Use Golf Travel Case for Light Stands & Tripods

Freedom Golf Travel Case $80

The first thing you notice about professional photographer’s gear is a lot of it is improvisation.  For example you will notice a Freedom Golf Travel Case that I bought many years ago to use as my light stand and tripod case.  I paid approximately $80 for it.  Today it sells for about $120.

HPRC 6300WE Wheeled Hard Case for Tripods $255

A similar case designed specifically for photography is the HPRC 6300WE Wheeled Hard Case for Tripods which retails for about $255.

Closed Up View


As you can see there is very little difference between the two items.


Before camera bags became well designed I knew of photographers who used boy scout bags for their cameras back in the 1970s.  This was before Jim Domke invented his bag.


I am curious what tips do you have for people on things that you have found work as well if not better for less money for your photography?  Tell us about them in the comments below.



Vacation Photos: Compose the setting first

To get this photo of my wife and daughter I took the photo below first.  It is then easier to have the people stand and fill in a part of the frame close to the camera. Nikon P7000 ISO 400, f/3.2, 1/40 fill flash to auto balance the background.
Nikon P7000 ISO 1600, f/3.2, 1/220

When you travel for vacations, be sure you do a good job of taking photos that show where you visited.  Don’t get so close on your family photos that the photos could have been taken anywhere.

Also don’t have the people so close to the background they are too small to see their faces.  Have the people as close to the camera without completely covering up your background.

Also, even tho you are outside on a sunny day try the photo with a flash and without.  Many times the flash helps improve the photo.

While this will work for your vacation photos, it will work for anyone you need to show in their environment.  Try this same technique for a person you might have a story about.

While I liked the picture of the Horwarts Train I really wanted to show our family visiting.  So after getting the camera angle I then had my family stand in and get a better photo for us.  Nikon P7000 ISO 100, f/4, 1/380
Adding my wife and daughter is easy once I have where they are composed.  Nikon P7000 ISO 100, f/4, 1/230
Nikon P7000 ISO 100, f/5.6, 1/400
Added my daughter to the photo above.  Again, by having a good background I am not only taking a photo of my daughter, but you can tell we went to Harry Potter Wizarding World Theme Park in Orlando, Florida.  Nikon P7000 ISO 139, f/5.6, 1/550 and fill flash used.

Will Camera Phones Replace Cameras?

iPhone 4S has an 8 Megapixel Camera

Apple fans, including co-founder Steve Wozniak, were lined up on Friday morning for a chance to buy the iPhone 4S. It contains an A5 processor (the same one in the iPad 2), which Apple says will render data twice as fast as the iPhone 4 and graphics up to seven times faster.

The 5MP camera on the Iphone 4 has been bumped up to 8MP, which Apple claims “might be the best camera ever on a phone”. It also has a bigger aperture of f2.4, while the illumination sensor has been improved, and there’s additional face detection. The video camera can shoot in HD 1080p rather than HD 720p, and it has added video stabilization that the Iphone 4 camera doesn’t have.

Can the iPhone replace my DSLR 8MP camera?  I think in time they might be able to do that, but for right now no and here are some of the reasons.

Sensor Size

Power-lines as you know can cause interference in your car’s radio the closer you get to them. Nikon P700 ISO 100, f/5.6, 1/60

The sensor they use in a camera phone isn’t the same size sensor they use in your DSLR.  While the megapixel count maybe the same the pixels are small and more compact.  The closer these pixels are to each other the same affect happens as when your car is closer to the power-lines and you are listening to your radio, you get interference.

You can hear the “noise” on your radio and you will see the “noise” in your photos. There is no grain in digital like we had with film, but the effect looks similar.  The more “noise” the grainier the photo looks.

As I was taking my morning walk I saw this and it helped me think of a way to explain noise in photos. Nikon P7000 ISO 100, f/5.6, 1/110

As electronics get smaller and they have electricity running through them this creates heat and the smaller the electronics the heat tends to increase. This is one of the things being tackled with nanotechnology.

Processor

Processor in iPhone 4S and iPad 2

The A5 processor in the new phone is faster than the older processor, but this isn’t the only thing that determines quality of your image. The software in the phone processes the image from the chip and turns it into a JPEG.  This process presently tends to make some judgement calls and gives some smearing affect as compared to an image shot on a DSLR in RAW.

When you can shoot RAW on your camera phone which gives your more control then you maybe able to do a great deal more.

Lens, Shutter Speed and Aperture

Right now most phones do not give you controls over the aperture to change it.  You just have a box camera. In many ways the camera in your phone is very similar to the Kodak box camera that they first introduced more than 130 years ago.  You couldn’t control the shutter speed, the aperture the focus or the ISO on the camera.  For the most part this is why the camera phone isn’t replacing anytime soon the DSLR or even the point and shoot cameras.

What you gain in convenience with the camera phone you often give up many controls which can make your images a higher quality.

Why I like my Nikon P7000

Another photo from my early morning walk with my Nikon P7000 ISO 100, f/5.6, 1/550
Fall leaves are changing on my street. Nikon P7000 ISO 100, f/4.5, 1/100

For all the reasons the iPhone 4S has deficiencies is why I love my Nikon P7000. The sensor is bigger and so less noise.  While it is only 10 megapixel and not all that bigger file size than the 8 megapixel iPhone, it is a cleaner file.

I can shoot RAW in addition to the JPEGs.  My camera offers Fine, Medium and Basic JPEGs where as with most camera phones you have no options.  I believe most of them are shooting a Basic JPEG due to the quality I see in them.

I can pick my ISO, my aperture, my shutter speed and I have an optical zoom.  My camera phone has none of these options.

Until all these are in the camera phone, the camera phone will be used for convenience, but I will most certainly still want to use my other cameras for images with enough quality to hang on my walls.

Don’t waste your money on visuals

Does this get your attention?

“We covered this event last year, let’s just run the same story,” have you ever heard this before?  Of course you would write a new story and find a new angle so the audience will want to get the story.  Another reason you create a new story is otherwise you might not have a job very long.

“Last year we covered it, let’s get a writer assigned to it and just use some of those visuals we had from last year,” is something I hear way too often.  If you think about it, this is why when you pull the analytics on a story, you see most readers never clicked to read the story or they spend less time than normal on the page.

If the visual looks like something the audience has seen before, many in your audience will assume they have already read that story.  Remember all the research says that the visual is the first place most of your audience will look.  If it is the same as last year and yet you have written a new story you have wasted your money on the writing.

Is this more effective with the light on the face?

One of the biggest things that professional communicators are asked to do is the cover the same events year after year and each time to cover it like it was their first time covering it. It actually is quite easy to cover that event the first time, but as most pros know it takes a lot more creativity the more and more you cover something.

The writer looks for a new lead for the story. We work for a new headline to grab your attention for something you have seen over and over.

Which one do you like more above? Ever thought you could use one one time and the other another time?

All the analytics for most websites continue to show that visuals help for driving traffic. Most everyone will agree that a strong image or visual will get the attention of the audience and make them want to know more.

While you may not be covering an event, but writing about a new initiative for your company, are you using the same visuals you are using for other articles?

Your photographs don’t have to be better, they have to be different to be successful.
–Dave Black

Always looking for the great image can sometimes paralyze your visual communication.  Believe it or not a photograph is successful if it stops your audience and makes them look.  Don Rutledge, my longtime mentor, told me that when a person is flipping through a publication and they stop on your photograph and then read the caption, it is a successful photograph.

On the flip side a photograph is a failure if the reader flips past your photograph.

It would be a few years before I would get another photo coach in Dave Black that helped me understand this from a slightly different perspective.  Dave let me know it isn’t about a better image it is about a different image.

The photos with the tilted horizon were different at one point and because they were different you stopped to look.  Now that it is a fad, it has worn off in its effective use to be “different.” The most recent phenomenon on Facebook is the App Instagram.  These filters turn your present photo into looking like a 1970s Polaroid snapshot.

When the App becomes a joke you know it is loosing the ability to be “different.”

You need to be sure your visuals are fresh if you want the reader to think it is new material.

Remember, the image doesn’t have to be great—it has to be different. You need to surprise your audience with a visual as much as you plan to surprise them with the text.

Don’t waste hiring a writer and stick an old visual with the story. You would actually get more hits on your website for example if you had a new visual and the same text. This way they would click to see what’s new. Isn’t that better than not clicking because the visual tells them they have seen this before?

Use fresh visuals with your fresh text so together they connect with your audience.

Don’t waste your money on visuals any more than you would on the text.  If you take the time to invest, whatever you spend is wasted if you don’t connect with the reader.

Fall in North Georgia with some BBQ

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The leaves are changing on top of Brasstown Bald in Hiawassee, GA.

This is the time to take advantage of the fall colors, especially in the mountains of North Georgia.  The peak is normally in the next couple of weeks.  The closer you get to Atlanta the closer the peak will be to the first of November.

Take some time and plan for a day trip.  Their are wonderful scenic routes that you can take.  Here is a link for planning your trip.

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I like using telephoto lens to capture the mountains.

Shoot a variety of photos at different zoom positions on your point and shoot or DSLR.  You will be surprised at how often a telephoto captures more of the vista than a wide-angle lens.  One of the reasons for this is the wide-angle makes things look further away.  You want to bring the impact up close and personal.

Normally I like to shoot the wide-angle with a flower or something close-up as the main subject with the mountains in the background.  I didn’t see any flowers that I could do this with on this trip.  The drought has affected some of those plants.

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You can see the leaves changing here closer to the top of the mountain.

You might want to bring a polarizing filter to help cut the glare on the plants and increase the color.  Here is a link to explain what it can do for you.

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This is the visitor center at the top of Brasstown Bald. There are great exhibits inside, but we just stayed outside with the great weather this weekend.

The best part of just taking off to the mountains this weekend was the surprises you find. We stumbled across Jim’s Smokin Que in Blairsville, GA.  We asked the park rangers where they recommended to eat and they told us about them.

I liked the food so much I wanted to be sure I put them in my blog here.  I hope you try them out.  I shot a few photos to show you how on the spur of the moment with a Point and Shoot camera you can tell a story.  I shot all of these photos here with my Nikon P7000.  They make a newer version called the Nikon P7100 that I highly recommend if you are in the market for a camera. 

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(Option #1) This is how many folks might want to start their photo story on Jim’s Smokin Que. does this really get your attention?  I don’t think so.

The first four photos here were me working until I could find the photo that I would use to start the story.  I was torn between #3 and #4.  Which one do you like the best to tell the story?  Notice I asked which one to tell the story and not which one do you like the most.

Why would I ask the question this way?  Tell me why in the comments below.

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(Option #2) I like this better than the first photo, but I still think this looks too generic as far as unique and making you take a second look.

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(Option #3) I went between this photo and Option #4 as to which one I would use the lead the story.  I think both work.

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(Option #4) This is most likely the photo I would choose to lead the story.  You know what to look for driving into Blairsville on the side of the road. 

Had I known I would want to tell this story for some magazine I would want to go back and show them Smoking the meat out back of the restaurant.  I would want to show more photos in the kitchen to show how fresh everything is they prepare.

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When you Google Jim’s Smokin Que you will find write ups that not only mention the food, but how clean the place is for a BBQ joint. It was clean and made me want to come again.

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I love Jim’s tag line of “You can smell our BUTTS for miles!”  If I were assigned to shoot the story and not just on a trip to the mountains for the afternoon, I would try and be here when the counter was full. I think then the sign with everyone in the stools would have a little more humor.

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Their famous “Butt Sauce.”  They also have a “Kickin Butt Sauce.”

It is important to show the things that help make the story different from other places.  All BBQ places have a sauce, but how they name that sauce can make it more appealing or humorous.  I think we see the humor of Jim Guess and his wife Donna.

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I ordered the Beef Brisket sandwich with Cole Slaw & Baked Beans

Review by Mike E.

The Real Deal. Just delicious. I stumbled on to this place during a day trip up to the North Georgia mountains, and I am glad I did. Everything I had here was fantastic. This is  BBQ how’s it’s meant to be. But unlike authentic BBQ joints, this place is clean and the staff is very friendly.

I had the Pulled Pork Sandwich and it was great. It came on a great soft bun with a ton of pork. They have this sweet BBQ sauce they make called “Butt Sauce” that is just ridiculously good. I couldn’t drench enough of it my sandwich.  The baked beans were really tasty too. They had some sort of pepper (I think) mixed in which gave them a really unique and delicious flavor.

They are also friendly to the motorcyclist, which come from far away to ride these scenic highways of North Georgia.

Review by Mike S

I’m a BBQ snob, and Jim’s is in my top 5.  Great pulled pork, lean but not dry with a deep smoke flavor.  Good sauce (i went with the hot) and seved on a nice soft roll.  Beans and slaw were good, not great.  Very nice people, you could do surgery in their open kitchen.  A nice surprise on the way to Blairsville.

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This is Jim Guess the owner of Jim’s Smokin Que.  He is a friendly guy making you feel at home at his BBQ stand in Blairsville, GA.

Why would I put into this blog those reviews I found on the web? Quotes are the greatest tool for the writer. The only think better than a quote is the recorded voice of the customer.  I would really like to go back and interview some of the customers and put together a multimedia package on the place.  It would just be fun to do and give me another excuse to go and eat some more of Jim’s Smokin Que.

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It’s October and the time for pumpkins and scarecrows.  This is in the overflow parking area, which we had to use when we first arrived.  They are a great place to eat while you visit North Georgia.

U. S. Labor Secretary Hilda Solis speaks in Atlanta

At the last minute, a request came in to cover a meeting held at Cascade United Methodist Church here in Atlanta on jobs. Hilda L. Solis, the US Labor Secretary, will be the keynote speaker.

As with most of these last-minute meetings, you must be very flexible and understand why the client wants you to cover the conference.

Hilda A. Solis, US Labor Secretary, takes questions from the media after speaking to the US Department of Labor Symposium: Job Clubs & Career Ministries on the Front Lines of Getting Americans Back to Work held at Cascade United Methodist Church in Atlanta on October 5, 2011, and standing behind her is Rev. Dr. Marvin Anthony Moss, Cascade United Methodist Church.

My goal was to show that the church hosted the event where the US Labor Secretary was the keynote. I think the first photo helps capture that it was a newsworthy event and the UMC logo on the podium showed they were hosting the event. The pastor is in the background, helping tie the church into the event through the photo even more.

In my opinion, an extended caption with that photo tells the story.

Corentiss Holmes from Georgia Trade-UP speaks as Madam Secretary Hilda L. Solis, U.S. Labor Secretary, listens US Department of Labor Symposium at Cascade United Methodist Church in Atlanta, GA.

After speaking, Madam Secretary Solis took questions and invited the Georgia Trade-Up group attending to the podium. They had just gone through training and now needed jobs.

Solis told her story of going to college on a Pell Grant and being the first in her family to graduate from college. However, while her story and the story of President Obama made it from very humble beginnings to the country’s highest offices, the education issue was not what was fixing the present unemployment situation.

Solis was here to promote President Obama’s plan before congress.

Solis talks about her journey using Pell Grants to go to college and the importance of science and technology degrees today.

I am not writing this to talk about what she was speaking to the group about as much as to show how I covered the event. In addition, I wanted to deliver professional-looking people who are out of work and need jobs.

I needed to show this in addition to the podium shot because this is what she came to Georgia to help fix.

Audrey Jones talks about how she is looking for work now on a panel discussing getting Georgians back to work. She had been in the banking industry but was now looking for work in healthcare. Do you have a job for her?

The panels included people from the faith community who had job clubs to help their members and those from the community find jobs. In addition, they have meetings where experts come in to give tips, that could be on how to use LinkedIn, and Facebook, how to write a resume, and even some give out gas cards to help them find work.

The idea is to share what they are doing in hopes that more faith communities start these groups because through networking, people learn to cope and find jobs.

Brian Ray of Crossroads Career Network leads a panel discussion on Getting Georgians Back to Work.

The high we get from creating – by Guest Blogger Brad Moore

I enjoy blogging, because I learn so much from the process. However, turning out 3 blogs a week can be draining. It is important to keep new material coming, so I have asked some friends to guest blog.

I thought immediately of my friend Brad Moore who helped his boss Scott Kelby coordinate the guest blogger for Scott’s blog. I knew he understood what I do and would most likely be the best person I could think of to kick off what I hope to be a way to introduce you to my favorite people in the industry.

Brad is one of the best in the industry when it comes to going the second mile and knowing how to play second fiddle. Brad helped Joe McNally and now helps Scott Kelby look good. He has the reputation of anticipating a photographer’s needs after working with them.

As you can see from his words below, Brad is always thinking.

Stanley


Brad Moore – Guest Blogger

[Author’s Note: I wrote this for myself more than anyone else. I hope you find it applicable as well.]

Bob Dylan almost had it right with the lyric “Everybody must get stoned!” from Rainy Day Women #12 & 35, the first track on his 1966 double album Blonde On Blonde. While I don’t condone or recommend getting stoned through the use of illegal drugs, I do recommend getting high.

We are constantly seeking manners through which to get high. There are the obvious things like alcohol, sex, drugs, caffeine, etc. If not one of those, then job promotions, buying a new car/purse/camera, or beating our high score on Angry Birds.

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Michael Maddox of Kill Hannah performs on July 21, 2010 at The Ritz in Ybor City, Tampa, Florida (photo by: Brad Moore)

But as creatives, we get our high by creating things. The feeling of creating something we’re proud of and sharing it with others produces a high that is not easily paralleled.

In Art & The Bible, Francis Schaeffer discusses how our works of art are works “of creativity, and creativity has value because God is the Creator… Man is made in the image of God, and therefore man not only can love and think and feel emotion, but also has the capacity to create. Being [made] in the image of the Creator, we are called upon to have creativity. In fact, it is part of the image of God to be creative.”

So, as we are made in the image of God, and God is the Creator, we too all have creativity within us. This is the reason creating something gives us a high that’s difficult to match through other means.

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A view from backstage during Fireflight’s performance on September 11, 2010 during “Rock The Universe” at Universal Studios in Orlando, Florida (photo by: Brad Moore)

However, we all go through “valley” periods from time to time, going weeks, or even months without creating something for ourselves. And no the things we create at our day jobs out of requirement, but something you do for YOU.

It can almost be depressing.

But the moment you point your camera at something that excites you and click the shutter, a rush of endorphins hits you. And when you get through the editing process to find the ONE shot, it can feel as if you’re bringing new life into the world.

How then do we get ourselves out of these occasional valleys and continue creating fresh art?

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Hillsong United perform in support of Aftermath before a sold-out crowd at American Airlines Arena on August 6, 2011 in Miami, Florida (photo by: Brad Moore)

We get ourselves into these valleys by walking along a road of repetition. These creative ruts occur by doing the same thing, the same way, over and over. And we repeatedly do things the same way because we think we have it figured out, the “right way” we’re supposed to do them.

In Walking On Water, Madeleine L’Engle says, “We live by revelation, as Christians, as artists, which means that we must be careful never to get set into rigid molds. The minute we begin to think we know all the answers, we forget the questions, and we become smug like the Pharisee who listed all his considerable virtues and thanked God that he was not like other men.”

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Derek E. Miller of Sleigh Bells performs for a sold-out crowd at State Theatre in St. Petersburg, Florida on April 29, 2011

When we think we have everything figured out, we become smug and close our minds to divine inspiration, which makes it difficult grow in our art. We must continue asking questions about our creative process in order to stay fresh in our approach. Even the most accomplished artist will likely admit that their best ideas come from outside themselves, regardless of their spiritual affiliation.

If our calling in life is a creative one, we must put ourselves in a position where our minds are open to divine inspiration, and our creative process open to questioning and exploration. Doing this will allow us to make fresh new art that we are unable to create on our own.

So go out, explore, create, and get high!

You can see more of Brad’s work at bmoorevisuals.com, find him on Google+, and follow him on Twitter.

Light diagrams for dancers

 
The client was looking for a “Gritty Look,” We decided to use a brick wall to look like you are backstage and toss in the lights with gels in the background to add to the effect.

“Our dance department needs some photos for a poster to promote the department,” was the request. After discussing the proposal and what they wanted in more detail, I realized we would wing this one.

I packed up in my van all my lights and backgrounds. Of course, I had most of my cameras and lenses with me.

They wanted gritty and edgy in one photo. Then the college wished to other traditional images for ballet.

Here are two from the photo shoot with the diagrams of how I used lights in the photos. In my next blog, I will also show a couple more pictures from the shoot.

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Here is the lighting diagram for the photo above.

Do you have a favorite of these two? If so, why did you pick it over the other one? What would you change if you could on these photos? There is always a place to comment on these blogs below.

This photo is more of a classic look, and I liked the moment a lot. The columns were in a lobby, and we decided to use these to help set the mood. I used a warm gel also to help convey a warm moment.
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Here is the diagram for the Ballerina by herself.

Professional Photographers and Restaurants have a lot in common

Meet Chef Marc Wegman and his wife at Adele’s: Authentic Cajun Experience.

A successful restaurant and a successful photographer have a lot in common.

We were really sad to see one of our favorite restaurants in Roswell close.  It was “North of New Orleans.”  They had great food and we loved the staff.  They didn’t survive a year.

They had a very hard time finding good kitchen help that understood not just how to cook, but to meet the demands of lunch and dinner rushes.  This pressure in the kitchen caused conflicts.

The old adage if you can’t stand the heat then get out of the kitchen, isn’t referring to the physical heat.  Running a restaurant business creates a lot of psychological pressure in so many areas.

It takes a restaurant balancing all these areas to be successful.

Photographers go out of business every year for the same reasons restaurants fail.  It isn’t always their photography that causes the failure—it is sometimes business or people skills that can take them under.

I continue to struggle with my business.  Everyone does sooner or later.  Sometimes a camera fails and I have to deal with the complications this can cause to an assignment.  Sometimes I have to deal with unrealistic expectations of people.  How you handle these moment’s taxes ones people and business skills.

I think the only thing that fails more than restaurants are photo businesses.  Just as chefs can over focus their success on the food, so too photographers over focus on the photos.

We hope that Chef Wegman is successful with his restaurant Adele’s.  We love the food and hope he can do everything on the business side to stay around.

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We were excited to see they did hire Craig who worked at NOLA.  this is Dorie, Craig and Chelle enjoying a small reunion.

Adele’s is conveniently located on the corner of Holcomb Bridge Road and Old Roswell Road in beautiful Roswell, Georgia.

Location / Contact Info:
690 Holcomb Bridge Road, 
Suite 260
Roswell, GA 30075
770-594-0655
[email protected]
http://www.adelescajun.com/

Reuinted after 33 years

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Dr. Ken Day enjoys catching up with Knolan Benfield after some 33 years.

A couple of days ago Nicholas Spratlen sent me an email that he and his friend Dr. Ken Day wanted to come and see the missions photo exhibit at Roswell Presbyterian Church.  They both get my e.Newsletters and read my blog and were fascinated with the concept.

I was pretty excited because they didn’t know that my uncle Knolan Benfield was coming to town the same day for a visit.  We met them at the church and frankly Nicholas and I barely got a word in, Knolan and Ken were just enjoying catching up and swapping stories about what it was like working together for the Southern Baptist Home Mission Board during the 1960s and 70s. 

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Dr. Ken Day and Knolan Benfield

“What impressed me the most about Ken was when he became the head of the communications division he went back to school and got his Phd in communications from the University of Georgia,” said Knolan. Today for the first time he told Ken about how he felt.  Ken was sort of paralyzed for a moment. No one had ever thanked him for doing that.

It reminded me how important it is to tell people the positive things they do for you.

The other day I wrote to my friend John Spink, a photographer for the Atlanta Journal and Constitution.  I was just taken back at how consistent his work was in the paper and with all the cutbacks it is hard to work for a newspaper these days.  I just wrote and told him I was really impressed with his work.

John’s response was unbelievable.  He said the comments made a big difference for him that day.

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The reason for the get together, the missions photo exhibit that I curated for Roswell Presbyterian Church.

Take the time today and pick up the phone, get on facebook, send an email or just send a hand written card to someone.  Thank them for what they did in your life.

I had to share these photos of Ken and Knolan, because you can see in their faces that they really were enjoying each other.  We all need that in our lives.

Race Cars and Photography Subjects have a lot in common

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Just a self portrait of me at the Atlanta Speedway

My last e.Newsletter sparked a reader’s comment.  He shot motorsports and wanted to do even more and get paid to do so.  He was commenting on my blog post “How to photograph what you love for a living.”

It was during the exchange of emails that I had a moment of clarity.  I had another example to help students learn how to understand marketing.

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If you look you will notice not just a major sponsor, but many others with their logos on these cars.

The guy had sent me some of his photos of cars on a track and I immediately saw all the sponsor decals. I see every sticker as a potential client–most photographers just see it as decoration.

For example Goodyear might be interested in photos and an article for their internal newsletter.  Every single sticker on that car is a potential corporate outlet.  Two departments at each of these corporations one should contact.  Their PR office which often has two parts an internal and external focus.  The second group is Marketing/Advertising. 

Every time you talk to anyone on the driver’s team you need to find out where they are from and what schools they went to.  Their hometown paper is interested and their college alumni publications are interested.

Don’t forget to then look at everything on your list and then think of all the associations these folks are members of.  Each of those organizations has publications as well. 

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Each and every sticker is another sponsor who would be interested in photos of this car.

Goodyear is most likely a member of TIA (Tire Industry Association).  They too have publications that need photos.  They run ads of their members in the publications.

While HomeDepot and Lowe’s maybe competition, most likely they are both members of the NRHA, North American Retail Hardware Association. 

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Even NASCAR driver Randy Baker has sponsor patches all over his driving suit.

You may not ever cover motorsports, but if you were to think of everything you photograph as having people interested in the photos the same reasons that sponsors put decals on race cars, then you have one of the biggest clues to know how to market your services.

Everyone has a story is based on another fact someone wants to know their story.  Learn to connect the dots between the story and the audience.

When you make contact

When you pitch a story you are pushing content.  Learn to pull content as well with each contact.  “…here is a story for you on ….”  Always let them know your availability and what you are doing in case they want to piggy back an assignment for you.  “I am going to cover _____ race on____.  If you need any coverage of this let me know.  Also, I can take time on the way there and back to stop and get coverage for you along the way.  This will save you the travel expenses since I am already in the area.”

Whenever you travel take time to stop by and visit some of these people you are contacting.  “Hey John I am in the area for a job tomorrow.  Do you mind I stop by and say hello.  Maybe we can get a cup of coffee.”  This can lead to more jobs.

It is about networking.  The more contacts you make the more times you will get a job that pays.

Three ingredients I look for in a sports photo

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Three ingredients: 1) Ball, 2) Competition & 3) Peak Action

There are three things that I think make for a good sports photo:

1) The Ball
2) Competition
3) Peak Action

The Ball

Not every sport has a ball, but for those that do I think it really helps to have the ball in the photo. Breaking this rule is possible to still have a good or even great photo.  But like all rules, when you break the rule you need to know why you did so.

Fan reaction to a play is a good away from the action shot where the ball will not exist for example.


The Competition

If you have a great peak action photo and the ball it doesn’t look as good without the competition.  It looks often like a practice moment when the competition isn’t in the photo.

The competition in sports shows the adversity that literally you must overcome to be a winner on the field.

1
We have all three, but the competition isn’t up and close like the first photo.  This communicates the runner is outpacing the competition. 
Peak Action

Just before they hike the ball in football you could have the ball and the competition in the photo, but lack the peak action.  It is a static moment.

Some of the things that can help communicate the peak action are expression and body language.  If you can see the expressions of the players you often can see the exertion of effort in the expression of the athlete. 

When they are at the peak of their jump like going over the defender you can see a peak moment.

Remember, in all of photography if you wait to see it and then click the shutter you will always miss it.  You need to learn to anticipate a moment.  This is most likely the one thing separating the great moments from an almost good moment. 

2
Here we have the ball and peak action, but there is really no immediate danger with the competition.  So there is less excitement than the photo above.
IMPORTANT NOTE:

These three tips are on top of the things necessary in all photos:

1) Good exposure
2) in focus
3) Well composed
4) Good use of light