Nikon D4, 14-24mm, ISO 4000, ƒ/7.1, 1/100 |
It is very common for me to shoot what would normally be about 10 to 12 assignments all packed into one day. On this assignment I packed in 11 locations in 1/2 day.
Fuji X-E2, 18-55mm, ISO 400, ƒ/5.6, 1/640 |
- Science Lab
- Helicopter Aerial Photo Shoot of Campus
- Students by statue of Mary & Jesus
- Female by herself
- Male by himself
- Male and Female
- Drums from around the World Class
- Spanish Class
- Computer Class teaching Adobe Illustrator
- Small group in the Library
- Priest Teaching class
- Priests with students and talking in lobby
- Calculus Class
- Robotics Class
Click here to see the photos in slide show larger.
The skills I give to my clients is to walk into any situation and come away with photos that will engage their audience. Any situation can require special lighting skills to shooting available light and even knowing how to shoot aerial photos of a campus.
I am not give time to brain storm and come up with lots of ideas. I am given less than a couple minutes to come up with an approach and then execute it in about 30 to 40 minutes. This includes setting up studio strobes and taking them down to go to our next location. I work with two assistants to make this go quickly.
The hardest part is the client who has not worked with a professional who is going to make each location look the very best by creating light may not be aware of the time it takes for each location. They may be use to seeing the local newspaper reporter come in and take a few photos and then they write a story. Those photographers typically use no flash or on camera flash due to the speed they need to work and the fact that most of the time the photo is reproduced Black and White.
Fuji X-E2, 18-55mm, ISO 250, ƒ/5.6, 1/500 |
No comments:
Post a Comment
All comments are reviewed.This is done primarily to eliminate spamming. Please be patient, I maybe on assignment and unable to review right away.
But to increase meaningful conversation, sometimes it’s necessary to reduce the not-so-meaningful bits. Here are the kinds of things we’ve been deleting in recent posts. Please avoid these types of comments:
One-word comments like “Cool!” or “Thanks!” While we appreciate the congrats, we’d love to hear more about what exactly you love, and (even more importantly) why.
Shameless self-promotion. Comments that contain links to your site within the body or otherwise encourage folks to visit your blog are a no-no. If you’d like to increase traffic to your blog, there are other places than here to do that.
Multiple comments by one author. We’re glad you want to be engaged, but please give others a chance to speak, too.
Really long comments. Let’s just say that if you need to take more than three breaths to read your comment, it’s probably too long.