Category: News

Legal Smeagal

Yesterday, I was browsing photography apps for my iPhone when I stumbled on an amazing concept. A mobile model and property release form generator. Instead of keeping generic paper release forms in your camera bag, you can create one right on your smart phone and email it to both the model or property owner as well as yourself. The app is called Easy Release and is available for iOS (iPhone, iPad, & iPod) and Android based systems.

I was able to quickly set up Easy Release by adding my logo, business information, and my written signature in the app settings. The interface is very straight forward from there, and getting a release form put together shouldn’t take more than a few minutes on the spot. If you know who you will be shooting ahead of time you can set it up prior to the shoot and be ready to accept a signature and quickly push past the legal junk so you can get to creating. Signing a signature is not as bad as you think it would be either. It feels as natural as it could get without the use of a stylus or pen (which for some people might not be very natural at all, but for me it was fine). It also lets you assign a photo to the release so you can take a picture of an ID or maybe a reference shot of a person (which would be very handy if you are shooting a bunch of people in the same session). It’s very well thought out and could potentially save your butt so you don’t end up in a lawsuit like the poor musicians in the band Vampire Weekend.

Here is a shot of my daughter in a funhouse tunnel at the Coastal Carolina Fair in 2007:

Funhouse Tunnel Exit

Today I received my prints from Mpix for the 2010 Coastal Carolina Fair, and as usual, they did an outstanding job. There is something so satisfying about a company that does things consistently well, especially when it involves your livelihood! The FedEx guy commented to my wife that I must be starting a gallery with all of the prints I’ve been ordering this week. What can I say, I got excited when I saw the stand-outs that I had made for Kulture Klash and couldn’t wait to see more.

I mounted them myself on black foam core using mounting spray. I knew that I could potentially ruin a print with sticky fingerprints, so I added Mpix’s lustre coating to each one when I ordered them. Lo and behold, the first one I mounted got a little sticky, and I was able to easily wipe it clean without a trace of my gummy paw prints. I also hope to eventually frame these (framing is prohibited for this contest) and possibly sell them in the future, so I want them to survive the harsh conditions of the contest display. It’s a small price to pay for invisible protection. Mpix does do foam core mounting, but it is flush with the edge of the print, and I wanted a one inch border to avoid fingerprints by whomever handles them at the fair. Besides, buying a sheet of foam core from the store and mounting it yourself is way cheaper in the long run when you’re doing multiple prints.

Who’s your favorite printer and why? Let me know in the comments.


The Cub Sleeps Tonight

Sweet Sleeper

6 years ago, my son was 10 months old and would not sleep through the night. He cried. A lot. At some point I wrote this quick little lullaby for him:

Hey Kegan

We used to get to the neurotic point of insanity that could only be quelled by putting this song on repeat while driving aimlessly around Long Island in our car. I think my wife and I must have heard this song at least 100,000 times during that time of our lives, and to take a picture like the one above makes it easier to forget just how nutty raising kids can be.

I got some very cool news from Charleston Magazine yesterday, I hope that it all works out. I also should be receiving the prints I’m entering into the 2010 Coastal Carolina Fair photography contest today. Last year I printed my entries on cheap computer paper using a cheap color laser printer. I felt kind of silly when I saw how much better the professional entries looked when printed on quality photo paper, so this year I decided to take it a bit more seriously.

This was my highest scoring entry from last year’s contest:

Day 13 - Rusty Red Ford V8

Last but not least, don’t forget to come to the 6th Annual Kulture Klash Arts Festival this weekend, and check out the prints I am showing.


Kulture Klash Arts Festival 2010

I got a message a while back from Charleston lifestyle photographer Jonathan Stout asking me if I knew anything about the Kulture Klash Arts Festival. I had heard about it on the Digitel, but didn’t really know anything about it. He asked me to introduce myself to one of the organizers and send some sample photos. I started reading about the event and looking through Jonathan’s photos from previous events. Next thing I know, I’m ordering large prints of my work to display and sell at the event. Music, art, drinks, comedy, & roller derby… I’m very excited to be a part of this festival as it looks like something that’s right up my alley.

This will be the first time that I’m showing printed versions of my photography in a gallery type of setting. I know it sounds cliche, but seeing fine art photography as a printed medium is a totally different experience then when looking at it on an illuminated LCD screen. I even tried to photograph the prints, which are all 16×24″ standouts shown here in my kitchen on the bar, but it just doesn’t come close to doing these pieces justice. The color and detail of “Abandoned Trailer” really shine as a metallic print. The stark contrast and shapes of “Columns” are even more defining. I put a lot of effort into making sure these represented my vision for them and spared no expense in creating their printed versions. The pieces I chose all have very different appeal, but demonstrate my current photographic style.

I really hope that if you are reading this and you can make it to 10 Storehouse Row at the old Navy base in North Charleston on October 9th, that you stop by. There will be a free art viewing from 1-4 p.m, and then the party starts from 7p.m.-2 a.m. which will cost $15 in advance and $20 at the door. Even if you just show up for the art viewing, I think you will walk away with a very cool experience. I plan on checking out the whole festival. The Charleston Scene has all of the details here, so I hope to see you there!


New Glass

Getting a new lens is like getting a new camera without the hassle of learning how to use a new camera. Sure you have to learn how to take advantage of your new glass, but it’s always a labor of love and not necessity. I found a great deal on this lens on eBay last week and I’m happy to report that it is flawless! It’s the Tamron 17-50mm f/2.8 VC.

Like any new lens owner, I immediately put it on my camera and started pointing it at anything and everything. How does it look wide open, is the Bokeh nice and smooth? How’s the barrel distortion at 17mm? How fast does it focus compared to my other similar zoom lenses? How sharp it it at f/2.8? After I addressed the geekiest of geeky questions that have been rattling around my head since I won the auction, the artist in me told me to point it at something meaningful. Luckily, my family was home!

My daughter was in the fridge looking for a drink. “Hey Mac, turn around quick and smile!”

Mac

My son was at the computer playing video games. “Kegan stop for one second and look over here!”

Kegan

And then there is poor Amy, who’s been laid up sick for the better part of this week, sitting out on the back porch while the dogs were outside. I think she was too tired to resist my demands, and actually looked genuinely happy to pose for a picture. That’s saying something when you are constantly being bombarded by a guy with his cameras. She’s so pretty.

Amy

So this leads to the current question on my mind: Is the only way to get a photographer’s family to smile on demand to purchase a new piece of equipment? I’m kidding, of course. I am very happy that they helped me with my impromptu experiment with my new glass.

So far I haven’t shot much else with it, but as far as I can tell, it is a real winner. I really wish I had it when I shot my first wedding a couple of weeks ago, as it would have been perfect for that. Actually, the need for a fast zoom was what inspired me to investigate the options out there and eventually find this particular lens up for auction. It was a demo unit from a camera store, and came with all of the original packaging and arrived in mint condition. The seller even threw in a Sigma UV filter! I will share more about it in the future.


Old Vs. New

I was reading Ken Rockwell’s news page and his post today about film vs. digital photography got me thinking. Back in the day when film was king I never cared about photography. I was a musician and that was my thing. Photography was a “hobby” for the rich (which by a musician’s standards is anyone who could afford more than a pack of cigarettes on top of 3 square meals a day), as the cost of processing film would be a decision that was lost to buying tacos for lunch. If what Henri Cartier-Bresson said about your first 10,000 photographs being your worst is true (and I happen to agree with him), then I would have starved long before realizing my potential! I really have a lot of respect for the film guys for doing so much with what they had to work with. There’s a giant “but” coming, you can smell it.

Audiophiles are really a bunch of curmudgeons. They will argue until they are blue in the face about the superiority of analog recording and playback . In most respects, they are correct, but digital recording and production has gotten so good that it is quite possible to record sound so close to analog that you could fool even the most discerning audio geek. I only wish the popular music producers of today would lay off of the compression and start using the abilities available to them to capture sound and not distort it completely in the name of loudness, but that is a fight for another website. The second record my band made was recorded to 2″ tape because we wanted that warm analog sound. When I took the mixed songs to the mastering house I realized something that most audiophiles miss. It was mastered digitally. The engineer took the songs and converted them to digital files that he mastered on a computer. He did run the signal through tube compressors, but the final product was captured in ones and zeroes. The same thing happens with 95% of film that gets printed. The negative gets scanned and then printed on a digital printer. It becomes a digital photograph the minute it gets produced or distributed! There are still a handful of traditional photo labs out there, but they are a dying breed. Digital is rapidly killing the world of film. Will it go away completely? Probably not, but it will be something you have to work a bit harder at to achieve pure analog photography.

This leads me back to Ken Rockwell’s post. Ken is a very opinionated guy, and he tries very hard to back up his opinions with facts. Sometimes he’s off, but for the most part I agree with a lot of what he has to say. I do find his delivery on this topic a bit abrasive. He calls the photography he grew up with “real photography”. Let’s be honest, I’m sure that guys who shot on metal plates scoffed at the film guys. Just like horse breeders who laughed at Henry Ford, technology moves on and leaves the old ways in the dust. Ken’s not saying in his post that he thinks poorly of digital, but that it’s different. I agree, but I also believe that you can get very similar results if you know how to develop your digital photos. He also argues that shooting film is cheaper. I’ll just go ahead and tell you I think he’s wrong there. The guys who grew up on film choose their shots more carefully because that is how they were brought up. They are far less likely to take 36 exposures of the same scene from every conceivable angle because it’s just not in their upbringing (with the exception of assignment guys who aren’t spending their own money on film and processing). So for Ken to say that it’s cheaper to shoot film to a guy like me who likes to let the shutter rip makes me think he’s crazy. I can shoot a dozen shots and delete the ones I don’t like on the fly and lock the keepers before I ever get near a computer. I can experiment with different exposures in changing light and get immediate feedback so that I am ready for a moment when the time comes. Digital makes a learning process that previously took days to realize take mere seconds. The old school guys hate this because they had to work really hard to achieve what the new kids can do with a lot less effort. It’s the old walking to school in the snow uphill both ways routine all over again. As for the guys that claim to be purists, they are manipulating reality the minute they use a different kind of film to achieve a different kind of effect. It’s no different than applying a warming filter in Photoshop. The greats like Richard Avedon used dogging and burning heavily to achieve their art. This is similar to a lot of the processing that goes on in the digital world.

Now, don’t get me wrong, film photography is still the resolution king. You can fit a lot more information onto film than most digital cameras can capture, just like you can fit a lot more audio onto a vinyl record than in a digital audio file. But can you tell the difference? For most humans, the answer is a big fat no unless you are hearing the audio on a high-end analog sound system or viewing a professionally processed pure analog print. Most of us are listening to music in our cars or iPods and viewing photos on our computers or in magazines (which are digitally reproduced).

Lets get back to the gist of Ken’s post. He is challenging photographers out there to try both in the same scene and compare them to each other and to see which one you prefer. Unfortunately I’m not going to be purchasing a film body anytime soon (although if the right deal comes by, I’d jump all over it). Instead I wanted to look at the example he gave with another photographer named Ken Lax and see if I could edit his digital photo to look more like the film one. His example definitely shows that a SLR loaded with professional portrait film interprets a scene with much richer colors than a high-end point and shoot digital camera’s presumably unedited file. You see, when a negative is printed it is a developed, which is a process. If you take a digital file off of a camera card and do nothing with it, you have not developed it. Most cameras that shoot in JPG do some form of developing in the camera, but if you shoot in RAW, you still need to develop the photo. What I came up with after “developing” Ken Lax’s digital photo was pretty close to his film photo (even though it was still not exact, it was more along the lines of how I would have handled the processing). I did reach out to Ken Lax to see if it would be OK if I post my edited version of his photo here, but he passed on that idea, so I must respect his wishes. Instead, I present a picture from the same area as his examples, which is on the Blue Ridge Parkway in North Carolina. I took this shot in May of 2009 with a Nikon D40 using the kit lens and the only editing was done in Apple’s iPhoto which consisted of simply increasing the saturation. His photos were taken during September of this year, so the different seasons will have a different look as will the different times of day, but the idea is that a digital photo can achieve similar rich colors when compared to film if presented on a digital medium, which is the way we view most of our photography (for better or worse).

Blue Ridge Parkway

The big question this brought up for me is that if I did shoot with film, would I eventually just edit it digitally and treat the negative as a RAW file? At that point, then what is the point of shooting film? It seems like a hassle, much like going through the trouble of recording a whole album to analog tape only to have it mastered and distributed digitally. Still, there must be something there I’m missing because of the delivery method, or else so many photographers wouldn’t be so passionate about it. Either way, the real art is in creating something, not in what technology got you there. Just an FYI, Mr. Rockwell also believes strongly in the process that goes on before you press the shutter regardless of what kind of equipment you are using and has a wealth of timeless information on his website. Make sure to check out his sponsors too so he can keep providing his experience and knowledge freely to the photographic community.


Nikon D7000 Announced

d7000 Nikon introduced the d7000, which is the replacement for my camera of choice, the D90. Here are some great resources about it: Dpreview.com‘s tech porn preview, Engadget and Gizmodo weighed in on the announcement as well. My favorite coverage is by an actual photographer, famed Seattle photog Chase Jarvis has a great post about it including sample shots, a sample movie and a behind-the-scenes movie all created on a prototype of the d7000.

Here is the short film he created on it:

Make sure to check out all of the awesome shots he created as well (I don’t want to re-post those here, but you can find them right here).

When new gear comes out like this it’s very difficult for a guy like me to control the urge to figure out a way to justify buying it. The truth is that the D90 is a friggin’ amazing camera, and I have no reason to upgrade it at this time. My next logical camera upgrade if I was going to stick with the DX format (which most of my lenses are designed for) would be the D300s. But the d7000 is for all intents and purposes even better than the D300s! This makes my head spin thinking about what the replacement for the D300s has in store. So my wife can relax, as I have no intentions on buying this camera, but I’m gonna start saving for the D400 now 😉

sb-700The other newsworthy release from Nikon today is the SB-700, which is a replacement for the flashes I use, the SB-600. The best new feature to me is that the SB-700 now can act as a wireless commander – which means you can use it on the camera to control other wireless flashes – something that the SB-600 couldn’t do. If you know what this means then it’s exciting news because you don’t have to use your built-in flash as a commander for the remote flashes and you don’t have to buy the expensive SB-900.

And, so as not to be a completely boring techie post, here is a picture of my happy little dog, Lola:

Happy Lola


Hello world!

Welcome to JWNPhoto.com. This site has been a long time coming, and I’m super excited to have a focused home for my photographic endeavors. I have a never ending urge to grow my craft, and with your input I will hopefully be able to realize that growth as quickly as possible, and trust me, I will enjoy every minute.

Joe


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