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Last Sunday was the last day for the extremely talented Artist Sophie Green and her incredible Exhibition “Impermenence” Highlighting Wildlife and conservation issues. I cannot not give you any idea of the texture, depth or attention to detail of each of her photo realistic pieces of art. Most of these are being auctioned to raise money for conservation projects. Prints and other products are available; please visit:
https://www.sophiegreenfineart.com -
So whilst we were in Northern Italy a couple of months ago touring the Northern Lakes we stayed overnight at this lovely hotel that overlooked one of the lakes, it had spectacular views, and an Olympic size 50m swimming pool.
Many, many years ago I was fortunate enough to represent the Royal Navy in a couple of inter service swimming competitions. I grew up with one of my best friends being an Essex county champion and some of it rubbed off, or so I thought. I was ok.
We had made friends in Italy with a lovely couple who were passionate triathletes, and they had invited us to join them for a morning by the pool and we eagerly accepted. it was a beautiful day, I jumped in and started my first length freestyle. What was this? at the end of that first 50m I was completely out of breath. Although fit out of water I was completely unfit in it, my breathing technique was shot and yes I did keep swimming and did a couple more 50m lengths individually but I was given a massive wake up call.
My point?: When we got back I decided to supplement my three gym sessions a week on a Monday, Wednesday and a Friday with a swim Tuesday and Thursday mornings as well. My local pool is a standard 25m and my first dubious attempts at continuous swimming were let’s say unimpressive.
By setting a goal of increasing my total continual distance of two lengths every week I achieved a personal best of 40 lengths this morning, 1000 metres!
Select realistic goals that put you just out of your comfort zone and work towards them, when you reach them pat yourself on the back and do it again. I think that is real sustainable progress.
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1: “What you think about creates your reality”
2: “What you focus on is what you will find”
3: “What you think about, is what you feed your mind”
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File Management:
I was wondering what to write about in this update, when it occured to me that many of you may just be starting out on your photography journey wondering how when you become the star photographer you are destined to be; You handle all the files and folders you accumulate, how you separate your family and friends images from those of your increasing list of professional and semi-professional clients, and how you generally keep sane!
After all every credible photographer gives the most important piece of advice anyone can give…..Keep shooting, just keep shooting etc, etc. which means, lots more files.
Next question you are probably asking is who the hell is this guy to give me advice? Well let me answer that by saying there is a world famous adage that that you are only good at something if you do it all the time!
I have spent years trying every permutation of listing and file naming you can think of, creatively trying out new stuff thinking I was going to one day come across the next big thing that would change the way photographers work and improve their workflow. Let me now save you all a world full of heartache, exhaustion and wasted time! It goes like this:
Folder: Master images
Inside: Folder for each year.
For each shoot when you import the raw file, create a folder with the following hierarchy,
2014.07.20 John and Jennifer’s Wedding
What you do within that folder then will depend on your workflow, I immediately back up the original files to an external hard drive where they are left untouched. Within the above date folder will be folders for processed images and flattened pegs. Then clients pics and album selection.
For you it might be different, and I know that there is never only one way. BUT, in my humble and LENGTHY experiment into the world of file management, if you deviate far from the above, you are pretty much stuffed!
Have a wonderful week!
KjC
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In the few months I have been asked a number of times why a few years ago I stopped using the Fuji X Series Cameras, and so to simplify things here is a blog post entry.
Moving camera systems is not a decision any photographer takes lightly.
Once you choose a camera system for professional/semi professional use the addition of pro lenses, flash systems, and spare camera bodies starts to represent a very significant investment and as a semi Pro/Pro you need to get something back on your investment as well as making sure you have the right equipment for the job you need it to do.
I think it started way many years back when I went on a three day Wedding Photography course with Damien Lovegrove. He was shooting BTS with the then Brand new Fuji X100. He was smitten and I was immediately charmed by its cute small form factor and amazing 35mm equivalent fixed Lens. A long time after that and having read the gushing praise from everyone that touched it, I sold everything I could and bought one. Not to replace My Nikon Kit you understand but this would be the perfect take everywhere and always have it with you camera.
I really enjoyed using the X100 even if it was a slow camera in operation (even after the software updates) compared to any recent camera I had used, and it came with me on a couple of trips abroad as my personal camera. Whilst never having the confidence to use it in anger at a Wedding or Portrait shoot as a primary camera, I would take candid and BTS images and it soon impressed me with its low light capability.
I also enjoyed the size and weight, and it proved itself extremely worthy for what was to be my first attempts at street photography.
The XT-1 and XE2 came out, The gushing praise was free flowing from amazing photographers all round the world, and I was lured into questioning my own methods and thought processes. Could this really be the system to replace my full frame DSLR and lenses? I decided if this was the way forward I needed to be in at the start, leading from the front and bought these two cameras with the 56mm F1.2 and Kit 18-55mm OIS lenses.
I started taking my X100 to local photography group sessions where it was a great conversation starter, with its ability to create a great file in low ambient light, as well as with outdoor flashes and indoor strobes.
The XE2 I took out with me a lot with the outstanding 18-55mm lens, bigger than the X100 but with the innards of the XT-1 it was a great travel outfit which worked well underwater with the ‘Aquapak” .
I waited patiently resisting any urge to get the much lauded X100s but along the way sold my Nikon D700 (Totally wrong move) to help finance a great deal on the 50-140 2.8mm lens. My 70-200mm replacement! Surely I can take the plunge and leave my DSLR at home? Well……No.
Things continued with a mix of Nikon and Fuji at various events for some time and I was getting a growing set of Fuji lenses, I eventually got the 35mm 1.4, and 16mm wide angle prime lenses as well which by the way are superb , my personal photography at this time was pretty much Fuji based, at least in digital terms.
Obviously no camera is perfect, and I did have a few issues:
My biggest was AF consistency in low light, what seemed to be a sluggish shutter and the short life of the batteries, the AF performance improved with some of the Fuji software updates and the camera became more bearable. I used the cameras advantages, small size and low weight, and worked round its disadvantages, slow AF, poor battery performance and lack of a professional TTL flash system.
For static people, travel and architectural images the cameras were very good, The problem is personally have not stuck to one genre of photography, and The Fuji’s were not working quickly enough to suit my way of working.
… but the big one was my pictures were becoming more static? and I was loosing the response I had previously enjoyed because my Fuji’s which were basically slow in operation compared to modern DSLR equipment.
I had kept my Nikon D800, but my foray into the arms of Fuji had, (apart from the expense!) left me without an equivalent back up camera. The intention to use the Fuji system as a back up and then move across totally was a non starter for the above mentioned reasons plus the following:
When I retired from my home office post I immediately flew out with Chris Weston and photographed the Arctic Polar Bear Migration from the Banks of the Hudson Bay in Manitoba Canada. Even the D700 (I had the D800 as well, a prosumer camera) only froze twice in ten days despite -45 degrees in the wind chill towards the end of the ten days we were there. (As a side note Chris left his D3s outside doing time lapse all night with no problems, that’s why you pay £4000.00 for a camera!Although the build quality of the Fuji’s is extremely good, It would never convince me it would take the physical abuse I would throw at it on a daily basis for very long. (I say this knowing there are lots of Pro Photographers using these cameras on a daily basis indoors and on location in the dry with no problems). There are however inevitable concessions that have to be made in weather proofing and durability when you are cramming so much technology in such a small body.
Another thing is Ergonomics, Nikon have always been miles ahead (Of say Canon) in this regard, and if this means little to you consider this:
If you have to have a pro level camera and Lens in your hand for most of the day the fact you can balance over £4-5000 of system in one hand on the tip of one finger becomes very convenient and less tiresome despite its obvious weight.
The controls on a Fuji are however well thought out, it is very well made and its light weight,
But.. it is never that well balanced in my view, and if your tall with big hands they can feel a little more delicate than you might like.
Then there is the X photographer thing…. looking on the face of it like an aggressive promotion of the camera brand to the semi or pro market place and I don’t think all the stuff we read is as real as it first seems. There have been lot of amazing photographers on their books up to now, and to think they are not being financially compensated for their time and promotion of Fuji products would seem a little naive, and I have to admit I fell for some of the distractions myself.
I have enjoyed my liaison with the fuji system but ultimately I found myself, especially whenever I have been asked to do any paid work, immediately picking up the long term faithful partners that is my Nikon system.
So the Fuji system is gone, and I have had a Nikon D810 for quite some time now the main squeeze.
The latest technology isn’t always necessarily the best solution for you, as gear is never as important as the images it produces, So it makes sense to work with the equipment you are really happy with, if not then that is the time to move on……….
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This a great question, and if you Google it you will get many, many answers long and short, and I bet you know many people who run their own business who don’t know what their brand is or what it stands for.
Fundamentally though, your brand is the experience or expectation anyone has when they have contact either visually , audibly, or physically with you, your business or anyone who works for you or on behalf of you.
I think this is worth revisiting in sections having given it more preparation but I will leave it for now with the above thought.
How can you improve your brand?
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“Photography is an art of observation, it has little to do with the things you see and everything to do with the way you see them.” Elliott Erwitt.
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Street Photography, does that term mean anything to you, and if so what? It is probably one the fastest growing genres of photography at the moment, especially since lockdown, and whilst the term is very fashionable at the present time I find it fascinating as for as long as I have had a passion for photography I have seen street photography in one shape or another. Any candid photograph of any scene or portrait of a person in the public outdoors could be deemed a street photograph. I would also suggest that your personal favourite photographer would have some street photography if not in their portfolio, then in their personal work somewhere. There is something magical when a brief unique moment in time is captured knowing that it will never be repeated in that context and place again. I am you would say, rather late to the party in relation to this genre and it is definitely out of my comfort zone, however the skills required only inspire me to practice and get better at this craft, as it can only be of value to the future me whatever the subject matter may be.
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“Do what you can, with what you have, where you are.”
Theodore Roosevelt.
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A few weeks ago I had a shoot booked with some photographer friends. One of them set up a group and we get together every so often and shoot a couple of models, normally on one high key set up and the other low key for variation. Now I use the term model loosely, they can be anyone from someone met in a supermarket to aspiring models that fly over from Spain to get some portfolio pictures done. A real variety of individuals from different walks of life and it can be fun. It is also a bit like speed dating, in that with so many photographers in attendance you have about two minutes each time it’s your turn to introduce yourself, build a rapport, direct the subject and take the images before it’s time for the next one.
The main reason for me mentioning this is the morning before this shoot my main camera’s two PCB circuits decided to pack up leaving me with no squeeze for the main event. Now I could have made my excuses and not turned up. However I have a point and shoot in the shape of Sony RX100 MK2. This is a pocket camera with no viewfinder but an LCD on the back. Because in a studio environment you need to be in manual mode what happens with this camera when you half press the shutter to focus is that a white frame line appears and then the screen goes black. The beauty of this camera is it has a centre pin hot shoe which allows you to use the generic studio flash trigger’s provided at the venue. You need to keep the shutter speed below the camera’s maximum sync speed so I took a tripod to minimise the very real chance of blurred images.
Despite being the butt of many jokes, most of which are probably rattling around your head right now and me tentatively explaining why I didn’t have my ‘Real’ camera with me, I carried on, concentrating on communicating with my subject and directing the pose. Quickly adjusting the camera to hopefully get the image and click the shutter to a blank screen.
The point of this story is, you guessed it, the majority of the images I took that day came out very well and certainly much better than expected with headshots and portraits the subjects loved. So if and when your prized bit of all singing and dancing kit dies on you, and it will, beg, borrow or grab anything you can that will get the job done. It may not be perfect, but that doesn’t exist. You have however created something for someone who cares, and that’s all that matters.