Beach Family Photos

This year we did the family photo up on the walkway to the beach. This was easier for my parents to navigate than on the beach.

Photo by Dorie Griggs [my wife]

Here is the basic setup for this photo.

Ocean Isle Beach, North Carolina. Leary Family Vacation [DJI Air 2S, Mode = Normal, ISO 120, 1/60, ƒ/2.8, (35mm = 22)]

Now I also took a family photo with my drone this year. The wind blew so much that we didn’t get one shot, with everyone looking great. We did get many pictures without the drone.

Now getting a moment with little children takes a village. They were done after a couple of shots, but we needed them for different groupings.

“Patience grasshopper”

– Kung Fu
Ocean Isle Beach, North Carolina. Leary Family Vacation [NIKON Z 9, VR 24-105mm f/4G, Mode = Aperture Priority, ISO 64, 1/100, ƒ/8, (35mm = 38)]

I believe that recording real moments is what we cherish years later. Of course, I am thinking about how we can get a better photo with everyone looking their best. I suggested the oldest cousin sit in front of one of the younger ones to make them feel special. IT WORKED!!!

Ocean Isle Beach, North Carolina. Leary Family Vacation [NIKON Z 9, VR 24-105mm f/4G, Mode = Aperture Priority, ISO 64, 1/125, ƒ/8, (35mm = 38)]

I then took my lights onto the beach for those who wanted photos on the beach.

Rebecca Kramer Manzi being a photo assistant [photo by Dorie Griggs]

Again I had some help from the rest of the family. They held the lights so the wind didn’t blow or damage them.

Madison & Joshua Poe at Ocean Isle Beach, North Carolina. Leary Family Vacation [NIKON Z 9, VR 24-105mm f/4G, Mode = Aperture Priority, ISO 64, 1/1000, ƒ/4, (35mm = 95)]

By the way, I shot the photos on a tripod in case I needed to combine multiple photos to get the best expressions.

Ocean Isle Beach, North Carolina. Leary Family Vacation [NIKON Z 9, VR 24-105mm f/4G, Mode = Aperture Priority, ISO 64, 1/80, ƒ/8, (35mm = 38)]

This last photo combines a couple of photos to get the best expressions.

Setup for the photos on the wooden deck

“Fearless to a Fault”

Many of us went back to the movie theater this past weekend and watched “Top Gun: Maverick.” Tom Cruise brings Maverick back to the big screen.

Maverick has a rogue pilot’s attitude to life. It takes the death of Goose for Maverick [first movie] to look back on his actions with anything resembling a critical eye, as the young pilot is initially a reckless, feckless recruit who couldn’t care less about the lives he endangers and the potential damage he could do himself.

Our culture teaches us we are to take calculated risks. However, Maverick tells Rooster, “Don’t think, just do.

“Remember that failure is an event, not a person.”

– Zig Ziglar

Without spoiling the movie, Maverick takes us on a journey where he is willing to push his limits. The greatest lesson Maverick teaches is the importance of believing you can do something.

One of the film’s central themes is, “It’s not the plane; it’s the pilot.”  Maverick added, “What is achievable comes to the pilot in the box.” 

“Believe in yourself! Have faith in your abilities! Without a humble but reasonable confidence in your own powers you cannot be successful or happy.

– Norman Vincent Peale

Creatives Need To Embrace Fear

Fear can be healthy. It is programmed into your nervous system and gives you the survival instincts you need to keep yourself safe from danger. Worry is unhealthy when it makes you more cautious than you need to be to stay safe and when it prevents you from doing things you would otherwise enjoy.

I watch many freelancers who have a hard time surviving in this industry. They overthink. They suffer from Analysis Paralysis. Analysis Paralysis is an inability to decide due to over-thinking a problem. An individual or a group can have too much data. The result is endless wrangling over the upsides and downsides of each option and an inability to pick one.

You Must Fail to Succeed

Failure is not a step backward; it’s an excellent stepping stone to success. 

“Success is the ability to go from failure to failure without losing your enthusiasm.”

– Winston Churchill

What’s the worst thing that could happen?

It’s good to ask yourself, “What is the worst thing that can happen?” in any given situation. You might be spurred into action if the worst thing is not that bad. If the worst thing that can happen is terrible, then it might cause you to sit this one out and stay on the sidelines because the possible downside is so awful, even if the chance of it happening is minimal. It’s better to err on caution than on the side of catastrophe.

Aron Ralston went rock climbing alone and got his hand pinned against a rock wall by a boulder that moved while climbing down it. He didn’t tell anyone he was going hiking so no one would look for him. He was stuck there for five days. He then realized that although he couldn’t move or break the boulder that trapped him, he could escape the boulder by cutting off his trapped arm with the small, dull knife he had. So that’s what he did. He cut off his arm to survive—quite a story.

Had Ralston asked himself, “What’s the worst thing that can happen to me while hiking alone?” before going alone, he probably would have told someone where he was going in case he got in a situation where he needed help.

Mitigate the Risks

Take the time to develop a game plan to grow your business. Dream Big! The only thing you need to do is plan out the actions that you will need to take to implement your vision.

Ask yourself, “What’s the worst thing that could happen?” If you can lose money to implement the plan, be willing to lose that money. Consider it a way to test your idea out. It is you doing research.

“Why do I talk about the benefits of failure? Simply because failure meant a stripping away of the inessential. I stopped pretending to myself that I was anything other than what I was and began to direct all my energy into finishing the only work that mattered to me.”

– J.K. Rowling

I love how Thomas Edison looked at what many would call failure. He tried over and over to invent the light bulb. He probably failed more than most. It took over 10,000 failures to find the suitable material to make it work. Edison said, “I have not failed. I’ve just found 10,000 ways that won’t work.”

What is the difference between most successful freelancers vs. those who had to leave the industry? Confucius said, “Our greatest glory is never failing, but rising every time we fail.”

Those who get back on the bicycle after falling are the ones who learn how to ride a bike.

“My great concern is not whether you have failed, but whether you are content with failure.”

– Abraham Lincoln

Not Your Mom and Dad’s Senior Photos

When parents of today’s seniors had their senior photos taken, they were shot on film and not digital as today.

My two sisters and I took on my oldest sister’s graduation from Manalapan High School

For our family, we all had senior photos made in the style of the day, but the number of images you took was much less than we do today.

My younger sister Hannah’s senior photos in Hockessin, Delaware

Today it is much easier to take hundreds of photos so that we can get a variety of images and the best expressions.

Kids who seemed confident throughout childhood may struggle to maintain self-assurance during the teen years. For many, adolescence is a time filled with self-doubt, a questionable body image, and insecurity.

Feeling self-conscious about your appearance is normal. How most of us are photographed throughout our lives doesn’t help. You see, most of the time, when a photograph is taken, that is it. One photo is taken, and maybe a second where everyone is acting goofy. What are the chances that moment was your best?

Look for a Seasoned Professional Photographer

Most all professional photographers can get a well-exposed and sharp photo. When you look for a photographer, pay attention to the people’s expressions in the pictures. Pay a lot of attention to the eyes.

Look for a variety of expressions. You can tell if they are genuine expressions.

Some photographers are great with their personalities but don’t bring out their subjects’ personalities. Sometimes the best photographers are quiet and listen more than they talk. That is because they are looking for real connections.

Some of the best people photographers I know had degrees in psychology, social work, and counseling professions. They studied body language. Other photographers without that formal education have spent a lifetime studying people. They have gone to workshops and studied with seasoned professionals to perfect their people and photographic skills.

Jane Yandel Senior Photos

Tips for Your Senior

Have FUN!!!!! Act up! Be Goofy!

After 40 years of working in photography, I can tell you that those willing to take the risk and look ridiculous and take risks are those with the best images I have ever made.

I started taking portraits in college. I found that those who would work with me and take direction always got the best expressions.

My Brochure and Prices for Senior Photos

“What are the rates for ________ ?”

This was posted today on Facebook. Every day somewhere, a newbie to the industry or a new genre of photography/video asks, “What can I charge?” Here is that question on this post:

Client: Environmental NGO based in California
One day Shoot: portraits, candid shots, etc. outside of the US
Usage: social media, website, other marketing material
Duration: they haven’t specified

Questions:

  • Would you charge a day rate or a flat fee?
  • How many pictures would you deliver?
  • What sort of usage would include (i.e., non-exclusive, 2-3 years?)
  • If it is a day rate, do you charge additional editing days, considering it is all minor color correction, etc.?
  • What’s the standard rate for NGOs in the US? (I know the rates vary quite a lot for NGOs based outside and inside the US, ranging from $360/day to $1,500.)

Here is my response, which I hope may help even more people.

What is an NGO?

The most significant difference between a non-profit and an NGO is the scope of work that most non-profits assume. Many non-profits are affiliated with churches, boys and girls clubs, and alumni associations. An NGO, on the other hand, has a broader and internationally driven footprint.

Similarities of non-profit and profit organizations

Both make income but reinvest all earnings into the organization to continue operations and support their causes. Although both have a staff consisting primarily of volunteers, they also hire and pay some higher-level employees within the organizations.

Their utilities are pretty much the same. The staff must be paid a going rate in their location, or they will not be able to hire.

Special events costs don’t change because they are a non-profit. The catering is the exact cost. The cost savings usually come in volunteers helping.

Don’t be the one vendor giving their work away for less while all the other vendors are being paid their total price.

Day Rate or Hourly Rate vs Flat Fee or Project Based Pricing

Charging by the hour is one of the worst mistakes a freelancer can make. If you charge by the hour, it will only be natural for you to work less efficiently than if you had priced on a per-job basis. And given that you only have a certain number of hours available in the day, you are essentially capping your maximum earning potential.

If, on the other hand, your price is on a per-job basis, you are limited only by the speed at which you can complete your work. You will learn to work more productively and, in turn, will earn a higher equivalent hourly rate (and impress clients with your efficient style and quick turnaround).

I suggest Project Pricing with a contract

For this model, it is necessary to spell out what is to be photographed and what the client’s deliverable will be.

When doing the job, it is common for clients to say, “Since you are here,” or “Can you take a few shots of this for me?” By having a contract with the project scope outlined, you now have a way to handle those requests that make you more money or keep you from giving away work for free.

“I would love to help you get more photos. Since this is beyond the contract, the extra cost will be $_______.” They may say no, but you offered to do the work, and they cannot take advantage of you.

You can also respond by saying, “The list of shots we have to do on the list will not all get done if we stop and shoot this. What on the list do you want to eliminate for this photo?”

The number of photos delivered

Delivering a few finished photo options for each situation is the bare minimum. Some show most of the take and only provide a limited number, which the client picks for further finishing edits. Usually, a number is given in a contract on the number of deliverables, but it’s good to always spell out the price for additional photos from those taken.

If you are new to shooting this assignment, have the client tell you what they want. Then overshoot and have them limit the final number.

Usage

An estimate always includes three prices. There are always three levels of pricing: low, Medium, and High, at which something changes in what the client gets for the price.

Usage is one of the best ways to create three prices. Also, by spelling out the use and other factors in pricing, you are setting up some of the parameters for negotiating with the client before starting the job.

Do not make your lowest price something that you will complain about if they choose to go in this direction.

I have found that most of the time, the client picks the median price.

For large corporations or organizations, add the 4th price. This I call the Whoop T Doo. If they go in this direction, you will benefit, and so will they.

Post Processing Fee

Please always let clients know you can do more with the photos. In post-production, you can fix skin issues or change clothing colors.

It is easier for the client to have a pricing idea before asking for the work. Sometimes, it is easier to have examples of before-and-after pricing.

Don’t make clients feel like they are being nickeled and dimed by you. Make them feel like they are at a spa, upgrading the experience, and enjoy spending on the luxurious experience.

What’s the standard rate?

There are no standard rates in photography.

The costs of living around the country alone cause prices to fluctuate. It costs more because everything in that market costs more, and people have to make a living.

The prices I hear in the Metro Atlanta area go around $600 daily to $4,000 or more.

There are always those who are cheaper, but rarely have they been in business for many years.

Tips!!!

  • Know your Cost of Doing Business. I would like to know what my monthly expenses average out over time and have a figure I know that I cannot walk out the door to do work or that I will be paying them to work for the job.
  • Know your hourly rate, but wait to quote it. Fast food restaurants know how much they must pay each employee an hour, but the prices on the menu do not show those hourly rates. Neither should you. Use this rate to help you configure your project price.
  • Sliding Scale. If a job is for an hour, for example, the client will pay much more for the most part than the person who hires me for a project that takes a day. So, if I am paying myself $300 an hour for the first hour, I may charge the client $1,100 for half a day of my time. Again, this is how I am building my price for the project in my head. They get a $100 discount for more work. I may only charge $1,800 for the day versus 8 X $300 = $2,400. Again, please give me more work you get a discount.
  • Usage & Risk. If the client is going to use this in a significant multi-year ad campaign, then most likely, your photos will help make them a great deal if successful. You want to get paid more. If this is something like a wedding where you have no do-overs, the risk means you should be paid more. High-risk jobs require more redundancy and preplanning to avoid unnecessary risks.
  • Always provide three prices. Give clients the ability to add fries to their orders. Price choices are how you can grow your business.

Show the Story vs Tell the Story

Nobody else will if you can’t identify what makes your story unique and exciting.

  • Who is driving the story? What is it about? Who is affected? Who benefits? Who loses?
  • What has happened? What are the consequences? What does this mean for the reader?
  • Where is this happening (building, neighborhood, city, country)? Where should readers go to learn more?
  • When did it happen (time of day, day, month, year)? When was the last update? When can you expect to learn more? When will the effects be felt?
  • Why did this event take place? Why is this important in the big picture? Why should readers care?
Chick-fil-A Supply DC is being built in Cartersville, GA; Brian Kemp, Governor of Georgia, is the keynote. The CFA Supply team is in attendance, as well as a Cathy family member, CFA leadership, other key partners on the project, local government stakeholders, and a few local media outlets. Paul Trotti, Brent Ragsdale, Dan Cathy, Commissioner Pat Wilson, Governor Brian Kemp, Tim Tassopoulos, Commissioner Steve Taylor, Glenn Jordan, Mike Haselton, & Matt Rumsey [NIKON Z 6, 24.0-105.0 mm f/4.0, Mode = Aperture Priority, ISO 100, 1/400, ƒ/5.6, (35mm = 24)]

Storytelling is Key

While you can have all the answers to the 5 Ws and have all the visuals from the close-up, the medium, and the wide overall photos to tell the story, you need a way to engage the audience and weave the parts into a coherent storyline.

Stories are either a 1) Drama or 2) Tragedy. There is always a tension for which everything pivots around.

Jeff Ellis, a mechanical engineering student at Georgia Tech, does research on a new heart valve under the direction of Dr. Ajit Yoganathan. Dr. Yoganathan’s current research is in the fluid mechanics of valvular regurgitation.

When the storyteller starts with a kidnapping event, the tension is established right away, and the question of if this is a tragedy or drama is what hooks the audience to stay on the edge of their seats for the ending.

The Atlanta Science Festival [NIKON D4, 14.0-24.0 mm f/2.8, Mode = Aperture Priority, ISO 4000, 1/80, ƒ/8, (35mm = 14)]

Businesses often fail in telling their story

Most businesses put most of their money into events like groundbreaking, award banquets, kickoff events, and other celebrations.

Imagine Star Wars starting the story with the celebration of the victory. Imagine any movie beginning with the ending, but this is what most businesses do with their Public Relations.

Either Or?

Am I proposing that instead of celebration events, you do storytelling instead? No. I suggest that storytelling be a priority so that the celebrations improve. Why do we celebrate? We had to overcome a great deal to get to this point. Tell that story, so everyone knows what brought you to the point of the celebration.

Chick-fil-A Peach Bowl 2019 [NIKON D5, 120.0-300.0 mm f/2.8, Mode = Aperture Priority, ISO 11400, 1/4000, ƒ/4, (35mm = 195)]

Invite your Audience to the Game

Do you think people would show up just for the trophy presentation? No. People want to see the game. They want to see and experience the tension of overcoming obstacles to win the game.

K’Lavon Chaisson #18 of the LSU Tigers is given the Most Outstanding Player award by Dan Cathy after beating Oklahoma Sooners in the 2019 College Football Playoff Semifinal at the Chick-fil-A Peach Bowl on Saturday, Dec. 28, in Atlanta. [NIKON D5, 120.0-300.0 mm f/2.8, Mode = Aperture Priority, ISO 9000, 1/4000, ƒ/2.8, (35mm = 240)]

What is your play of the game for your business this year???

Hire a professional storyteller to tell your story. Most of your audience isn’t present while you play your game. They will need the storyteller the next day to pull the highlights and the gameplay to tell your story.

The coffee berry borer is a small, black beetle, just a few millimeters long. The females bore holes into coffee berries and lay their eggs in the seeds within—the bits we know as “coffee beans.” The larvae devour the seeds when they hatch, destroying them.

Establish the crisis that your business provides the solution to.

Just Coffee and Frontera de Cristo [NIKON D3S, 24.0-120.0 mm f/3.5-5.6, Mode = Aperture Priority, ISO 4000, 1/1000, ƒ/6.3, (35mm = 62)]

How to Fight The Coffee Borer Beetle

  1. Regularly inspect your crops for signs of infestation. …
  2. Immediately separate all infected samples and cherries. …
  3. Use pesticides (organic farmers may also be able to find appropriate pesticides).
  4. Use traps.

Are you telling compelling stories, or are you killing the saga by starting with the ending by only celebrating with events? My suggestion is to do both. Tell your story and celebrate those milestones.

Thriving in the Gig Economy

Today many are Gig Workers. They are self-employed and work for many clients, unlike employees with one boss.

Gig mind setters are constant learners — they self-manage, take spontaneous initiative, focus on skills more than roles, feel free to shortcut processes, and don’t hesitate to question the status quo. They share what they learn with others, take ownership of their personal growth, and feel confident in their ability to influence people.

Poetry @ Tech presents SPOKEN WORD/SLAM ARTISTS: REGIE GIBSON, KODAC HARRISON, M. AYODELE HEATH, BOB HOLMAN, M. L. LIEBLER, and PATRICIA SMITH The Defoor Centre.

The Gig Mindset includes a level of loyalty to the organization and not the process. It is a willingness to make things better.

If you are someone who wants to show up and get a To-Do List from someone and execute it, then you need to find employment with a company. Then spend time in that company learning how to develop a Gig Mindset before you become a freelancer.

I think one of the key elements for Gig workers is their ability to develop solutions for their clients.

Spring Orchestra Concert “Electrify Your Strings” with Mark Wood – Recording artist, performer, producer, inventor, Emmy–winning composer, and music education advocate has spent the last four decades electrifying the orchestra industry–literally.

Creating is not a result of genius, unconscious incubation, or aha! Moments. It results from thinking: a series of mental steps consisting of problem, solution, and repeat.

Complacency is an enemy. “If it isn’t broke, don’t fix it” is an impossible idiom. No matter what the sales, no matter what the customer satisfaction, there is always something to fix.

“Most Gig Workers can do a job, but few can conceive one.” 

– Stanley Leary

The secret of Steve Jobs was that he was never satisfied. He devoted his life to asking, “Why doesn’t it work?” and “What should I change to make it work?”

Judaism, Christianity, and Islam have been celebrating Passover, Easter, and Ramadan. All of these are the time for believers to remember. It is a time to hit the pause button on everything that is going on in their lives and focus on the bigger purpose in our lives.

Togo, West Africa

It is just as essential for us to do our work. Each year we should hit the pause button and remember the purpose of our work. I believe people of faith who integrate their faith purpose with their work will be the most successful.

As a Christian, I am reminded of how Jesus stayed laser-focused on his purpose. At the crucifixion, the chief priests—probably both Pharisees and Sadducees—insisted that the sign over Jesus’ head that said “The King of the Jews” should say, “This man claimed to be King of the Jews.”

Throughout scripture, Jesus confronts the religious leaders about their desire to be honored by men, not God. He purposely healed the sick and picked grain on the Sabbath day to counter their extreme views about the Sabbath.

He was focused on his purpose. Jesus hit the pause button and took time to be alone. He prayed.

Martin Luther, best known as a seminal figure in the Protestant Reformation, said, “I have so much to do that I shall have to spend the first three hours in prayer.”

C.S. Lewis is often attributed as saying, prayer “doesn’t change God. It changes me.”

As a Gig Worker, I see prayer as necessary for my business. It is a time for me to align my will to God’s will.

I have committed my business to honor God. I firmly believe that this alignment helps with all the ethics of my work and gives me a better sense of purpose.

“For even the Son of Man did not come to be served, but to serve, and to give his life as a ransom for many.” Jesus said the “leader” is “the one who serves” in the Gospel of Luke 22:24-27.

I spend a lot of time trying to understand my clients and potential client’s business. The core question is, “How can I help them grow their business with their clients?”

I recommend that all Gig Workers hit pause and find their purpose for your business. Start each day in prayer. Be sure your business stays aligned to serving others.

Earth Day April 22, 2022

Earth Day, celebrated annually on April 22, is a reminder to protect the environment, restore damaged ecosystems and live more sustainably. First celebrated in 1970, this year marks its 52nd anniversary.

The April 22 date was selected partly to maximize the number of students reached on university campuses as this date fell between colleges’ spring break and final exams.

10 things you can do now to help the planet

  1. Change your lights.
  2. Recycle unwanted wire hangers.
  3. Fly with an e-ticket.
  4. Recycle your old phones.
  5. Use your own coffee cup.
  6. Turn off the water while brushing your teeth.
  7. Go vegetarian once a week.
  8. Take shorter showers.
  9. Shop at thrift stores, garage sales, second-hand stores, etc…
  10. Wash with cold or warm water

The Importance of Connecting in a Disconnecting Society

How do you connect authentically with people today in a disconnected world?

We are all wired to connect as human beings. During these past two years of social distancing, we have been using technology to help us connect. However, there is still a gap between many of us who do not let us connect authentically.

When we connect authentically, I believe we feel heard and understood and listen to others opening up and sharing with us. We find common ground.

Teaching Storytelling to missionaries in Santiago, Chile [NIKON Z 6, 24.0-105.0 mm f/4.0, ISO 2500, ƒ/4, 1/100]

While many of us have seen and even experienced unfollowing or unfriending people due to their views, which make us uncomfortable, we can still find our “Tribe.”

Many of us have found online affinity groups around our hobbies or other subjects that help us feel connections.

We all know how special it is to find your “peeps,” but many of us struggle to understand how to start a relationship with a stranger. If you are in business, your livelihood depends on your ability to create new relationships with strangers. The ability to develop new relationships is how we get “NEW” customers.

We all have heard about “Networking,” but many hate it. I think the reason is that we have never learned how to do it effectively.

One of the best ways to network was what we did for the first years of our lives–go to school. What that did for us was put us together with other people our age who needed to learn similar content to develop into working adults.

Many of our closest friends are from a forced networking event–called school. During those years, we spent time together, and through our conversations and even class activities, we formed social networks. We would play sports, join clubs, and hang out with those with similar interests in our age groups.

If you own a business, encourage your people to be involved in the community. You have to meet people first before any relationship can begin.

Teach your people to be curious. One of the most incredible things you can teach your team is how to ask questions to get to know others. Just as important is for each person to understand their own stories and interests.

Hands down, the best skill and job was as a photojournalist. I had to introduce myself and get to know people so that I could share their stories. I learned not to ask who, what, where, when, how, and why questions. But to ask questions that ask people to share the struggles that helped make them who they are today.

The best part of interviewing people for a journalist is that the focus is on the other person, not you. What I found is that doing this was helping me to connect in ways that took years to do with my friends through school. It was being intentional that was the difference.

Getting to know someone will help you connect and also build trust with the person.

[NIKON Z 6, VR Zoom 24-105mm f/4G IF-ED, Mode = Aperture Priority, ISO 200, 1/100, ƒ/5.6, (35mm = 24)]

Moving from acquaintances to friends means having a connection to their past, present, and, even more, their future. What do you like to do? Let’s plan some time together to do something fun.

In sales, you connect when you know how to improve their lives. You will often discover that the service you do for work isn’t something they need or would benefit from. That is OK; you have a friend.

Keeping friends, even if they are not someone you can sell to, is essential. Sometimes they can help you, or it would be just as good if what they do could help another one of your friends.

Keep repeating that last paragraph. It is the key to those who understand the power of genuine connection. Don’t be shortsighted as so many have become in business. Those thinking about the next 30 to 90 days do not flourish like those who think about a lifetime.

“The social brain hypothesis predicts that humans have an average of about 150 relationships at any given time,” according to a research study. “Within this 150, there are layers of friends of an ego, where the number of friends in a layer increases as the emotional closeness decreases.”

Most of us do not reach our potential in the number of relationships we can maintain.

“Connection is why we’re here. We are hardwired to connect with others, it’s what gives purpose and meaning to our lives, and without it there is suffering.”

― Brené Brown

Why I Bought The Nikon Z9

When you take pictures for a living, the reasons to upgrade might be different than for the hobbyist. I mention this first because the first thing I consider before even thinking about the other reasons is, “will I be able to recover the investment?”

At one point, I would buy a newer car when I thought I was getting high mileage. This was because the amount of money to keep it running would soon not make sense to pour into the older vehicle.

Today I no longer think this way about cars. They are made to last much longer than when I first started driving. I have 282071 miles on my Toyota Sienna van.

I think more with cameras as I did with my earlier cars. If you keep your Digital Camera too long, it loses value much faster than film cameras. With film cameras, a newer model wasn’t doing all that much different because the film was what was changing every so often. You bought the film for the assignment.

If you are buying the flagship model most of the time, when the next new flagship comes out, your older one has the most excellent resale value. If you wait for every other flagship to upgrade, your camera’s resale value drops even more.

Nikon D5

Typically I find that you can expect to sell your older model for about 50% of what you paid for it if you take good care of that camera. I have found that marketing directly to someone locally is where you get the best resale price.

I have found that selling my cameras on eBay was better than going to a camera reseller.

Reason #1

So, I buy a newer model first to get the most for my present camera. I usually have two flagship cameras of the same model. I often have another third camera that is more of a prosumer model. Today I have the Nikon Z6 as my third camera.

When I do an upgrade, I can usually get enough money selling two cameras to cover the cost of one of the newer ones.

Reason #2

Since I have stayed with Nikon for all my cameras I do jobs with; I have sometimes skipped an upgrade because there wasn’t significant value added in the newer model. So, when the Nikon D6 came out, I kept my Nikon D5 cameras until the Nikon Z9.

I will start with the jump from film to digital. I had been shooting film, and scanning 35mm transparencies and the biggest reason I wanted a digital camera was for digital capture. The amount of time I saved on the average job was days. The time to process the film and then scan each image took forever.

CameraBenefit
Nikon D100 [6 Mp]Digital Capture main reason
Nikon D2X (12 Mp]Better resolution
Nikon D3 [12 Mp]ISO 200 to 6,400 & OK at ISO 12800
Nikon D4 [16 Mp]ISO 100-12,800 expandable to 204,800
Nikon D5 [20 Mp]100-102,400ISO Expandable to 3,280,000, Better Video
Nikon Z9 [45.7 Mp]Silent Shutter, Electronic Shutter 1/32000 to 30 Seconds,
ProRes 422 HQ 4:2:2 10-Bit, Built-in Wireless & Built-in GPS

There is a much more significant difference between the D4 and D5 than the D5 to D6. The gains of the D5 over the D4 are the different resolution which makes a big difference, especially if you have to crop a bit. The AF improvements are substantial and worth the upgrade alone.

The High ISO was the only thing that went backward from the D5 to the Z9. Increasing the number of megapixels while keeping everything else constant (sensor size, technology, etc.) will increase noise per pixel but also makes the noise finer grained, which is less objectionable.

Image size (megapixels) doesn’t directly impact noise, but it indirectly affects noise when considering two sensors of the same size. In this case, all things being equal, the larger-megapixel sensor will show more noise as a side-effect of trying to “squeeze” more pixels onto a sensor of similar size. Although showing this in some instances within a camera line, this factor can be challenging to pin down because cameras also often have upgraded sensor or processing technology that effectively manages noise.

Reason #3

Competition is real. There are numerous ways through the years this has impacted the industry.

If other photographers can deliver a better-looking image due to a camera that has cleaner images at higher ISO, the clients who use photographers will notice the difference. You cannot afford to let your equipment leave you behind.

Nikon D3s

Until the Nikon D3, all my digital cameras were letting me shoot the identical ISOs as film, nothing better for high ISO. However, the biggest game changer in my career was the Nikon D3. I no longer had to light interiors with flash to get acceptable images. So, I could be less disruptive to my clients because I didn’t have to use flash all the time.

Now the cameras after the Nikon D3’s biggest jumps came in the video side for me. Having a headphone jack for audio was huge.

Fuji X-E3

When I went to mirrorless, I first did so with the Fuji X-E2 and X-E3 cameras. What I loved the most about these was the ability to shoot silent at times, and more importantly, I could look through the viewfinder when shooting video. I didn’t have to plug in live view and attach a unique loupe to see the image while filming.

While I tried a few other mirrorless cameras, I couldn’t replace my Nikon D4 and D5 with them. They were slow with focusing and slow with the shutter release.

The Nikon Z9 was the first mirrorless that I didn’t give up anything regarding focusing, the speed of capturing images, and no special extra attachments to video. Since I rarely shot above ISO 15,600, I didn’t lose anything in the high ISO.

Summary

There were many more factors for each camera that I upgraded to or bought to try out. No question that until the Nikon Z9, the Nikon D3 over the previous cameras was the biggest game changer.

Here are some of the upgrades with the Z9 that are worth mentioning here:
  • No Shutter: Silent lets me shoot on film sets, during prayer services, and in other places where I need to be quiet. However, the most important thing is when I am behind people, for the first time in my 35+ years when I take a photo, people do not turn around due to the “Clicking Sound.”
  • Focus: This not only focuses as well as my Nikon D5 but even more accurately and all over the frame. It has Artificial intelligence to look for people & animals’ eyes, and even cars it will track. One guy summed it up well when just photographing birds in flight. He had gotten more focus and usable images in just a couple of hours than in the past ten years.
  • 45 Mp: This is the first high-megapixel camera for me. More megapixels will allow for larger images and cropping that I could have never done before.
  • Zero Blackout Viewfinder: With DSLR, the mirror must move, and your camera goes black. With many of the mirrorless cameras, it also will go black due to the computer processor, but the Z9 is like never losing vision of the subject.
  • In-built Image Stabilization – Sharper images at longer focal lengths and slow shutter speeds. A big plus with Video
  • New mount design: Nikon reworked their mount and came out with new lenses to get better edge-to-edge sharpness. Edge-to-edge sharpness is huge with Video.
  • Focus Bracketing – Take multiple photos shifting the focus point
  • Focus Stacking – Stacks photos in-camera to maximize depth of field
  • Smartphone Remote – Remote control your camera with a smartphone
  • Continuous Shooting – 20 fps in RAW & 30 fps in JPEGs or If you don’t mind 11MP JPEGs, the Z9 can even shoot at up to 120fps
  • Backward lens compatible – You can use all the lenses in the Nikon lineup with the converter.

Changing Deadline After Start of Project

My good friend and art director Tony Messano said it “often was the FedEx delivery guy who determined your deadline” before we delivered online.

Nancy Reyes (far left), a classmate of Jesus Fonseca, Jr. talks with FOX news before the funeral service.

Only live news is more terrifying for a communication creative.

Throughout my career, there have been a few times where the client came back to the team after a project was started to ask to move the deadline up. Most of the time, the Art Director had to explain to a client that wasn’t possible at this point.

Storytellers Abroad Workshop Bucharest, Romania

Creatives build a little time into their projects, just like most people in Atlanta traffic leave a little early in case of accidents or some other kind of delay.

Change in Scope of Job

Often I find many clients who believe their job is to get the most out of you as possible. So for photography and video, they say, “While you are here …” The first few times people did this to me, I was caught off guard and didn’t know how to handle those requests.

I have learned to go over all the expectations for a job before I create an estimate. Based on my experience, I know how long and what gear and if I have expertise in something my competition doesn’t have.

One thing I learned is some times; the request will interfere with the ability to complete all the other work they have on the schedule. If this request comes after all the work has been done and they ask for just one more, then I let them know this is beyond the scope of the contract, and I would be more than pleased to accommodate for a price that I give to them for the additional work.

Moving the Deadline Up!

Once the contract is signed and agreed upon, a client can ask to move the deadline up, but they are responsible for the total amount of the contract even if they cannot use the content due to their deadline needing to be moved.

Cancellations & Postponements: Client is responsible for payment of all expenses incurred up to the time Photographer receives actual notification, plus 50 percent of Photographer’s fee. If notice is given less than two business days prior to the shoot date, Client will pay 100 percent of the fee. Unless otherwise agreed, Client will pay 100 percent of the fee for Weather Delays on location or 50 percent of the fee if postponement occurs prior to departure. Client will be charged 100% of fee and expenses for any reshoots required by the client. For reshoots required by an act of God or fault of third party client will pay all additional expenses.

This is pretty much a boilerplate for contracts. These are my terms for projects.

Possible Responses

Say No! This is the oldest response, but you must say this if it isn’t possible. You cannot run a business by overworking yourself or others on your team.

Compromise if you can. Always start with no, and if there is pushback and you could do this without taxing yourself or your team, then look for a way to compromise. For most creatives, the biggest obstacle is a drop in quality. While the client may be OK with it, don’t do it if you cannot afford others to see this and know you did the work. Often the best way to push back is to charge rush fees. These fees are reasonable because you constantly have to work overtime or put other clients’ projects off to complete this one.

Fast Tracking a Project. This is quite different than just cramming the project through; this is often where you hire temporary people to help with the project. Again, this is where you tell the client you can make it happen, but to do so, there are extra expenses to make it work. This is more than a RUSH fee. You are charging for additional resources to make it happen.

The Movie of Unrealistic Expectations

This clip shows how Adam Neumann of WeWork was not running a realistic business model. This clip sums up how his expectations didn’t match what was possible in the timeframe he was trying to grow WeWork. His personality reminded me of many of those problem clients I have had who didn’t understand what they were asking.

Nikon Z9 @ ISO 25600 & DXO PureRAW 2

[NIKON Z 9, VR 24-105mm f/4G, Mode = Aperture Priority, ISO 25600, 1/40, ƒ/5, (35mm = 38) Flash Fire = no flash]

I think, for now, my solution for shooting with my Nikon Z9 when I need the high ISO is to use the DXO PureRAW 2.

My Nikon Z9 setting is worth noting for this ball taking place on top of a roof in downtown Atlanta after sunset.

  • Aperture Priority
  • Auto ISO with 64 – 25600
  • Auto ISO with Shutter at 1/250
  • Godox V860IIN with Magmod Sphere on TTL
  • Sigma 24-105mm ƒ/4 Art
  • Sigma 35mm ƒ/1.4 Art

Click on photos Below to see larger photo

[NIKON Z 9, VR 24-105mm f/4G, Mode = Aperture Priority, ISO 25600, 1/250, ƒ/6.3, (35mm = 24) Flash Fire = on, return detected]

I would shoot with a different lens, but most of the time, I was shooting with the 24-105mm with the flash.

[NIKON Z 9, 35mm f/1.4G, Mode = Aperture Priority, ISO 14400, 1/250, ƒ/1.4, (35mm = 35) Flash Fire = no flash]

Due to my decision to use the DXO PureRAW 2 after the shoot, I would have done one thing differently. I shot everything in the Lossy Compressed ( HE* / HE ). I should have shot in the Lossless Compressed. Here is a chart from Walter Rowe that shows what software is presently supported with the Nikon Z9 files.

Image Editing Software:

PackageLossless CompressedLossy Compressed ( HE* / HE )
Nikon NX Studio​optimized support​optimized support​
Adobe Camera Raw 14.2 (PS/LR)
Adobe Photoshop Elements 2022​
preliminary (not optimized)
preliminary (not optimized)​
preliminary (not optimized)
preliminary (not optimized)​
Capture One 22 (15.1)​optimized support​no support​
DxO PhotoLab
DxO PureRaw​
coming in DxO 5.2
available in PureRaw 2​
no support
no support​
ON1 Photo RAW​no support​no support​
DarkTable​no support​no support​
RawTherapee​no support​no support​
ACDSee Update 2022.1​supported (no details)​supported (no details)​

Image Viewing Software:

PackageLossless CompressedLossy Compressed ( HE* / HE )
Photo Mechanic 6​reads embedded previews​reads embedded previews​
FastRawViewer​supported​not supported​
Windows Explorer​no support​no support​
macOS Finder​no support​no support​
[NIKON Z 9, VR 24-105mm f/4G, Mode = Aperture Priority, ISO 25600, 1/250, ƒ/5.6, (35mm = 24) Flash Fire = on, return detected]

So here are the steps that I took to process some 800+ images.

  • Ingest all images using Photo Mechanic Plus – All the NEF images put into a RAW folder and renamed images {year4}-{month0}-{day0}_{hour24}-{minute}-{second}
  • Culling of the images – Tagged the ones to keep and then selected all the untagged images in Photo Mechanic and deleted them
  • Ingest into Lightroom – Copied as DNG from the RAW folder to a DNG folder [took a while to convert 800 to DNG]
  • Process with DxO PureRAW 2 – Put them inside the DNG in a DXO folder [Took about 6 hours to process with Macbook Pro 16″ Apple M1 Max & 32 gig RAM]
    • DxO DeepPRIME – Demosaicing and denoising
    • DxO Optics Modules – Improvements to sharpness & Corrections to distortions, vignetting, and aberrations
  • Imported back into Lightroom from the DXO folder and processed. No sharpening or denoising using light room. Just some exposure and color corrections
[NIKON Z 9, VR 24-105mm f/4G, Mode = Aperture Priority, ISO 25600, 1/250, ƒ/6.3, (35mm = 24) Flash Fire = on, return detected]
[NIKON Z 9, VR 24-105mm f/4G, Mode = Aperture Priority, ISO 25600, 1/250, ƒ/4, (35mm = 28) Flash Fire = on, return detected]
[NIKON Z 9, VR 24-105mm f/4G, Mode = Aperture Priority, ISO 25600, 1/250, ƒ/4, (35mm = 32) Flash Fire = on, return detected]

Why ISO 25600?

I didn’t want a black background. I wanted to show the context of their event at the Ponce City Market Roof Top.

[NIKON Z 9, 35mm f/1.4G, Mode = Aperture Priority, ISO 22800, 1/100, ƒ/1.4, (35mm = 35) Flash Fire = no flash]
[NIKON Z 9, VR 24-105mm f/4G, Mode = Aperture Priority, ISO 25600, 1/250, ƒ/5.6, (35mm = 24) Flash Fire = on, return detected]

Summary

I can’t wait till DxO PureRAW 2 will support the High-Efficiency RAW files. However, I am looking forward to when Adobe Lightroom optimizes the Nikon Z9 files.

Until then, if I am shooting over 10000 ISO, I will try to remember to shoot Lossless Compressed, and then I don’t have to convert to DNG, saving a great deal of time.

I now love the Z9 even more that my files have little noise at ISO 25600.

Communication Visual Tips: 10 Of Them

We know that nonverbal communication is the most powerful way to communicate because it is the type of communication we use the most daily. 

Much research has been done using eye-tracking technology to see how people react to websites, newspapers, and television. Those research projects consistently show how visuals that do more than just window dressing communicate more quickly and effectively than words alone.

We must spend years learning to read and write a language, but we need no training to understand a photograph.

The Roswell Criterium

There can be no words without images.

— Aristotle

More than any other technological innovation, computers are responsible for the explosion in images. Today, 20 percent of the U.S. population can use a computer. But 80 percent of school-age children have learned to become computer literate. By the turn of the century, Sculley predicts that 98 percent of all the words and pictures created in the world will be computer mediated. By that time, virtual reality — the ultimate fusion of computer and television technologies in which viewers become active users of the medium — will be inexpensive and accessible.
Educational psychologist Jerome Bruner of New York University cites studies that show persons only remember ten percent of what they hear, 30 percent of what they read, but about 80 percent of what they see and do. When all members of society whether at home, in school and on the job learn to use computers for word and picture processing, the switch will be made from passive watching to active using. There will no longer be the barrier between the two symbolic structures. Words and pictures will become one, powerful and memorable mode of communication.

— Professor Paul Martin Lester, Ph.D., Department of Communications, California State University

Visual forms of communication grab the attention of today’s audiences. Graphic representations such as diagrams, charts, tables, illustrations, and photographs not only catch the eye; they draw the viewer into the presented information.

Corporate communication departments that took advantage of this visual revolution early on are today’s leaders in the communication field. They saw this “explosion in images” coming and jumped aboard.
Endless, long blocks of type spreading across pages are rarely read. Early editors discovered a visual tool that cured this ill… they broke the copy into short, more manageable paragraphs that didn’t intimidate or bore their audience.

Today, many no longer read traditional texts. Just taking brochures from the past and posting them on the web will not get the message out.

Okay, if it’s true that professional use of visuals will improve communication, and if expertise in this area seems like a foreign language… what then?

Storytellers Abroad Workshop Bucharest, Romania Herăști, Giurgiu, Romania

We’d probably take classes to learn a foreign language, so to become proficient in using visuals, perhaps we should study art, photography, or theater at the local community college. This is one way to learn how the masters in these fields used visuals. Mr. Bean was a British comedy television series starring Rowan Atkinson. Bean, an almost silent character, used physical comedy to entertain. The series did well internationally because words were not crucial to the show’s success.

Instead of brainstorming, an idea tries playing a game of Charades to express what needs to be communicated about that idea—the game forces thinking in visual terms. Pictionary is a board game where teams try to guess specific words from their teammates’ drawings. More than Charades, Pictionary requires forming mental pictures. Both games provide a fun way to practice visualization.

Drone shot of Park Springs Retirement Community in DeKalb County, Georgia

Here are Ten Tips to consider when thinking about using images:

  1. Humanize – Illustrate how products affect people. For example, to show how small something is, put it in someone’s hand rather than using a ruler. If something improves lives – show it by doing just that. Today the trend is to use a more photojournalistic approach or, at least, to make it look like a photojournalist. To ensure genuine expressions, give it enough time, and it can become real.
  2. Good Lighting – Sometimes, the natural light is perfect. Cut the flash off and use a higher ISO for the available light. Remember that whatever has the most light will become the main subject.
  3. Try Black & White – Some war photographers feel that color may make even war look pretty. Black and white is an excellent way to focus attention on faces and graphics.
  4. Get Closer – Almost any photo will be better closer up.
  5. Watch the background – Look around the subject. Be sure nothing is growing out of a head or sticking in from the edge of the frame. Use a shallow depth-of-field like ƒ/2 versus ƒ/16 to make your subject stand out from the background. If the location helps tell the story, increase the depth-of-field by using f16 or f22 or vary the background between fuzzy or sharp.
  6. Consider a worm’s eye view or the bird’s eye view – Shoot low or high above the subject. Change the camera’s height to the subject; avoid taking all the photos from standing.
  7. Variety – Make plenty of photos from different angles. In addition to zooming, get closer and farther away from the subject. Make wide-angle and close-up photos. Try some without flash, some with direct flash, and some bounced flash.
  8. Give it time – Make a few photos, then stop for a few minutes. Let the subject get used to being photographed. After a while, they’ll relax, and great images will happen.
  9. Action and posed –Show the subject doing what they do. Let the person do their job and take lots of pictures. Then, pose them for a good portrait, not just a headshot, but an environmental portrait showing their work environment or signage of the place they work in the background or foreground.
  10. File Size Matters – You can always downsize an image but can’t do much to upsize the image. Many think they can get more pictures on their SD or CF card by changing the file size, and you can. The problem is that unless you ever plan to use the photo for more than an avatar or profile picture on Facebook, you cannot make prints or use it in printed pieces. Use RAW or at least the highest JPEG at the most refined setting possible for your camera. You might have to find the owner’s manual to do this for your camera.
Surgeons are doing a bone graft of the lower part of his leg for a little boy to hopefully help him keep his leg at the Hôpital Baptiste Biblique located in Tsiko, Togo, West Africa.

Many other ways than these can improve visual communication. Like everything worth doing, visual skills come from doing… from practice.

Think about it this way: Who will SEE your message today?