Wednesday, January 28, 2009

A Quick Interview With Me

Interviewer: Aubrey Stevenson

1. I saw in your 'about me' section that you love anything Coldplay. Tell me how music influences your life and the one album you would pick to take with you on a hot air balloon ride!

I use music when I'm writing. It's like the video accompaniment just plays itself in my head. If I'm feeling good, a little reggae will have me bouncing through the day. If I feel bad, Tom Waits will commiserate with me. If I had to take one album with me, I'd say Coldplay's "A Rush of Blood to the Head." That's good for all occasions.

2. What are the most difficult and the most rewarding things about photographing animals?

The most difficult thing about working with animals is getting them to be still when you want them still and getting them to move when you want them to move. The most rewarding thing is getting the shot; because usually there's so much work and time that has gone into it when you finally get something good, it's really satisfying.

3. I see you live in North Carolina. Do you like living there? Why or why not?

I love Asheville and the mountains. I hate the cold though. I miss Florida and the humidity. It sounds insane, I know, but when you have dry skin and perpetually cold feet, a tropical environment is just what the doctor ordered. Asheville is a neat place to be. There are good people here. I have trouble staying put in one place for any length of time, but I'm trying.

4. What inspired you most when deciding to write your first novel?

I think being rejected from the master's program I had applied to was my biggest motivator. Most of the time when I set out to do something, I expect to get it. It's arrogant, but that's me. When I didn't get into the program, I just said, "fine, I'll do it myself."

The story idea came when I saw a quote from the bible about Nephilim and an interpretation about them being half human half angel. I was like, "I read the bible, and I don't remember that part." So I looked it up and there it was. I thought, "how cool is that. What would I do if I suddenly discovered I was half angel?" and the story grew from there.

5. I saw your short animated film. Very funny! Any thoughts about bigger film projects in the future?

I have a couple of ideas. I'd like to do a horror film. I've been wanting to shoot a feature for a while now, but it's all about the story. If you don't have a really good story, the rest is irrelevant. I'm in development now trying to flush out a script. I really want to finish my book first so I can move on and get to movie making.



Here's the directions:
1. Leave me a comment saying, "Interview me."
2. I will respond by emailing you five questions. (I get to pick the questions).
3. You will update your blog with the answers to the questions.
4. You will include this explanation and an offer to interview someone else in the same post.
5. When others comment asking to be interviewed, you will ask them five questions.

The Magic of Childhood

Being a kid is just magic. It’s a time when opening a peanut shell and finding a nut inside is like discovering a pearl in an oyster. In childhood stairs work better than slides and no matter how bruised your butt gets, going down them never gets old.
Katie

Saturday, January 17, 2009

Baby Brandon




Remember a while back how I said the two most difficult things you can shoot are animals and children? Well I must just love the challenge of it, because I had to go and tackle the children half of that feat. I was so excited that my trip down to Florida happened to be right after my cousin’s baby was born. I’ve never shot a newborn and I was ready to go all Anne Geddes on him. Brandon, the baby, had different plans.

The first night I was there, he couldn’t settle down and sleep. He also didn’t want to lay down, or be held in any of the ways I wanted him held. He would seem to relax and then when everything was in position, he would start crying. I did get a few nice shots that night, but it wasn’t nearly what I had hoped. Luckily I was able to go back the next day and Brandon slept through the entire shoot. I guess what I’ve learned from all this is that children and animals work on their own schedules and you just have to be patient enough to wait for them…that and catching them while they’re sleeping helps too.

Katie

Tuesday, January 13, 2009

Jacksonville, FL

It’s been years since I’ve seen Carl and Zack and I’m amazed how much they’ve both changed since I saw them last. Everyone told me how tall Carl was, but it didn’t sink in until he was standing next to me... and he was the tallest! We had fun shooting fireworks, that’s Zack shooting a roman candle. And I couldn’t resist getting some pictures of their dog Kaylee whose tongue sticks out like Maes.
Katie

Sunday, January 11, 2009

Kayaking in Jacksonville


Before going to South Florida, I spent a day in Jacksonville with Aunt Marnie, Uncle Todd, Carl and Zack. Aunt Marnie and I went on a kayaking trip through a tributary that lead to the St. Johns River. It was eighty degrees out and I had to borrow flip flops and shorts. I got a few turtle shots, but my favorite is a turtle butt as the turtle slipped away into the water. We passed a canoe with a pet parrot at the bow; I thought that was pretty neat.
Katie

Friday, January 09, 2009

Denmark, South carolina

I’m just back from a whirl wind trip to Florida. I had just three days I could take off from work, so I decided to use them to go see my family in Florida and meet my cousin’s brand new baby. On the trip down I took a small country highway through South Carolina and I passed some really neat old southern style mansions. I had been making good time up until I decided to stop and take pictures, but it was worth it. Most of these houses were in or around the small town of Denmark, South Carolina.
Katie

Thursday, January 01, 2009

My first Animation

The animation wars have begun. It all started when Ben, a friend of mine at work, showed me an animation he had made. It was a simple movie, but it inspired me to make a simple animation myself. So armed with clear plastic notebook sleeves, paper, and some dry erase markers I came up with the following movie. After I showed my movie to Ben, it was on. He is now working on a claymation movie, to which I will answer with a claymation of my own. For now, here is the first animation. I estimate, it took me about 4 hours to draw this out, and 2 hours to edit.

Katie

ktdamien has shared a video with you on YouTube:

The Horror
A stickman discovers his hometown is over run with zombies. Will he make it out alive?45 seconds of cheezy animated horror movie goodness. Drawn using paper, clear plastic sleeves, colored pencils, and a dry erase marker.

If you can't see the link above, copy and paste this: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qftYDY2EzYM