About Sheryl Checkman

Sheryl Checkman is an award-winning designer with more than 25 years' experience in applying innovative yet pragmatic solutions to the full range of communications and design challenges. Before opening Checkman Design, Sheryl was Vice President & Manager, Design Services, for the public relations agency Burson-Marsteller from 1981-1992. Prior to that she was an Art Director at the The Barton Gillet Company, a marketing communications firm. Sheryl graduated from Cornell University and attended a Masters program in Communications Design at Pratt Institute as well as a three-month design program at the University of Copenhagen in Denmark. She graduated from the High School of Music & Art in New York City. Sheryl is an avid skier and scuba diver. She swims, plays tennis, practices yoga and enjoys taking pictures, both above and below the water. She adds her creative signature to her photographs by creating Digital Fine Art which she currently exhibits in her online gallery. She recently launched a line of inspirational sports-themed T-shirts under the name Life is Balance®. In addition to her design work, Sheryl also creates custom photomontages for a variety of corporate and consumer clients.

Lionfish, Oh My

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These are a couple of photos of Lionfish that I took on my last dive trip to the Turks and Caicos. These fish are native to the Pacific and are causing havoc in the Caribbean. It’s believed that they got introduced into these waters in 1992 after Hurricane Andrew destroyed a private aquarium and released six of them into Miami’s Biscayne Bay. Here’s a link to the msnbc story

Wear My Dive Art!

300 Dives and Still Counting

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This past July I took my annual trip down to the Turks & Caicos to dive with Club Med. On this trip I was to complete my 300th logged dive. That should have made it special enough (I like to celebrate milestones). On the day of my 300th dive my buddy had arranged for everyone to swim up to me under water and hand me a little rubber duck. I didn’t catch on to this until the 4th duck was handed to me during our safety stop. Along with the ducks, the Club Med Scuba team made me a cake, literally. I was covered in eggs, cocoa powder and flour upon arriving back at the dock. After a few not very attractive photographs & a shower, I was looking forward to my 301st dive.

The most memorable of my 9 days of diving this trip however occurred on dive 310 at a dive site called Grouper Hole. This was my last dive of the trip, a shallow second dive of the morning. I always get a bit nostalgic on my last dive of each vacation and look for something really special to remember while waiting for my next dive vacation. I was thinking to myself that I’d really like to see one more turtle on this trip. Moments later I looked at my dive buddy who was giving me the hand signal for turtle. I couldn’t believe it… I wished for a turtle and like magic, one appeared. And then he proceeded to swim with me, side by side, allowing me to photograph and video him up close for a quite some time until he seemed to get stuck between two pieces of coral. He just stayed still stuck and not moving until Alain, my buddy lifted his front flipper, allowing the turtle to swim free and head toward the surface for a breath of air.

It was one of those magical encounters that can make even a skeptic believe in a greater force at work. I don’t know whether it was the power & energy of my thoughts that brought the turtle to me or just a coincidence, but, I’d prefer to believe that on some level the turtle and I connected and he came to make my last dive of the trip into a special memory.