You may or may not have seen our previous piece breaking down our outdoor design studio—from which I am currently writing these words—but one thing not mentioned there was my old mousepad, which was the hardcover edition of Castles, a book I’ve had since childhood.

See, our outdoor table, used as work desks, is slatted, which is great for running chords through, but not so much for using a mouse, which we still need to do since Apple has yet to introduce touch screens and we’re not yet at the Minority Report, swipe in the air stage yet, which I’m hoping Apple will soon announce it’s skipping ahead to. So, when we set up the office for the first time at the beginning of this year, I just grabbed what I assumed would be a good surface for my mouse work. Indeed, it was, but taking the book out every workday and flipping through it every now and then, I rediscovered how awesome Castles is.

I was your classic nerd as a child, severely into fantasy and anything involving castles and elves; still am at heart. This book—beautifully illustrated by Alan Lee (known for his work with Tolkien’s books), written by David Day, and published by Bantam Books in 1984—is bound to stir up excitement from anyone else equally into the genre. Castles draws on history and legends through the middle ages—from Beowulf to Camelot to Norse legend to Irish folk lore to Jack and his giant to the more modern castles of Poe’s stories—to channel Lee’s artistic talent and Day’s poetics to pair with the artwork and retell these oft age-old stories. It stands to this day as a beautiful piece of work that grabs the imagination of both the young and young-at-heart.

A few months back, I noticed that my mouse had started to rub the fabric of the book a bit raw, so I retired Castles the mousepad to preserve Castles the awesome book.

You can see a few shots from the book below, but it seems like you can also still order the book used via Amazon. If you’re into this sort of thing, I highly recommend doing so.

IMG_0090 IMG_0089 IMG_0087 IMG_0085 IMG_0082 IMG_0080 IMG_0076

Another from our photo archive, this one from Katie’s early personal work.

It’s always been a personal favorite of mine—one of those strong visual images that gets locked into your subconsciousness in formative years and sort of sets a path, I think, for what you appreciate and, likewise, want to create in you own work. I love what’s shown and what’s not shown in this shot; the perceived emotion or intention between the mostly obscured figures.

Katie’s always had a great eye, and I think this is one of the first things that really proved that to me.

We’ve been doing in-store product + promotional photography for our newest, non-sit-in-front-of-a-computer venture, MooShoes Los Angeles over the past month or so and implore you to head over to Instagram and/or Twitter to check it you’re waiting in line at the DMV or pretending to listen to your mom talk to you about what Mr. Grady did the other day or, you know, just want to see some nice, cruelty-free footwear.

Better yet, come by the store and see for yourself. Granted, my camera’s pretty nice, but I bet your eyes are nicer. Why get second-hand seeing when you can get it first-hand, man!

We’re at 3116 Sunset in Silver Lake. Come by and say ‘hey’.

May you all enjoy a very ghoul’d evening tonight and, should you have party plans, we hope they go off without a Hitch(cock).

…puns were never our strong suit, but wishing you all a very happy Halloween! Get spooky, ya’ll!

 

Another entry in the Stuff We Like category, these tall, spruce-scented candles from a collaboration between the good people at Good Candle + designer Brian Farrell.

Brooklyn’s Good Candle has been hand-pouring their candles in Crown Heights since getting their start at the ever-popular Brooklyn Flea in 2012. Sourcing American-grown soy wax and clean-burning braided cotton wicks, they number among the now deeply crowded field of sustainably made, craft candle-makers. You’ve likely seen their mason jar candles all around town.

But we love the artwork they pulled in for the glass from NJ-based, Minnesota-born, Rome-raised (that’s never before been written, right?) Brian Farrell, known for his oft-colorful, always intricate handmade decorative patterns. Most of his work tends to remind me of re-imagined hex signs from the Pennsylvania Dutch folk art tradition. My grandmother and her ilk used them, and I was never clear on whether it was more for the purely decorative sensibilities of them or for the superstitious uses. I’d like to think the latter.

Talismanic or not, these Good X Farrell candles are both beautiful and pleasingly aromatic, in that “I feel like I’m wandering around a pine forest” way, not in that “I wandered into a Yankee Candle at the mall and now I can’t breathe” way.

We got ours at Hemingway + Pickett, just up the street from MooShoes Los Angeles, but you can also order them online.

20141012_156120141012_1567

Saturday night, Katie + I attended KCRW‘s sixth annual Masquerade ball.

We’d never been before, so we didn’t really know what to expect, but we have to say—It. Was. Awesome.

The local public radio station took over the first two floors of the Legendary Park Plaza Hotel (we’re not sure why, but you’re required to call it ‘legendary’ in each and every instance), with DJs and live bands performing in five different ballrooms, roaming marching bands, Elizabethan stilt-walkers, pretty great food trucks in a back lot, and countless top-notch costumes among the night’s guests.

One thing we took note of moving from New York to Los Angeles was the striking difference between the two cities’ prominent public radio stations, WNYC + KCRW. In New York, it’s all Leonard Lopate and Brain Lehrer and Terry Gross and news headlines and politics, all of which we love, but it’s not exactly entertaining all the time. They even took their one music-oriented show—Soundcheck—off the air a couple years back, making Web-aceess only.

KCRW, however, is grounded in a culture of cool, basing nearly all of its programming on music+ entertainment. Draw whatever conclusions you want about those differences and what it means about New Yorkers and Angelenos, but we’ll give you one certainty from our view—they can plan a fucking party in LA. So make your plans for next year now—KCRW’s Masquerade is a must.

Above, our Hitchcock-inspired Birds costumes. If you get a chance, head over to Facebook and give us a like. We could win a costume contest!

From our photo archive, an old polaroid taken in North Carolina’s Outer Banks years back.

Earlier today, NASA did something to up their cool factor in this age of underfunding and zero moon-walking—they opened up their sound archive to the public, copyright-free.

Yes, this means being able to listen to and, say, include vintage ‘one small step’ samples to your next spoken word piece. Cooler yet though—chorus radio waves from the Earth’s atmosphere, beeping Sputniks, stardust from comets, sounds from the sixth-largest moon of Saturn, and lightning on Jupiter.

Oh, and this, which I seriously do not understand. Is it space-centric Christian rock? No idea.

Give some of it a listen below. You can browse the massive full catalog of sounds on NASA’s sound cloud page.

Back, say, seven or so years ago, Katie + I moved from the Park Slope apartment we called our first New York home down to the upper borders of Sunset Park. Lovely apartment but, sadly, not the nicest neighborhood, especially coming from tree-filled, idyllic Park Slope, a neighborhood now often associated with the yup-most yuppie living. We stayed in that new apartment for not even a year before moving up to Carroll Gardens, where we remained until picking up shop and moving west. Sunset Park was, overall, not a great move, but the location had its benefits too, among them, single-handedly turning our private backyard gravel lot into a raised-bed garden, gaining a sun-filled back office that allowed us to grow our design business, and meeting one Mr. David Goldman, photographer extraordinaire and our upstairs neighbor at the time.

Though it’s been years since we’ve all been neighbors, we all remain friends to this day and stay in close contact with David. After an admirable career in music-related photography, David has shifted over the past years to more humanitarian-driven documentary subjects, working with the UN and others to show the work being done to aid those in need in other countries and, more generally, to tell stories of other cultures halfway around the world.

Recently, David announced that he would be raising funds to support a month-long project documenting migrant sugar cane workers in India, traveling “by oxcart with migrant workers from their villages to the factory towns, learning along the way what motivates them and what are the challenges they face both individually and as families.”

We got a chance to talk with friend and gifted photographer, David Goldman, about fundraising for his coming trip, the inspiration behind it, and how he went from rock photographer to true photojournalist.

raven + crow: Okay, first question, friend: Can you tell us—in this day and age of everyone and their mother’s hair stylist hitting people up for money to pursue their new line of jewelry or the cat-themed coffee shop they want to open or their series reinterpreting each and every one of Michael Jackson’s music videos using only magnets and metal shavings—how does your project stand head and shoulders above the rest in such a very, very crowded field?

David Goldman: I suppose I don’t think my project is any more important than anyone else’s. I would hope that if you go through the challenge of asking, begging, pleading for support for a crowdfunded initiative that you fully believe in it. Like all those other people, I believe in what I’m doing. I’ve been lucky enough to do some traveling in my life and with that traveling I’ve realized in living color just how lucky we are to be living in North America. We have the freedom to grow, educate, and thrive with relative freedom. There are those who through no fault of their own face a life of struggle beyond anything that we could comprehend. I do feel we have a moral responsibility to be aware, at the very least, of how others live. If, in our awareness, we can adjust our lives in ways to help others then we are doing something right. I simply want to show how other people live and, in that, hope to create awareness amongst the people who see it. If one person can do something that in turn can affect someones life in a positive way then I will have done my job.

blink-182Well-put. So, how did you go from working primarily in the high-glam music photography biz, shooting album covers for Blink-182 and others, to shooting such humanitarian-fueled subjects?

About 10 years ago my best friend was diagnosed with breast cancer. I was compelled to help in whatever way I could. Unfortunately, I was living in NY while she was in LA, so I could not be right with her but I created sendyourbest.com. It was a way for people to reach out to her and let her know that she was not alone. Through messages and gifts, my friend felt the love and support of many people both known and unknown to her. She told me many times how all this support really helped her during her treatment. I thought if I could make SYB available to everyone in the world it would be pretty cool. Although SYB did not take off the way I had hoped, it got me thinking about ways as a photographer that I could bring awareness and attention to issues and causes. The next thing I knew, I had an opportunity to go to Ethiopia and do a project about obstetric fistula. I photographed two young women who had both lost their babies to fistula. I found myself helping to get them back to their villages. So, after hiring a driver and an interpreter, we set off on a 1000km drive. It was on this drive that I both shot and filmed a very powerful story. Through that trip to Ethiopia and the images that I created, I was then hired by the UN Trust Fund To End Violence Against Women.

Tell us about the work you did through that trust fund. What were you covering for them?

I was hired to show how the UN’s money was being used by four organizations they supported. I covered a story on dowery related violence in Delhi, then on to Sex worker issues in the Karnataka region, then it was off to do a story on Adivasi (indigenous) people. From there I traveled to Dhaka, Bangladesh to do a story on migrant workers.

What was that like, being immersed in those worlds that are so culturally foreign to our western world?

It is hard to describe to someone who has never been in that environment but you see many many injustices. Sometimes I would find myself getting upset and wanting to almost lash out physically against the men who had so badly mistreated some of the women that I met. Of course, I realize that it’s a systemic problem built into the culture, so beating up some guy would solve nothing and, in fact, he would probably not even understand why it was happening to him.

Yeah, that must have been really difficult + frustrating—seeing what you or I would perceive as individual injustices and not being able to really do anything about them. I know you write on your funding page, “(m)y feeling is that there is more to be accomplished by showing positive and inclusive imagery than divisive and controversial ones which often leave us feeling helpless and depressed.” Do you find that tough to do when you’re covering such unfair, terrible conditions? Do you ever just want to shake people here back west and just be like ‘LOOK at this. Stop what you’re doing and look at the things going on in the world, man’?

I find that a smile goes a long way but you don’t get that smile by just coming into a situation with your cameras out shooting photos like a machine gun. It takes time to build up trust and then to be welcomed into a community. Once you are welcomed you can get on with telling a more full story. If you can tell the full story you will get the positive images of hope. Of course, it does not mean you will not see the tougher images, but making sure that the story is balanced is important to me.

Do you have any favorite stories from that trip for the trust fund or your work in Ethiopia?

When I was able to return one of the girls to her family, the elder of the tribe gave me a live goat as a thank you. That was quite a gift. I understood it to be of great value and, although I had no use for it, I also knew that I must accept it. So we took it and gave it to another family in the village where we spent the night. They cooked that goat in the tent I was sleeping in and in the morning I woke up dizzy and no doubt with some carbon monoxide poisoning.

Ouch. So how did you get turned on to this story of migrant sugarcane workers in India?

unnamed-4While traveling from Bangalore to a small town—after a 24 hour train ride and 2 hour truck ride—on the way to visit the sex workers or the Karnataka health collective, I spotted a tent city on the side of the road in the shadow of a huge factory. This turned out to be where the migrant farmers who worked at the sugarcane factory were living. We stopped for about 20 minutes and I ventured into the area and began to take photos. I shot some portraits and when we continued on our journey up to the sex workers, I was told more about those people. I was fascinated by the efforts they underwent in order to do this work. I felt this would be a story worth telling.

And are you funding your trip entirely through your IndieGoGo page?

My hope is to fully fund it through the IndieGoGo.

So this is all you—no affiliation with the UN or anything on this project?

Correct, this is all me. As a photographer, I feel the need to create and, since I’m always interested in how others live and work, I felt that this would be a great opportunity to push myself both creatively and technically.

Very ambitious of you. Do you have any cool funding prizes for the various levels of support?

For a contribution of 1K, I will give two Skype sessions or, if you are in the Tri-state area, I will come to you for a private photography lesson. For 2K I’ll go anywhere in the US or Canada and for 5K I’ll take your grandmother to prom ( just kidding but there are some cool rewards).

I think you should keep the 5K-grandmother reward. Do you have an outlet in mind that you want to use to get photos out into the world after you return? Gallery show? Book? Broadway show?

My goal is to create a great interactive Web site that shows both motion and stills with written word as well. I’m hoping to talk to Andrew Lloyd Webber about a stage performance for early 2016.

Nice! And are you for real traveling by ox cart?

Yes, I will travel with some migrant farmers as they travel from their villages to the town where the factory is.

How long are you going to be gone for?

I’ll be there for a month.

Wow, that’s really awesome. Is there somewhere we can follow along with you from afar as you go? Instagram? Tumblr or something?

Yes, I’m on social media however, I’m not totally sure as to the internet access I will have. Still, my instagram is dibzy27 and my blog is blog.davidgoldmanphoto.com.

Great. Well, good luck! And thanks for talking with us Mr. Goldman.

Thank you Mr. and Mrs. Crow.

You can read more about David’s coming trip and contribute for the next 9 days, as of writing, on his IndieGoGo page. View more of David’s work on his Web site.

All photos, courtesy the artist.

unnamed-1

We just had to take a moment to share a photo our friends Patrick + Amy took of this blue obsidian, which I didn’t even know was a thing.

Some of you who know me well may be saying to yourselves, “Wait, didn’t you get your bachelor’s in geology?” And, yes, that is true, oddly enough, but that was also roughly one hundred million years ago—so, yes, the Mesozoic—and I don’t remember ever coming across obsidian that was anything other than the blackest of blacks.

I always loved it though, firstly because it was a cinch to identify—nothing else breaks in those conchoidal fractures quite like this volcanic glass—second because it’s just beautiful stuff. It’s produced when high silica lava cools rapidly, so theres little time for air bubbles to form in it or crystallization to occur, resulting in the dense, glassiness and super-sharp edges, used by various civilizations throughout time to create tools + weapons. Right, and members of the Night’s Watch in their battle against the White Walkers.

But, as it turns out, obsidian can sometimes have a hue other than black. According to geology.com (which, sadly, did not exist when I was in school—we only barely had the internet):

“Black is the most common color of obsidian. However, it can also be brown or green. Rarely, obsidian can be blue, red, orange or yellow. The colors are thought to be caused mainly by trace elements or inclusions.”

Thus, this awesome image our friends captured on their drive down the west coast. Thanks trace elements or inclusions!