Portrait Wrangling
My friend David was kind enough to let me photograph him a few weeks ago. He's someone who can make orchids grow, which places him squarely at the intersection of wizard and genius in my book.
I have a hard time with succulents.
The space was amazing. The light was gorgeous and David was a fantastic (and patient) model. Having his dog Frankie around didn't hurt, either. I was trying a few things with the shoot that I hadn't done before, and I was curious to see how it would all turn out.
It's tough experimenting in a craft where precision and technique are paramount to "success." Letting go of the familiar is intimidating, particularly in this medium. Smartphones and Instagram have made photographers of us all. Not that I mind that much. I like the opportunity and the challenge it presents.
Still.
Portraits are tricky. I'm risk averse. Rather than shoot from the hip, I decided to shoot further from the heart.
Hopefully it resonates.
I'll have a chance to do it all again next week, when I head up to Sunset Blvd with another new friend. This time we're looking for a little Hollywood glamour.
(I'm still a bit stunned that I can now use "Sunset Blvd" in a sentence, let alone as a shoot location. I'm sure I'll get used to it, as I continue with what I'm now calling project #portraitLA.)
Until then, a huge thank you to David, The Orchid Wrangler, for his energy, patience and time.
And Frankie, too.
Shadows
Stairs, West Hollywood. (c) Jared Fortunato | Photography
I'm obsessed with the shadows.
I watch them transform the surfaces of our little house, creating geographic typography on the walls and floors, casting everyday objects with a mysterious form.
The quality of light as it moves through the day is what gets me the most. It's unexpected. Fantastic. Mutable beyond imagination, a hard an unforgiving glare that can give way to the most unbearably tender glow.
I'm fascinated.
It seems an appropriate time to be consumed with shadows. It's almost Halloween here in the City of Angels. Entire blocks look like a decent into Inferno. Devils, ghouls and ghosts of every manifestation adorn the sidewalks, and to enter many a bar or restaurant means to pass through the maw of some supernatural creature. It's disconcertingly festive.
And oddly comforting.
The ultimate celebration of the dark places that give depth to the light.
Bud vase, West Hollywood. (c) Jared Fortunato | Photography
Stairs: Late afternoon, West Hollywood. (c) Jared Fortunato | Photography
Sofa, Mid-morning, West Hollywood. (c) Jared Fortunato | Photography
Palm tree with hide, West Hollywood. (c) Jared Fortunato | Photography
Models Needed!








I need models for a project. Support the arts. It's simple.
We meet, say hello and I fiddle with stuff. You sit (or stand), I click the shutter a bunch and we talk about all sorts of things while we do it. When we're done we say good-bye and a few days later you get a picture.
Interested?
You get that portrait you've always wanted, I get images for my portfolio. It's a win/win.
Check out the gallery of other portraits I've done (of people you probably know! Don't they look great?) and drop me a line using the email or contact form on the site.
I'd be very grateful.
(And please don't make me put an ad out on craigslist. That scares me.)
Thank you for your time and consideration.
J
Top Ten things I’ve Learned After One Month of Living in LA
10. You can get good coffee here.
Coming from the Bay Area, I was skeptical. I didn’t think you could find decent coffee anywhere but in the sturdy <heath> mugs of the Bay Area’s finest establishments. Find the subtle sweetness of a Blue Bottle latte here in the Southland? Good luck. Partake in a cup as lovingly prepared as those at Sight Glass? Never.
I figured I’d savor those little luxuries on trips back to San Francisco and get used to swilling Starbucks out of cardboard. But I was wrong. There is good coffee here. And food. And wine. There is actually a pretty robust foodie scene--that’s not afraid to take risks and that doesn’t take itself too seriously.
9. People take public transportation (and it works!)
Biggest shocker: LA public transportation. I’ve made a number of runs so far and have been pleasantly surprised. Longer trips can take some time--don’t get me wrong, but the system works. And it’s pretty convenient. It’s easy to use, frequent, and not a terrible way to get around if you’re in a one-car household (like mine). And when that fails, uber’s responsive here, too. Go figure.
It's everything you'd think it would be--and more.
8. Traffic is bad, but not impossible.
Yes. It sucks sometimes. And yes, the lines of cars waiting at intersections can cause panic. But the legends are true. There are secret ways to outwit the traffic monsters. They include: ample use of surface and side streets, avoiding the left-turn altogether (do this by boldly executing U-turns past the intersection and coming around to the right) and moving confidently into intersections on the yellow if avoiding a left turn proves impossible. It’s an art. It’s a craft. It’s a game of skill and strategy. And you, smart-phone wielding driver, have powers (and apps) to guide you.
It's just like a video game, but you're behind the wheel!
7. People are friendly—mostly.
I’m not in business with them, auditioning against them, or trying to date them, which makes this assessment a little shallow. I don’t have any real data except for the consistency of pleasant exchanges while carrying on my day-to-day. And that has been a great surprise.
From dining at one of our fine establishments or checking out at the local Whole Foods, I’ve found the interpersonal communication friendly, open and genuinely engaging. (Yes, I’m looking at you 3rd and Harrison Street Whole Foods: You’re. The. Worst.) People will often respond with actual eye contact and coherent sentences in those awkward moments of forced public intimacy (like in a cramped parking garage elevator, for example) and that has been very refreshing.
6. The climate is (I mean WAS) amazing.
It isn’t this week. It is hot. Very hot. Stiflingly hot. Like living under a broiler hot. When it’s not hot, which is (lately) never, it is beautiful. Shorts and t-shirt weather all the time.
It's like 100 degrees out here right now. I could roll a bowling ball down the center of this park right now.
5. There are a ridiculous amount of juice bars in my neighborhood.
Maybe it’s an artifact of my West Hollywood location, I don’t know. There is seriously a juice bar on every other corner. It’s like that line in “Best in Show” when Piper Posey says she met her husband at Starbucks. Not at the same Starbucks, but the one across the street. It’s ludicrous. How much juice does a city need to drink? How do they all stay in business? Where does all this juice come from? Mysteries.
4. The city is HUGE.
Duh. But it really is. No weekend visit or circuit party fly by can prepare you for its sheer immensity. It’s gigantic. From Downtown to Santa Monica, Long Beach to the Valley—(not technically, I know, all “Los Angeles”)—there exists a massive and incredibly diverse urban and semi-suburban megalopolis. Streets, neighborhoods, cities within cities: it’s vast, teeming and almost overwhelming.
3. People here love their dogs.
San Franciscans love their dogs, too. And this place takes it to a whole new level. Service dog regulations are flouted with as much impunity as anywhere in the Bay Area. Dogs are everywhere—on the sidewalk, at the table next to you, in the arms of that girl buying lipstick at the Bloomingdales. And I have to say dog lovers here spend as much on pampering and protecting their pups as any of their Bay Area counterpoints. For every juice bar and smoothie place (see above) there are almost as many doggie day spas and organic dog food spots vying for your pooch-loving dollar.
2. I’m developing a serious addiction to the Yogurt Stop.
Here’s how it goes: ask for a small sample cup, try out all of the artificially sweetened low-fat dairy “products” on offer, and then pump small mounds of your favorites into a gigantic paper bowl. Then proceed to the “toppings” bar and douse the whole thing in sugar free hot fudge sauce and candy mm’s (not the peanut) and a teaspoon’s worth of crushed heath-bar (to limit the calories). Pay at the weigh-in station, find a spot out front and enjoy.
Maybe it’s the sidewalk seating, the hot evening air, or the ridiculously sexualized logo—I’m not sure. All I know is I practically ignored these places in SF. Now, this place knows my name.
There's free parking in the rear. I swear it says that.
And here it is, the number one thing I’ve learned from one month in living in LA.
1. I miss my friends. Terribly.
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