nowheremangraphics

Portrait of the Artist: Joe Garber

November 7, 2011

Portrait of the Artists Joe Garber

I met Joe Garber after seeing his artwork series titled “Demons” at the Cupcake Royale up on Capital Hill. I was immediately captivated by the animal beheaded characters, and immediately knew I wanted to do a portrait of him for my project because I was simply inspired by his imagery. He was interested in participating in my project and we were able to arrange a shoot about a week and a half ago. I also knew that I had to do a funky portrait which would compliment his own work.

After a quick session in his studio we went out to Freeway Park at the Seattle Convention Center around the corner and use some of the great textures out there despite the pitch-black.
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Fur In Fashion

July 23, 2011

Becky Franklin - Fur In Fashion

Last weekend I had scheduled another photo shoot with the wonderful Becky Franklin. We had originally planned to shoot on-location on the streets of Seattle. Unforgivably, however, we forgot that this is Seattle and it’s got a rep to protect, so of course it was pouring down rain. We had the incredible Maddie Hibbert helping out with styling. For me this is photo-shoot gold. Both of these girls are pretty brilliant, fun, vibrant and know how to bring out some of my favorite work. I just think our styles mesh incredibly well and I love working with both of them, so having us all on one shoot was amazing. The quote of the day for this show was “They’re like wings… on her eyes.”
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Sometimes When It Doesn’t Work Out It Still Works Out

May 4, 2011

7 Sins of Fashion: Lust [v1]

I like this shot. I think it works on a couple of different levels, but it’s not at all the right shot for the assignment I’d set for myself. I’ve never been a big one for composites, so this was really a practice run at this. Sure I’ve dropped in shadows from one photo onto another, or swapped out a person’s head in one shot for another because the expression just worked better but the pose didn’t, and I think I’ve got the Photoshop chops to pull it off. But I’ve never added a person to a photo that wasn’t there, and I’ve certainly never tried to have two people interact in a photo that was composited.

This is why it’s important to test these ideas out before you try to do it for a client. If this were a client job I’d be reshooting on my own dime. I’d be paying for models and stylists to come in again to get the shot I need to get. But for self-assignments I can experiment and learn, and I learned a lot about compositing with this shot.
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McKenzie Jump!

January 18, 2011

I had the idea for this shot in my head and chatted with McKenzie who helped me realize it.

Jump!

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Poseidon

July 21, 2010

Poseidon

I got together again with model Midas I Write (MM#1564051) for another shoot. He wanted to do something with an octopus tentacle coming out of his hair. He also has these cool star tattoos which we wanted to incorporate into the piece, so the name Poseidon just flowed out naturally from this.

Shooting Info
I shot this with a my Pentax K200D and my Tamron 28-75mm f2.8 lens. I wanted a relatively shallow depth of field so I set my aperture to f5.0, and then set up my light, an AB800 through my home-made silver beauty dish just out of the frame to camera right… about 3 o’clock. The power setting was fairly low… less than half-power because I wanted my background to go fairly gray (but not black) and I was using a relatively wide aperture.

And yes, that is a real octopus tentacle (technically it’s a leg, but tentacle sounds so much cooler). There’s a fantastic Asian Market down the road from me in the Seattle area and they sell all sorts of cool things like Octopus legs.


Daniel

June 5, 2010

Badass Daniel

Last weekend I went out to do a fashion shoot with Daniel (aka Midas iWrite) (MM#1564051). We had a great time. I wanted to get a very masculine, harsh look to the series, and I think we achieved that very well.
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Tips & Tricks of Working With Models

May 27, 2010

Everyone has their strengths and their weaknesses. My strengths have been for ideas and concepts and figuring out how to achieve those ideas and concepts. My weakness has always been with directing. Photographically I’m a voyeur. I’m an observer. I watch people in coffee shops, in parking lots, shopping, waiting for the bus, or sitting in their cars in traffic. I very easily can identify with the person singing along to a song while sitting in traffic and it always makes me smile. Not because I’m laughing at them or making fun of them, but because I do it too. Oh, I’m an ardent shower-singer and I tear up the steering-wheel drum set. I wouldn’t do it in front of people. I’m far to shy and embarrassed to do that, but I recognize myself in others. What I have a very hard time doing is pulling those emotions and “reality” out of people, simply because I’m naturally more of an observer instead of a director.

The problem is that it’s awfully hard to take a portrait of someone and have them pretend that they’re not having their portrait taken. It’s different when it’s a snap-shot or a “stolen” moment. Actually creating that moment is much harder that it seems. At least it is for me.

But I’ve been learning. At Scott Church’s workshop that I attended in Seattle in February he said something that really made me pause. He said “sometimes the best way to get the picture you want is to put aside the camera”. A lot of photographers, me included, often tend to hide behind the lens, waiting for that moment to appear so we can grab it, but really great photographers create the environment that fosters those moments first and then let the moments come, and they do that by pulling the camera away from their face and talking with their models.

And they slow down. Waaaay down. Watching Scott work with models I was struck by how few frames he’d shoot. He’d spend 5 minutes working with a model and shoot about 7 frames. Most of the rest of the people have rattled off 30 or 40 frames in that time.

What I’m beginning to do is after every shot lower my camera, re-compose my model (even ever so slightly like “lower your chin a tad”), then raise my camera, recompose the shot and shoot. There are many portrait photographers like Will Crockett who always set up every shot on a tripod so they don’t have to recompose. I’m personally not a fan of the all-tripod-all-the-time method because I like the freedom to easily switch from vertical to horizontal, to get high or get low on the fly. Will’s a great photographer and his method works great for him. I prefer to be a bit more active, although I admit at the end of a day of shooting you realize how much of a sport photography is!

The other trick that I learned from Scott’s workshop was working with lights. I learned lighting about a year and a half ago, and like many of those new to lighting I wanted to play with my lights. I wanted to move them around and try to get cool and different looks, which is fine if you’re shooting objects or self-portraits, but you end up spending a lot of time moving things which means you’re not paying attention to your model. And models get bored. Who wouldn’t? I mean I’m interested in this stuff and if I’m sitting in as a model and the photographer is constantly walking away to move a light you’re just left there to entertain yourself. It’s boring. So spend as little time with lights as you possibly can. Just set it and forget it. Once you’ve got your lights in place, leave them alone! Move you model around. move yourself around, but try to not touch the light stands at all once you’ve got your basic lighting set-up in place.

Lastly, take some time to talk to your model about the emotions you want from them. If you can, take some example photos with you that give them the overall mood you’re going for.

If you put the attention on the model, you’ll be rewarded with much more emotional and impact-full images. And an powerful image with lacklustre composition and lighting will trump a beautifully lit and composed image of a person looking flat and dry any day.


Little Red Riding Hood

December 7, 2009

Little Red Riding Hood

Model: Cheaynne Clark (MM#733610)
Make-up: Angie Callau
Costume: Vintage Costumers (aka the best costume store ever)
Axe: Colin & Ria Miller

I had a shoot this weekend with the amazing Cheyanne Clark. This was the first time I worked with her… it sure won’t be the last! We’d been planning this shoot for ages, and this was due to be the first in my Twisted Fairy Tales set, but got postponed due to illness. Well, we put it together again and sailed on. I got my good friend and make-up artist, Angie Callau to do hair and make-up for the shoot, and she did a fantastic job on short notice. We ended up doing several different non-fairy tale scenes as well, which will be coming down the pike soon, once I get this giant back-log of work sorted through. I’m slowly but surely making progress though!

More details and larger below the cut.
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Cinderella’s Sin

December 1, 2009

Cinderella's Sin
Better Viewed Large For All The Awesome Detail

Cinderella: Rachel So (MM#116807)
Wicked Step-Sister: Dodi Rose-Zooropa
Makeup: heartSHAPEDbullet (MM#732720)
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The Waiting

November 25, 2009

The Waiting

I finally got a chance to do pregnancy photos with my friend Lisa. I’ve got to say, photographing pregnant women is rather counter-intuitive. I mean… your’re photographing a woman and you want to emphasize the stomache?

Lisa had this absolutely fantastic gynormous 5-foot reflective umbrella that made some gorgeous light. Basically it creates a 5-foot light-source near your subject which creates just lusciously soft wrap-around light. Groovy! She better watch that thing… it might some day grow legs and follow me home :)

Lighting notes:
AB800 through orgasmic-umbrella at about 7 o’clock. Vivitar 283 bare at 10 o’clock as a kicker.

After the jump I’ve got a quick tutorial for getting rid of hot-spots.
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