photography: honey bees

One of the most wonderful things about working with a diverse group of clients, is the opportunity to learn new things - to expand one's awareness, education and passion for the millions of unique facets this world and humanity has to offer. My clients have taught me about forest conservation in Alaska; about how to take charge of one's legal career; about the world of recycling jet engine alloys; about progressive health care; about business-focused event planning, and so much more. But most recently, I have learned about bees.

There is a lot of buzz about bees right now, pun intended. You can google "honey bees" and get a plethora of quality articles, op-eds, and agri-resources. Their health and well-being is directly related to ours. The majority of our food supply is supported through their pollination. Our own environmental allergies can become subdued simply by consuming local honey, which also has shown anti-bacterial first aid benefits, and miraculously, can still be edible hundreds of years after it is stored in a tomb with King Tut.

And yet, most of what we know (and teach young children) about bees revolves around whether or not we should know where the nearest Epi-Pen is located. 

But, what I have learned over the past year, is how vastly advanced and complex bee colonies are. How susceptible to disease, cross-breeding and pesticides they can be.  And how wonderfully social, beautiful, amazing, intelligent and collaborative they are. If we all lived as bees do, our world would be a better place. (With the exception of all of the female bees kicking out the male bees to die in the wintertime. Ouch.)

We have 25 active bee hives here at Rocky Creek Ranch. And another 75+ at a "sister farm" in Cherryville by the name of River Taw. In collaboration with long-time beekeeper Jimmy Brooks, we have been able to launch a Certified Naturally Grown, fully sustainable colony of honey-producing Russian bees. And through this process, I have had the unique opportunity to not only photograph the hives, but also design the product packaging for our first entry into the local honey market.

As Part One of two posts, this entry showcases some of my favorite images from being "inside the hive." I was surprised at how easy it was to put aside any fear of being stung, and to just *be* with the bees.

100113_BlogHoneyLabels.jpg

When you look closely, you realize just how beautiful they are, and your awareness for them in your own environment shifts. They are not to be feared, but rather nurtured. They are not be squashed, but rather enjoyed.

100113_BlogHoneyLabels2.jpg
100113_BlogHoneyLabels3.jpg

 And through teaching children how to exist around bees, we can lower anxiety and raise awareness for these amazing little creatures that really are one of the most important contributors to our daily existence.

100113_BlogHoneyLabels4.jpg
100113_BlogHoneyLabels5.jpg
100113_BlogHoneyLabels6.jpg
100113_BlogHoneyLabels7.jpg
100113_BlogHoneyLabels8.jpg
100113_BlogHoneyLabels9.jpg

Tomorrow, Part Two - the final product design -- honey labels! 

suite-hearts: me + him {main invitation}

You always think you have more time than you do. When Bryan and I got engaged last September, and finally decided on our wedding date(s) about a month later, I marked my calendar with "July 1 - Send Invites to Print" and "August 1 - Mail Invites". At the time, my first of those deadlines was over eight months away. And then, all of a sudden, it wasn't. 

I was excited, and anxious, about designing this suite. I put the pressure on myself to make it perfect. After all, potential clients look to your own work as a reflection of what theirs might be. I knew I wanted it to be simple, yet different. I knew I wanted it to be touchable, save-able. And I also knew I wanted it to be representative of us, and where we currently are in our lives.

That place we currently are in our lives.... is Rocky Creek. A once-in-a-lifetime opportunity landed us at a historical farm property in the foothills of the Blue Ridge Mountains, about an hour from our Uptown life.  A chance to live, literally, among the trees, nature and most importantly, my horses. And for those who know me well, you know what a big part of my life that is. We packed up last Winter, rented our much-loved Plaza-Midwood bungalow and headed for "ranch living." If you follow me on Instagram, you might feel as though you live here too. 

So, when it was offered for us to have our wedding here as well, we jumped on it. And since Rocky Creek has become our home -- this wedding will truly be a homemade, backyard, personal affair. As I was designing our invitations this past Spring, I knew I wanted that to shine through in the final suite.

Design preview for Erica + Bryan's main invitation in their suite-hearts package. 

Design preview for Erica + Bryan's main invitation in their suite-hearts package. 

A mix of my Scandinavian-white-space-loving roots and a rustic "farm chic" approach, brought me to the final suite – a 1/0 letterpress invite combined with an offset press postcard RSVP, a white-ink-on-20pt-kraft details card, all layered into a slate gray enclosure and sent out in a kraft lined snow white envelope. The RSVP cards each feature a different photograph, all depicting a day in our life at Rocky Creek Ranch.

Design preview for Erica + Bryan's RSVP cards in their suite-hearts package.

Design preview for Erica + Bryan's RSVP cards in their suite-hearts package.

The hours I spent torturing myself on whether or not I *really liked* the final design {that whole, "being your own client" thing again...}, and the additional hours I spent painfully collating each invitation, were all worth it. They mailed on deadline, actually before deadline, to arrive in mailboxes on August 1. At least, those that didn't get lost in the mail did. Ah, #countryliving. 

 

The final product for Erica + Bryan's main invitation in their suite-hearts package.  1/0 letterpress on 110# crane fluorescent white, combined with a white ink on 20pt kraft paper details card and offset press RSVP postcard each containing a u…

The final product for Erica + Bryan's main invitation in their suite-hearts package.  1/0 letterpress on 110# crane fluorescent white, combined with a white ink on 20pt kraft paper details card and offset press RSVP postcard each containing a unique photographic image. All elements were packaged in a slate gray enclosure and mailed in a kraft-lined snow white envelope with custom address label and rubber stamp.

The final product for Erica + Bryan's main invitation in their suite-hearts package.  1/0 letterpress on 110# crane fluorescent white, combined with a white ink on 20pt kraft paper details card and offset press RSVP postcard each containing a u…

The final product for Erica + Bryan's main invitation in their suite-hearts package.  1/0 letterpress on 110# crane fluorescent white, combined with a white ink on 20pt kraft paper details card and offset press RSVP postcard each containing a unique photographic image. All elements were packaged in a slate gray enclosure and mailed in a kraft-lined snow white envelope with custom address label and rubber stamp.

The final product for Erica + Bryan's main invitation in their suite-hearts package.  1/0 letterpress on 110# crane fluorescent white, combined with a white ink on 20pt kraft paper details card and offset press RSVP postcard each containing a u…

The final product for Erica + Bryan's main invitation in their suite-hearts package.  1/0 letterpress on 110# crane fluorescent white, combined with a white ink on 20pt kraft paper details card and offset press RSVP postcard each containing a unique photographic image. All elements were packaged in a slate gray enclosure and mailed in a kraft-lined snow white envelope with custom address label and rubber stamp.

The final product for Erica + Bryan's main invitation in their suite-hearts package.  1/0 letterpress on 110# crane fluorescent white, combined with a white ink on 20pt kraft paper details card and offset press RSVP postcard each containing a u…

The final product for Erica + Bryan's main invitation in their suite-hearts package.  1/0 letterpress on 110# crane fluorescent white, combined with a white ink on 20pt kraft paper details card and offset press RSVP postcard each containing a unique photographic image. All elements were packaged in a slate gray enclosure and mailed in a kraft-lined snow white envelope with custom address label and rubber stamp.

The final product for Erica + Bryan's main invitation in their suite-hearts package.  1/0 letterpress on 110# crane fluorescent white, combined with a white ink on 20pt kraft paper details card and offset press RSVP postcard each containing a u…

The final product for Erica + Bryan's main invitation in their suite-hearts package.  1/0 letterpress on 110# crane fluorescent white, combined with a white ink on 20pt kraft paper details card and offset press RSVP postcard each containing a unique photographic image. All elements were packaged in a slate gray enclosure and mailed in a kraft-lined snow white envelope with custom address label and rubber stamp.

The final product for Erica + Bryan's main invitation in their suite-hearts package.  1/0 letterpress on 110# crane fluorescent white, combined with a white ink on 20pt kraft paper details card and offset press RSVP postcard each containing a u…

The final product for Erica + Bryan's main invitation in their suite-hearts package.  1/0 letterpress on 110# crane fluorescent white, combined with a white ink on 20pt kraft paper details card and offset press RSVP postcard each containing a unique photographic image. All elements were packaged in a slate gray enclosure and mailed in a kraft-lined snow white envelope with custom address label and rubber stamp.

The aim of art is to represent not the outward appearance of things, but their inward significance.

— ARISTOTLE