Exploring My Photography Portfolios: 2018-2024

I have finally collected the seven portfolio projects I completed for the Enchanted Lens Camera Club in Albuquerque. There is one for each year, beginning in 2018-19. They were scattered in various computer files where I had to search for them. I now have them in a Mixbook book. I am looking at them and pondering the variety of topics I chose and how well I executed each one. What will be my topic for the 2025-26 year? It is a difficult decision. What do I enjoy photographing? What do I want to convey, and what will help me grow?

Today, I am adding six projects to the blog, from newest to oldest. I did not include the 2024-25 portfolio, which has its own post. This will give me another way to find them. It allows me to share them with you.

I welcome your questions and responses. Some possibilities for 2026 include old buildings (such as businesses) in Albuquerque, as well as themes like people and books, people and food, and sacred places. What would you like to see next?

Lights of the Polar Night Portfolio, 2023-2024

Patterns in Nature, Portfolio, 2022-2023

Human Impact on Mother Earth, 2021-2022

The Eyes Have It, 2020-2021

Windows Transformed, 2019-2020

The Pilgrim’s Way, 2018-2019

There is also a video roughly based on “The Pilgrim’s Way.”

Kent Twelve Ways 2025 Photo Portfolio

This was my 2024-2025 Portfolio Project Completed for the Enchanted Lens Photography Club (ELCC), Albuquerque, New Mexico. The aim is to compile a group of pictures on a theme. Click on the individual photos to enlarge them

Windows Transformed: Portfolio Project 2020

Click on the photos to enlarge them and display captions.

Creating this portfolio was a year-long project that involved working in a small group with other members of the Enchanted Lens Camera Club to help each other develop a selection of no more than twelve photos that together conveyed a theme or a story. I had no idea what I was going to do when I started, but I had lots of ideas about windows. I don’t think a single photo I started with ended up in the final selection, which I narrowed to photos of windows that distorted or transformed what was seen through or reflected by them.

Half of these remaining photos were taken through two windows in my tiny bathroom — one covered with condensation and drops of water that transformed the trees outside, and the other a wavy glass window in the shower that transformed flowers, a face, and the light behind it. Others came from shattered and bubbled glass in San Francisco, through a dirty window and a window screen in our garage, and a graffitied window high up on the outside of a cathedral in Quito, Ecuador. One of the delights of the project was learning to pay attention to what I was seeing, and discovering beauty in unexpected places.

I also enjoyed the oxymoron that a window, which should enable us to see clearly, was also a means of distortion and transformation. The reviewer of the project commented on the lack of window frames, and he liked that — I hadn’t noticed — and indeed when I started, many of the pictures had shown window frames. When discussing illustrations in children’s books, we often consider whether frames distance viewers or bring them closer into the pictures and the stories. What do you think? I always rather liked frames, such as those often used by Trina Schart Hyman, but without frames perhaps the distorted vision could be our own, and not the fault of the window through which we are looking?