Approximately 75 pages in length with more than 70 color images and is almost all photography.
There is nothing quite as fun as people watching that is not either fattening ,illegal, or immoral. The following volume is the result of a rather fun, and quite entertaining day spent at the Phoenix Arizona 2012 Comicon convention. The event attracted more than 30,000 visitors of which a great number attended in full regalia. This is the third of three volumes simply because the total, as a single volume, would be enormous.
The author began photography and photo-journalism in early 1963 when he accepted an offer from his local newspaper to write about and photograph sports events at the Arizona high school where he was a junior.
After a stint in the service, he had an opportunity to study photography and printing techniques with Bernard Hoffman, a true gentleman and scholar, and one of the earliest staff photographers for Life Magazine.
Since that time he has had thousands of photographs and hundreds of articles published by more than 60 national and international periodicals. He was also a contributing editor for one of them for more than ten years. Topics ran the gamut from professional sports, medicine, archeology, and photography to science.
After twenty years away from Arizona he returned in 1985 and it has been the base from which all his photographic excursions are launched. Along with many others he has embraced digital photography but can still be seen, from time to time, peering through the ground glass of a large format camera, hoisting a large medium format 6x7, or indeed still using a 35mm film camera.
The photographer currently has fine art photography on exhibit at The Center for Fine Arts in Globe, Arizona.
There is nothing quite as fun as people watching that is not either fattening ,illegal, or immoral. The following volume is the result of a rather fun, and quite entertaining day spent at the Phoenix Arizona 2012 Comicon convention. The event attracted more than 30,000 visitors of which a great number attended in full regalia. This is the third of three volumes simply because the total, as a single volume, would be enormous.
The author began photography and photo-journalism in early 1963 when he accepted an offer from his local newspaper to write about and photograph sports events at the Arizona high school where he was a junior.
After a stint in the service, he had an opportunity to study photography and printing techniques with Bernard Hoffman, a true gentleman and scholar, and one of the earliest staff photographers for Life Magazine.
Since that time he has had thousands of photographs and hundreds of articles published by more than 60 national and international periodicals. He was also a contributing editor for one of them for more than ten years. Topics ran the gamut from professional sports, medicine, archeology, and photography to science.
After twenty years away from Arizona he returned in 1985 and it has been the base from which all his photographic excursions are launched. Along with many others he has embraced digital photography but can still be seen, from time to time, peering through the ground glass of a large format camera, hoisting a large medium format 6x7, or indeed still using a 35mm film camera.
The photographer currently has fine art photography on exhibit at The Center for Fine Arts in Globe, Arizona.