Showing posts with label sports photography. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sports photography. Show all posts

Thursday, June 21, 2012

The perfect day

I love my work, it allows me to express my admiration for women, for their strength and their beauty.
But sometimes, magic just happens. What does it take? who knows. It's a mixture of trust, chemistry, creativity and luck.
This is a clear example. Jenny, the Quixotic aerialist.
Jenny got in touch with me, because she had a special idea, more of a request. We talked it over, she came to the studio and we just clicked.
Months after that day, her session came. This is what we created together.
I don't think that this kind of art is possible without trust, great communication and to put it plain and simple: willingness to be open, to create, to think outside the box and go to places we haven't before.
Hanging upside down wasn't new for her. What was new for her was to be at the studio, trust me and put herself in my hands.
Me? well, I've done crazy things before,  but pictures of ladies hanging upside down wasn't one of them. They had always been hanging the 'normal' way :)

Thank you Jenny!
Adrian

PS
These are other crazy things I've done:
 A single good picture like this made my whole trip. Yep. Crazy.
So Creatives, artists, adrenaline-seekers, extreme crowd...Unite. Come create art.

Monday, November 21, 2011

The Boudoir pie


Years ago, when I started trying to get money out of what I loved doing, the big thing was doing weddings. It seemed like the logical choice. As in many other fields, we managed to blow it. Every new graduate from art college wanted to get in, so they came up with very interesting pricing, just to get their foot on the door. The problem? We got too many feet! When the new photographer tried to get some business, since there was no experience, the hook to attract clients was a very low price, thinking that once the experience came, the price would go up accordingly. In some months, with some weddings under the belt, newbie raised the prices. By then, another ten new guys had fancy websites and ultra low prices, trying to get their own slice of the pie. Now, I've seen photographers offer to pay, to do a wedding, just to get 'their names out'. As we saturated the market with entry level DSLR's, flash based websites and home-based studios, we now move to boudoir! It's just a normal thing. We move to another new trend, once the last one is depleted or shrinking. As the photographer on the side of the brick and mortar studios, now it's my turn to deal with the newbies. But my advise is not for photographers today, but for consumers. I saw many very talented professionals quit their passion, due to the inability of the consumer to find the value on a true artistic approach. Now I see the consumer live the groupon era, where the only thing that matters is the rock bottom price. Having dealt with the groupon people myself, I can see what we are doing to the industry. We're creating a price war, where we are sacrificing quality for quantity. (groupon wanted me to do a special for about 1/5 th of my normal price, due to another photographer based on an apartment, shooting for that amount) Well, thankfully I decided to do it for twice the other photographers fee. As consumers, we must care for the very things we value. We must support our favorite vendors, get educated, interact. Most people rather ignore that their loved groupon deal is really causing their favorite vendor a loss. That's fine, since it was the vendors decision. but that vendor was banking on patrons who would come back, and pay regular price later, instead of lurking groupon for the next newbie doing a special for close to nothing. Support true artistry. Support quality and do the math. How long can your favorite vendor offer you that awesome product or service making less than working at the fast food joint? So, my 2 cents of boudoir shopping advise: (and it's free) Talk to the people. Clients love to text and email. But they never really get a good feeling of who they're hiring. To me, specially boudoir needs lots of trust. I tend to get a very good idea about somebody, when I talk to them. If you don't know what you want... At least know what you don't want. Browse the web, see images and find out what's hot, what's old, what's appealing to you. Love yourself. If you don't like how you look, nobody can make you look good. Many, however, will be happy to make you look fake though! Find your match. Each artist has a different style. Find a style that you can see yourself in. Don't go to walmart studio and ask for trendy. They just don't talk your language. If you like a photographers work, go for it, but don't ask him/ her to do something they don't. (I have people come to me for kids portraits. Or for long sleeves girlie pictures...seriously?) Be prepared. I can't stress it enough. Boudoir is mostly a once in a lifetime experience, unless you get addicted to it. So why would you show up to your session late,with two outfits (one of them on) and one pair of shoes? It's about beauty, empowerment, confidence, freedom, and yes, naughtiness. So invest in yourself. Get some nice outfits, get hair and make up done. Bring a good friend, have a great time! Be nice. Nothing is weirder than a rude lady in underwear. Your photographer is actually trying his best to make you look amazing. It's a hard work. Also, really doesn't pay much. So manners are ALWAYS appreciated. Before, during and after the session. I've met many amazing people as a photographer. And many nasty ones too. Please, don't be the second. Adrian

Saturday, August 7, 2010

Price of art


So, I went to this group's practice. Brazilian Capoeira. They're so amazing! Besides the whole concept, a martial art disguised as a social event cuasi-dance, the elegance of the moves, the interaction of the players, the respect and feeling they display while playing is amazing. It's hard to take pictures at an event like this. first of all, these guys move....fast and a lot. secondly, many times the background is not the best, so you have to get creative.

I chose lower angles for two reasons: would leave the trees as background, cutting out bystanders and buildings to a minimum. secondly, because it gives a sense of greatness to the players, which is what I wanted to convey.
The problem I didn't count on, was power. I set my lights, get readings and then started shooting. I had a quantum battery pack, plugged to my sb-800 flash, so I was good to go. and I went. actually, I learned why the newer brother of the sb-800 has a thermal cut off. to avoid overheating.

this is how my flash looked before I ended my shoot:
This is after I noticed some burnt plastic smell but disregarded it as maybe somethin unimportant:
My trustworthy flash wouldn't stop firing. even when it melted.
So, next time, gotta either use two flashes at half of the power, or use the bnigger strobes, such as the Alien Bees 1600, to keep the little guys from working too hard.

just saying.