Life is a Beach … at our Panama City Beach Condo

Posted in Life on February 19th, 2008 by Kyle Dreier – Be the first to comment

About three and a half years ago Amy and I purchased a condo which was simply a drawing of a floor plan and a couple of artist renderings. Construction was completed in September of 2007 and we began decorating and setting up our vacation home. We’ve decorated it and equipped it for our use as well as for guests.

March 1 officially starts the peak rental season and I’m rather pleased with how everything turned out. We’ve created a web site with additional information about our beach condo.

If you’re interested in getting discounts and last minute deals make sure to sign up via our www.1708shores.com web site.

Shores of Panama ~ Panama City Beach, Florida

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Shores of Panama ~ Panama City Beach, Florida

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Shores of Panama ~ Panama City Beach, Florida

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Shores of Panama ~ Panama City Beach, Florida

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Shores of Panama ~ Panama City Beach, Florida

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If you are interested in rates and availability and additional photos please check our Shores of Panama web site.

See you at the beach!

- Kyle

How Far Would You Drive for a Whataburger?

Posted in Food, Life on February 12th, 2008 by Kyle Dreier – Be the first to comment

Ever since I was a boy I’ve had a certain affinity for Whataburgers. I can remember my mom saying those ever welcome words of “you wanna get a Whataburger?”

The love continued through high school and college and now well into adulthood. But this is where my story takes a dark turn.

In 1998 Amy and I moved to Tennessee where if you were to ask where to find a Whataburger you’d likely get a response of “A what-a-what?”

While my obsession for Whataburger pales in comparison to Wayne Geyer’s, I do, when given the opportunity, go a little out of my way to rekindle my Whataburger taste buds.

Whataburger

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Whataburger

This past weekend I kept an eagle eye on the roadside as I headed down to Florida. Apparently Alabama is more worthy of not just one, but multiple Whataburger locations. I stopped at one of them, just 2.5 hours south of my home.

- Kyle Dreier

The Bluebird Cafe – First Timer

Posted in Just Critical, Wednesday Nights on February 8th, 2008 by Kyle Dreier – Be the first to comment

Well, it’s my weekly Wednesday Night Out and my bud Jeff McMahon says there’s a friend of his playing some of her work “in the round.” Even though I’m somewhat hep to the local music biz jargon I had to make a joke about the artists singing “Row Row Row Your Boat” in rounds, to which Jeff quickly said that they also do “99 Bottles of Beer on the Wall.”

Anyone that lives in Nashville knows that The Bluebird Cafe is the paramount place to go to hear artists and writers. Wednesday night was my first time to cross the threshold of this landmark here in town.

The Blue Bird Cafe - Nashville, TN

For nearly 10 years now I’ve driven by this place and have created what turns out to be a romanticized image of what this venue is beyond the understated facade. Once inside my first impression was “This looks like it used to be a Japanese restaurant.”

The place was filled with friends, supporters of the artists and I assume some music business executives or wannabe’s. Not much, if any, pretension – which is nice. This venue was pretty much just an intimate (shoulder to shoulder … “is there a fire marshal in the house?”) relaxed environment … at least for the audience. The artists commented on how it can be a little intimidating to play without all the lights, stage, tech that goes with big venues.

The event was an “ASCAP Presents: In The Round with …” and they had four artists/writers. For my taste I was really struck by the talent of Kelleigh Bannen and Meghan Kabir. All four were far more talented than I could ever hope to be but the style of these two really caught my ear.

Kelleigh Bannen had a style and tone that reminded me of Patty Griffin. Meghan Kabir made me think of Fleming and John. It was fun hearing their voices and enjoy them in a pure and unproduced environment.

I’ll never bill myself as a music critique but I certainly know what I like and do have an appreciation for people’s talents.

- Kyle Dreier (Mr. Critical)

Reading. My new veg.

Posted in Life, TV on January 29th, 2008 by Kyle Dreier – 3 Comments

I’m the kind of guy that has to just stop and unplug most days. In my single days when I was working as Art Director for American Way magazine I lived less than one mile from work and I had no TV. I totally missed the entire OJ Simpson ordeal.

So, what did I do without a TV? I ran a bunch. I Rollerbladded more. I’d hop in the car and dart off to a local park and skate for an hour or two. I was in good shape. That was sixteen years ago.

So what about today? Lately I’ve found myself channel surfing through stupid stuff on TV. We don’t have cable … not that it’d be any better.

“Enough!” I say.

Thanks to my pal and fellow Steve Martin fan, Jeff McMahon, I started the year off reading the Steve Martin autobiography. Good read, especially for anyone who has followed him since his first album or before.

Now, I’m on the self imposed one-book-per-month plan.

January: Steve Martin autobiography
February: Financial Peace – Dave Ramsey
March: My Name is Asher Lev – Chaim Potok
April: Boundaries – Townsend/Cloud

The rest of the year is still up for grabs, but so far, I’ve already read more than I have in the past 5 years.

- Kyle Dreier (less vegetated)

My New Toy … Walnut Pinhole Camera

Posted in Photography on January 23rd, 2008 by Kyle Dreier – 5 Comments

Today I felt a little like Nicéphore Niépce as I shot photos from the top of a building on Main Street in downtown Franklin, Tennessee. My camera? A beautifully crafted 65mm f/130 pinhole camera made of walnut by Dennis Wilder.

This is such a contrast to my “normal” shooting with digital SLRs … and I LOVE the serendipity that this old technique allows. Digital is fast, immediate, highly controlled … where this is slow, clunky and far less control … all good therapy for me.

Polaroid proof.

My first Polaroid pulled from my new pinhole camera. Niépce would be proud.

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kyle dreier pinhole photograph

One of my favorite Polaroid shots from my afternoon on the roof in 30 degree weather. The exposure time on this was about 6 seconds … as I counted in my head … one Mississippi, two Mississippi. Oh, and the shutter? … my finger.
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What next? Who knows, but one thing’s for sure, I’m having fun.

- Kyle Dreier

Interior Photography

Posted in Photography on January 17th, 2008 by Kyle Dreier – 1 Comment

Another fun job. I continue to enjoy shooting interiors, particularly when the subject of these shoots is so cooperative … sitting still and just looking pretty.

Marrero Building & Development

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Marrero Building & Development

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Marrero Building & Development

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Marrero Building & Development

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Ok, maybe this last one isn’t really an “interior” but I treated it as such with lighting and styling.

-Kyle Dreier

Show Opening

Posted in Art on December 9th, 2007 by Kyle Dreier – Be the first to comment

Last night was the show opening for Johnny Rogers and me. I love Johnny’s work. I was moderately pleased with my work.

Here’s how it looked prior to me loading it up and taking it to the Nashville Art House.

Kyle Dreier Fine Art

See all eight pieces here: http://www.dreier.com/kyle/fine_art/

-Kyle

38,000 People Running the Streets of NYC

Posted in Photography on December 7th, 2007 by Kyle Dreier – Be the first to comment

Well, I was there … catching the action of the 2007 ING NYC Marathon. What a fun time! I shot from sun-up to sun-down … actually before sun-up and after sun-down.

What a day. I walked about 6 to 8 miles and captured many aspects along the route. Thanks to the subway system that allowed me to walk then jump ahead 5 or so miles at a time then emerge from the subway for a new view. I was on Staton Island, Brooklyn, Queens and finally at Central Park.

I was there on assignment for the Tug McGraw Foundation. See my link below to look at the results from the entire shoot.

nyc-marathon01.jpg

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There’s much more to this story. The Tug McGraw Foundation raised over $250k for brain cancer research. I was privileged to be a part of their weekend and team. See the entire shoot here.

- Kyle