New Logo

Michael Rossi is amazing, he created this new logo for KateBenson.com. I am so in love with it!! Thank you a hundred times Michael! This should be live on my main website sometime today.

The most useful site online

Ever wanted to try out a new lens, light, camera, before deciding if you want to buy it? The prices at Borrow Lenses are the lowest I’ve found and that includes my local Miami rental shops, (sorry guys!). Every type of photography (food, jewelry, portrait, wedding, architecture, etc) can be done best if you have the right gear, but why drop 2K on a lens that you need for an assignment every once in a while. Just doesn’t make sense. So I’ve become a fan of Borrow Lenses because those special assignments (for me usually architecture and I need a TS-E lens) would not pay for the gear needed to shoot it right. Go check it out and you may find yourself bookmarking the page. I’ve always had great experience with them.

Enjoy!

Every now and again, we all work on Sundays.

Although shooting on a Sunday afternoon with impending storms approaching is not usually my first choice, it turned out well last weekend. I let our subject (this time she’s a 14 year old girl) send me images that inspired her so we could match what she wants with my style. We came out with some incredibly different images. From a tribute to Herb Ritz on the beach to an Anthropologie catalog it’s hard to believe these photos were shot within 1.5 hours of each other.

More to come! Check back, as there was also a quick shoot in the studio before we left and another 2 location looks.

Chilian coast

A few more fun pictures here of the sunsets in Ritoque. Every night we stayed at the beach we would hike out on the cliff’s and watch the sunset. Although scale is hard to see in photo’s like this, the waves were easily 6+ feet. Sam and I took surf lessons earlier this day as it was a “small wave” day.
If you every have the chance, Ritoque was where we had our favorite day of the trip and although it was also the coldest of the two weeks we hated to leave it.

 

 

 

Wine Tasting in the Southern Hemisphere

The last two weeks were a true adventure. Sam and I took our long awaited honeymoon to Argentina and Chile. It helps that we are both lovers of wine and amazing food because Buenos Aires and Mendoza, Argentina truly shine at both. If it weren’t still somewhat overshadowed by corruption and poverty Mendoza’s wine regions of Maipu and Uco Valley, Napa would be off the map. Fortunately for Napa (and somewhat unfortunately for us) Argentina despite having a reputation of being a safer South American country is still suffering in some places. Buenos Aires seemed to be an oasis from this. Although this post is about Mendoza. Perhaps to be fair, I should clarify that one of our best experiences was riding bikes to the smaller wineries, the ones it will be hard (if not impossible) to find bottles from here in the US. These more subtle and modest bodega’s did not require a reservation which if you’ve ever tried to navigate on South American roads is a very good thing. Just hope on your bike and go. Letting luck guide us down the correct side of the fork in the road, we found and tried some of the best wines of our lives.

We traveled the red line. Our hotel was the #13 on there. Almost every stop ended in wine purchased because they were that good.

So if you ever see these wines in the US, grab a bottle and maybe one for us if your feeling generous.

#12 – first stop, Bodega Carinae – Carinae Winery, small 100 year old winery (across the street from #11, an olive oil farm)

#7 – second stop, Bodega Tempus Alba – Tempus Alba Winery, had a lunch reservartion here so had to ride to the top and work our way back. This was a great idea. Tempus Alba had VERY generous pours for the tasting and the much needed food to keep us somewhat sober was sublime (as was the view). Bought a Merlot, yup, a Merlot!

#8 – third stop, Bodega Viña el Cerno – Viña el Cerno Winery, a bit more touristy but the only place besides Martel & Co in Reims that had hand turned bottles of sparkling wine.

#9 –  Bodega Familia Di Tomasso – Di Tomasso Family Winery, another older vineyard, although they don’t do tastings of it (or sell it by the glass) this Italian family makes their own Limoncello.

#10 – last stop, Bodega Vistandes – Vistandes Winery, ran in just before closing and bought bottles of both wines we tried. The Torrontes was a perfect example of what the grape is meant to do, sweet and fruity on the nose and crisp on the tongue. The Malbec was equally impressive, we couldn’t resist and drank both these bottles on our trip our in Ritoque.

The shady side of the Mendoza region should have been a  common sense realization. Mendoza is still country, which many wealthy tourists have recently started traveling to. There are still a lot of people who do not have much or anything at all. Usually we found those people to be kind and actually somewhat wary of us. It was the industry that makes you a target. The wine tourism industry. Although some of the bigger issues we had with corrupt cops, greedy entrepreneurs, and often being made to feel like we were not worth much to people, we would still be happy to go back. Just with a little less Uco Valley and a little more Maipu (but not at the Aguamiel Hotel, maybe Club Taipaz instead). Trying to do the big things worked for the photography that I had to shoot to submit to the Wine Spectator Magazine but it was not the place to spend much time doing anything else.

So although I should have started with images from Buenos Aires, these are the shots that I went to get (although some played with to be fun) so we start in Mendoza. Enjoy the pictures!

All images © Kate Benson Photography INC, 2011

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