The Daily Foto: July 26th

Phodographer Carolyn Lane outside the Global Mission Watering Station, Haiti April 2009
Like a scene from a western movie two boys, Tito and Dieuveut, jumped upon their donkey and rode off across the road in rural Haiti and towards the ocean holding and staring at their very first photos. They were so mesmerized I worried if anyone was driving the donkey across the busy street and yonder.
The Daily Foto: July 24th

Phodographer Brittany Lane in Blanchard, Haiti April 2009
Inaugural Photo Tour Goes to Haiti

Photographer Carolyn Lane in Ibo Beach, Haiti, July 2007

Phodographer Carolyn Lane in Ibo Beach, Haiti, March 2009
The first Dog Meets World Photo Tour group including Carolyn Lane, Leah Hudson and Brittany Lane flies to Port-au-Prince, Haiti. Carolyn wants to fulfill a promise made to herself to return to Haiti and shift the paradigm of taking photographs to “Taking and Giving” photographs! She intends to find the girls from Ibo Beach and give them a copy of this original group picture from 2007 and take new individual ones for each of them! Mission Accomplished!
Where are the smiles?
Hi. Here I am sitting outside a classroom in Ibo Beach, Haiti doing impromtu English lessons with these French speaking girls. They easily parroted my words and we laughed alot. In an effort to capture this scene I handed my SLR camera off to a young man. He struggled to figure out how to use it and numerous shots are taken. The girls crowded around and stared at the digital screen images. Later I study the shots and realize the girls are not smiling, while I’m always grinning to beat the band. My Haitian friend explained the girls have rarely, if ever, had their pictures taken and are trying to look serious for this important moment. Wow, smiling for a camera is actually a learned response.
Back in Florida, I come to the conclusion that it is infinitely unfair that I have this picture of these gorgeous girls and they do not. This realization is the catalyst for starting a non-profit aimed at bringing personal photography to the rest of the world’s kids and families. The idea is to shift the paradigm (ever met a paradigm that didn’t shift?) from no longer just taking pictures of others, but to “taking and giving” pictures.



