Real Estate Flambient

The photo above is a mixture of Ambient Lighting and Flash Lighting––Many call this Flambient

The “flambient” method combines both flash and ambient light in shots. It is one of the fastest-growing techniques for shooting real estate images. … On the other hand, shooting using pure flash can result in an image that looks fake, with shadows pointing towards the windows instead of away.

Here is just the Ambient of the photo above.

Ambient

While it takes time to do this compared to just shooting one shot, it is even better than HDR without flash. You tend to get more accurate colors.

Flambient

Now here is the before with just ambient.

Ambient

Here is one more example from a room I did for a client.

178 Brighton Blvd Woodstock, GA

Now notice the color of the fabric and the windows, as well as the kitchen, which is far from the window light is dark in the ambient photo.

Flambient

I love the Flambient approach to real estate.

Time Of Day Can Be Everything

[DJI Air 2S, 22.4 mm f/2.8, Mode = Manual, ISO 840, 1/8, ƒ/2.8, (35mm = 22)]

I believe one of the best times of day to take photos outside is Twilight. Compare this top photo to this one from a different time of day.

[DJI Air 2S, 22.4 mm f/2.8, Mode = Manual, ISO 100, 1/250, ƒ/2.8, (35mm = 22)]

This can be summed up as the difference between everything in the photo getting the same amount of light or, like a spotlight on the stage when you light just some of the scene is more appealing.

[DJI Air 2S, 22.4 mm f/2.8, Mode = Manual, ISO 1690, 1/4, ƒ/2.8, (35mm = 22)]

Again another Drone shot from a different perspective and different time of day to compare.

[DJI Air 2S, 22.4 mm f/2.8, Mode = Manual, ISO 110, 1/320, ƒ/2.8, (35mm = 22)]

Another difference is the type of light during the day also can make a difference. This one below is with tiny clouds. The one above it is with cloudy conditions.

[DJI Air 2S, 22.4 mm f/2.8, Mode = Manual, ISO 100, 1/5000, ƒ/2.8, (35mm = 22)]
[DJI Air 2S, 22.4 mm f/2.8, Mode = Manual, ISO 1130, 1/4, ƒ/2.8, (35mm = 22)]

My suggestion is whenever you can take pictures at twilight.

Could we live in a world without rules?

The FAA Part 107 Remote Pilot Certificate tests for understanding hazardous attitudes. They have a list of five:

  • Macho – “Let me show you what I can do!”
    • Antidote – Taking chances is foolish.
  • Impulsivity – “Do it quickly!”
    • Antidote – Not so fast. Think first.
  • Invulnerability – It won’t happen to me.”
    • Antidote – It could happen to me.
  • Resignation – “What’s the use?”
    • Antidote – I am not helpless. I can make a difference.
  • Anti-Authority – “Don’t tell me what to do!”
    • Antidote – Follow the rules. They are usually right.

Some will rail against rules being an affront to our freedom and argue that they’re “there to be broken.”

Woodstock Park Roswell

Yes, some rules are unjustified. Someone gets in power and doesn’t like something, and then since they sit on the city council, create a new ordinance or law because they don’t like something their neighbor is doing.

Rules are the essence of sport, games, and puzzles – even when their entire purpose is supposedly fun. But haven’t you seen a fan lose it when their team is called off-sides.

I teach many workshops worldwide, and the organization I work with starts each workshop by going over some ground rules. At the end of going over each direction, the leader said, “Please don’t do anything that makes us create a new rule.”

I think we would want to encourage everyone to learn the rules so that we can all enjoy flying our drones for commercial and personal enjoyment without having someone create a problem that needs a new direction.

Rules, like good policing, rely on our consent. And those that don’t have our permission can become the instruments of tyranny. So perhaps the best advice is to follow the rules, but always to ask why. Learn why a law was created.

I learned a lot this past year when I jumped onto the Drone Bandwagon. Most of the rules the FAA has created make it safer for all of us. In addition, it helps all of us enjoy this as a hobby and as a profession.

Water tower in Roswell, Georgia

Forced To Shoot Old School Style

Buttigieg visits Georgia to promote the Administrations scaled-back infrastructure plan
[NIKON Z 6, 24.0-105.0 mm f/4.0, Mode = Aperture Priority, ISO 100, 1/400, ƒ/5.6, (35mm = 24)]

I had the privilege to cover Pete Buttigieg, The Secretary for the Department of Transportation, visiting Atlanta, Georgia. There were so many government representatives meeting with him. A few names were Senator Jon Ossoff, Senator Raphael Warnock, U.S. Rep Nikema Williams, Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms, and many others.

Challenge & Solution

The digital media guy for the Department of Transportation asked me to send him photos that he could put up on social media throughout the day. Here are just three of the many challenges I was faced with on that day.

  • Packed Shooting Schedule
  • No Time to ingest into laptop & edit images
  • Anything I would send would have to go unedited

The solution for me was to use the Nikon APP SnapBridge. While it can do a great deal, I used the Bluetooth connection for my answer.

I could shoot RAW with my Nikon Z6 and have the camera download every image I took as a 1620×1080 jpeg to my phone or chose which ones. I started by downloading it all automatically; even when I turned the camera off, it continued to transmit to my phone.

My setup using the MagMod Magsphere on the hot shoe Flash [Canon EOS 5D Mark III, EF24-105mm f/4L IS USM, Mode = Manual, ISO 3200, 1/80, ƒ/4, (35mm = 40)]

In many of these situations, I realized that I would normally edit a RAW file to get better skin tones––But NO TIME. So I decided to use more fill-flash than I ever do on a job these days.

No Flash

There were many situations throughout the day where Secretary Pete Buttigieg was often backlighted with very little light in front of his face. This is one example. It would have been a disaster if I sent that to the client to post.

With flash using the MagMod MagSphere

Back in the days of shooting film, this is how I had to shoot chrome film. In a film like Kodachrome & Fuji Provia, you had to get exposure to the camera.

While I didn’t turn the flash on all the time, I was very keenly aware when I needed it.

Secretary Pete Buttigieg walked through a new train tunnel being built at Hartsfield-Jackson Airport in Atlanta, Georgia.

In this scenario, Secretary Pete Buttigieg is wearing a hat and walking in a tunnel with light at the very end. While there were lights on the wall, as he walked, he went from good morning to backlit over and over. Waiting for the best lighting moment does not work well with the best moment capturing what is going on. Using the flash helped immensely with this situation.

See how many photos you can recognize that I used the flash. You might be surprised that some I didn’t use it.

So do you think you could shoot and transmit photos on an assignment with no chance to edit?

I know I wasn’t so sure. So the days before the shoot, I practiced doing this throughout the whole process. The DOT gave me a Google Drive Folder to upload my images. We tested it together the day before. This not only calmed my anxiety but the client’s as well.

“Thank you all for the amazing work. Stanley, your photos are phenomenal. Can’t wait to see the rest!”

DOT Social Media Manager

I got that at the end of the shooting that day and before I had then gone home and processed all the RAW files from my three Nikons. I was using Nikon D5 w/ 14-24mm ƒ/2.8, Nikon D5 w/ 28-300mm ƒ/3.5-5.6 & Nikon Z6 w/ Sigma 24-105mm ƒ/4 Art lens.

Here is one of the Twitter Feeds from the DOT that day with my photos:

Flash Makes A Difference

I will not say that today’s cell phone cameras are no match for a regular camera; that isn’t true.

When you take photos outside in the daytime, all cell phone cameras do a great job.

Chick-fil-A Roswell Town Center at dusk. [DJI Mavic Air 2, Mode = Normal, ISO 790, 1/3, ƒ/2.8, (35mm = 24)]

My DJI Mavic Air 2 has a Sony IMX586 48MP sensor also used in the Galaxy S10 phone. So these phones do a pretty good job.

So one of our friends took their phone this past weekend and had me take the picture. They had the benefit of having both and choosing what to use. Here are those two photos:

Then here is my photo using off-camera flashes.

[NIKON Z 6, 24.0-105.0 mm f/4.0, Mode = Manual, ISO 100, 1/125, ƒ/8, (35mm = 48)]

The cell phone is acceptable until you see the difference using flash. All cameras do a better job of reproducing colors under flash than you get under other light sources like fluorescent.

Besides a better color, the noise is a problem when shooting in low light with a cell phone. Using the flash, I am shooting light equivalent to the sunshine outside. I can shoot at ISO 100 and fast shutter speed as well.

[SM-G970U, , Mode = Normal, ISO 250, 1/39, ƒ/2.4, (35mm = 26)] photo by Dorie

Dorie also took photos to show my setup so I could see her settings for the camera.

Now there is one more difference worth pointing out. When professional photographers set up using flashes, they put the lights usually at 45º to the right or left of the camera. Then they also put the light about 45º above the person’s eyes.

The lights in the ceiling are directly over their heads and create what I call “raccoon eyes.” These are the shadows around the eyes.

Here are the benefits that all the people who paid me to take their photos in the Ring at the Citadel:

  • Full Spectrum Color Light
  • Lower ISO ~ less noise
  • Better light direction on faces
  • 24-megapixel images so they can get large prints made

While you can get your cell phone pictures, there are times when it is worth going for quality rather than good enough.

“I Wear The Ring”

In the prologue, Pat Conroy’s The Lords of Discipline starts with one of the most potent sentences that Conroy ever wrote, “I wear the ring.” Four short words: Once you finish the story, understand why wearing a ring from a military school is such a big deal.

Ordering and Receiving a Class Ring {For The Citadel ~ from their website}

  • While any rising senior cadet may in the spring of the junior year be measured for and order a class ring, to be eligible to receive a class ring, a cadet must meet these two conditions:
    • Have an academic classification of 1A.
    • Have a cumulative GPA of at least 2.000.
  • To participate in the Ring Ceremony, the cadet must:
    • I have passed the Corps Physical Fitness Test outlined in Chapter 5 of the White Book.
  • Cadets who have met academic requirements to receive the ring but have not met the Commandant’s Physical Effectiveness Requirements to participate in the Ring Presentation may pick up their rings on the Monday following Parents’ Weekend at the Holliday Alumni Center.
  • If a cadet fails to meet the requirements to receive the ring with their class, the Alumni Association will typically hold it until the end of the following spring semester.
  • If the cadet has not met the requirements to receive the ring by that time, it will be returned to the manufacturer.
  • The cadet may not order the ring again until all requirements to receive the ring have been met.
  • The eligibility of cadets who failed to meet ring eligibility in October of their senior year will be rechecked in January.
  • The rings of cadets who have not yet received their rings but will receive their diplomas in May or will be eligible to participate in the commencement ceremony will be cleared to receive their rings before commencement.
  • No other cadets will be cleared to receive their rings until after commencement.

These are minimum requirements and will not be waived. Students should see the Registrar confirm eligibility.

[NIKON Z 6, 24.0-105.0 mm f/4.0, Mode = Manual, ISO 100, 1/125, ƒ/8, (35mm = 48)]

This is the largest group I have seen with the ring. It means a lot to the family when a cadet not only wears the ring but has the logo facing them while she is still attending school, and at graduation, the entire class turns their rings to face out. They are now graduates of The Citadel.

Usually every October the senior class gets their rings and has a big blowout ceremony.

This was when our son Nelson Lalli got his ring during Ring Weekend for the seniors at the Citadel on October 8, 2010. [NIKON D3S, 122.0-300.0 mm f/2.8, Mode = Aperture Priority, ISO 3200, 1/80, ƒ/2.8, (35mm = 300)]
After they get their ring, they run the barracks where the lower class cadets in their company have prepared special toasting for their seniors. [NIKON D3S, 14.0-24.0 mm f/2.8, Mode = Aperture Priority, ISO 280, 1/8000, ƒ/2.8, (35mm = 24)]
[NIKON D3S, 14.0-24.0 mm f/2.8, Mode = Aperture Priority, ISO 280, 1/8000, ƒ/2.8, (35mm = 14)]

Traditionally, after a few other celebrations that evening, they get to walk through a large ring with their date; often, the tradition is their mother.

Dorie Griggs with her son Nelson Lalli and his date.[NIKON D3, 122.0-300.0 mm f/2.8, Mode = Aperture Priority, ISO 6400, 1/100, ƒ/3.5, (35mm = 122)]

After the ring, they walk through the Sword Arch.

Ring Weekend for the seniors at the Citadel [NIKON D3S, 24.0-120.0 mm f/3.5-5.6, Mode = Aperture Priority, ISO 10000, 1/80, ƒ/5.6, (35mm = 78)]

Then COVID-19

The Citadel Class of 2021 missed this tradition as well as many others. This year Taylor Skardon went out of his way to try and make up for what was out of The Citadel’s control by having the ring set up in the Alumni Center for any graduating seniors on their graduation day.

Taylor Skardon served in the Navy for 30 years. The 1982 Citadel graduate is currently an adjunct professor and head of The Citadel Parents’ Program.

Here we are set up in the Alumni Center for the day, taking photos for any cadet that wants photos. [photo by Dorie Griggs]

All the students at The Citadel during COVID-19 have missed out on traditions, that is why most of them chose to go to The Citadel. Many have read Pat Conroy’s The Lord’s of Discipline and decided to have a similar experience for their college years.

While there are many traditions that incoming classes had no idea would be happening to them, so too have these students who have endured more than a “Hell Week!” For them, COVID-19 has redefined what it means to be part of The Lord’s of Discipline. No one truly admires those college years as much as with hindsight. This class has a unique 2020 hindsight.

Real Estate Photography

Today’s Real Estate market is geared toward people browsing photos and videos of properties as the first step toward finding a home.

Many people will not even contact a realtor until they have searched to get a feel for the homes on the market. One of the places that many go to is Zillow.com.

The good news for most selling is that the market is so hot that most properties in my North Metro Atlanta, Georgia market are in need for a short time. Some houses have multiple offers within minutes of going on the market.

235 Founders Mill Court Roswell, GA [NIKON Z 6, 14.0-24.0 mm f/2.8, Mode = Aperture Priority, ISO 100, 1/80, ƒ/8, (35mm = 14)]

You would think with this hot market; photos are not needed. However, if you have photos, people will possibly bid on your house just from seeing the images. They cannot risk losing a place waiting to schedule an appointment.

I like taking all the essential photos of all the rooms, but I also believe most homes would benefit from a couple of drone shots.

Taking photos from the ground doesn’t always show off your property in the best way.

It would help if you still had all the shots of the home.

I like to shoot many of the rooms from opposite corners so that you can get a feel for the space.

Besides those inside shots, I try and get the outside views that people are looking to see.

Estimates Require Bottom Up Thinking

Bottomup thinking is said to take place through taking in details and building up from there. The fragmented bits and pieces are structured and categorized, and then induction is made—a process that brings rise to something.

Topdown processing, on the other hand, refers to the perception driven by cognition.

In the best of situations, those asking for estimates are often in management, and the key to the project’s success is when they realize calculations require conversation.

This past week I have worked on four very intense and convoluted projects. The client is coming to me with a project they often try to complete. Most of the time, the management has already set a budget. When this is the case, we spend time going back and forth to see what we can do within their budget.

I have one client that came to me looking for the Bottom-Up approach. They are in the budgeting phase for a significant project. I helped them with a similar project in another part of the country. They are asking me to duplicate that in a new location.

The problem is that the person asking for the Estimate was not involved in all the parts of the last project. I have to educate them on the details of the estimate that are much more involved than what they think was involved.

Honduras Outreach Estabian Olancho

When most people see a video of an interview that is under a minute, they think that is all it took to get that interview. This is one of the parts of the estimate I had to explain to the client.

Here is the gist of my education on the topic of a video interview.

While you may see a 30 to 90-second interview, almost all the ones you noticed that we produced took about 3 to 4 hours to shoot. That includes the time to set up the cameras, lights, and microphone and take it down. The actual time we interviewed was about 30 minutes.

I then take those interviews for a first rough cut. I take out all the questions and significant pauses and create a video that is often first reviewed by another team member. That person is often the writer/editor. Then they send back time codes, and we put together the first actual edit. This includes the lower third graphics. Then this is shown to another person up the chain before we offer it to the main client.

The video has usually gone through about 4 to 5 revisions when the client sees it and makes their changes. This is usually about 8 to 10 hours of editing and reposting this online for the team to review.

The purpose of all this is to help explain why what they think is just a few minutes will be a couple of days of work, and that is why the estimate must reflect the behind the scene position they often do not see.

This is Bottom-Up thinking.

The problem with those who do not understand the importance of the Bottom-Up thinkers working with Top-Down thinkers is that the American Automobile declined from the 1960s till almost the 1980s. Meanwhile, Japan overtook the market around 1970 with the help of Dr. William Edward Deming.

William Edwards Deming (1900-1993) is widely acknowledged as the leading management thinker in the quality field. He was a statistician and business consultant whose methods helped hasten Japan’s recovery after the Second World War and beyond. He taught that by adopting appropriate management principles, organizations could simultaneously increase quality and costs (by reducing waste, rework, staff attrition, and litigation while increasing customer loyalty).

Today most people know his work at Total Quality Management and link this to Toyota rather than Deming, who created it. He broke it down into a cycle.

The Deming Cycle, or PDCA Cycle (also known as PDSA Cycle), is a continuous quality improvement model consisting of a logical sequence of four repetitive steps for continuous improvement and learning: Plan, Do Check (Study), and Act.

Estimates are only as good as the information given to the person creating the forecast. Deming understood that as you work on something like a car, it is often the front-line worker who will first see a problem. They need the power to stop the assembly line to be sure the customer gets the best product.

Estimates are needed for Ex Nihilo [out of nothing] work. This is where something is required to be created versus buying something already in existence.

Bottom Line Take Away

Working on estimates can be pretty frustrating to everyone. They are so disappointing because the customer is asking for the estimate. They cannot go forward with the project if they don’t know what they are getting and the cost of it. For the one writing the estimate, they need all the information to create it, but most of the time, the customer doesn’t know all they need to know–this, they are asking for an estimate.

Customers need to be realistic about the process of creating an estimate. They should never think they can continue asking for revisions without compensating for this work.

The one doing the estimating is doing some of the work you need to be done to go to your bosses to give them the feedback they need for budgeting and making decisions.

If you are the one creating estimates, I believe there comes the point in the process of revisions that you are perfectly entitled to compensation. You are doing all the heavy lifting, and the client can take all your work and shop for someone to implement your estimate for a lower rate.

Most of the time, the one doing the estimating is doing the most creative work for a project. They need to be compensated. Also, don’t forget that people will not pay for your first estimate. There will be some give and take, but at some point, the client needs to compensate for all those revisions if they want more clarity in the estimate.

Civil Twilight

At the beginning of civil twilight, just after Sunset, the colors of the sky change most rapidly. Clouds in the west are illuminated by orange-red sunlight, while the ones in the east remain blue and indigo. Generally speaking, civil twilight lasts for about 20 to 30 minutes, depending on the season and latitude.

While Civil Twilight is technically 20 to 30 minutes, the best possible moment to get that perfect balance of the city lights with the night sky is more of a “Twinkling of the Eye.”

52 in a flash, in the twinkling of an eye, at the last trumpet. For the trumpet will sound, the dead will be raised imperishable, and we will be changed.

1 Corinthians 15:52
Seattle Skyline

As you can see, back in biblical times, people understood that some of those things we see are like a shooting star and happen so briefly that if you are not paying attention, they will disappear.

It is considered an icon of the city and the Pacific Northwest and has been designated a Seattle landmark. It was located in the Lower Queen Anne neighborhood and was built in the Seattle Center for the 1962 World’s Fair, which drew over 2.3 million visitors. [NIKON D4, 70.0-200.0 mm f/2.8, Mode = Aperture Priority, ISO 100, 1/6, ƒ/8, (35mm = 95)]

I believe that the Civil Twilight is the best time to photograph architecture. The second best time is “Civil Dawn,” which happens at Sunrise.

The Gateway Arch is a 630-foot monument in St. Louis, Missouri, United States. Clad in stainless steel and built as a weighted catenary arch, it is the world’s tallest arch, the tallest artificial monument in the Western Hemisphere, and Missouri’s tallest accessible building. [NIKON D750, 28.0-300.0 mm f/3.5-5.6, Mode = Aperture Priority, ISO 100, 20, ƒ/16, (35mm = 40)]

What you quickly realize is that during these few minutes of Civil Twilight, artificial light values come into the same exposure range as the sky. Anything that doesn’t have a light will slowly go to a silhouette.

Tilikum Crossing, Bridge of the People, is a cable-stayed bridge across the Willamette River in Portland, Oregon, United States. It was designed by TriMet, the Portland metropolitan area’s regional transit authority, for its MAX Orange Line light rail passenger trains. [NIKON D750, Sigma 24-105mm F4 DG OS HSM, Mode = Aperture Priority, ISO 100, 13, ƒ/8, (35mm = 35)]

To get the best photos of Civil Twilight requires a tripod. The best photos are generally taken with the lowest ISO. This makes your exposure time for the shutter speed take seconds, not a few seconds, as you can during daylight.

Pier at Ocean Isle Beach, North Carolina during Civil Twilight [NIKON Z 6, Sigma 24-105mm F4 DG OS HSM, Mode = Aperture Priority, ISO 100, 30, ƒ/11, (35mm = 105)]

When you use these longer exposure times of 30 seconds, as I did photograph the Pier at Ocean Isle Beach, the water turns into foam.

Pier at Night Ocean Isle Beach, North Carolina. Leary Family Vacation [NIKON Z 6, Sigma 24-105mm F4 DG OS HSM, Mode = Aperture Priority, ISO 100, 30, ƒ/8, (35mm = 52)]

What happens as the light from the sky becomes darker? The light fixtures are no longer distinguishable; you see the light emitting from the institution.

Fireworks 4th of July Ocean Isle Beach, NC [NIKON D4, 14.0-24.0 mm f/2.8, Mode = Manual, ISO 200, 30, ƒ/8, (35mm = 14)]

The other popular thing to photograph is the fireworks after Civil Twilight. They want the fireworks to stand out in the night sky.

4th of July Fireworks at Roswell High School [NIKON Z 6, 24.0-105.0 mm f/4.0, Mode = Manual, ISO 100, 4, ƒ/11, (35mm = 24)]

Most everything becomes, at best, a silhouette, and challenging to make out what is on the ground.

4th of July Fireworks at Roswell High School [NIKON Z 6, 24.0-105.0 mm f/4.0, Mode = Manual, ISO 100, 4, ƒ/11, (35mm = 24)]

I worked on this photo in Lightroom to open up the shadows to reveal some of the nighttime skies, but it also introduces a lot of noise.

Portland Skyline [NIKON D750, Mode = Aperture Priority, ISO 100, 8, ƒ/8, (35mm = 24)]

Tips for Twilight Photography

Sunrise or Sunset ~ Before considering going, determine if this is better as a photo. Do I want the sun shining on the front or back as it sets? In some locations, the sun will be to the side, not in front or back.

Pack Tripod & Bug Spray ~ My friend Morris Abernathy and I went one evening to capture the Fort Worth Skyline; the best location was where mosquitos ate us up. It would help to have a sturdy tripod for the camera and lens you plan to use.

Arrive Early ~ Civil dawn is when the sun’s geometric center is 6 degrees below the horizon in the morning, and Civil dusk is the moment when the geometrical center of the sun is 6 degrees below the horizon in the evening. That is 20 minutes after Sunset and 20 minutes before Sunset. So, whatever the time is for Sunrise or Sunset, you must be in place with your tripod and camera setup at least 15 to 30 minutes prior.

Stay Late ~ I recommend planning for 45 minutes before Sunrise or Sunset.

Take lots of photos ~ don’t just shoot those few minutes of the best light. Shoot some with the sun still up and when it is pitch black sky. Sometimes, these are also great photos.

Second or Third Camera ~ Some locations you may want to compose differently. Rather than miss a great shot, if you have extra cameras, tripods, and lenses, make use of them.

Cable Release or Radio Transmitter ~ Use a cable release to get the sharpest photos. If you shoot on a DSLR, locking up the mirror will help with sharpness. Using a radio transmitter can help you trigger numerous cameras simultaneously if you are using multiple cameras.

Portland Skyline [NIKON D750, Mode = Aperture Priority, ISO 100, 4, ƒ/8, (35mm = 35)]

There are many times that daylight will reveal things like mountains in the distance that dusk or dawn can hide.

Portland, Oregon [NIKON D4, 28.0-300.0 mm f/3.5-5.6, Mode = Aperture Priority, ISO 100, 1/400, ƒ/8, (35mm = 200)]

The More You Learn, The More You Earn

James Dockery taught Adobe Premiere Pro during the Storytellers Abroad Workshop in Lima, Peru. [X-E3, XF18-55mmF2.8-4 R LM OIS, ISO 4000, ƒ/4.5, 1/100, Focal Length = 29]

I am just wired to learn more and more. Once I find a subject, I go down that rabbit hole. I want to know more and more.

Here are some significant changes in my career that required me to learn more or earn less.

  • Learning to shoot Transparency film like Kodachrome
  • Learning how to use hotshoe flash
  • Learning how to use studio strobes
  • Learning how to create audio/transparency slide show
  • Learning how to control my strobes by understanding all the light modifiers
  • Switching from Film to Digital
  • Learning PhotoShop
  • Learning about Metadata
  • Learning how to create Database
  • Learning how to create Website
  • Learning how to create a blog
  • Learning how to create digital audio slide shows
  • Learning how to shoot video with my DSLR
  • Learning about mirrorless cameras
  • Learning how to use Sliders & Gimbals
  • Learning how to fly drone and become a FAA Part 107 Certified Remote Pilot
Photo By Gibbs Frazeur

Only 15% of hiring managers say most job seekers have the skills their company is looking for.* If you want to increase your chances of getting a good job, you want to be in that 15%. This means you want to take the time to acquire the skills employers are looking for. 

This is also true for those doing Gig Work. [The term “gig” is jargon for “temporary job.” You’ve likely heard it used conversationally, especially when freelancers say, “I’ve booked a gig.” Additionally, you’ve probably heard of a “gig economy,” which means a free market system in which businesses use independent contractors—for short periods—to handle.]

There are two ways to decide what you need to tackle next. You can be on the Bleeding Edge, which is a little riskier. If you pick the exemplary “New Trend,” you could quickly get a lot of work. However, when you try to guess, the next big thing is, being too early.

When I switched to digital from film, I did it when it was a little more economical, and the technology had come closer to giving me a similar quality to my film. That was the year 2002. I paid $1,999. A similar Kodak back for the Nikon F5 year-earlier went for $16,000. The year before that, it was $25,000. I was not making enough money in those years to recover the cameras’ cost.

St John’s Baptist Church in Connelly Springs, North Carolina. [DJI Air 2S, Mode = Normal, ISO 100, 1/50, ƒ/2.8, (35mm = 24)]

In 2013 DJI introduced their first Phantom Drone. This drone began the modern camera-equipped drone craze. Within a few years, DJI would hold a commanding position in the consumer drone market, with almost 80% of consumer drones manufactured by DJI or one of their subsidiaries.

I had bought a couple of toy drones and could barely fly them without crashing. So, I was waiting until the technology was solid enough that I stepped into the drone world this February when I studied for and passed my FAA Part 107 Certified Remote Pilot test. I bought my first drone just a few days before I took my test.

While we all know about the “Learning Curve” and think it will be like this one above, it is more like it.

William S. Burroughs is credited with saying, “When you stop growing, you start dying.” This is the best way to think of the alternative to becoming a Lifelong Learner.

Here is one more way to understand why you want to also “Learn More, To Earn More.” The odds of increasing your income from one year to the next are directly related to what new things you have added to your skill base. Now I am not saying you should be chasing money, but the cost of living will increase just to stay at a similar income. The only way to keep up with this is to produce more content or better content that is worth more.

Speedrun

This photo above was taken by Dorie Griggs, my wife, last year during my time interviewing Dr. Charlie Weiss.

This past week my daughter said her friend liked that I was direct with conversation. They used the gaming term “Speedrun.”

So with some research, I found this about Speedruns.

Speedruns are artistry. Not only do they demonstrate complete mastery over a game, but they also poke away at the edges of what a game intends you to do. Watching a perfect speedrun is similar, I imagine, to watching good gymnastics, but they’re more than just skill-based. They’re borne of curiosity about the edges of games: the things we’re not meant to see and the things we aren’t supposed to do.

There’s a whole science behind speed runs. Players spend weeks and sometimes years chiseling a perfect path through a game. They exploit minor traversal bugs to gain speed, they tap away at the outer limits of a game world in search of hidden routes, and then they move to execute all these tricks in one graceful swoop. There’s a strong collaborative spirit among speedrun communities because, in the end, it’s all about what’s possible, not who wins.

These are some of the strengths I have as one with Asperger’s. For each of these, there is an equally opposite trait. You will find many with Asperger’s are direct.

Before sitting down to interview someone on camera, I have done lots of research and preparation for the path I need to take to get what I have as content needs to tell the story. I have done many informal interviews before I sit down.

I become focused just like a kid on an Easter Egg hunt. I know what I am looking for, and I go for it.

Professor of Math at Georgia Tech works with his student Gary Clark Alexander on a math problem.

It is essential at times for you to have this kind of focus like the “Speedrunner.” However, there are times you need to slow down.

This little boy shepherd is part of the Fulani tribe known for being herders and working in the village of Soubakamedougou, Burkina Faso, on October 15, 2005. The Marlboro company gives hats to the young boy cowboys to promote their product in Burkina Faso.

One of the times I slowed down was my first time in Burkina Faso, West Africa, with a writer.  African time is the perceived cultural tendency in parts of Africa and the Caribbean toward a more relaxed attitude to time.

I knew what we needed, but I realized quickly that over three weeks, we had the time to get our content and even more. So, I learned to look around while the writer was interviewing and just observed.

Chelle’s “Hip Hop” dance class invited the parents to photograph and see her work for the last 15 minutes of class time.

The one thing that helped me to observe even more had children. I would take my camera and enjoy seeing them take in the world and grow up in front of my eyes.

Taylor during a T-Ball baseball game

Speedrun vs Taking in the Roses

My mentor and friend Don Rutledge took me on many assignments that he self-assigned himself. I did this with Don for many, many years. We traveled around the country doing some of these stories.

John Howard Griffin & Don Rutledge –– This photo of Don from 1955 when he worked with John Howard Griffin on the book “Black Like Me.”

When I asked Don why he did so many of these smaller self-assigned stories, he said he liked it when he could take his time. Sometimes he would go back over a few days to work getting everything he could think of to make a solid visual story and the written story he would also craft.

He said these stories let him master his craft at a slower speed so that he, like the “Speedrunner, ” could make the most of his time when he was working on reports where the time was limited.

Pam Goldsmith, world-renowned violist, and sister-in-law to our family

Most professional musicians like Pam Goldsmith, who sits the first chair in many movies you see in Hollywood, must practice for hours each day. Most professional musicians practice 6 to 8 hours daily, 6 out of 7 days a week.

When Pam goes in to play on the latest movie, she and all the other studio musicians have never seen the music before. An orchestra has never played it. They take a moment to look it over. They may make a note or two, like bowing motions, and then play it. By the way, they recorded it that first time as well. Then they are done. Seldom do they go back and redo something.

When they go back, the composer may see they made a mistake and need to change something.

Asperger’s also processes a lot before they are “Speedrunning.”

This may sound contradictory, but it is what I do. Time is such a precious commodity in life. It is the most important thing you can give to anyone. So to make the most of my time with people, I must know when to ”Speedrun” and when to just “Chill.”

Actors Gotta Act

The best tip I have for getting your headshot is to take some advice from singers.

  • Yawn-sigh Technique. For this quick vocal exercise, yawn (take in air) with your mouth closed. 
  • Humming warmupS
  • Vocal Straw Exercise
  • Lip buzz Vocal warmup
  • Tongue trill exercise
  • Jaw Loosening ExerciseS
  • Two-octave pitch glide WarmUp
  • Vocal Sirens Exercise.
  • Vocal Slides Technique

You see singers stretching their vocal cords. In a way, they are calibrating their voices.

While photographing some actors a few years ago, I thought they wouldn’t love to perform. That was when I was trying to get them to enjoy themselves. I accidentally discovered that after they have been going through different types of characters, the expressions that follow are more relaxed and engaging.

Have fun in your headshot session. Keep the lighting simple and spend all the time getting a variety of expressions.

When an actor comes to me for their headshot, they are a little reluctant at first.

photo by Dorie Griggs

This past Saturday, I set up a studio in the lobby at Riverside Theatre Complex – Columbus State University.

My daughter, Chelle Leary, is a student in the Theatre program at Columbus State University and was helping me. She would help coach some actors by asking them to imitate professors and students in the program. Ronald Walker was getting into the roles once he had some ideas to play with.

Ronald Walker

After playing with some characters, I would get a few natural moments and then move on to another character. I continued to shoot these so they could later use them for fun with Social Media.

I think the actors love seeing the results of the different characters they created.

photo by Dorie Griggs
Gabrielle Solomon

I like to think of taking this variety of expressions to calibrate the face. You need to push or stretch beyond the best expression for any mood you are trying to achieve to make the one that is dialed back just a little look natural.

Here are some more tips for you in a downloadable PDF

Now fully vaccinated, I am ready to take on clients once again. Call me, and let’s set up a portrait session for you.