AG has seemingly not hurt his jump shot at all.
A few days before his term ended, Mr. Lynch, Brown ’87 — a star on Brown’s 1986 Ivy League championship basketball team — was perfectly at ease knocking down three pointers with a gummy old basketball at the South Side Boys and Girls Club on Louisa Street in Providence.
The Brown Alumni Magazine asked me to arrange a portrait for an article marking the end of the notable alum’s service to the state and the beginning of his new job as the Institute for International Sports’ ambassador to the 2011 World Youth Peace Summit. He agreed to squeeze me in between engagements in his final days in office.
At the conclusion of a small press conference about the achievements made by his office and community leaders in the fight against lead poisoning in children, I asked Mr. Lynch to take off his suit coat, loosen his tie and roll up his sleeves for the portrait. He was happy to oblige, saying that he was very comfortable in the Club gym — a place where he spent countless hours playing basketball during his youth.
Mr. Lynch is a good-looking man — tall and trim with an easy smile — and he photographs well. We chatted a little between shots and he repeatedly told me to take my time as I scurried around adjusting the lights. He certainly didn’t seem like a man who was too worried about being late for his starting-any-minute lunch meeting across town.
Between setups, Mr. Lynch and a fellow from his office couldn’t resist playing a little ball. They even talked gentlemanly trash as Mr. Lynch swished jump shots over his much shorter associate. As I reset the lights for another portrait, I kicked myself for missing the spontaneous moments as the two big boys played basketball.
After a few more quick photographs, the AG buttoned his sleeves, tightened his tie, thanked me for my time, and, late for lunch, shuffled out of the gym.
To read Gordon Morton’s article in the recent issue of BAM: Just click the cover.
Comments are always welcome, encouraged even.

































