Blog — Emily Caldwell Photography

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The Creative Heart of Emily Caldwell Photography

A few nights ago, I was sorting through an old, old, old portfolio site I had made for myself back in 2010. When I first opened the home page, I felt a little... guilty. Like I'd wronged myself. We all expect to grow and change in 5 years' time, but sometimes the growth isn't what we thought it would be. Sometimes, while developing one part of a heart, another vital piece gets pushed aside.

I'd like to share a little history about my creative journey. This is history that, until I was flipping through process books and websites and old portfolio pieces a few days ago, I had almost forgotten. But, with the direction I'll be taking my business in the coming months, I feel this is a vital part of me to share because this is where my passion comes to life.

2008-2009 process book

2008-2009 process book

Brag moment: My 2009-2010 process book was turned in for credit and received an "A+++" with the note: "Raw, vulgar, I love it. You nailed it."

Brag moment: My 2009-2010 process book was turned in for credit and received an "A+++" with the note: "Raw, vulgar, I love it. You nailed it."

In 2008, I was attached at the hip to my best friend, Chelsea. We would spend 80% of our time after school clipping fashion magazines and creating some honestly vulgar "collage-y" interpretations of pop culture, pasted into required reading books from our English class that we hated. (My "process book" was The Old Man and The Sea, in case you were wondering) We'd take inspiration from the colors, textures, and compositions we created in those books and bring it alive on camera. Chelsea would get dressed up in something classy, sexy or downright weird. We'd take my little Canon Rebel XTi outside and find a well-lit spot, or we'd go to my brother's old empty bedroom, drop a bed sheet down the wall, and I'd use his car work lights for studio lighting. We did some variation of this almost every day for two years.

For two years, I did nothing with my spare time but create. And looking back, given my knowledge and the tools I had to work with, I am damn proud of what I created.

Fast forward to fall of 2009. I had gained admission into my dream school, Minneapolis College of Art and Design, with plans to pursue a career in fashion and editorial photography. I was happy. I was sleep deprived and sometimes my work got shredded to pieces in critiques, but I at least had momentum. I organized regular Fashion Friday events with my friend and art director, Zamin Dharsi, collaborating with all kinds of local artists and creatives; I was doing what I loved even when it wasn't the assignment.

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But at some point, I got spooked. I don't remember exactly how or why. I don't know if it was something that was said to me by a well-meaning friend or professor, or if it was the weight of the idea that my art would have to be meaningful and unique to sustain my career. In a sea of artists of all levels, I couldn't help but compare myself and feel inadequate. So, I left MCAD to "figure it out."

Reality check: You know what happens to students who leave school to "figure it out?" Most of the time, they don't. At least, not for a really long time. I can't say I regret my decision to leave school. I think huge parts of me--parts totally unrelated to my creative life--needed to grow or heal before I was ready to pursue my art. I do, however, regret that when I left school, I left my art with it. I should have known better!

It was a long time before I really picked my camera back up. I continued shooting occasionally, either at the request of friends and family or when I had a creative urge. But for the most part, my creativity was stifled by fear of the unknown. As an artist, I was completely paralyzed by fear.

When my husband, Nick, and I got together, I really got the what-for. Nick knew my work from far before we were a couple or married (in fact, I took his moody-guitar-player senior photos back in the day). He knew my talent and he loved that about me. Nick pushed me. At first it was, "Don't you want to do photography again?" or, "Would you like to shoot this session for my buddy?" I'd respond with a sheepish excuse: "I haven't shot anything in so long" or "I don't have the right equipment" or "I'm just not ready." Finally, his "do you wants" turned into him volunteering me for every type of session or event under the sun, which led to my hesitant first few bookings.

When my passion for photography came back, it honestly took me by surprise. I'm no longer a 19-year-old college student with nothing to my name but a beat up Toyota Celica and a closet full of hand-me-downs. I am now a wife and a mother; people are depending on me to do this right. I don't know why I dared to jump in like I did, investing so much of my time, money and heart. If I had to guess, I'd say (as cliche as this sounds), I did it for my daughter. In 17 years, Olivia will be going off to college to start her own career. I don't want her decisions to be based on fears. I need her to know that it's okay to fail, as long as you try with all of your heart. I can't teach her that if I don't show her that.

Last year, I committed most of my time, all of my money, and a little bit of my heart to my business. This year, I'm doing things differently. This year, I'm committing some of my time, a little bit of my money, and ALL of my creative heart (but not my family heart--shout out to you, husband, you tolerant, neglected man!)

How will that change Emily Caldwell Photography? How will that change my style and how I do business? It’s going to be amazing… but more on that later.

Yours,
Emily

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Surprise Proposal // Taylor & Tyler // Steilacoom, WA

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Surprise Proposal // Taylor & Tyler // Steilacoom, WA

The first time Tyler Howard came over to our house was last Thanksgiving. Every year, my husband, Nick, and I host a Thanksgiving dinner for all of the soldiers who didn't go home for the holiday. I remember overhearing Tyler having a conversation with Nick, declaring his love for his best friend, Taylor, back home in California. "Well, why don't you ask her out, man?" Nick asked him. "I'm going to!" Tyler declared. "I'm gonna do it! Next time I go home!" (Yes, Tyler is a person who talks in exclamations a lot.)

He actually didn't. It wasn't until Taylor flew in a few months later to visit that Tyler finally officially asked her to be his girlfriend. See, Taylor and Tyler have the storybook romance… Boy meets girl in high school, boy gets put in friend zone, boy and girl become inseparable best friends, boy falls in love with girl, girl (eventually) realizes she loves boy too. I swear, this is not a chick flick plot. These two genuinely grew up riding horses, learning to dance on a hill by their houses, hanging out in coffee shops… I mean, it sounds like it's straight out of a movie.

So when Tyler revealed to me a few months later that he was ready to pop the question, I insisted that he hire a photographer. "Every girl wants a photographer at her surprise proposal!" I reminded him every chance I got. So, I was obviously thrilled when he asked me to photograph it for him. We planned it out meticulously a couple of weeks before. He would take her to the park in Steilacoom by their future apartment, a small bluetooth speaker would be set up and waiting for him to play their song, and he would dance with her on this beautiful white platform overlooking Puget Sound. I'd be hiding just in front of the platform out of sight, and at the end of the song, he'd reach into his boot and I'd hurry into position. It would all happen at golden hour with the sun in front of them on a beautiful day…

There was one flaw in our master plan. We were SO excited about how perfect it was, we didn't think of a plan B. Nick and I got down there early and set everything up. I crouched down in front of the platform as planned and Nick disappeared into an alley. Then, a couple walked up. I peeked up from the platform and smiled at them. Taylor and Tyler were approaching quickly and I froze. How do I kick these people off the platform?! I tried to make it very obvious what I was doing without shouting at them to leave, and even gave them the universal "shh" signal, like, "don't rat me out." Then they started talking to each other in Spanish and all I could understand was, "photo." Oh, great, so they saw me and were probably going to give me away!

I heard their boots hit the platform and immediately Taylor ran over to the railing and leaned over. I was RIGHT UNDER HER NOSE! I quickly melted into the side of the platform as best as I could. Tyler spotted me crouched down and started laughing. "Tyler, why are you laughing?!" Taylor asked. "Oh, I just saw some lady pick a wedgie…" "Uh huh. You're acting weird, why are you acting weird?" and then a few minutes later I heard, "You're really sweaty, it's not that hot out!" and almost laughed.

After about 10 minutes… a really good leg workout for me, crouching down there… Tyler texted me and said he was going to do it on the bench. There were 3 benches! I was freaking out, I had no idea what to do and Taylor was starting to get annoyed with how he was glued to his phone. At one point, I thought I knew which bench and was gonna make a run for it, but when I peeked out they were right in front of me! I quickly ducked back down thinking I'd ruined it. I texted him to come down by the fence and do it, thinking I might just have a shot at catching it if he did. So he did, he totally winged it and it turned out great! He played the song on his phone while I hovered around the platform taking pictures through any opening I could find. I watched them dance and then he started to crouch down. He was digging in his boot for forever!

Finally, he got down on his knee. At this point, I started running, still crouched (I don't know why…), trying to catch her reaction. She saw me -- "EMILY? EMILY!" and just started laughing.

Tyler was so nervous and excited, he tried to put her ring on her right hand! Nick had been hiding out with all the props (and our sleeping baby), so he came out of hiding to help me out with the rest of the shoot.

They loved all of the props we surprised them with--especially the bottle of champagne!

These two were so much fun to work with. I love working with people who aren't afraid to let loose and have some fun in front of the camera! They were both totally natural and didn't even act like there was a camera in their faces--and that is what lifestyle photography is all about!

It was such a precious moment and I'm so glad I got to capture it. They were so much fun to photograph! Taylor is so relaxed and cool, she is going to be such an awesome bride for a lucky photographer to work with.

Taylor and Tyler texted their parents and closest friends to share the news, then we wrapped up the night with burgers at Topside Grill. It all couldn't have gone better. The weather was beautiful and Taylor's reaction was priceless!

You can view Taylor & Tyler's full gallery here.

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