Andrew Commander

Articles about Andrew Commander and his adventures in life.

Christmas eve was one of the coldest ski days I have ever had at Breckenridge.

Despite the cold temperatures, My Dad and I braved the wind chill of negative twenty five and had powder soft runs all day.

The first run was half groomed, half untouched soft. Starting the day on peak seven’s rolling terrain was a nice warm-up on my G3 Rapid Transit telemark skis.

It wasn’t the nice foot of powder I would have liked; but it was drifting in some places close to 8 inches. This drifting also ment that some places had nothing but rock hard ice. “Variable conditions” would describe the day better than “powder” yet I was still able to find face shots.

The top of the T-Bar was so brutally cold that I could only take three trips up, with breaks in-between.

Being on Christmas eve, I managed to even find Santa on a lift. This was a great way to spend the day before Christmas for me.

Santa at Breckenridge

LOUIS AN
Tell me about your site

I’ve always had a very simple site,louisanphoto.com thanks to my limited html skills. But the byproduct is that I let my photos speak for itself instead of a fancy website. I try and make my site into an online portfolio, so you can see what kind of photographer I am from just glancing at my website. Cause in the end, people are going to remember you if you have an impressive portfolio.


How did you get involved in photography?

I’ve always loved pressing that shutter button, I don’t know why. I remember insisting to a photo of my parents below Mt. Rainier when I was 6 or so. But I really discovered photography when I took Photo 1 at MHS instead of study hall. Best decision ever. From that on, I was hooked. That was the only photo class I took, everything else was self-taught. It also helped that my friend Parker Rice was also an aspiring photographer. We always shot together throughout high school, and constantly tried to one up one another. We definitely got better through competition.

What is the biggest tip you would give to new photographers?

The best tip I can give to aspiring photographers is to get a manual film single lens reflex camera. When you have a limited physical medium like film, you take your time with a picture. Ansel Adams didn’t blindly go around taking photos. He took his time with every single scene. Film allows you to learn the patience and judge if the scene is worth your time and effort. And there is nothing like working an enlarger and putting the photo paper through the developer, stopper, and fixer. Yes, digital is easy, but it’s too easy.

What is your favorite photo you have taken and why?

Click for larger size

Click for larger size

Flatirons at Chautauqua. It was the blizzard of March 2009, where it dumped a foot onto Boulder. I went down to Chautauqua the morning after and it was perfect conditions all around. The sun was shining right onto the mountains, there were the perfect amount of clouds, and the sky was as blue as the ocean. And because it was a panorama, you could zoom in and see icicles on the Flatirons.

Do you ever see yourself become a blogger/photoblogger?

I don’t think I could ever be a blogger/photoblogger, I’d feel like I’d run out of things to write about. But if I was hired to take photos and blog about a certain subject, I’d be all for it. But as self-motivated hobby? I don’t think so.

Who would you like to work with given a chance?

I would love to collaborate with National Geographic. There is no higher honor for a photographer than being published in that yellow magazine. I would love to get paid to essentially travel and take pictures about the world. I would also love to work with a big mountain skier/snowboarder/biker. I love to ski and bike, so naturally I wouldn’t mind taking pictures of it. Photographers who take photos of skiers are either skiing the terrain that the skiers are, or are in a helicopter. Both sound very appealing to me.

What is one thing about you that not many people know?

I guess not many people know that I am originally from South Korea. So naturally, I still speak to my parents in Korean. I still think it’s funny to look at people’s faces after I’m on the phone with my parents and nonchalantly switch back to English. To me, that’s as natural as walking.

What is on your iTunes?

I have a pretty broad taste in music, except country. I can’t stand that twang. But it ranges from rock, electronica, classical, and hip hop. Examples of such are Black Sabbath, Pink Floyd, Incubus, Muse, Bob Marley, Pepper, RJD2, Jurassic 5, The Chemical Brothers, Infected Mushroom. I recommend everyone check out Muse. There’s nothing like good old space rock to get the blood flowing. Knights of Cydonia by Muse makes me feel like I’m a space cowboy. If anyone’s a Pink Floyd fan, The Wall movie is a very good depiction of their album.

What is one thing people can do for you?

The one thing that people can do for me is to spread my photos. Buy a print from me, hang it up on your wall, and spread the word. But there is one thing I would love more, and that’s people to shoot with. So pick up a camera, learn the basics of photography. I would love it if there were more competent photographers in the world, because there’s nothing like competition.
Boulder street

School is now the priority until finals are over. I need to focus my attention now that I had a relaxing vacation on the islands of Kauai and Oahu, Hawaii.

My Dad’s cousin had three Dogues de Bordeaux. They were fun to play with and hang around.
Dogue de Bordeaux
I also got to ride in my great Uncles old Stingray convertible

Stingray Convertible

While throwing the frisbee in the street, I saw the most unusual tree. I had to take a picture with my newly acquired camera. It was either trimmed up in a weird way, or its just plain weird.
weird tree

My new camera died on Oahu and so I didn’t get to take any pictures of Kauai.

While there I surfed, snorkeled, zip-lined, attended a Lu-au, and pretended I was a seal on the beach laying out to catch some rays.

Hillside on Oahu

Hillside on Oahu

This was my second time in Hawaii but I was only 4 the first time. I had so much fun this time.

The only bad thing was the return flight to Denver, not just because I was leaving Hawaii. It was a 7 hour red eye flight that left me jet-lagged like none other. 35 hours straight without sleeping left me tired for a week. School was difficult the first week back. Now is the time that I have to focus on my finals.