Sequim photographer Randy Tomaras points to a photo featured in his two-volume course “It Is NOT the Camera.” Tomaras’ home studio will be featured in the Strait from the Artists Studio Tour today and Sunday. (Michael Dashiell/Olympic Peninsula News Group)

Sequim photographer Randy Tomaras points to a photo featured in his two-volume course “It Is NOT the Camera.” Tomaras’ home studio will be featured in the Strait from the Artists Studio Tour today and Sunday. (Michael Dashiell/Olympic Peninsula News Group)

Sequim artist looks for life outside of frame

Photographer will be part of Strait from the Artists tour

SEQUIM — A common question when people see Randy Tomaras’ colorful, stunning photographs is a simple and understandable one: What kind of camera did you use to get that?

It’s also the wrong question to ask, he said.

“The camera makes up less than 5 percent of the knowledge needed to create an outstanding image,” Tomaras wrote in his newly constructed, two-volume digital book that doubles as a photography course, dubbed, “It Is NOT the Camera.”

“Good or bad, the camera only accepts the image,” Tomaras, 75, wrote in his forward. “This course concentrates on the other 95 percent that nobody tells you about.”

With more than 50 years as a professional photographer, Tomaras will look to pass on his expertise through his course, lessons accessible and pertinent to fellow pros, semipros, amateurs and even those who don’t yet own a camera.

Tomaras will open his home and archive of photography — much of it scenic and profile shots from across the globe — as part of the third annual Strait from the Artists Studio Tour, which is set for 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. today and Sunday.

Tomaras said he was moved to complete the publication and take part in the tour after undergoing a four-way heart bypass in March.

“I thought, ‘Now is the time,’” Tomaras said.

Outside the frame

“It Is NOT the Camera” is split in two, separating his primarily vertical and horizontal shots. Each photograph comes with some exposition as Tomaras gives either the story or the fundamental lesson — or both — that goes with the corresponding image.

Each page is designed to give a kind of moral, Tomaras said.

One of those lessons is simply, “Be kind; you never know who you’re talking to.”

In his visits to other countries, Tomaras often seeks out those residents who may be largely ignored, such as the homeless in Paris. He recalled meeting an elderly woman, alone and smoking, who needed help getting across the street. He invited her to lunch so she would tell him her story and allow her to be photographed.

When he visits a place he’s never been before, Tomaras often picks up postcards at the airport, scenes that catch his eye, and then finds a way to communicate with a taxi driver to “take me there.”

For profile photos, Tomaras said he has a system: he takes a multi-lingual photo release form, made out tongue-in-cheek style, so as not to scare someone off when he approaches them.

“It’s not just photography; it’s working with people,” he said.

For photos of tourist-targeted subjects, such as grand cathedrals, Tomaras said he likes to get to the place when it opens and search for places not so obvious to the average phototaker.

During the studio tour, Tomaras said he plans to offer a demonstration of how to get good still-life photos, such as a set of flowers, in a studio setting.

For more about the studio tour, visit straitfromtheartists.com.

________

Michael Dashiell is the editor of the Sequim Gazette of the Olympic Peninsula News Group, which also is composed of other Sound Publishing newspapers Peninsula Daily News and Forks Forum. He can be reached by email at michael.dashiell@sequimgazette.com.

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