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andy royston FtLAUDERDALESUN Looking for the perfect wave Andy explains why he is drawn more and more to the ocean’s wild side The Unseen Sea Turtle Why sea turtles love our beach and what we can do to protect it + Art of Instagram How Instagram took over the mobile photo world. iPhone 101 Shooting with your iPhone Tips and tricks Sobre Las Olas My favorite street If anyone can, pelican! All hail the mighty peli SUmmER 2012 FINE ARt PHOtOGRAPHY 4G DESIGN OCEANSCAPES
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Andy Royston Magazine

Jan 30, 2016

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The Summer Issue of the new magazine from fine art photographer Andy Royston,
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Page 1: Andy Royston Magazine

andyroystonFtLAUDERDALESUN

Looking for the perfect wave

Andy explains why he isdrawn more and more

to the ocean’s wild side

The Unseen Sea TurtleWhy sea turtles love our beach

and what we can do to protect it

+Art of Instagram

How Instagram took over the mobile photo world.

iPhone 101Shooting with your iPhoneTips and tricks

Sobre Las Olas My favorite street

If anyone can,pelican!All hail the mighty peli

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FINE ARt PHOtOGRAPHY 4G DESIGNOCEANSCAPES

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So why, in this age of instant digital communications should I start a magazine to share my work and ideas? that’s a very good question. these days I’m probably far better known for my real-time photography project FtLauderdaleSun, and the project has grown in reach and reputation because of the use of the best social media

outlets on the internet. And today, the internet includes the ordinary (or should I say extraordinary) 4G smartphone.

Indeed the project is photographed, edited, post-produced (or apped as its now called) and uploaded directly from my iPhone. my only use of a computer is to archive and label the work. I’m a passionate advocate of the smart phone as a primary artistic tool. It can take a fine image that can then be enhanced, distressed, duplicated, color corrected and given any kind of effected treatment that you can think of without leaving the small box in the palm of your hand. What is more it can be published in a hundred different ways and reach an appreciative audience globally within seconds of being created. So why make a magazine? Because it’s a great way to step away from the chase and take a longer look at the work of the past few months and to share my thoughts about where this amazing creative outburst (everyone’s Instagramming it seems!) will go. So whether you’re reading this online or in printed form I hope you enjoy this look back on the past, and my thoughts about tomorrow.

Why iPhone?

iPhoneography, or mobile photography, is visual art created, edited and produced entirely on iPhone.

this device is the common denominator of a growing global network of photographers, artists and individuals who have embraced the limited resolution capabilities and have found enormous common ground artistically. Artists the world over have put aside their bigger cameras to enter this amazing global mobile photography scene.

It is photography, but it is also a collective mind set that’s changing the way that we create digitally in the 21st century.

www.tropicalsundesign.com

instagram: @ftlauderdalesun

twitter: @ftlauderdalesun

facebook.com/ftlauderdalesun

Welcome to issue oneAn introduction from your host, Andy Royston

It’s aGrand life

My most loyal supporters during 2012 have been those fine folks at the Pelican Grand Beach Resort. the Pelican Grand just happens to be on my beach beat, being situated right on the sands of North Ft Lauderdale Beach. If you see any shots of a pelican in this publication the chances are they were taken within sight of the biggest Pelican of them all, the Pelican Grand!

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A curious bird is a pelican.

His beak can hold more than his belly can.

He can hold in his beak,

Enough food for a week

But I just don’t know how the hellican*

hellopeli!It’s aGrand life

*There seems to be several slightly different versions of this

Dixon Lanier Merritt limerick. This one is as told to Jackie by her

dad, so it has to be the right one!

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I’ve always thought the pelican a most comical bird. With their comedy beak and waddling sailor’s gait they are hard to take too seriously.

But in flight, the pelican is an altogether different matter.

that firm, elegant flying style is frequently interupted by a dive into the ocean for a fish. they seem good at it too, and knock back quite large fish whole before making a fussy typically pelican takeoff into the air again.

most times I see them early in the morning that are solitary or in small groups of two or three. Sometimes though an entire flock will appear in a perfect V shape, off to who knows where. this is quite a spectacular sight, and on air-show days they seem to be doing fly-bys just to get a cheer from a crowd who appreciate a good flight formation. I catch a good photo of these guys quite infrequently, which means I’m always on alert if there’s a familiar silhouette heading down the shore.

ANDY ROYSTON

If anyone can, the pelican!A classic Fort Lauderdale sight is a flock of brown pelicans as they fly along the shore.

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Best time to see them?

The quietest time on our beach for sea birds is the spring, as they’ve got FAR better things to do than hang out at the beach!

You might still see one at Dania Pier, or a little north at Lauderdale-by-the-Sea’s Anglin’s Pier where they stick around optimistically hoping for a handout from one of the fishermen.

As summer goes on though the fish begin to return to coastal waters and on calmer days you might see quite a few on foraging trips. On the really calm mornings they will forget everything and just stay put, floating aimlessly around - in no special hurry to get on with things.

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Lauderdale-by-the-Sealogo

I’m very proud to have been commissioned to create the logo for one of my favorite beach towns

the brief was to design a logo that was in keeping with the low-rise miami modern scale of this family-orientated coastal resort.

the American classic adirondack chair - a homespun porch favorite and a bona-fide eco-design classic - was a perfect fit.

But the logo needed character, and the chilled out, inquisitive and friendly pelican was just the job!

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The image on the left shows the iconic town

square sculpture in Lauderdale-by-the-Sea

by Colorado-based artist Carl Wagner.

Whilst working on the town’s 2012 logo I

learned that some of the fishing pier regulars

have affectionately named the pelicans

Melvin and Sarah after the town’s founders.

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Toy camera apps for smart phones were nothing new.

But Instagram brought something new to the party;

a quick and easy way to share photos with friends.

Because it is easy to set up the service it became a great

way to share some of the quirkier beach shots, and the

deeper crops. After all, the app was designed mainly to be

viewed on a cellphone and I’d

probably never show these

images anywhere else.

And you know what? It became

great fun! I started to love one

or two of the set frames (like

‘Earlybird’, the sepia-tinted one

use on this spread...

instagram

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instagram

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What makes Instagram so unique is that it has caught the imagination of a generation of smart-phone users, who have learned that it is the perfect capture-the-moment device. I hold that it is like rock-n-roll radio - some of it is cliched, goofy and unashamedly pop - but it is something that we can all relate to and appreciate.

It sparks global conversations and chatter about the most amazing things. Some leading iPhoneographers like Aussie maestros misho Baranovic and Ollie Lang have used Instagram to bring together an active community of users. Elsewhere IG meetups are commonplace, and the phenomenon shows no sign of letting up. For me Instagram gives me a chance to share a one-of-a-kind snap and perhaps share a few views of the beach that are a little different.

Instagram accounts: @ftlauderdaleSun@ayup@teamlasolas

Instagram

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F t L A U D E R D A L E S U N . C O m

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Breakdance_SW9

At the heart of

my photography

there’s a

breaking wave.

These waves still

carry

the shadow

of the night,

but are kissed by

the first light of

the morning sun.

newwave

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newwave

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Breaker Fishermen_DAS5

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Ocean Having Fun_SW2Light Of Dawn_SW11

Silver Waves_SW16Breaker Fishermen_DAS5

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Shore Diver_mW1

Roll Wave_mW2 Big Break_mW5

Dark Wave 1_mW6Catch of the Day_mW8

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On a Facebook group recently we were talking about the lack of decent free apps around. I thought immediately of a wonderful toy cam app that first came with Korean instructions, yet managed to be so much fun that this didn’t matter. Pudding Camera isn’t a high-res app

that will give you a giant canvas to frame or a classy picture for your 500px account. It’s just a box of neat photo filters and frames all dressed up in a neat and tidy interface. If you just want to play around with the available light and share the results on your Instagram, Pud is just perfect. I particularly love the square Fantasy cam with the vivid color option so I can max out those golden sunrise colors. I tend to just shoot palm trees with it, but I’m sure you can find a million variations and color combinations from this natty little app.

And yes, it’s free.

Hipstamatic’s hot new combo

I’ve been using Hipstamatic for a long time and have always been a fan of this daft old app.

A new pak came out recently with a combo that really rocks. Its called the Portrait SnapPak and includes just two items. the Foxy lens and the Sugar film. I’m especially sold on the Sugar film, which works very well with most of the lenses. It brings John S to life especially.

the image here uses the Foxy lens with another fave, Claunch 72 monochrome.

Hipstamatic is back.

iPhoneography 101Want a tasty dessert? Try Pudding Camera!

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Every summer it happens.

And every summer it seems that some

beach-front businesses fail to get the message.

The signs are clear enough.

Do Not Disturb.

protect&survive

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As a photographer I turn a blind eye to lots of things, in my efforts to keep from getting distracted from nature, but one thing I’m very passionate about and can’t shy away from, sea turtle protection. I’ve been walking the sands of Fort Lauderdale beach daily for well over

three years now, and have observed the sea turtle nesting patterns over that time with great personal satisfaction.

to arrive at the shore to see the tell-tale tracks of little turtle hatchlings heading out of their yellow-taped nest area and off towards the ocean if a wonderfully uplifting sight. the team from NOVA University, whose dedicated turtle protection protection squad are constantly on the alert for new and activity around these precious nests, can be seen at work every moring throughout the nesting season.

the most amazing thing is that for all the mornings I’ve been walking the sands I have yet to see a single momma turtle or hatchling along the shore in the mornings.

I have witnessed a nest laid - during a recent stay at the Pelican Grand Beach Resort I took a midnight wander up the shore and soon came across the tell-tale tracks of a sea turtle heading up the sands. that there was no return tracks told me that she was still at large, so I moved slowly up into the shadows to find a rather sandy and slow moving shape high up the beach. What a privilege!

the sad thing though is that too often those hatchling tracks head in the wrong direction. Usually caused by disorientation - by instinct they head towards the dawn glow, and if the brightest thing in the sky happens to be the ballroom of a beachfront hotel or a tV left playing in a bar balcony then off they’ll go.

Quite why beach businesses continually forget themselves, or fail to remind their guests or cleaning crews to mind the lights is beyond me. Only a few weeks ago over 60 hatchlings were killed on A1A heading to join the party at one of the bigger beach hotels. Ironically this same hotel has a giant picture of a sea turtle in reception.

Find out more

You may only see the caution tape and the idea that you are sharing the sand with sea turtle hatchlings might seem just a story.

Here are a few places to find out more...

BROWARD COUNtY SEA tURtLE CONSERVAtION PROGRAm www.nova.edu/ocean/seaturtles/Broward’s wing of the state-wide protection program whose team patrol the shore in those familiar AtVs. this is your first port of call to find out about our sea turtles.

SEA tURtLE OVERSIGHt PROtECtIONwww.seaturtleop.org/

Sea turtle Oversight Protection (StOP) nighttime survey volunteers monitor sea turtle nests in Broward County Florida.

Protect & SurviveOur most important beach visitors, the sea turtles, need as much t.l.c. as we can give them.

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Spreading the news

My images of the turtle tracks and the volunteers who protect them are not anything like those that I hang in art galleries

they are simply part of the daily @ftlauderdalesun live-from-the-beach photo project that I run through twitter, Instagram and my own website.

You can follow daily and see the latest goings on at our wonderful beach here in Fort Lauderdale.

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Come see where it all began in the heart of Fort LauderdaleGuided tours daiLy at 1, 2, and 3 pmLearn about Frank and ivy stranahan and how they helped to build Fort Lauderdale. this is a story of a house, a family, and a town.

335 southeast 6th avenue Fort Lauderdale, Florida 33301 (just off Las Olas Boulevard

across from the Cheesecake Factory)

954.524.4736www.stranahanhouse.org

For more information or to register for a sunday night river Ghost tour, please call or go online.

riVer GHOST tour

BIG ETHE BOOK!

EVERY SUNDAY RAIN OR SHINEEast Las Olas Boulevard

and SE 12th St FORT LAUDERDALE’SONLY OLIVE OIL BAR

1239 EAST LAS OLAS BLVDFORT LAUDERDALE, FL 33301

(954) 522-5088

This fall:Showing iPhone art by

Fort Lauderdale’s Andy RoystonDrop by to see these wonderful prints!

FTLAUDERDALESUN.COM/BOOKS

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Just don’t call him egret, bub...

e’sback!

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Big E - so named because for a long time I thought him a great white egret - is my favorite beach companion. He comes to the shore quite regularly in late summer and makes for quite a photographic subject. I now know that he’s a species of bird that’s only found in Florida. He’s a white morph blue heron and the distinction only becomes clear when you see the differences in coloring and behavior. Big E is now a seasonal visitor to the beach, and as we get closer to the

mullet run (the annual migration of mullet along the coast that brings so many other fish to our waters) he’ll be an increasingly regular subject.

He’s most easy to photograph when there are shore fishermen around, as he’s learned that one or two regulars will toss him a baitfish or a small catch for breakfast. He’s more than capable of catching his own breakfast though. It’s fun to watch him tilt his head as he watches the shore breakers, and when he strikes he’s very fast.

Other times being photographed is the last thing on his mind. On days like this he’s quick to fly off before I get close.

Probably my biggest concern for him is that he’s getting very confident and not all fishermen like to have a large wading bird nosing into their keep bucket. Sooner or later someone will throw something larger than a fish at him!

most folks though are happy to have him around. He’s a smart looking bird and quite a character.

e’s back!North beach’s most diligent fisherman is back again for a third summer. Catch or cadge, he always gets his fish...

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F t L A U D E R D A L E S U N . C O m

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Like many others I’ve had happy times on Las Olas Boulevard. It’s a place for relaxing, for having fun, for chilling out, and maybe, for falling in love.

Las Olas begins at the museum of Art, Fort Lauderdale in downtown, and runs east through a wonderful restaurant, boutique, art and bar district.

From here the road widens a little into the Las Olas ‘east village’ area where the stores and services are more personal and local. Beyond this the boulevard winds a little then passes by some of the fi nest waterside properties which sit along the Las Olas fi nger isles with fi ne yachts and sailboats docked alongside.

Finally after crossing the Intracoastal Waterway you are then right on the beach. It is one of the fi nest in South Florida with fi ve star hotels and fi ne facilities and that amazing ocean!

What I love the most are the greener areas, like the Richard mancuso Greenway a block north from mangos, or Colee Hammock Park at the foot of SE 15th St, a perfect place to picnic. I think you can see just why I love this city!

#TeamLasOlas

Over many years professionally I’ve worked with most of the biggest names along the boulevard and my loyalty to the street remains the same.

I’m proud to be working with several Fort Lauderdale initiatives over the next few months, with my images being published by Sunny.org, the Winterfest Parade and our latest initiative to bring feet to the street, #teamlasolas

Follow the link on the ad at the back of this issue for details!

Las Olas BoulevardLas Olas lies at heart of Fort Lauderdaleand for twelve years I’ve called it home.

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published by tropical Sun Design, Summer 2012

this publication of iPhone photographs -

all a part of an emerging digital artform

known as iPhoneography - were all taken

and edited on Ft. Lauderdale Beach or Las

Olas Boulevard using the iPhone3GS and

iPhone4 by Andy Royston.

iPhoneography (or mobile photography)

is a new and popular photographic

medium, that combines a camera, a set of

applications that process and edit these

images and a means to share in real time

to social media and website communities.

Artists and photographers have realized

that the shared limitations of a globally

available mobile device create a level

playing field for creativity. the resulting

outburst of visuals via Instagram,

Facebook, twitter, Eye’em and a myriad

of website and photoblogs have together

created a new global renaissance in the

photographic arts.

If you want a particular image as an art print

email us:[email protected] call 954-850-7448

Our Prints All prints are printed on museum-quality paper, authentic giclee inks which combination gives a longevity of over 100 years in normal lighting conditions.

they are hand numbered and signed by the artist.

Pigment printing processes have been utilized since the middle of the 19th century. the image stability of pigment printing is superior to that of any other method of printing, including traditional silver-halide or metal-based.

Digital inkjet printing has seen a surge in the use of the pigment ink as ink sets have been refined to be compatible with the latest in high-resolution inkjet technology.

A digital pigment print, sometimes referred to as a pigmented paper print, is a digital image rendered onto an uncoated, natural fiber substrate with pigment inks.

Custom sizing and framing quotes are available.

Yes, we print...You can own any of the images published here in a high quality giclée print

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954-850-7448

Fine Art and Photography

Design and Art Direction

Social Media Management

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teamlasolasJoin the Team Las Olas marketing system

FREE

tropicalsundesignYES, YOU CAN USE TEAM LAS OLAS TO PROMOTE YOUR

BUSINESS ABSOLUTELY FREE...

If you would like an overview of Team Las Olas and its exceptional internet and social media network, please get in touch via TeamLasOlas.com