Call & Response

a photographic dialogue

Tag: golf

Brother

The Call: Three at the Range — Cheryl It was another hot day, but that didn’t stop Henry, Luke and Sam from working on their games at the driving range. Luke is the one with the passion for golf, but I love it when his brothers dabble in it alongside him. The Response: Chic Magnet […]

Eagle

The Call: Almost There — Jessica My oldest son is almost an Eagle scout. He has one merit badge and one night of camping left. And then the Eagle project. He’s stalling out on that and it’s a race against time. On June 10th he turns 18 and the gig is up. Unfortunately for him, […]

Adult

The Call: Paris — Jessica I was very lucky to visit Paris as a child. My father was in the army and we were stationed in Munich at the time. That giant Eiffel tower made a huge impression on my six year old self. So did Versailles for that matter. I was lucky twice and […]

Passion

The Call: Six Iron, Five Iron — Cheryl Luke started walking the day he turned nine months old. He started swinging a golf club within nine months of that. His handicap is now 0.3. Luke is passionate about golf. He loves the challenge of mastering a sport that always throws something new at him. He […]

Flaunt

The Call: Photo Shoot — Cheryl Luke was happy to hear that he had once again been named Golfer of the Year for The Kennebec Journal. He loves to capitalize on opportunities for flaunting his golf skills. The Response: House Across the Street — Jessica I use to be able to get some pretty nice […]

Fair

The Call: Jump — Jessica Faint hearts never won fair maidens. The two-year-old hesitated for exactly two seconds and then followed his five-year-old brother, jumping down the entire flight of stairs two at a time. One time through was not enough. At the bottom, they turned and ran back up in order to hop down […]

Narrative

The Call: Guess What’s for Dinner? — Jessica Narrative. Story. In certain photography circles it’s a big deal and a constant topic of conversation. The ultimate goal is to tell stories with your photographs. But a story has a beginning, a middle and an end. How do you translate that into a single frame? I […]