Adobe Photoshop Elements 14, Released September 24, 2015
With an image that has one foot in Norman Rockwell and the other foot firmly planted in the dark sense of discovery that is both childhood and parenthood, I couldn't have been more surprised when Adobe approached us about this project.
Why would they want to brand their product with this image? What does it mean?
A friend suggested that the image might be about making something out of nothing, sending a d.i.y. message of infinite possibilities with the simple power of vision.
And with that in mind, this inspired use doesn't seem surprising at all.
Friday, September 25, 2015
Wednesday, September 23, 2015
Stanford Physics Department With Stand Ins
Monday, September 21, 2015
Monday, September 14, 2015
Augusta Lee Collins / The Stratosphere
So sorry to hear about the loss of Augusta Lee Collins.
As a photographer, you meet a lot of people just once. The meetings slip through your fingers and life very quickly. Some people stick with you, stay in your stratosphere, always reminding you that you had once crossed paths. Augusta was exactly that.
Onward ⚡
Augusta Lee Collins, 69, made a name for himself as a session drummer with numerous bands coming through the Bay Area, including sitting in with jazz greats Herbie Hancock, "Cannonball" Adderley, Sun Ra and Bobby Hutcherson. But over the last 30 years, Collins reinvented himself as a blues singer and guitarist and was a fixture at farmers' markets and blues jams in the region.
While he never achieved great fame, his long career left an impact on local musicians who remember him as influential and inspiring but very humble. In the course of his reinvention from drummer to singer and guitarist, he overcame a drug problem and homelessness but always remained an icon, Bay Area Blues Society executive director Ronnie Stewart said Wednesday.
In 2010, Collins was inducted into the West Coast Blues Hall of Fame. Collins' musical career dates back to the thriving West Oakland music scene of the 1960s, when his band the Metropolitan Sound Company would play downtown clubs, high school dances and outdoor concerts. Stewart said he first became aware of Collins while attending Fremont High School in 1966, when he would jump on an Alameda-Contra Costa Transit bus in East Oakland to go out for parties and dancing. Metropolitan Sound Company was among the bands he'd see.
"He was part of that whole era of young musicians who were making that crossover from blues to R&B," a movement that defined what came to be known as the "Oakland sound" in funk and R&B that drew the attention of artists nationwide, Stewart said. That first band played until the early 1970s, according to Stewart. After that is when Collins embarked on a career as a session drummer playing on albums and live for numerous artists working in and visiting the Bay Area.
As a photographer, you meet a lot of people just once. The meetings slip through your fingers and life very quickly. Some people stick with you, stay in your stratosphere, always reminding you that you had once crossed paths. Augusta was exactly that.
Onward ⚡
Augusta Lee Collins, 69, made a name for himself as a session drummer with numerous bands coming through the Bay Area, including sitting in with jazz greats Herbie Hancock, "Cannonball" Adderley, Sun Ra and Bobby Hutcherson. But over the last 30 years, Collins reinvented himself as a blues singer and guitarist and was a fixture at farmers' markets and blues jams in the region.
While he never achieved great fame, his long career left an impact on local musicians who remember him as influential and inspiring but very humble. In the course of his reinvention from drummer to singer and guitarist, he overcame a drug problem and homelessness but always remained an icon, Bay Area Blues Society executive director Ronnie Stewart said Wednesday.
In 2010, Collins was inducted into the West Coast Blues Hall of Fame. Collins' musical career dates back to the thriving West Oakland music scene of the 1960s, when his band the Metropolitan Sound Company would play downtown clubs, high school dances and outdoor concerts. Stewart said he first became aware of Collins while attending Fremont High School in 1966, when he would jump on an Alameda-Contra Costa Transit bus in East Oakland to go out for parties and dancing. Metropolitan Sound Company was among the bands he'd see.
"He was part of that whole era of young musicians who were making that crossover from blues to R&B," a movement that defined what came to be known as the "Oakland sound" in funk and R&B that drew the attention of artists nationwide, Stewart said. That first band played until the early 1970s, according to Stewart. After that is when Collins embarked on a career as a session drummer playing on albums and live for numerous artists working in and visiting the Bay Area.
Saturday, September 12, 2015
Tanium : Not Far From The Tree
Inspiration ?
Well I guess it's where you find it.
When Forbes called with a story about start up company Tanium, I was focused on the father/son relationship of founders Orion and David Hindawi.
An elaborate image setting them on Treasure Island, with San Francisco behind them was planned out, but to me the most honest image was found in their conference room.
During a staged moment where I asked them to get into an actual discussion, they fell into what I can only describe as "father and son body language", a personal dynamic programmed into the two of them from the very beginning. Two special people who have their own system, I was just thankful they allowed me to see into it for that afternoon.
Read about Orion and David in Forbes Magazine's feature HERE.
Well I guess it's where you find it.
When Forbes called with a story about start up company Tanium, I was focused on the father/son relationship of founders Orion and David Hindawi.
An elaborate image setting them on Treasure Island, with San Francisco behind them was planned out, but to me the most honest image was found in their conference room.
During a staged moment where I asked them to get into an actual discussion, they fell into what I can only describe as "father and son body language", a personal dynamic programmed into the two of them from the very beginning. Two special people who have their own system, I was just thankful they allowed me to see into it for that afternoon.
Read about Orion and David in Forbes Magazine's feature HERE.
Friday, September 11, 2015
The First Americans / National Geographic
Combing thru a hard drive and I came across this image from our week with Jim Chatters' team up in Seattle for the National Geographic story titled The First Americans. Haunting and almost human, this face of Naya was created by the team over the arc of a week. Lots of images of the process, but this ending image always seemed to inhabit a human quality that never settled in the others.
Monday, April 13, 2015
Again I Formed Whole / Patrick Mahoney

The most compelling story of the year landed on my plate during the first week of 2015.
Patrick Mahoney's story of a bike accident, brain damage and poetry will resonate with anyone who has peaked over the edge of their own mortality. A day of photographic collaboration staged in a reborn Berkeley house yielded so many life lessons I'm not sure how to spell it all out sufficiently, so I'll simply share a poem written by Patrick titled "Heaven".
Heaven
Where I want to be
until I find out
I’m already there.
This world beyond
is inside the wool
sweater my mother knit,
behind these eyes
my fingertips touch
each morning. I live outside
lands long settled and embrace
minutia—I smell the coffee
ground, then taste it brewed.
I feel the dirt road with my feet
through my black faded Chucks.
The end of the road
goes well beyond sight.
So I turn on tips of toes
and I am breathing deeply—
the air, tasting of oak-moss,
my eyes—still closed.
Read Patrick's story "Again I Formed Whole" written by Kara Peters HERE.

Wednesday, April 1, 2015
Game of Thrones / The Fans



A chilly San Francisco evening with beautiful light. We had cameras. We had ipods with audio recording apps.
There to meet the fans of Game of Thrones, a super popular HBO television series I know nothing at all about. And sometimes, of course, it's better that way. :)
This all came together for the story "Inside The Uber Geeky Game Of Thrones Season Five Premiere" for Bloomberg Business Week. Read it all HERE.

Thursday, March 19, 2015
Tonight : Lecture at The Battery Club SF
Eyes Wide Shut : Looking forward to getting behind the gates of The Battery Club tonight at part of Photography Salon VII. I'll be talking about ECHOLILIA and HOME, with copies of HOME for sale.
Here's what they say :
The Photography Salon opens on Thursday, March 19, at 7 p.m. In the salon, successful commercial photographer Timothy Archibald will be showing deeply personal and profound portraits of his autistic son Eli. Collected in the book "Echolilia," the photos show the young boy exploring his environment and trying out sensory experiences that might take him out of his isolated state. Archibald also documents his son’s art and writing projects, which quietly speak to his desire to know and communicate.
Berkeley-based Mimi Plumb will present selections from her wide-ranging photographic oeuvre over several decades with a recurring theme of women and girls. Her documentation of Cesar Chavez and the United Farm Workers in the 1970s is one of the most notable records of that important historic period. An avid horsewoman, she has also perfected the equine portrait, lending as much feeling and pathos to her animal subjects as her human ones.
Almost everyone living in San Francisco has a relationship to the iconic Mission District. Judy Walgren, who heads photography at the San Francisco Chronicle will provide the back story to the paper's stunning and provocative visual series documenting how the Mission District is changing during this boom time.
Here's what they say :
The Photography Salon opens on Thursday, March 19, at 7 p.m. In the salon, successful commercial photographer Timothy Archibald will be showing deeply personal and profound portraits of his autistic son Eli. Collected in the book "Echolilia," the photos show the young boy exploring his environment and trying out sensory experiences that might take him out of his isolated state. Archibald also documents his son’s art and writing projects, which quietly speak to his desire to know and communicate.
Berkeley-based Mimi Plumb will present selections from her wide-ranging photographic oeuvre over several decades with a recurring theme of women and girls. Her documentation of Cesar Chavez and the United Farm Workers in the 1970s is one of the most notable records of that important historic period. An avid horsewoman, she has also perfected the equine portrait, lending as much feeling and pathos to her animal subjects as her human ones.
Almost everyone living in San Francisco has a relationship to the iconic Mission District. Judy Walgren, who heads photography at the San Francisco Chronicle will provide the back story to the paper's stunning and provocative visual series documenting how the Mission District is changing during this boom time.
Wednesday, March 18, 2015
Pack 42 Art Merit Badge Tutorial
For Pack 42's Art Merit Badge Night I wanted to create a crash course in living and breathing and eventually solving the issues of contemporary photography.
Getting the kids set up with the classic trio of photographer, art director and digital tech, we all put together the series of photographs highlighted here:
Assignment One : The Photo Bomb
Assigment Two : Role Playing
Assignment Three : The History of Photography / Robert Frank's The Americans
Enjoy.
Tuesday, March 17, 2015
It Didn't Look This Good In Real Life
Reluctant dinner of sushi and sugar free soda at the Berkeley Marina.
Kinda messy and trashy, we make this snapshot and wow...it's romantic brotherly love in which youth and maturity combined will live forever.
Really, keep in mind, it's only a photograph.
An editor from France drops me a note the next day. She explains that she has been inspired by the work I've done with my children and would like to include this photograph in an anthology. She asks me to write an essay and I do, something about the rituals of dinner time while juggling my role as a parent. She accepts it in a confused way. While editing it all she asks one quick question:
"Who are those people in the beach photograph? Are they strangers?"
Kinda messy and trashy, we make this snapshot and wow...it's romantic brotherly love in which youth and maturity combined will live forever.
Really, keep in mind, it's only a photograph.
An editor from France drops me a note the next day. She explains that she has been inspired by the work I've done with my children and would like to include this photograph in an anthology. She asks me to write an essay and I do, something about the rituals of dinner time while juggling my role as a parent. She accepts it in a confused way. While editing it all she asks one quick question:
"Who are those people in the beach photograph? Are they strangers?"
Friday, February 27, 2015
Vantage / Medium / HOME
Great piece written by Taylor Glascock on my work for Medium.com's VANTAGE photography online magazine.
Focusing on life after the publication of ECHOLILIA and introducing the current book HOME, Taylor ties it all together with humor and grace:
In November 2014, Archibald released his latest book, Home, which is a quiet meditation on the dissolution of his marriage. He had been with his wife since age 19. He was living in the garage. Home wasn’t so easy to define.
Square black and white images are displayed side by side to denote presence and absence. Eli makes an appearance in the book, as does his younger brother, Wilson. The children are digging a hole. This hole reappears over and over again. “You try to fill in that hole, but it’s never really the same.”
Focusing on life after the publication of ECHOLILIA and introducing the current book HOME, Taylor ties it all together with humor and grace:
In November 2014, Archibald released his latest book, Home, which is a quiet meditation on the dissolution of his marriage. He had been with his wife since age 19. He was living in the garage. Home wasn’t so easy to define.
Square black and white images are displayed side by side to denote presence and absence. Eli makes an appearance in the book, as does his younger brother, Wilson. The children are digging a hole. This hole reappears over and over again. “You try to fill in that hole, but it’s never really the same.”
Read Taylor's piece on Medium.com HERE.
Buy your copy of HOME from Straylight Press HERE.
Thursday, February 26, 2015
PPGBA Lecture / Special Guest Star
The Best Western Grosvernor rises from a functional neighborhood on the outskirts of the San Francisco Airport like a hotel from another era, another culture. Shades of a bunker that could sustain a hit from a SCUD missile, suffering only blown out windows and keeping it's residents safe. Eli and I approach the space with curious anticipation. I was here to deliver my lecture, he was along for the ride, ideally hoping to also get to drink a Coke.
To say this event was sparsely attended would be generous at best. As always, the show must go on. Great to meet everyone involved in the PPGBA: Paolo Salcido, Julie Olson, Joseph Valenzuela ran the show. Super excited to meet long time inspirator photographer Mark Tucker from Nashville and new pals Icarian Photography from Berkeley.
As often happens at any speaking engagement, I'm always thankful- I learn more from the audience than I'm sure they learn from me. Peace.
Wednesday, February 25, 2015
Saturday, February 14, 2015
The Creative Family Tree We All Pick From
Bob Dylan gave this speech the other night that is floating around the internet. Totally fascinating view into the creative process, with all the mystery stripped away. He goes forward in detail about how he wrote particular songs and points out his direct influences. The best line, paraphrased here, could apply to any creative process. A solid acknowledgement of the creative family tree that we all are picking from and watering every day we do our work:
These songs didn't come out of thin air. I didn't just make them up out of whole cloth. There was a precedent. I just opened up a different door in a different kind of way.
More good stuff :
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Lecture Coming Up!
Timothy Archibald: Photographing the Family Landscape
Originally finding fascination in “the other,” Archibald's projects later took a turn inward and he has now focused closely on family for the past ten years. He’ll address the successes and failures that come when photographing those to whom access is unlimited and discuss ways to find the path to beginning and completing these projects. He will also share a variety of commercial projects that have sprung off his personal work and discuss the challenges of mixing the two genres. Bring your questions!
Thursday, February 19, 2015 / 7 pm – 9 pm
Location: Best Western Plus Grosvenor Hotel, 380 S. Airport Blvd., S. San Francisco. Tickets and info : http://ppgba.com/feb-19th-speaker/
These songs didn't come out of thin air. I didn't just make them up out of whole cloth. There was a precedent. I just opened up a different door in a different kind of way.
More good stuff :
The last thing I thought of was who cared about what song I was writing. I was just writing them. I didn't think I was doing anything different. I thought I was just extending the line. Maybe hard to pin down, but so what? A lot of people are hard to pin down and you’ve just got to bear it.
Just to keep things in perspective, Dylan also devotes at least four paragraphs to directly ridicule his critics and demand clarification as to why they focused on him and let other artists off the hook.
Just to keep things in perspective, Dylan also devotes at least four paragraphs to directly ridicule his critics and demand clarification as to why they focused on him and let other artists off the hook.
So much for not caring what people think. Why do I bring this up? I think whole thing just reinforces how even the most exalted artists get stung like we all do. Why am I bringing this up? When one has a lecture looming in a matter of days, you look everywhere you can for subject matter. :)
Lecture Coming Up!
Timothy Archibald: Photographing the Family Landscape
Originally finding fascination in “the other,” Archibald's projects later took a turn inward and he has now focused closely on family for the past ten years. He’ll address the successes and failures that come when photographing those to whom access is unlimited and discuss ways to find the path to beginning and completing these projects. He will also share a variety of commercial projects that have sprung off his personal work and discuss the challenges of mixing the two genres. Bring your questions!
Thursday, February 19, 2015 / 7 pm – 9 pm
Location: Best Western Plus Grosvenor Hotel, 380 S. Airport Blvd., S. San Francisco. Tickets and info : http://ppgba.com/feb-19th-speaker/
Friday, February 13, 2015
New Gallery / The Cats Of Instagram
What else?
The Cats Of Instagram on timothyarchibald.com.
It should be called My Cats On Instagram, but for now, this is what we got.
Enjoy it HERE.
The Cats Of Instagram on timothyarchibald.com.
It should be called My Cats On Instagram, but for now, this is what we got.
Enjoy it HERE.
Thursday, February 12, 2015
Thursday, February 5, 2015
Timothy Draper / Draper University

Breaking the ice with Timothy Draper for our brief photo shoot was really not hard at all, seeing that both my girlfriend and I went to Draper High School in Schenectady, N.Y. and Timothy was currently running something called Draper University. That, and the shared pun that is often shared when you meet someone with your own name.
Elegantly published in this month's Review On Business Magazine, edited by longtime favorite photo editor Clare Vandermeersch.
Wednesday, February 4, 2015
The New Home School / Wired.com
Always happy to have a rich story land in my lap to kick off the new year. Photo editors Neil Harris and Maria Lokke of Wired.com directed me to the home of Samantha and Chris Cook, a family homeschooling their kids in a contemporary way.Rich visuals and a rich home life, there really was a photograph to be made everywhere we looked.
Out today on Wired.com HERE.
Enjoy.



Tuesday, February 3, 2015
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