Join Storytellers Abroad Missions Multimedia Workshop in Lima, Peru, January 2 – 17, 2019.
Go to the website to learn more about the trip on the website.
A teaching team is a fantastic group.
Jeff Raymond, ABWE Director of Visual Communications
James Dockery, ESPN Video Editor
Patrick Davison, UNC School of Media/Journalism
Stanley Leary, Adjunct Professor UGA, Freelancer & Workshop Leader
Each person is given a story to work on during their time in the country. We have constructed the course so that each person can have one-on-one time with the instructors to help coach them through their stories.
QUALIFICATIONS/REQUIREMENTS
– A working knowledge of your DSLR camera and laptop computer – An interest in using photo storytelling in missions
If you are a working professional, this course is designed to apply your skills and experience in a mission context and expand your tool kit into new disciplines and heights. You will discover how to use your expertise for Kingdom work.
If you are a student, this course is designed to fulfill the internship requirements of most photography, journalism, digital media, design, or missions majors. It may also qualify for course credit at your institution. Contact us to discuss the details.
The workshop fee includes all travel expenses from Harrisburg, PA (airfare, baggage, taxes, ground transportation, travel insurance), meals, housing, workshop tuition, supplies, use of equipment and software, and group activities.
Participants are responsible for their expenses to Harrisburg, PA, and any necessary immunizations, passport, or visa costs (depending on destination).
This is an excellent workshop because your leaders are working in the industry and have been teaching the art of storytelling for years.
I have been to many workshops myself through the years. Most leaders have been outstanding in the industry, but very few have been exceptional teachers. We all want to create tomorrow’s storytellers and enjoy all of the students to succeed.
Here is one of the past stories from workshop participant Stacey Schuett in Togo, West Africa.
Over the past few months, the massive destruction of the Kilauea volcano hasn’t been what we expect from Mother Nature.
We don’t expect our homes to be destroyed with no hope of rebuilding.
In this photo, you can see the home in the path of the destruction. This looks more like a scene from the 1958 science-fiction-horror film The Blob.
While enjoying my tourist helicopter ride to see the volcano’s power, I wasn’t thinking about the lives being destroyed by nature.
I was in the sky with other tourists on numerous helicopters flying over the volcano, being entertained.
I was in Hawaii to teach photography at The University of Nations, which is part of Youth with a Mission. The campus is now in the process of seeing how they can help some of the families displaced by the volcano.
I was listening to the founder Loren Cunningham as he talked about the plight of those who have lost their homes to the volcano.
I had been teaching on storytelling and knew that when you tell a good story it actually affects the audiences physical body.
In a good chase scene, you can feel your heart racing. When the main character is hiding and close to being found, your palms may sweat.
The gut-wrenching feeling I get when bills are due and the tight cash flow is how I felt when Loren Cunningham pointed out that these people had not just lost a home but still had to pay on their mortgages. They were now paying for something that they couldn’t rebuild or resell.
This is a different kind of natural disaster than the past fires, tornados, or hurricanes I have experienced. Volunteers organized to help clean up and rebuild the destructed areas during those disasters. They helped to restore people’s lives.
The closest disaster with some similarities was Katrina, where many could not go back and rebuild.
As you watch the updates on the volcano, please keep in mind all those who have lost their homes and are now in financial crisis.
It was a thrill to get the chance to go up in a helicopter and see the lava flowing at the Kīlauea Volcano on the Big Island of Hawaii. Dorie and Chelle gave me this present for father’s day.
While I had been in helicopters many times, clients paid for the experience. This time it was out of our pockets. I had wanted to do this for years.
I have been coming to The Big Island of Hawaii at the invitation of my good friend Dennis Fahringer. I have been teaching photography to his School of Photography students with the University of Nations, which is part of Youth with a Missions.
Now for 12 years, I have been driving to the Volcano, hoping for good photos. I have taken some pretty good pictures through the years. Here is one from February this year before they closed the Volcano National park due to the recent activity.
The best way to see the volcano is from the air.
This is an untouched photo right out of the camera. I just converted from Nikon NEF to a JPEG.
By shooting RAW, you can work with the photo in Lightroom just like we did in the film days in the Darkroom.
The number one tool that helps you when shooting from a helicopter is the Dehaze Slider.
There is a lot of haze created by the atmosphere, and over the volcano with VOG, you need to use this tool, or the fog clouds the photos.
Just compare this photo of Rainbow Falls I processed to the unprocessed image.
Now here are two short videos I shot while up as well. I processed these in Final Cut Pro X and corrected the footage for better contrast and color.
Your old photos can look even better today due to technological advances. I returned to this photo of my daughter’s first day of school ten years ago to re-edit the image in the latest version of Adobe Lightroom.
You may like the earlier edit, but there are more possibilities with a few changes in Lightroom. First, they did a significant overhaul of the main engine in the software and then added new tools like Dehaze.
Today you can pick a color profile and use Dehaze; that was not an option in 2010.
Another control implemented in 2010 was Lens Correction improving all lenses by correcting for their imperfections.
Back in 2010, I didn’t even try to edit this photo. With the dehaze control, I could make the background much more accessible than doing this in 2010 would have required.
TIPS
Shoot RAW – you have more information to work with before exporting a JPEG in Lightroom. Folder for a RAW and separate folder for JPEG – I ingest and put all my RAW files into a folder, and then when I finish editing and exporting, I put those in a different folder JPEG Archive all photos – Keep the RAW images and your JPEG images. You can later return to these photos and discover some gems due to the software improvements in the future.
Dorie, my wife, knew when making plans for our children when they were young that there was a time limit. It was about 2 hours, and then it was like we hit a wall.
We like being at a fair: there are rides, games, entertaining acts, and tons of food. It’s exciting at first, becomes overwhelming, and finally, makes you sick (and you hate it!).
When you’re sick of something, it shows in your attitude and performance most of the time. Just like our kids would be at places like Disney World.
Often we hit the wall in our careers just as we did when we were young. It isn’t fun for us anymore. If you are a freelancer, you can feel that you are just not in step with your client as you once were.
I have discovered this happens with every client I hit a wall with at some point. It is the same feeling that happened with our kids on an outing.
I think we have become too focused on what we do in our jobs and less on the people we work with in doing those jobs. This can happen to you if you are extroverted or introverted.
Too much focus can be a problem: It drains your brain of energy, makes you care less about people, and prevents you from seeing what is happening around you. When you become more focused on a product that you are producing in a job rather than realizing you are working with other people, they need to enjoy the process and not just the end result.
I came to this conclusion when I found that I must rekindle a working relationship over the years. In the past, I would work on my portfolio or some new skill to talk to my client. I thought the client needed to see my skills were valuable.
While working on some materials for this latest round of rekindling relationships, I realized that no matter what I did, it would look like I was going to do some “Explaining” to the people in the meetings I was setting up.
This approach can be very condescending to others. It undermines the relationship that you are trying to nurture.
Thinking about this, it hit me – I had not worked enough on the relationship with my clients.
In your work, have you been measuring using your skills in our work as well as developing relationships?
We spend a lot of time at work; nothing is worse than someone who cannot get along with others. It’s essential and involves being helpful, understanding the unwritten rules, and being respectful, reliable, and competent.
Here is a simple way to start this conversation, “We’ve been doing business together for almost a year. I want to take you to lunch to get to know you better.”
The most important thing you can do at a business meal listens. You want to hear what the other person cares about, their interests, and what makes them tick. They need to know you care about them as people, not just the money they give you to pay your bills.
Once we were at Disney, we ran into my daughter’s friend from home. While usually, our daughter would be ready for a break from the theme park, this “Relationship” gave a burst of energy to go through not just our daughter but the entire family.
Theme parks can be like your product in business. At a certain point, this doesn’t keep your client enthused. Remember, friendships do keep your help energize business relationships as well.
The key to fireworks is the foreground. The context helps give a sense of place.
When I started shooting the July of 4th fireworks this year in Roswell, GA, the location was slightly different than years past. I wasn’t sure exactly where they would be in the sky. I had a general idea, but I had a few problems when they started.
As the sun set, all the street lights in the parking lot we were in started to come on. When I first started shooting, this is what I was getting. The street light was creatine a flair and wasn’t very interesting. The street lights were distracting.
Using a tree in the parking lot to help with the street light also blocked some of the lower flying fireworks.
I picked up the tripod, went closer to the shops, and pointed the camera toward the high school where the fireworks were being launched. It gave me the best photos of the fireworks and making the street lights no longer a problem, but you only see a couple in the lower left.
I determined that the best place was to shoot the fireworks wide with a 14-24mm lens. This let me show all the community that turned out for the fireworks and helped to tell the story.
Earlier in the fireworks performance, I shot this with my Sigma 24-105mm ƒ/4 at 58mm. Fireworks look great, but this could be anywhere in the world. The wider shot helped me to show you what it looked like where I was in Roswell, Georgia.
Carry a couple of different lenses so you can change your approach if necessary. Be willing to move to get a different perspective. Most of all, take lots of photos. Only a few will be the keepers that you want.
Technical
ISO: 100 Aperture: ƒ/11 Shutter Speed: 5 seconds to 14 seconds [using Bulb] White Balance: Fluorescent to match the Street Lights
I used a tripod and a cable release. I would start taking photos and stop after 2 to 4 fireworks go off.
Getting a well-exposed, color-correct photo will bring the most out of any subject.
When your photo is well exposed, you will see all the gradations on a grayscale. When you have your digital camera set to the proper white balance under flash you get the most dynamic range possible.
The color space of flash is dead center in the color wheel. Other lights like Tungsten, Fluorescent, Mercury Vapor, LED, and others are skewed off the center of the color wheel. While you can color correct these images by adding or subtracting colors to try and slide them back to the center, your color is never as good as under pure flash.
I shot this photo outside on the shaded side of my house. I color-corrected using “Custom White Balance.”
Using the ExpoDisc, I put this over the front of the lens and did an incident light reading and custom white balance.
I do this when shooting in the studio because softboxes often have a slight color cast that I can correct.
I cannot stress enough that the one thing that separates the very top photographers from the rest technically usually is white balance.
Colors pop when your exposure and color balance are on target.
SOBERING statistics published earlier this month show that the annual rate of suicide in the US has risen by almost 28 percent between 1999 and 2016.
I believe this is affecting businesses as well as individuals.
For this topic, I believe many of us are experts. Almost everyone will go through events that cause upheaval and crisis.
Depression causes one to look for relief. Unfortunately, many who are dealing with addiction start with depression.
I believe that in today’s economy, companies are showing signs of depression.
When you are depressed, you are prone to reach for things that give you pleasure but are not always the best. Ask any addict.
So many of us are looking for Likes or comparing our life to other people’s Facebook feeds.
We have gone from liking a post to loving, laughing, wow, sad, and even mad.
We are losing our compasses on how to navigate life. Instead, we are now looking to measure what is good or bad based on skewed analytics.
Opioids are primarily used for pain relief, including anesthesia. Many in business reach out for things like an opioid to make them feel better. That person has more followers than us. Let’s hire them. They can make it better. Remember, opioids not only can relieve pain, but they can also anesthetize you. I think many in business today are operating in a fog.
Communications departments have moved away from a solid story to choosing to use work based on the content providers’ social media feeds of likes and several followers.
Teaching in college and workshops, I experience more students who feel like they are already good photographers based on their social media likes from friends.
Brandon Stanton, the creator of Humans of New York, said, “Photography felt like a treasure hunt, and even though I sucked at it, I’d occasionally stumble upon a diamond. And that was enough to keep me wanting more.”
Stanton’s success is based on one simple truth–Everyone Has A Story!
People were drawn to his storytelling, which led to his massive following, but he didn’t go out and find someone doing something and copy it. Instead, he just went with his interest in the people on the streets of NYC. At first, he focused on visually exotic people, but slowly he discovered that everyone had a story.
Instead of trying to find the next “Cool Trend,” why not go with storytelling?
Stories allow the listener to learn vicariously and discover lessons seemingly on their own.
Stories make us feel a part of the situation.
Storytelling is tapping into people’s emotions that will help you to influence or persuade them.
Stories build connections between people. Those who tell stories are the ones making solid connections with their audience.
Storytelling is powerful because it engages the entire brain. A story, if broken down into the simplest form, is a connection between cause and effect.
Let me work with you and make your stories visual to be more engaging.
Cowboys compete in steer wrestling at the 27th Annual Pana’Ewa Stampede Rodeo put on by the Hawaii Horse Owners in Hilo, Hawaii, on February 18, 2019. [NIKON D5, 28.0-300.0 mm f/3.5-5.6, ISO 1600, ƒ/5.6, 1/4000, Focal Length = 210]
The number one problem with people’s photos has always been blurry photos.
The four leading causes of blurry photos are:
The subject moves while the shutter is open
The camera moves while the shutter is open
Out Of Focus
The Depth Of Field is too shallow
Addressing the first two by using a proper shutter speed.
If you have a 200mm lens on your camera, then the slowest you want to handhold the camera to take an in-focus photo is 1/200.
Now, in this case, where the mayor of Atlanta, Keisha Lance Bottoms, is speaking,g I am on a tripod shooting at 600mm. Since she is not moving all that much, I was able to shoot at 1/100 because the camera is on a tripod.
When you are shooting something where the subject is moving, and the camera is moving to capture an image, as in sports, you need a breakneck shutter speed.
In this photo, the football players are moving very fast. Over the years, I realize I need to speed up the shutter speed to get sharp images.
When I started shooting sports with film, the highest ISO I could shoot was ISO 1200. Film’s ISO kept me shooting around 1/500 for most sports.
Only during day games was I able to get genuinely razor-sharp images.
Besides shooting at 1/4000 shutter speed, I am also using a monopod.
Most photographers on the sidelines of a football game use a monopod to help steady the camera.
Out of Focus
If your subject isn’t moving that much, like my person speaking, start by switching from multi-point to single-point focusing. There is either a joystick or pad on many cameras that lets you move your focus point around. Move this to the person’s face and as close to the eyes as you can.
You need to know that your camera has limits and that certain situations are difficult for the camera’s technology to work correctly. Here are some for you from my Nikon D5 camera manual.
Too Shallow Depth-of-Field
If your lens is wide open at an aperture of ƒ/2.8 or wider ƒ/1.4, then the depth-of-field is relatively shallow. The other piece affecting this is how close you are to the subject.
The closer you get, the more depth of field will get even shallow.
The top-of-the-line cameras tend to have the best focusing systems, which will track subjects allowing you to get that razor-sharp image. In addition, combining the best quality lenses and cameras can let you shoot wide open and get sharp photos.
However, if you cannot afford a 300mm ƒ/2.8 lens and have a 300mm ƒ/5.6 lens while you think that the depth-of-field is greater, your photos may not be in focus because the lens is too dark for the camera sensors to focus.
The other problem is a fast lens, but the focus system is struggling to keep the subject in focus. Difficulty focusing is where you close down the aperture to give you a little more wiggle room in the depth-of-field that your photos are still sharp.
B-roll is supplemental or alternative footage intercut with the main shot in film and television production. These can be still images, videos, and even graphics.
Your video’s overall goals and pace should help determine the length of your B-roll shots. Say you have a longer support video demonstrating a specific process to your customers. Those illustrative shots might be 20 to 30 seconds long, depending on what you’re trying to achieve.
A still image up for 20 – 30 seconds can be made more interesting by zooming in or out and panning across the image. The Ken Burns effect is a type of panning and zooming effect used in video production. The name derives from the extensive use of the technique by American documentarian Ken Burns.
Just like music has a beat, most interviews have a similar feel. The very best editors have a good feel for finding that beat and pacing to then know when to start and stop B-Roll clips.
Literal vs Abstract B-Roll
When I took a course in church music during my seminary days, the professor helped me understand how a creative [organist, for example] can help lead people in worship. He divided music that an organist plays when people are coming into worship, leaving, or during the service can be literal or abstract.
When the organist plays “Amazing Grace,” this is literal because people so know the song that they begin to sing it in their heads and sometimes even out loud when they hear the music.
However, if the organist starts to play something like Mendelssohn wrote, which is often music that isn’t associated with words, then the people can let their minds wander. The organist can create a mood, but how the people hear it individually will let their minds wander. This is an abstract type of music.
I suggest using a literal B-Roll when you can show something that relates directly to what the person is talking about. For example, if they are talking about their parents, a pan across their dresser with photos of them works pretty well.
Now often during interviews, people talk about things in the past or even the future. This is where abstract B-Roll usually works great.
When someone reflects on growing up somewhere, this is a great time to use nature shots from that area. It is like helping the audience dream with them as if they are thinking back and looking out their window or like they are driving down the road looking out the car window.
Flowers blowing in the wind or a person’s hand moving through a field of flowers can work as an abstract. Seeing rain hitting a puddle or a stream of water flowing can be pretty soothing.
Closeups of tools can work great as well. Seeing the blade cut wood versus a wide shot of a person cutting wood can often look more abstract. A closeup of welding that goes from out of focus to in focus is another way to create an abstract B-Roll.
Transition B-Roll
You often need to transition the audience from one scene to another in the storyline. This is where a B-Roll of a door opening and closing or having someone walk through a location can help you transition to a new thought.
Video portraits are pretty famous today for B-Roll. They can work with transitions as well. This is where you roll for 20 to 30 seconds on a person with video versus the still portrait. I would advise getting a lot of different takes if using this technique. Have the person look out a window. As they look out the window, have them turn and look into the camera. Reverse that and do another take.
Have people look into the camera and they then walk away with the camera following and another time staying still.
Have them go from pretty expressionless faces to anger or smile. Start your shot out of focus and then go in a direction. Start in focus and then go out of focus.
Movement
With video, you are capturing motion. You can keep the camera still and have the environment moving, or you can move the camera within the environment.
Car scenes are notorious with showing motion. You can have camera stationary on the person while they are driving. The windows are like cinema screens showing life happening around them as they are driving.
Shooting from another vehicle, you can drive alongside them to give a sense of context.
Type of shots
You have a variety of shots which I encourage you to get lots in each category for easier editing later.
Wide Shot – helps to establish the context. Medium Shot – often two people close together or where you see the subject’s hands type of distance. Tight Shot – This is often where you are just showing the face. You are letting the facial expressions help tell the story. More than 50% of most movies are tight shots. Close-up – These are the detailed shots. Where you see someone’s ring on their finger, pouring a cup of coffee, the cork on a bottle of champaign being opened.
You can never have enough B-Roll. I have never heard this said in an edit suite. That what were they thinking giving me all this B-Roll. I do listen to it over and over that there is not enough.
When I do my interviews, I always try to use two cameras. There are many benefits like:
Backup of the interview if one camera fails
Different looks using a slightly wide shot and a tight shot
Helps with editing
Let me talk briefly about how much two cameras can help with editing. Almost all the time, you need to edit someone’s comments. This means you cut something out, and when you do it, the person’s head will jump on the video and give us the telltale sign that you just cut something.
Now, if you have two cameras, you can switch camera angles, and it doesn’t tip the audience that you cut something. It will just look like you went to a different angle.
Now, if you have a slightly wider shot that includes the hands when the person is quite talkative with their hands and not just their mouth, it is good to include them.
Besides cutting out a long comment that doesn’t add to the storyline, there are times you need to rearrange their remarks. Maybe the last thing they said would make the most substantial lead for the story.
Again having that second camera lets you change angles, and it will look like they started with this thought.
In the end, you will help the subject sound more coherent and look like this was just a straight take and more accessible for the audience to absorb.
Reasons to redo the interview
The first time you interview someone, be sure and tell them you may need to come back the next day or two for a second interview.
Unless you are a seasoned pro most people will not catch everything happening in real time and will notice missing information during the post processing editing time.
If this happens, I highly recommend having the subject redo the parts you liked for several reasons.
They often have changed clothes.
Matching the lighting and camera angles is difficult
Matching the sound can be difficult as well
You may even want to play the video parts you liked and have them rehearse a few times before you redo them. I have found that often the person realizes they can even say it better now that they have heard themselves.
I must tell you this funny story about a seasoned photographer learning to do a video for the first time. He thought of locations he wanted to use as the background for his subject’s interview.
We realized that we failed to tell people to do their interviews in one place while teaching. While in a still photo, that would make sense to show your subject in the different locations, when it came time for editing, the sound didn’t match, the lighting was so different, and when you finished editing the content and put the takes in the logical order of how it best told the story the guy was jumping all over the city back and forth.
It was so funny. Just imagine the evening news where it was the same person instead of going to Washington to listen to the correspondent there and then to the West Coast correspondent or maybe an East Coast correspondent. That was what it looked like.
If you do an excellent job with the interview and have a well-thought-out storyline told by the subjects, you should be pleased with the results. If this is all the audience saw and heard, it will work.
One strategy for editing almost any type of production is to do a “radio” edit. Focusing your cuts and the assembly of your timeline on the dialog [AUDIO] places the story’s content as the highest priority.
Once you have this done, you will work on getting visuals to supplement the audio—more on that in the next part of Shooting Video with your DSLR.
Some more technical tips
I recommend a magnifier for your LCD. It would help if you were sure your shot was in focus.
Another option is using a video monitor. The advantage of an external monitor is not just a bigger picture for focusing and exposure control, but with some monitors like this Atomos Ninja Blade 5″ HDMI On-Camera Monitor & Recorder is recording for more extended periods than the time limits on most DSLR cameras. You are only limited to the size of the hard drive you use.
Atomos Ninja Blade 5″ PRODUCT HIGHLIGHTS
Key Features – 325DPI, 5″ IPS 1280 x 720 capacitive touchscreen monitor/recorder. – Waveform RGB & luma parade, vectorscope with zoom, and test pattern generator. – Adjustable gamma, contrast and brightness. – HDMI input and output. – Real-time monitoring, playback, playout to a PC or Mac with QuickTime, and edit logging. – Focus peaking, 0-100% zebra, and two modes of false color monitoring. – Records 10-bit, 4:2:2 in ProRes or DNxHD. – S-Log / C-Log recording. – Trigger REC/STOP from camera (Canon, Sony, ARRI, Panasonic, RED, JVC) – Timecode from camera. [Nikon has no timecode] – 2.5″ HDD/SSD media storage.
It records up to 1080 30p/60i resolution via HDMI to an available HDD or SSD using either Apple’s ProRes or Avid’s DNxHD codecs. Recording at 10-bit with 4:2:2 color sampling, this unit provides a monitoring and recording solution in one compact battery-powered unit.
Chick-fil-A Long Point Road FSU, Mount Pleasant, SC [Nikon D5, Sigma 24-105mm ƒ/4, ISO 400, ƒ/5.6, 1/6 – (3) Godox V860IIN + Godox X1NT]
I am enjoying capturing some of the Chick-fil-A restaurant designs around the country. The designers are restrained in some ways to create a space that is an efficiently run restaurant and fits within a community.
The new restaurant in Mount Pleasant, South Carolina, used a lot of landscaping to help the building fitting within the community.
The palmetto has been a symbol for South Carolina since the American Revolutionary War when it was used to build a fort on Sullivan’s Island that withstood British attack—putting these on the property helped tie to the state’s traditions.
The second photo may do a better job of showing the design of the building, but when you eliminate some of the landscape architecture, it loses a sense of place. Now the building could be anywhere other than in Mount Pleasant, South Carolina.
Now the thing about this view is even tho I am showing more of the landscaping; it still could be almost anywhere in the US.
This last angle is where I started shooting before sunrise. I also was lighting just the building when I started. The trees and shrubs around the building were silhouetted. My first thought was that it would work since this is how the palmetto tree appears on the flag [silhouetted]. Well, the trees were new to the location, had been trimmed, and didn’t read as clearly as I wanted them to appear.
I took the flashes and located them further back, lighting up the foliage and the building before sunrise.
The only thing I think would have dramatically improved the photo is if the flag waving in a breeze.
Hopefully you are seeing here that it is not just setting a camera on a tripod and pushing the shutter release. You need to often add light to help accentuate and draw out the elements in the photo to help add to the photo.
Photography combines two Greek words, Photo, and Graph, which mean “drawing with light.” Sometimes the light is just perfect naturally and other times, the photographer adding or subtracting light in a scene makes a more powerful image.