Archive for the 'Life' Category

Kitchen La Bohème

My ever-evolving side project, my personal food blog Kitchen La Bohème, has a fresh new look. I’m always at my happiest when I’m preparing and photographing dishes for KLB! Tweaking the graphic elements and branding, and overseeing the project as it developed into the “Bohemian Kitchen” that I’d originally dreamed up has been an exciting process.

KLB is a source for Vegan and Vegetarian recipes and other food-related content, and a platform for inciting social change by showing how beautiful and delicious plant-based cuisine can be. Check out the full blog here!

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Mysterious Decay

For the past few months, I’ve been considering the concept of decay — the process of destruction, death, The End — both figuratively and literally. Relationships sometimes deteriorate, a lot like the bowl of figs that got pushed to the back of my refrigerator and was accidentally forgotten for a month. There is an evolution to decay — the mold on the figs; the distance and communication breakdown in a dying relationship… It grows over time.

I became interested in this process initially in the literal sense after finding and subsequently photographing those figs, hairy with psychedelic mold. I began to photograph them daily until they were just a pile of unrecognizable mush. I’d been doing so much food photography for my food blog Kitchen La Boheme already, this was just a natural twisted extension of what I’d been working on with my recipes. But the process was pretty far along when I’d discovered the figs — I wished I’d noticed them and begun the photography sooner. So I started a little science experiment, purchasing and allowing other fruits and vegetables to rot while photographing the process. Some deflated and shriveled, some oozed and grew strange forms of mold; and I photographed them all in various stages of decay in carefully plated and styled shots, some even in intricately developed tablescapes. In the end, what I’ve created has become an unsettling series of surreal still lifes (and the total opposite of food porn); but it’s only just the beginning.

There is a personal side to decay and the way it develops and continues, or sometimes stops (think aging skin; mummification…). But I’m also thinking of the breakdown that can occur between people. How does it begin, and how does someone document that process? There are many ways to conceptually show deterioration…

Above is one of the initial, very basic, photos of the figs that started it all. Vibrant, dark, mysterious decay. I don’t want to post any of the tablescape photos yet — the ones that are more elaborately styled, much darker and more emotional — at least not until I have a final version of the series pulled together. But for now, I wanted to share the idea behind the project. There will be final photos to come!

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Evolution

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Police Line

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Welcome Back + New Website

I am swamped! With nearly everything in life keeping me busy around the clock, I’d forgotten all about the Hyperfocus blog. Welcome back, if you still follow. I’ve made a promise to myself to get back to updating this blog with new information and work as often as possible. For now, you can check out some of my most recent personal work: food blog Kitchen La Boheme.

KLB keeps me incredibly busy during the small amount of free time I have these days. Aside from KLB, I’m still working on figuring out how to make Sweeties New York Pastry Co. a full reality, and working a 9-6 graphic design job.

And I’m happy to announce that a new HyperfocusNyc.com showcasing my graphic design work and also some of my food photography has launched. Check it out here!

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Twitter Tips and Strategies for Beginners

So you’ve just started tweeting. Now what? The way I see it, Twitter is not simply a social networking web site — it’s a wonderful business tool for making connections, job seeking, marketing and broadcasting. Making Twitter work for you in these areas is not hard, and if you want to be smart, there are things you can do to quickly increase your visibility and attract quality followers who are interested in what you have to say and share an industry connection with you, and keep yourself off of sites like this one. Here are some tips and strategies:

I know it’s tempting when you’re just starting out, to only follow personal friends and maybe a small group of public figures of interest to you. And while it’s true that this will gain you a small initial following (of course your friends are going to follow you back), it’s not going to do much in giving you a broad forum for getting your message across. So what do you do? How do you get new followers?

I think the most important thing is to first begin tweeting. Don’t leave an empty or sparse feed for potential followers to see. Think about what you look for in someone to follow. Do they tweet often? Is what they have to say interesting? Do they share valuable articles and advice? Can they be funny at times? No one wants to follow a boring robot. And it may be hard to hear, but no one cares what you ate for dinner — unless it was a zebra steak while riding bareback on an elephant through the Serengeti. Think about your target audience and fill up your Twitter feed with tweets that will be of some value to them.

Now that you’ve filled up your feed with interesting tweets that pertain to your target audience and have also sprinkled in some humorous and personal thoughts, it’s time to attract more followers. Contrary to what many people think, it’s important to be proactive in earning followers at first. You can’t expect to sit around and tweet and miraculously garner a massive following. You and I know that everything you say is mesmerizing and inherently brilliant. But the problem is that no one else cares. Why? Because nobody knows who you are. Unless you’re John Mayer or someone who is well-known within your field, no one really has any idea who you are. So why would they seek you out and follow you? You have to go get them!

Start by making a list of companies and professionals in your industry who are of interest to you and whom you’d like to connect with if you haven’t been able to already. Most people and companies are using Twitter and if you find them and follow them, many will return the favor and follow you back.

Another strategy is to make a list of keywords that relate to your areas of interest and input them into Twitter’s internal search engine to find people you wish to follow. Again, many people will follow you back and even if they don’t initially, there are ways to sway them in the future that I’ll share with you next.

In order to get and keep valuable followers, your profile must contain your name or company’s name, a location and a web address, a photo and a custom background. Your feed must be interesting and it must be obvious that you are a normal human being who is actively connecting with others and utilizing Twitter in an appropriate way — not some robot who is only interested in spewing out marketing crap about his own brand to anyone within range.

And therein lies the easiest way to gain followers who initially did not follow you back. Interact with them! Retweet their most insightful messages and reply to them with an interesting question or remark. They may have just overlooked you the first time, and interacting with them periodically is a great way to earn their respect and get a follow-back. And most important: other potential followers will see that you are interacting with others and know that you’re a real person. But pay attention to detail when retweeting and replying — make sure you have the person’s @ Twitter name correct and also the original information you are retweeting. Attention to detail says a lot about you as a person and/or potential employee or business partner.

Once you’ve managed to get your first hundred or so followers, the rest will start to come on their own if you maintain a quality feed. Don’t be afraid to share stories and articles that are not written by you or are not from your personal blog or web site. Sharing is one of the most attractive things about the Twitter community, and no one wants to follow the guy who is clearly only interested in self-promotion. That way, when you do share your personal work, people will be more inclined to want to take a look, because you haven’t been in their face about it with every tweet.

Twitter is simple to use and fun, and it doesn’t take a rocket scientist’s I.Q. to figure out that making it work for you can be one of the most valuable marketing weapons in your arsenal.

 

EDIT
Another tip: Don’t protect your tweets! People generally want to see what you’re tweeting about before making the decision to follow you back or not. Also, you want to make it as easy for them as possible to click and follow you back.

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Another Dimension

I sort of think that when you’ve been a music fan and collector of Rolling Stone magazine from the age of like thirteen, walking into a room, right into Omar Rodriguez-Lopez deep in animated conversation with David Fricke is like stepping into another dimension. And that’s exactly where I ended up when I went backstage as a guest of drummer Thomas Pridgen and hung out with Grammy-award-winning progressive rock band The Mars Volta after their show at the Roseland Ballroom in NYC last night.

I won’t get crazy with every minute detail. But I will say that I met everyone in the band, including Omar and his longtime bandmate and Mars Volta frontman, Cedric Bixler-Zavala.

Special thanks to Thomas, who is not only a phenomenal drummer but also a genuinely nice person, for welcoming me into his little Mars Volta family. Here’s a photo to commemorate the experience that came out real awesome, of my legs and Omar’s legs:

omar_legs

By the way, the actual show was amazing. Here is a setlist:

Son Et Lumiere
Intertiac E.S.P.
Goliath
Cotopaxi
Roulette Dares
Viscera Eyes
Halo of Nembutals
Eunuch Provocateur
Ilyena
Teflon
Drunkship of Lanterns
Luciforms
The Widow
Wax Simulacra

And if you don’t know who Thomas Pridgen is? You should! Check out this video from YouTube.

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