Welcome to yakimaheraldphotos.com
September05200712:00 PM
Welcome to the new Web site and blog of the Yakima
Herald-Republic photo department. Here, members of
the photo staff want to open a dialogue with
Herald-Republic newspaper readers and website users.
Photo staff members will share their thoughts about
photography and photojournalism at the
Herald-Republic . Your comments are welcome. So let's
talk about this photo, the opening photo on our
website and one that appeared in the Herald-Republic
in July.
It was hot in the Yakima Valley
that week and our job, as photographers, is to
figure out how to photographically portray the
heat and how it affects the Valley. We could go
to a pool and show kids cooling off in the
water. Nope. Been there, done that. No, wait -
let's find someone on a road construction
project who has to work out in the 100+ degree
heat. Take a picture of a worker drinking water
or wiping the sweat off his brow. Ditto. Been
there, shot that. Someone else suggested going
to the local ice maker and show them laboring in
cold temperatures, a contrast to the sweltering
temps outside. Nope - that photo's got "cliche"
written all over it. I've been fortunate to live
and work here in the Valley for nearly 19 years
but there is a downside to that longevity -
finding new and different ways to photograph the
same events (like hot weather) year after year.
Knowing that some people, including farmworkers,
start work early to beat the heat, I figured
that would be one way to show how some people
cope with the hot weather. Of course this would
mean I'd have to start work at 4 a.m. (we have
to change our work schedules to match those of
our subjects since we don't set up or stage our
photographs). Having met farm owner Roland
Dagdagan on a previous assignment, I called him
and he generously let me hang out with his
workers early in the morning as they harvested
corn. The workers were, as always, generous and
fun to hang out with and I got to practice my
rudimentary Spanish language skills. They
laughed at me only a little as I spoke Spanish
(or at least my version of it). The morning
light was fantastic. I chose this photo because
it conveyed the time of day (with the subtle
pre-dawn lighting), the place (the cornfield
surrounding the subject) and the work (the
worker shouldering the large bag of corn). It
wasn't necessary to show his face because his
body language told the story more than did any
expression he had. I took lots of other photos
that morning, some of which were almost as good,
but I thought this one told the story more than
any other. Of course this means that during next
summer's hot weather I will have to think of
another way to tell the story of the heat.
--Gordon King
It was hot in the Yakima Valley
that week and our job, as photographers, is to
figure out how to photographically portray the
heat and how it affects the Valley. We could go
to a pool and show kids cooling off in the
water. Nope. Been there, done that. No, wait -
let's find someone on a road construction
project who has to work out in the 100+ degree
heat. Take a picture of a worker drinking water
or wiping the sweat off his brow. Ditto. Been
there, shot that. Someone else suggested going
to the local ice maker and show them laboring in
cold temperatures, a contrast to the sweltering
temps outside. Nope - that photo's got "cliche"
written all over it. I've been fortunate to live
and work here in the Valley for nearly 19 years
but there is a downside to that longevity -
finding new and different ways to photograph the
same events (like hot weather) year after year.
Knowing that some people, including farmworkers,
start work early to beat the heat, I figured
that would be one way to show how some people
cope with the hot weather. Of course this would
mean I'd have to start work at 4 a.m. (we have
to change our work schedules to match those of
our subjects since we don't set up or stage our
photographs). Having met farm owner Roland
Dagdagan on a previous assignment, I called him
and he generously let me hang out with his
workers early in the morning as they harvested
corn. The workers were, as always, generous and
fun to hang out with and I got to practice my
rudimentary Spanish language skills. They
laughed at me only a little as I spoke Spanish
(or at least my version of it). The morning
light was fantastic. I chose this photo because
it conveyed the time of day (with the subtle
pre-dawn lighting), the place (the cornfield
surrounding the subject) and the work (the
worker shouldering the large bag of corn). It
wasn't necessary to show his face because his
body language told the story more than did any
expression he had. I took lots of other photos
that morning, some of which were almost as good,
but I thought this one told the story more than
any other. Of course this means that during next
summer's hot weather I will have to think of
another way to tell the story of the heat.
--Gordon King