Monday, March 2, 2009

Digital Darkroom Worshop Keeps Things Real

Still reveling in the joy of my website being published and all of the wonderful comments, emails, and phone calls it is no wonder that Saturday morning I woke up in great spirits. I was off to a daylong Lightroom workshop and ready to impress. My clothes were picked out, my computer bag packed and the car even vacuumed. I'm pretty sure I even curled my hair. This was a workshop, but I also figured it would be a chance to meet some PDX photogs, do a little networking, treat myself to a Soy Chai and nourish the creative spirit inside. I was glowing. For about 30 minutes.

Well, maybe a bit longer considering the amount of time I took to get ready, but once I got in the car I believe the glow lasted approximately 30 minutes. It started to fade when I drove up and down Belmont amongst a sea of unnamed buildings looking for a building number that didn't exist. Then faded slightly more when I could not get my cellphone to turn on despite the fact that it had been charging all night. And then faded just a wee bit more when I decided to walk into Zupan's to ask a cash register if they had a phone book and and phone I could use. Did you know there is basically no such thing as a phone booth anymore? I'm pretty sure the glow was completely gone by the time I walked into the workshop 25 minutes late, hoping there would be a seat in the back, and settling into the reality that by the time I made my way to the only empty seat in the room everyone was going to know who I was. I guess I discovered a new kind of networking scheme to make people notice you. Or maybe that's just what they call "making a grand entrance."

It gets worse, now that the radiant glow was gone a deep red tint began to emerge on my cheeks. After I had unpacked my computer from my oh-so-chic red computer clutch, asked the gentleman in front of me if I could rearrange the outlet strip so that my cord could fit, set my chai down, and crossed my peek-a-boo heel adorned feet I began to feel a presence. Or maybe it was a lack of a presence. The warm-fuzzy estrogen laden smiles of encouragement I find from all my photog friends was missing and in it's place was about 18 middle aged men. I was alone. And out of place. And definitely not glowing anymore.

Hello, Girl With the Silver Lining. My good friend Kelly Jones has a new CD out and this is one of my favorite songs. It's not a song to listen to while chilling with friends. It's a song to pull out when the world around you says, "No you can't." Cartoonish, happy, and mood lifting - that's what I needed. I finished my day humming, "Yes I can.", flashing mega-watt smiles, oozing positive charms, and learning to edit, retouch, and store my images like a super hero.

No, the day didn't turn out quite like I hoped, but it was an amazing workshop. If you live in the Portland area and are looking to learn more about workflow, Lightroom, or Photoshop. GO. We have a genius living right here in our midst. Mark Fitzgerald of the Digital Darkroom teaches a variety of workshops and even does private tutoring. I can not even begin to tell you all how much I learned in one 8 hour day. It was so worth it.

1 comment:

jlchristblog said...

cant' wait to hear about it!

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