Skip to content

somewhere between a handshake and two kisses

  • paige green

recent posts

  • Snakes eat broligarchs for breakfast (sliding scale photos for all non-broligarchs)
  • another year. and very glad we’re still here.
  • International Women’s Day FREE Photo Shoot
  • What do you photograph?
  • strengthening my niche…

about

Paige Green is a documentary and portrait photographer, whose storytelling approach to photography frequently addresses issues involving agriculture, land use, and food. Her work is featured in nine books and has been published in Glamour, National Geographic Traveler, New York Times Magazine, Conde Nast Traveler, GQ, Country Living, House Beautiful, and Culture. Paige lives in Petaluma, CA with a house full of boys.
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Business Cards for the first time ever…

    June 1, 2010

    I have never had business cards because I could never pick just one photo that I liked enough to represent all my work. But now I don’t have to because of Moo. Moo let me pick as many different photos as I wanted, and they print on recycled paper… that is all this indecisive tree loving photographer needed to hear. If only they had square cards though, so I wouldn’t have to crop the rollei photos. I guess I can make one sacrifice.

    My new cards, with all these amazing faces, arrived today… I can’t wait until the next person asks me if I have a card.

    Share this:

    • Share
    • Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
    • Share on X (Opens in new window) X
    Like Loading…
  • Organic Colored Cotton right here in Northern California…

    May 27, 2010

    This is the amazing Sally Fox. The woman who will not be stopped on her mission to grow organic colored cotton.

    This is Sally Fox’s organic cotton growing in a field that she is letting go fallow in order to let the soil rest.

    This is Sally Fox’s adorable daughter, who is the only nine-year-old in the valley.

    Vodpod videos no longer available.

    This is what an organic cotton field sounds like.

    This is Rebecca Burgess wearing an outfit that was made solely from Sally Fox’s brown organic cotton.

    Rebecca made her shirt and Rebecca’s mom made her pants. This means that Rebecca’s entire outfit was grown, spun, and sewn within 150 miles of her home in Fairfax, California.

    And this is what Fibershed means. It means wearing locally grown, spun, designed and produced clothes that look and feel beautiful. It means wearing clothes that reflect the region you live in. And it means wearing clothes that do not harm the environment or the people who make them.

    To help support Rebecca’s challenge to only wear clothes grown within her Fibershed for one year, please take a moment to vote for us on the Grant for Change website: http://www.nau.com/collective/grant-for-change/rebecca-burgess-1355.html

    The winner gets $10,000! We need funding for this project so we can help pay farmers like Sally Fox and so we can document Rebecca’s journey in sustainable fashion. Thanks for your vote. Any little bit helps.

    To learn more please visit the Fibershed website.

    Share this:

    • Share
    • Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
    • Share on X (Opens in new window) X
    Like Loading…
  • Three Bags Full… and only 15 days left to help fund this project…

    May 26, 2010

    The first step for Rebecca’s Fibershed challenge is to process all of the locally sourced wool and cotton that the local fiber artists need to make the Fibershed clothes that Rebecca will be wearing every single day for the next year.

    So our first trip was up to Yolo Wool Mill in Woodland, California… which is 82.3 miles away from where Rebecca lives in Fairfax, and therefore it is well within the boundaries of Rebecca’s 150 mile Fibershed. And there we met Jane Dreamer, the owner of the Yolo Wool Mill.

    Rebecca brought with her three bags full of wool that she bought from a meat sheep farmer in Marin, who was planning on throwing away the wool because he didn’t know what else to do with it.

    Rebecca and Jane weighed the wool so the processing of cleaning, carding and spinning, in all of these big machines, could begin.

    Jane was an excellent tour guide. She carefully explained the history of each machine and showed us how each one worked in order to make the final product.

    Vodpod videos no longer available.

    Vodpod videos no longer available.

    Vodpod videos no longer available.

    Vodpod videos no longer available.

    It is amazing that such big, clunky, ancient, greasy machines can make something so beautifully delicate… and it is even more amazing to think that it all is made right here in our very own Fibershed.

    To learn more about the history of mills and more about the machines we saw at Yolo Wool Mill, visit the Fibershed blog: http://fibershed.wordpress.com/

    If you are curious to know more about what Fibershed is you can read more here: https://paigegreen.wordpress.com/2010/03/16/fibershed/

    We have only 15 more days to reach our fund raising goal on kickstarter. If we don’t reach that goal we will not get the funds that have been pledged so far.

    So if you enjoyed this post and if you would like to see more of them, then please consider making a donation here: http://www.kickstarter.com/projects/fibershed/funding-fibershed-one-year-150-miles

    If you liked this post, but you can not support it financially, then you can vote for our project to win a $10,00o grant here: http://www.nau.com/collective/grant-for-change/rebecca-burgess-1355.html

    Next stop: Sally Fox’s farm in the Capay Valley and Rebecca wearing her first complete Fibershed outfit.

    Share this:

    • Share
    • Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
    • Share on X (Opens in new window) X
    Like Loading…
  • California Dreaming…

    May 25, 2010

    I am dreaming that California would always have these big puffy clouds and even partially green grass at the end of May. Big clouds make me happy and so do old cars in the middle of fields.

    Share this:

    • Share
    • Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
    • Share on X (Opens in new window) X
    Like Loading…
  • Photographing The Symphony…

    May 24, 2010

    This is my talented photographer friend, Jessamyn, and her one month old, Symphony.

    The hard part about being a photographer, is that you are never in any photographs.

    Jessamyn can, and will, take thousands of amazing photos of her new little human.

    But what she can’t do is photograph herself with her new little amazing human.

    So I got to come and visit.

    We cranked the heat and striped Miss Symphony down and we just played.

    It was the perfect thing for a cold and rainy Monday.

    And she was the perfect little model, which is a good thing, since this is only the beginning of her career.

    Rolleiflex photos coming soon.

    Share this:

    • Share
    • Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
    • Share on X (Opens in new window) X
    Like Loading…
  • Sneak Peek of an Incredibly Photogenic Adventure…

    May 19, 2010

    I spent an amazing afternoon exploring Yolo County and Capay Valley with Rebecca Burgess for her Fibershed project.

    The clouds, the people, the landscape… they all were absolutely incredible that I couldn’t wait to share tales and photos of our adventures. But the day is long gone, and a new day is rapidly approaching, so just a sneak peek for now. A real post, with more photos, and a better explanation of the journey coming soon.

    Share this:

    • Share
    • Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
    • Share on X (Opens in new window) X
    Like Loading…
  • Nothing but love…

    May 11, 2010

    Graham and Janet are getting married and I am lucky enough to photograph their wedding this summer.

    They wanted to have engagement photos for announcements. Graham, who is an emerging photographer, said that he tried to set the camera up and take their own engagement photos with a remote, but he said it was harder than he thought to get the photos to look natural.

    So we made a date in Golden Gate Park, and we did a quick one hour engagement shoot with their new love, Jasmine.

    Our mini-photo shoot was just enough time for us to get to know each other a little better, and for them to practice being in front of the camera, and for me to capture natural photos of them being in love, with each other… and with Jasmine.

    And then Jasmine had enough of the love…

    Share this:

    • Share
    • Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
    • Share on X (Opens in new window) X
    Like Loading…
  • One face, a woodshop and a picket fence…

    May 8, 2010

    This is Jason.

    Jason wants to seriously start pursuing his acting career, so he needed some head shots.

    It was amazing to see how differently a person can look with even the slightest changes.

    And it was fun to see what a dusty woodshop and a white picket fence can do.

    Share this:

    • Share
    • Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
    • Share on X (Opens in new window) X
    Like Loading…
  • I love my town…

    May 5, 2010

    Petaluma River Festival (and posters) coming soon!

    I want to give a huge ‘thank you’ to Drew Washer and Tyler Young for coordinating everything.

    Thank you to Debbie for fantastic styling.

    And thank you to all our gorgeous models for coming out to play today.

    I wish I could do this everyday.

    Share this:

    • Share
    • Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
    • Share on X (Opens in new window) X
    Like Loading…
  • A new heart for the tin man…

    May 2, 2010

    (pig heart, from pigs butchered in March.)

    Right after we graduated from college my best friend was told she needed open heart surgery to replace her aortic valve. One of the options she had was to replace her broken valve with a pig valve. But she was told the pig valve might not last as long, so she might have to have another surgery later in life. She chose the mechanical valve instead. If you listen really closely, you can hear her heart clicking. It is a constant reminder that life is short and science is amazing.

    So please take care of your heart and the hearts of people you love.


    Share this:

    • Share
    • Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
    • Share on X (Opens in new window) X
    Like Loading…
Previous Page Next Page

Blog at WordPress.com.

 

Loading Comments...
 

    • Subscribe Subscribed
      • somewhere between a handshake and two kisses
      • Join 249 other subscribers
      • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
      • somewhere between a handshake and two kisses
      • Subscribe Subscribed
      • Sign up
      • Log in
      • Report this content
      • View site in Reader
      • Manage subscriptions
      • Collapse this bar
    %d