Welcome to the Webbpage Blog. Home of Tim Webb Photography. Here is where you can see what really goes on in my life. Enjoy!

Human Emotion

October 10, 2024

Let's be honest...as a Corporate and Editorial Freelance Photographer, I shoot a lot of boring stuff. Don't get me wrong, I love what I do, but it can be pretty static at times with corporate events. I could let this be a crutch and approach it that way, but instead, I choose to work as hard as I can to elevate my game by making a boring subject as interesting as I can. I do this with human emotion. Just like capturing peak action with sports or news, I try to capture peak emotion with events. Sometimes, it can be as simple as a smile. The moral of this story is, you don't have to work in news or sports to be a photojournalist. You can always tell a story with the camera.

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Photo by Tim Webb Kentucky Chamber of Commerce, Best Places to Work
Central Bank Center, Lexington, June 13, 2024

Photo by Tim Webb Touchstone Energy, Kentucky Special Olympics
Eastern Kentucky University, Richmond, June 1, 2024

Photo by Tim Webb Community Action's 60th Anniversary
Embassy Suites, Lexington, June 12, 2024

Photo by Tim Webb International Society of Neurogastronomy Conference
University of Kentucky, Lexington, May 17, 2024

Photo by Tim Webb Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell meets with the Kentucky Students during the Washington Youth Tour. 
Kentucky Living Magazine
Washington D.C., June 20, 2024

 
"Step Brothers" or Employee Portraits? 
Fleming-Mason Energy
Flemingsburg, June 27, 2024

Photo by Tim Webb Photo by Tim Webb
The Washington Youth Tour
Kentucky Living Magazine
Washington DC, June 20, 2024

Camp Burnamwood
Stanton First Presbyterian Church
Irvine, July 25, 2024

Photo by Tim Webb Photo by Tim Webb The Kentucky Bar Association Annual Convention
Northern Kentucky Convention Center, Covington, May 9, 2024

Photo by Tim Webb Photo by Tim Webb Photo by Tim Webb Transylvania University, Spring Commencement
Lexington, May 25, 2024

Flashes of Hope
Norton Children's Hospital, Louisville, August 15, 2024

Photo by Tim Webb Photo by Tim Webb CASA of Madison & Clark Counties Annual Gala
Eastern Kentucky University, Richmond, August 3, 2024

Photo by Tim Webb UK Healthcare Pharmacy Services, Research Expo
UK Chandler Hospital, Lexington, May 21, 2024

Photo by Tim Webb Photo by Tim Webb Photo by Tim Webb Touchstone Energy, Honor Flight Kentucky
Bluegrass Airport, Lexington, August 24, 2024

 

 

 


The Local Lens

September 02, 2024

I've waited over two years to make this blog post!

In May of 2022, I met Nate Brooks for lunch one day at a Korean-style seafood restaurant on Richmond Road in Lexington to discuss a large-scale photo book project that he had in mind. The seafood restaurant was a bit much, but the book project turned out to be one of the greatest photographic projects that I've ever done in my life. Nate and I are both from Powell County, but a generation apart. I went to school with his mother and have been great friends with both of his parents, Troy and Deana Brooks, for many years. It was kind of bizarre to be involved with a multi-year project with so many moving parts, with a kid that's the same age as my kids, and someone I've known, literally since he was a newborn. I'm not sure if it was bizarre because he's that young or because I'm that old, HA!

At the time, Nate was about to finish a podcast series that he did for the Powell County Health Department titled The Local Lens. The podcast was funded through the CDC in Atlanta and Nate used it as a tool to explore and to educate on all aspects of the drug epidemic. Ultimately, he did 74 episodes and interviewed over 100 people. Here are my opening comments in the book...

 

When I began this book project with Nate Brooks in 2022, I truly didn’t understand the depth of Powell County’s drug problem. I grew up in Powell County, specifically on Black Creek in Clay City, during the 1970s and 1980s, and was a photojournalist there in the early 1990s. There has always been a drug problem in Powell County, but it wasn’t until I came back home for a couple of months during the summer of 2020, when my father was dying of cancer, that I got a small glimpse of just how much the problem had grown since I had moved away in 1995. I realized then that something had changed and my little hometown had changed with it.

One day during that summer, I almost ran over a man who had passed out in a sharp curve beside the road with his head lying about a foot away from the white line. With a population of only 1,200 people, Clay City had over 100 homeless people living within its borders that summer, mainly because of the drug epidemic. At the same time that I was witnessing all of this, Nate was beginning to produce a podcast called "The Local Lens" highlighting the different aspects of the drug epidemic that not only had infested Powell County but Appalachia as a whole.

I soon made a correlation between addiction and a ripple. At the epicenter of the ripple effect caused by drug abuse is the user. Immediate family members are located somewhere in the first two rings of the ripple, with first responders and police officers occupying the third and fourth layer of rings. Spiritual warriors providing faith-based rehab programs and resources serve as a bridge between the user and the road to recovery in rings five and six.

As the rings of the ripple gravitate further away from the epicenter it becomes less personal, but no less important, with healthcare professionals fighting the epidemic in rings six and seven. Professionals in Frankfort, and Washington D.C. may not know the user, and the user may never know them, but they still feel the effects and they occupy the outer rings of the ripple. They too are an integral part of the road to recovery.

Then multiply all of the rings times every user in Powell County. Then multiply the rings of every user in Kentucky. Then Appalachia. Then the United States. Many of the rings overlap and share similar threads of the story. It’s overwhelming to think about all of the people who are affected by this monster and the countless toll that it has taken on so many lives.

For me, creating this photo book was extremely personal. I haven’t lived in Powell County for nearly 30 years, as Richmond is where I live, but Clay City will always be my home. My genuine hope is that this book will somehow make a difference as we tell the story.

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Photo by Tim Webb

Photo by Tim Webb This photo of Misty Dehart standing in a field of mustard flowers, in an area of Powell County known as Turkey Knob, became the signature photo and cover for the book. Misty, who has been in recovery for several years and is now a nurse, represented freedom from addiction. I called it the Titanic pose. Photographically, I wanted to create an angle that people weren't used to seeing. People are used to driving down KY HWY 15/11 looking out at the flowers, but not in the flowers looking back.

Photo by Tim Webb Powell County minister Brad Epperson helps inmates transition back into life outside of jail with the Substance Abuse Program (SAP) at the Powell County Detention Center.


Rebecca Stone analyzes suspected drugs that have been confiscated by local police departments in Central Kentucky at the Kentucky State Police crime lab in Frankfort.

Photo by Tim Webb The needle exchange program at the Powell County Health Department.

Photo by Tim Webb Nate interviewing nurse practitioner Heather Deel during the series' last episode at WSKV radio station in Stanton, December 2022.


With Powell County having one of the highest overdose rates per capita in the country, Jazmen Thorpe is one of many of a generation of children who have grown up witnessing the terrible effect and the grip that drugs have had on their parents. 

Responding to the drug epidemic can be extremely expensive for a small rural community with law enforcement and first responders. Former Powell County Judge Executive James Anderson advocated a proactive approach to the problem, such as the Syringe Service Program at the health department. Sadly, Judge Anderson died in an accident before the book was completed. 

Photo by Tim Webb
Stanton Police Officer Ian Morton, above, and Clay City Police Officer Rob Williams, below, are on the front lines of Powell County's drug epidemic. 

Photo by Tim Webb Photo by Tim Webb Photo by Tim Webb Photo by Tim Webb Photo by Tim Webb
Oshia Haddix runs the Powell County Homeless Coalition in the Bottoms of Clay City.

The book expanded beyond Powell County by looking at programs in neighboring Montgomery County, with Tabitha and Tony Barrett leading Recovery Montgomery County, top, and Angie Gregory, above, with the Montgomery County Health Department, running a program that works with women in the Montgomery County jail who have been arrested on drug charges, which is about 85 percent of the women there.

Photo by Tim Webb I didn't want all of my healthcare professional photos to look the same, so I asked my childhood friend Dr. Julie Kennon to roll her pant legs up and wade out into Hardwicks Creek in Clay City with her white coat and stethoscope, because her medical career was literally born out of Hardwicks Creek, where she fell out of a tree in middle school and broke her back. Dr. Kennon still practices in her hometown of Clay City.

Photo by Tim Webb  Dr. Taufik Kassis at his clinic in Stanton. 

Photo by Tim Webb Nurse Practitioner Scott Seitz in Winchester.

Nurse Practitioner Heather Deel at her clinic in Stanton.

Photo by Tim Webb Husband and wife team John and Donna Isfort at their clinic in Irvine. 

Jenell Brewer is at the epicenter in the battle against addiction in Powell and several surrounding counties with Casey's Law and SPARK Ministries. 

Photo by Tim Webb Photo by Tim Webb Photo by Tim Webb Photo by Tim Webb Estill County coroner Jimmie Wise and his wife Sheila have seen more than their fair share of overdoes in neighboring Estill County. 

Photo by Tim Webb Lisa Coffey and Jeanette and Wayne Ross, affectionately known as Pastor and Momma, lead a very effective faith-based recovery program at Shepherd's Shelter Ross Rehab in Mount Sterling. 


Paula Adams of Irvine, holds a picture of her son Dalton, who died of a drug overdose in 2019.

Van Ingram is the Executive Director of the Kentucky Office of Drug Policy in Frankfort.

Jerrica Brandenburg, an alcohol and drug counselor at Marcum & Wallace Hospital in Irvine, holds a box of Narcan that is somewhat of a miracle-drug that has saved so many people from dying of an overdose.

Photo by Tim Webb Marti Hackworth, Laura Helvey, and Rebecca Wolfinbarger lead a Narcotics Anonymous (Nar-Anon) meeting for mothers of kids suffering from Substance Abuse Disorder. 

Neil Hamilton and David Howard of the Powell County Detention Center see the revolving-door effect of repeat offenders.

Photo by Tim Webb Photo by Tim Webb Photo by Tim Webb Powell County native Will Arvin, who went from a hardcore drug user to an evangelist and church pastor, had an incredible story to tell. Will, who now lives in Fort Gay, West Virginia, just randomly raised his Bible into the air as I was finishing his shoot in the rain, near a crossroad with two iron bridges. It was a great impromptu moment!

Photo by Tim Webb
Powell County Health Department Public Health Director Stacy Crase approaches the epidemic with a concept known as harm reduction, which accepts the fact that, for better or worse, drug use is part of our world, and works to minimize the harmful effects of drug use rather than just ignore it or condemn it. 

What started in May of 2022 finally came full-circle August 21, 2024, with a celebration and launch of the book in Stanton. 

A few behind-the-scenes, top, working down...Nate's Mom Deana helped me with some of the early photo shoots while Nate was off hiking the Camino de Santiago in Spain. Nate and I had an all-day design session in the basement of his parent's house when he came home from graduate school in May.

The funniest thing happened in June...we decided to order a few books to proof one last time before making the large run later in the month. Nate was working an internship in Washington DC and I was in DC for the Washington Youth Tour when the books arrived. While my copy was home in Richmond on my desk, Nate brought his copy to my hotel and we looked at it together in the lobby of the Crystal City Marriott. Looking at the book together like that, after so much hard work and time was very gratifying.

Photo by Tim Webb Like I said in my opening...working on this book was extremely personal. Richmond is where I live, but Clay City will always be my home.

 


Old School With My K1000

July 30, 2024

When I first started doing photography in third grade my Dad started me out on a completely manual Agfa viewfinder camera. Then when I got into middle school he gave me a Pentax K1000. I was so excited just to have a camera with a light meter inside. It became my main camera for several years, including high school and college. I used this camera during my days as news editor and photographer at my hometown newspaper, The Clay City Times in the early 1990s. I used it so much, I tore the grip off of one side. It had a telephoto lens that came with it, but I mainly used the 1.8 50mm. That was such a sweet little lens! The K1000 itself was a great camera. It was the last American-made camera that was made of metal, not plastic. Professionals who shot Nikons at the time, would keep a K1000 in their trunk as a backup. Those cameras were indestructible. You could drive nails with them.

I recently found a lady in Waco that will do small-run t-shirt orders. So I had her make a t-shirt with a K1000 on the front of it. I love it because it's old school!

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The camera and the shirt.

One of my early mentors was a guy named Bimbo Reed. He taught me a lot when I was in high school. He even had a color darkroom set up in his trailer. He was the one who told me that it was okay to take a vertical picture every now and then, ha! Bimbo took a picture of me with my K1000 on his couch, New Year's Eve 1990. A much skinnier version of myself snapping a few shots at Daytona Beach with my K1000, June 1988.

The Clay City Times, 1991-1994

I kind of laugh at this cheesy picture now, but, let's just say, I took my job as a journalist seriously. My trusted K1000 is beside me, October 1992. I ran several hundred rolls of black and white film through it while I was working in newspapers. It and a police scanner never left my side. 

 


2024 Washington Youth Tour

June 24, 2024

One of the best parts of my job as a freelancer is that I get to make two trips to Washington DC each year. One of those jobs happens each year in June when I travel with about 60 high school seniors from all over Kentucky, spending a week in DC on the Washington Youth Tour, which is sponsored by the Kentucky Electric Cooperatives. This year marked my 14th trip. I mainly document the week with photos for the state's electric cooperatives to use of their students, but my main job is to create a magazine cover for each co-op to run in Kentucky Living Magazine later in August and September. We usually switch up the location on the cover photos and this year I did them at my favorite site in DC, the World War II Memorial. Good photos tend to create themselves there, regardless of the light or angle. I'll admit, I don't necessarily enjoy riding a bus that many hours because it usually makes me sick, but I thoroughly enjoy being around a group of 17-18-year-olds for a week because it helps to keep me young at heart.

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Photo by Tim Webb

The trip always starts with a visit to Thomas Jefferson's Monticello in Charlottesville, Virginia. Locals pronounce it Monti-chello, but I have yet to find the H in Monticello. I'm sure the folks in Wayne County could correct them on the proper pronunciation of Monticello.  

Photo by Tim Webb Next on the agenda was George Washington's home at Mount Vernon. 

Photo by Tim Webb Photo by Tim Webb

Photo by Tim Webb Photo by Tim Webb Photo by Tim Webb The Sunset Parade at the Marine Memorial (Iwo Jima statue). 

Photo by Tim Webb The Kentucky students come together with several hundred other students from all across the country during the NRECA Youth Night. Our Kentucky kids never disappoint!  Photo by Tim Webb Photo by Tim Webb Photo by Tim Webb Photo by Tim Webb Photo by Tim Webb Photo by Tim Webb

For years, I sat up a complete light system to do the cover shots, but the last couple of years I've gone with a small speed light (a flash) on a remote and used one of the other chaperones as a human light stand, which you can see Joey Frakes' shadow on the ground in front of me. If I start early enough in the day while the light is calm it works. 

Photo by Tim Webb Photo by Tim Webb I have photographed the WYT for several years with my good friend April Burgess, who works for Inter-County Energy in Danville. She brought her husband Rudy along on the trip this year. They were so funny, and really good people to hang out with! April is easily in the top five of my favorite chaperones (inside joke, ha!).

Photo by Tim Webb Photo by Tim Webb Photo by Tim Webb Photo by Tim Webb Photo by Tim Webb I don't care if you're a Democrat or Republican...what a great moment when Mitch McConnell, the Senate Minority Leader takes a few minutes to come outside and talk to you on the steps of our nation's capitol. I told the students that they will appreciate this photo more and more as they get older in life.

Photo by Tim Webb The Great Shoe Exchange of 2024: Blisters are a real thing when walking 5-6 miles in dress shoes. 

Photo by Tim Webb Photo by Tim Webb Photo by Tim Webb If the World War II Memorial is my favorite site in DC, then the Holocaust Museum and the Pentagon 911 Memorial are right there with it. Maybe someday I'll do a blog post about these two sites because it would be hard to do either one of them justice here in this post. If you ever go to DC these two are definite must-sees! They both are made up of so many moving parts, but yet, so well-done, so intimate, and so sad!   Photo by Tim Webb Back home six days later at Base Camp at East Kentucky Power in Winchester.


A Mere Shadow of Myself

May 29, 2024

I have shot with two cameras for several years. I keep my 70-200 on my right shoulder and my 24-70 on my left shoulder. It took a long time for me to build up enough equipment to do that. I remember how happy I was when I could finally afford to buy two professional-level camera bodies. People love to ask me why I do it that way instead of just changing out lenses with one camera body. I do it mainly for speed, meaning, it takes time to change lenses out, and on certain assignments, especially with news and sports, you can miss the money-shot while you're changing lenses. Plus, the constant changing of lenses allows more dust to get inside your camera. 

I use vertaical grips that have a shutter button on the side, which means the shutter button on my left side is always resting against my hip, and likes to take it's own pictures. Everytime that I'm shooting, I usually come away with about a dozen or so shots of the ground because of my hip. A few weeks ago, I came home after working in Taylor County and downloaded cards and found these. I thought they were pretty cool to be an accident. 

The bottom picture looks a little phallic, but I promise I'm not happy to see you, HA!

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Photo by Tim Webb Photo by Tim Webb Photo by Tim Webb  

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