News items from December 1913 indicate Scott was filming with
Buck Connors at
Fort Bliss, Texas for the newly formed
Albuquerque Film Company Perhaps the film was
The First Law of Nature, a 3-reel film with
Dot Farley and Buck Connors which was the Albuquerque Company's first release. Scott's first known cinematography work in Southern California was
The Key to Yesterday for
Carlyle Blackwell's Favorite Players Film Company in 1914. Scott filmed the four features produced by that company before the company folded in 1915. For three years Homer Scott was closely associated with director
William Desmond Taylor. Scott and Taylor both went from Favorite Players, to
American Film, to Pallas-Morosco, to
Fox, and back to Pallas-Morosco (which had been absorbed by
Famous Players–Lasky). Their collaboration lasted from 1915-1918. Scott freelanced for several years, and in 1920 filmed noted underwater scenes in
Annette Kellerman's
What Women Love (1920) and
Maurice Tourneur's
Deep Waters (1920). In 1921
Mack Sennett hired Scott as cameraman for
Mabel Normand, and Scott filmed her features
Molly O (1921),
Suzanna (1923), and
The Extra Girl (1923), plus other features for Sennett. ==Shooting for the Warner Bros.==