Archive for March, 2010

It’s a jungle in there…

Friday, March 19th, 2010

or… Test Run with the Horseman.

I finally got a chance to head out with the Horseman. I had to wait to get a tripod sturdy enough (thanks Kevin!). Otherwise, I was pretty much limited to wishful thinking.

The weather was not terribly cooperative, so I headed to the Garfield Park conservatory to function test, and play with the 75mm ultra-wide on the Fuji 160S (three new things at once, MADNESS).

All in all I’m pretty happy. The camera and film performed well. The tripod will need some tweaking, and will be upgraded down the line – but all good for now. A few shots below. No portfolio pieces today, I don’t think. But still fun.

100% crop from the center grotto of the above. Nice little waterfall. (man, I need a new scanner. FYI Client work is drum scanned, not done on this old thing.)

All in all – I think things worked well. A few kinks to work out. But good tools, and I like the way this film scans. Once I nail the color balance, we’ll be in good shape.

Good light!

“Outwork your competitors…”

Wednesday, March 3rd, 2010

Jim Fiscus has an interesting interview (given by a student from his alma-mater, East Texas State) over on the Stockland-Martel blog.

In particular, I liked his parting advice to “aspiring” photographers. (I put aspiring in quotes, because frankly, I think it applies to ALL photographers.)

Learn business skills. Outwork your competitors. Take risks, and be willing to fail.

Good stuff. A simple lesson that bears repeating. Luck is important, but the harder you work, the more opportunity for luck to jump in and lend a hand – you make your own luck.

A few other gems hiding in there. His point about good light is important. Many people seem to think you can fix or create just about anything in post production. And there is no doubt that you can do quite alot. But starting with good light. Learning how to light and set a subject, puts you that much further ahead. It saves you time in post, you start with better material, all in all – you can work to make a good or great picture that much better, instead of spending all of your time trying to overcome flaws in technique.

All of which is a long way of saying. Technique matters. It doesn’t matter how grand and creative your vision is, if you cannot effectively realize it in final image.

Read the full interview here.

Thanks all. Good light.
Liam