The Visual Science Lab / Kirk Tuck
Kirk Tuck's blog about photography and the commercial visual arts written for photographers, designers, art directors and all sorts of people in marcom departments around the globe. We'll discuss new products and new trends and how to incorporate them into our daily businesses. For complete contact info for Kirk Tuck go to: www.kirktuck.com. Otherwise, Welcome aboard!
Monday, September 6, 2010
The five minute portrait. Just checking in.
This is my kid, Ben. I'm blessed to have such a good kid. I had some lights set up in the studio from my photo session with Alexis, last friday. I walked past Ben's bedroom on my way out of the house and out to the studio and I was amazed at how much he'd grown. I was also amazed that he was sitting on his bed studying his Spanish.
I asked him to come with me to the studio and spend just a few minutes sitting for a portrait. I wanted to see how the light looked and I wanted to se if my memory of the Kodak SLR/n having better skin tones (by far) than my new Canon 5D mk 2 was just optimistic or if the Kodak really is a better portrait camera. It is. I also wanted to photograph one more subject before I tore down the lights and got ready for the upcoming work week.
To light this I'm using one gigantic 84 inch Lastolite umbrella with shoot thru diffuser on the front. It's firing through a 6 foot by 6 foot diffusion silk that about five feet from Ben. The background is lit by a little light in a small softbox five feet from the canvas background. I'm using various black flags to prevent to much "fill/spill" from hitting the shadow side of Ben's face. This took, literally, five minutes and 20 frames. I'm happy with the look.
I'm using a Kodak SLR/n with a 135mm f2.8 Nikon lens (MF) that I picked up last year for $60. The light for both sources was from the Elinchrome Ranger RX. The file is a conversion from raw with no levels or color controls. I love the flesh tones. That was my question. I love that my kid dropped his book and followed me to the studio without a moment's hesitation. Life is good.
Saturday, September 4, 2010
The Anti-Workshop was a smashing success. No one got hurt and we saw art. Great art.
Let's get the important stuff out of the way first. I shot with an Olympus EP2 camera and a 20mm Panasonic lens. I thought it was perfect and tiny and light. Nice to carry around all day, especially if you have a skull and crossbones wrist strap, carefully selected for you by a teenage boy... I can't imagine any working photographer that doesn't have a collection of self portraits in bathroom mirrors from around the world. This one is from a bathroom in the new section of the McNay Museum.
Speaking of Museums, the McNay utterly blows away the Blanton Museum in Austin for architecture, the breadth and depth of the collection, and just plain coolness. Here's a newly acquired Picasso which joins the other two in one of the intimate galleries in the original part of the museum. My shooting companions were as amazed as I at the stellar collection of twentieth century masters that are hidden away in this treasure of a museum. I guess I'm a sucker for sentiment because I really liked the Monet water lillies. But the Renoir nudes are the raison d'etre of being an artist......
We spent a good amount of time rummaging thru the collection.

I found this sweet person at the market square sitting with a similarly dressed companion. I asked them why they were dressed up. They smiled and said, "We're celebrating the fact that we're still alive!" Sounds good to me.
I guess I was channeling my "inner Stephen Shore" with this shot. I love the many meaningless juxtapositions I find all over San Antonio. That, and the famous Olympus Jpeg colors make every image a bit juicier.
But I guess I should report on the actual anti-workshop:
We met in front of the Alamo at 8:30 am. Bernard brought ample copies of my maps of downtown which had areas of visual interest marked and noted. We pulled together the group of 28 intrepid shooters and talked about the mechanics and ethics of street shooting. I gave a vague itinerary which basically suggested that we meet up again in two hours, at Mi Tierra restaurant in Market Square for a brunch. There was tons of activity around the Alamo and many stayed for a while to shoot.
I headed off to see the San Fernando cathedral and was charmed once again. I'm also very happy with the new park in front. It's very cool. Then I made my way over to the Market Square.
Being Labor Day weekend things were hopping. Food merchants had booths set up everywhere. The smells of cooking food were intoxicating. Bands were playing on three stages and diverse groups of tourists ranged everywhere. (Free range tourists?) I put us on the waiting list for a big table and I could see our people having a blast, shooting everything that moved, just outside the windows of the restaurant.
If you're a Texas photographer and you haven't had a meal at Mi Tierra, shame on you. It's not about the food (although it was very good, especially if you are a lard snob...) it's all about the giant mural, which now contains film maker, Robert Rodriguez's image as well as Eva Longoria's. We're talking a painted mural at least 60 feet wide by 18 feet tall, painted with a wild impasto/realist style. It's also all about the 50 foot long case of Mexican pastries and candies. It's all about the carefully trained staff and the endless, over the top, decor. We stayed for two hours and could have stayed one more if the street hadn't beckoned. Amazingly, for such a large group, no one shirked their part of the check. We actually had a surplus of cash. First time I've ever seen that. And I'm 54.
Off we go to shoot the swirl of activity in the market square. Off to see the old buildings on Houston St. Down the Riverwalk to see the Southwest Craft Center (beautiful!!!!!) and then back to the heart of downtown.
At 3:30pm some people peeled off and a core group of about 14 rendezvous'd at the fabulous McNay Museum. I think I've described the experience pretty well, above.
When the guards and docents kicked us out a closing time we headed one block away to La Fonda restaurant on N. New Braunfels to get our second helping of great salsa and Tex Mex, layered in with a little alcohol. Lively discussions ensured: Who's the biggest online photo poseur? (you had to be there) What does the future hold, technically? What the hell is diffraction and why is it intent on limiting things. Which was the favorite painting at the museum? Who got to photograph the teenagers learning to throw knives at the Alamo? And so much more.
Best part? I think everyone quickly learned that they didn't need a big name teacher or a fancy venue in order to practice their photography crafts at a high level and to really enjoy the day. At least that's the vibe I felt. If someone disagrees I'm sure we'll see it in the comments. And if anyone had a bad time I'll be happy to refund their full tuition!!!!!! (What? It was all free???????).
Friday, September 3, 2010
A pretty damn cool article. About one of us. A real photographer named Dave Jenkins.
Go here and look at this incredible article that will shortly be in your mailbox in the form of Rangefinder Magazine: http://www.rangefindermag.com/storage/articles/RF0910_Jenkins_Jenkins.pdf
Dave does incredible architectural photography work, is a successful photographer, and incidentally is a regular reader of this blog.
Getting a profile in Rangefinder Magazine is an achievement I've yet to figure out how to get. I think you either have to be really good (like Dave) or be able to pay someone off. And it's kind of a Catch-22 because if you're not good enough as a photographer to be able to make it into the magazine on the strength of your own work you're probably not good enough to make the kind of scratch it takes for a pay off. At least I haven't been able to.......(I'm kidding about the second half. I don't really think the magazine accepts payola. Sorry but my lawyer makes me add these disclaimers for the humor impaired and the very linear thinkers. Go HDR....).
But back to my point. I'm reading the comments with a finer tooth comb these days and finding that we have an audience of very, very talented people.
Go to the link. Read the article. Look at the great work. And then come back here and give some well deserved "Kudos" to Dave Jenkins. Pretty damn cool!!!
Way to go, Dave.
Dave does incredible architectural photography work, is a successful photographer, and incidentally is a regular reader of this blog.
Getting a profile in Rangefinder Magazine is an achievement I've yet to figure out how to get. I think you either have to be really good (like Dave) or be able to pay someone off. And it's kind of a Catch-22 because if you're not good enough as a photographer to be able to make it into the magazine on the strength of your own work you're probably not good enough to make the kind of scratch it takes for a pay off. At least I haven't been able to.......(I'm kidding about the second half. I don't really think the magazine accepts payola. Sorry but my lawyer makes me add these disclaimers for the humor impaired and the very linear thinkers. Go HDR....).
But back to my point. I'm reading the comments with a finer tooth comb these days and finding that we have an audience of very, very talented people.
Go to the link. Read the article. Look at the great work. And then come back here and give some well deserved "Kudos" to Dave Jenkins. Pretty damn cool!!!
Way to go, Dave.
"It reads better than it lives." -Ian Fleming
I think my friend, Alexis, looks like a glamorous spy from a movie.
To a certain extent, that's the way I feel about photography. I grew up reading about the swashbuckling adventures of Magnum photographers and Life Magazine photographers who were chartering planes to fly deep into the Congo or over the South Pole, drinking Rum punch in Paris right after the war with Ernest Hemmingway, and then dancing the night away at 21 in New York City.
The camera seemed to be a magic talisman of incredible power and the men and women who could wield them effectively were the surrogate eyes of the world. The best of them were paid like princes (Avedon would amass a personal fortune of over $50 million !!! Annie Leibovitz was able to loose nearly half of that without even trying.....) and even the most workman like of advertising photographers seemed to earn like plastic surgeons and orthodondists but with the added benefit of not having to play with blood or buy malpractice insurance.
Somewhere along the line, the wheels came of the profession and now even the top dogs struggle from time to time. But I think we all persevere because we can't imagine having to do a real job. Being leashed to a real schedule. The world is changing. It won't always be the way it was. And not everyone is bringing wonderful new stuff to the table. Another quote from the bond book, "Tell them in Chicago that their guys suffered from delusions of adequacy...."
There are still a handful of photographers making good livings shooting advertising. Many fewer are making a living at all shooting photojournalism. The ones that are hanging on are doing it by mixing in new visions and technologies. Slide shows with captured sound. Video clips, etc. Maybe the wedding people are still ordering caviar and drinking martinis but my take is that it's rough all over.
I still think people look in from the outside with rose colored glasses on and think that photographers are living a dream. They see the iceberg part of a photographer's life. The scant time spent on the actual shoot. They don't see the "Titanic sinking" business end of the iceberg which is all about waiting and negotiating and PhotoShopping and begging the clients to "please send the damn check so I can keep the lights on...." and then spending every free minute marketing and cold calling.
Maybe the opacity of the surface makes people too optimistic about the business. Maybe a few more stories of talented shooters going down in flames and celebrated visual translators getting stiffed by multi-national corporations would open a few eyes. Then they might understand that this has become a tough game. I wouldn't give it up for a minute and yet, even with four good books out and twenty something years of experience, I still get nervous near the end of some months. I still loose sleep wondering if the jobs and the checks will keep coming in. In all I guess what I'm trying to say about photography is, "It reads better than it lives...." (apologies to I. Fleming)
The photo above, of Alexis, was shot this afternoon in the studio. I used a Canon 5Dmk2
Note: Get a good night's sleep. Tomorrow is the anti-workshop. Cruise around, break the rules and take all the photos your memory cards can handle. I'll be playing "lifeguard" on the periphery. Remember the Alamo. 8:30 AM
Thursday, September 2, 2010
An interesting campaign for a Japanese Tech Company.
We talk a lot here about philosophical issues pertaining to photography. I thought I'd take a break from that and just show a nice, cohesive campaign I did recently for a Japanese company. The art director was very good with direction and I feel like the combined images worked well. This campaign is all about branding and very little about actual product.
The shoot was really straight forward. We used a Nikon D2x and a small assortment of lenses.
The art director was Greg Barton, owner and creative director at Dandy Idea.
On another note: We're doing out "anti-workshop" in San Antonio starting Saturday Morning. 8:30 at the Alamo. Free. Open to all.
Request: If you enjoy the blog could you pass the URL along to someone else who might enjoy it?
Reminder: I've written four books that have been well received and well reviewed. Would you have a look at my Amazon author's page and see what you think? If you've already read the books would you consider leaving a review? Here's the address: Kirk's Authors Page.
Thanks, Kirk
Do you ever do photographs just for fun? Really silly fun?
This is a photo of my friend Lou. Here she is normal, beautiful and happy.

Then we get the idea to wire her up to a special device that will be tripped with our Pocket Wizards in the hope that, with enough probing, we'd hit that part of the brain that controls automatic smile responses. I'll be the first to admit, we got greedy. We figured if every shot was a sure deal for smiles we'd save consumers a bundle on film, processing and prints. And, of course we'd miniaturize the circuitry just as soon as we found the right nerve bundles and the right nodes........
But as you can see from her expression we were never able to quite hit the "smile center" even though we had an amateur neurobiologist along for the ride. Word leaked out and we had to agree to pay some fines and sign a piece of paper stating we'd never play with a model's deepest emotions again. But, the device is selling well in several other countries----but in entirely different markets.
(This is total fiction. Don't wire your friends up at home.)
Has the entire paradigm changed or are we just experiencing extended suffering from "the downturn"?
I had an interesting portfolio show with a creative director at a smaller agency here in Austin. He and I have worked on fun projects with the agency and he's always been a proponent of my work. I showed him a bunch of new photos. Things I'd done in the months between our meetings. He looked thru my large prints (please, everyone, keep showing your work on iPads while I drag around a box of 16x20's. I don't mind wiping the drool off the protective sheets.....) and he said very nice things about my work.
And then we put the images aside and he became philosophical in the way that creative directors can be, sometimes. He wanted to discuss the future of the advertising industry. And as we spoke it reminded me very much of the earlier decay of the market for commercial photography. While we had bread and butter assignments to sustain us the ad agencies had the profit from large media buys to wallow around in. Over time the consolidation of media and the demands of clients have eroded what was once the profit center for every major agency into.......nothing. Agencies can still charge retainers or by the hour to figure out where to place the media but no longer get much or any cut of the media buy. That leaves the agencies two or three profit centers: Traditional creative concept and production, marketing strategy and branding strategy, and social and viral marketing. And most of these charges are based on hourly expenditures/charges at various rates. Which flies in the face of what Andy Warhol always advised; "Charge for the art, not for the labor". And it also negates the model of doctors and entrepreneurs which is all about, "Charge for what you know, not for what you do." After all isn't a great idea worth a lot? Even if you think it up in a heartbeat? You know the brain storming might last weeks until the epiphany hits.
As the profits decline the agencies also find themselves smack up against the same kinds of market killers photographers have encountered. There are fewer big placement, national ad campaigns because the demographics have become so splintered. If the total market buy is fractionalized by multiple demographic customizing then the percentage for each ad production budget drops enormously. There may be more ads than ever before but they've been, by necessity, cheapened and loaded with homogenous and warmed over concepts and given budget resuscitation by the use of dirt cheap stock instead of (sometimes) more appropriate custom assigned images. Then it becomes an ever cycling and self fulfilling race towards the bottom. And, with a decline of people with wide ranging (liberal arts) educations there are fewer on the client side who can tell good from bad, funny from banal and so on. I remember trying to tell a client about an ad concept based on "The Rites of Spring".....He'd never heard of it. Didn't think anyone else would have either.....It was a sad testament to the decline of western civilization via business schools.
If the ads only have to be "good enough" and "cheap enough", and if everyone else is doing good enough and cheap enough then gradually the whole industry succumbs to wretched visual and verbal deterioration. At some point the clients will decamp toward in house suppliers, stock design templates and home made solutions. It's easier now to make a website than it is to change the oil in your car. The great middle of the market is seeking independent web designers who reject the overhead of the big agencies. And yet I can remember the days of the half million dollar websites. With Canon 5Dmk2 cameras every photographer who stumbles thru a client's front door is ready to do a "TV Commercial" and at prices that make traditional television producers shudder.
What was my colleague's position? He firmly believes that traditional, big broadcast, mass market advertising is on the way to the graveyard. He believes everyone will eventually spend their days glued to one screen. This one screen will bring them all of their content, become their workspace and their entertainment. It will also be the de facto communications center. Everyone will rush to create "killer apps" in order to cement their brand in the minds of loyal customers and would be customers.
Imagine this bleak, 2016 (riffing off George Orwell's 1984, or Aldous Huxley's Brave New World) future where it might actually be illegal to go around without your personal screen device. It might the nexus of all your commerce. All meetings will take place as conference calls on your screens. All news and even television programming will flow to your device. The apps you use will be branded in a frenzied attempt to keep your loyalty in a sea of cascading images and offers. From the moment you wake till the moment you turn out the lights----and beyond--- you'll be locked to the screen. Earbuds jammed in hard. Oblivious to everything but the content.
No more shared experiences. No more face to face socializing. Oh sure, you might virtual "face to face" with someone while you wolf down a dinner your GPS enabled screen sourced from the crowd sourced food approval list. But probably nothing beyond that. And since no one will want to read anymore all the programming will be moving pictures, video. And rock music and more video. Books as we know them will be used as fuel for power plants desperately churning out juice for a zillion battery chargers. By 2020 everyone will have reading glasses from the 18 hours a day of screen viewing. Exterior decoration will be a thing of the past. People will no longer care what they or their surrounding compatriots look like because no one will be inclined to look up from the screens.
Of course this is such a cynical point of view. The other way to look at this is to understand that the ad agencies are trying to find their footing much the way photographers had to a few years ago. I think that the economic slowdown is much to blame for a lot of what ails the advertising communities. Surely it is always profoundly changing but the more it changes the more it stays the same. The new concept and the new idea kicks out the old. Only the delivery methods change. Everything will recover in lock step with the money. The basic currency will always be the value of the human connection and the power of the ideas.
Looked at from a third point of view the destruction of traditional paradigms of ad agency/client relationships means that the agencies are no longer such powerful gatekeepers for their clients. Clients understand that creative ideas and productions can come from almost anywhere. The barriers to direct client assigned work are being torn down, campaign by campaign. If the photographers and video producers focus their pitches they can supplant much that agencies control now.
It's all mixed up and it might get worse before it gets better. I think the conceptualization of the app as the next step is overstated and will, in fact, be no more than a small tool in a big tool kit. I think HD TV and other re-creations of technology mean television is just coming into its golden age. Enormous clients will still want enormous agencies to handle a cohesive look and feel to brands. And the photographers with vision and staying power will remain.
When the economy recovers the creative campaigns will return. They'll be different. The media may be different. But we'll figure it out. We always do.
Bottom line? Follow the money.
Wednesday, September 1, 2010
Summer's over. Time to get back to work.
I'll admit it. I get a little lazy during the Summer. It's nice to spend time at the pool and the lake. Nice to BBQ at will and mix blenders full of daiquiri's. Cold Sauvignon Blancs around the a table full of salads and finger food. I just wanted to say, "Bye" to Summer with one of my favorite portrait/swimming cross over images. Jen with goggles.
Done in the studio against a warm, gray backdrop. One giant softbox to one side (you can see the reflections in her eyes. And one small softbox gently grading the background. The long lens on the MF camera does the trick for ultra smooth transistions and, of course, much interpretation in the printing phase. But the most important piece of equipment in the whole studio was the spritzer bottle filled with warm, warm water.
We're booking up portraits like crazy this Fall and it seems that everyone is looking for beautiful monochromes with delicate tonalities and wonderful eyes. Fortunately I have that kinda figured out. I'm pushing hard to do more and more portraits. Love em. Daytime, evenings, weekends. Can't get enough. But in the studio, mostly. Not a big fan of shooting in the bluebonnets or with urban alleys in the background.
Remember the motto, "Fun portraits are better portraits."
Tuesday, August 31, 2010
Roar with intensity. Be clear about your path.
I've done so many things over the years. And shot so many different kinds of photographs. I still like the challenge of bringing tiny microprocessor dies to life and making big, industrial machines look sexy and potent. On a good day I can even find pleasure in photographing products on white backgrounds. There's a meditative charm to doing good clipping paths, after the fact. I love to shoot events. The constant flux and mixed vibrance of people hellbent on sharing ideas is alluring. And the exchange of knowledge can be intoxicating when something totally new is broached.
But those things are not really why I got into photography, either as a hobby or as a profession. To be absolutely truthful there are only two types of photography I wake up thinking about. One is shooting on the streets and the other is classical portraiture.
The shot above was done on film with a Contax G2 and a 28mm Biogon. Ben was running towards me with a joyous bluster and his mom trailed behind him. It was a Spring day and we were at Emma Long Park, which borders Lake Austin. The park was nearly empty because we were there on a week day in the early afternoon. There's nothing planned about the shot. I just pulled the camera up to my eye, focused and shot. But I like so much about the shot. I love Ben's little shadow. I love his stride. I love the diagonal pattern of the boards in the dock.
I never leave the house without a camera. There's just no way of knowing what you might miss. I see street photography and this sort of ongoing reportage as a way of writing a visual book. It's all part of a larger narrative that I just haven't been able to tag with a beginning, a middle and an end. But it's writing a visual novel all the same. That's why I love this kind of imagery. It unfolds chapter by chapter and you work in collaboration with chance, fate and destiny to distill the images from the swirl of life around you....
And then there's classical portraiture. The image above, of my friend and former assistant, Anne is my favorite portrait ever. I know I'm supposed to like portraits of my kid and my wife better but this is the portrait I'd be happy to have define my work for my entire career. And in a way this image sums up everything that I think is wonderful about portraiture in the studio.
Every square inch is exactly as I wanted it. The lighting is exactly what I previsualized and created. Anne's expression is exactly what I wanted her to convey. It's a wonderful record of a beautiful and deeply thoughtful person.
If I could customize my career I would spend the next twenty years doing portraits just like this. All that's needed are a few lights, a few backgrounds and one camera and one lens. That, and the time to sit quietly with each subject and get to know them as individuals. As fellow human beings. I would shoot sessions every day and spend the rest of the time massaging the tones and textures into prints. Not screen fodder, but actual prints that people could hold in their hands and cherish.
In many ways these kinds of images are almost unattainable now. People want to move too fast. Get stuff done and get on to the next thing. Do you remember the last time you had an hour long conversation with someone? Did they glance at their phone every so often, reminding you of the split nature of their attention? Were they booked so tightly that, from the minute they arrived they were anticipating when they would have to go. Between planning to arrive and planning to depart did they give a thought to how they would be "in the moment?".
As artists we have control. We can set the parameters for a session. We can ask that phones be extinguished and we can create a space and a mood that invites sitters to linger. In exchange, we can try each time we shoot to give our sitters a very, very special image. A portrait that defines this moment in time. This moment in their lives.
How did this portrait come about? I'd been experimenting with backgrounds. I loved the look of folded drape going off into an increasingly blurry distance. The drape on the left side of the prints is perhaps 12 feet back from Anne. The drape on the right perhaps 20 feet back from Anne. Each set of drapes was lit by it's own light in a small softbox. In this way the amount of light on each drape, and even where it fell, could be individually controlled.
I put Anne in a favorite old, rickety chair and had her lean her arms against the back. She's quiet by nature and doesn't fidget around much so she makes a wonderful model for a longer session. I wanted a big, soft but directional light source for my main light. Like the soft light from a cloudy day billowing through a window. This was provided by a 50 by 72 inch softbox covered with layers and layers of white diffusion cloth, clothespinned to the front panel.
A white wall over to the shadow side of Anne's face created too much fill so I put a big, black card in between Anne and the wall. The camera was a Hasselblad with a medium telephoto lens, used at f5.6 (almost wide open for medium format....).
We talked for a while before I started shooting film. I wanted her to settle comfortably into the space. When both of us stopped being diligent and trying too hard I started to shoot. I shot three or four rolls of film and there were many frames I liked. But as with most portraiture there is one frame that clearly stands above the rest. In our minds, this one was that frame.
What a wonderful career it could be if I can make more and more of these.......
Edit: I forgot to mention that sometime last week we hit a milestone of sorts: 500,000 page views. Probably more people have read or viewed my work in the last 16 months than......... KT
Monday, August 30, 2010
Sometimes I post something because it reminds me of something else.
This photo reminds me of shooting images for plastic surgeons. They always want "perfect skin" and big eyes and perfect lips. You can do lots of things with PhotoShop. But should you?
I like to look at images that haven't been retouched. I think the reality is much more alluring than the fictive.
Anti-Workshop sentiment rising. A reminder to un-participate.
Here's a novel idea: Let's all leave our cellphones in our cars and pretend that being out shooting photographs in San Antonio is a lot more fun than checking all the text crap every few minutes. We could spend a day off the grid!
So much for wishful thinking. Well, we're counting down the days until we intersect in San Antonio for what I hope will be a day of wandering around shooting stuff that really resonates with me. If you are coming I hope you'll find stuff that resonates with you. And it doesn't have to be the same stuff. We'll meet at the Alamo at 8:30 am. I'll have some (printed) maps with some of my favorite routes on them. If I get ambitious I'll even include visual landmarks. We'll yakk for a few minutes and then everyone can start drifting through downtown, aiming, generally toward the Mercado. There's a huge restaurant there called, Mi Tierra. I'm aiming to have brunch there at 10:30 am. I may call ahead and let them know that we might have a big table of people but I have no idea how many people are actually planning to attend. The food is classic Tex-Mex. If you are an ardent Vegan you might want to bring something to gnaw on. The coffee is totally vegan!!!
Someone asked about lunch. Get serious. If we have a big Tex Mex El Brunch at 10:30 am you'd have to have the metabolism of a caffeinated hummingbird to be hungry a few hours later. Coffee breaks? Yes. Snacks? Sure. Full out lunch? If you feel you need one there's a ton of places to choose from and I'm sure you'll be able to find a fellow photographer to go with. I'll be walking around shooting stuff.
At 3:30pm, or there abouts, I'll be hanging up the street photography thing and driving over to the McNay Museum. http://www.mcnayart.org/index.php Please take a few minutes to go to their webpage (if you plan to attend) and look at the stuff they say about photography on their property. You are basically agreeing to use images only for personal use. That pretty much means you can sell them as stock to anyone. They are happy to have you take photos on their grounds and in the rooms but no flash and no tripods. Read the stuff and you'll be happier. The entry fee is $8 for adults. If you wanna get your money's worth, go earlier and plan to spend a couple hours there. There's a lot to see.
The museum closes at 5pm and it's just down the street from one of my other favorite restaurants, La Fonda. It's on N. New Braunfels in the Sunset Ridge Shopping Center. I'm heading there after they push me out of the door at the McNay. I'll be talking photography and savoring the ambience until everyone gets bored and leaves. Then it's back home to Austin.
Some thoughts about shooting: The fewer cameras and lenses you take the more comfortable you'll be shooting all day long. The fewer pieces of lighting gear you bring the less you'll have to carry around.
For example, right now I'm anticipating taking one DSLR camera, one normal lens, and two 8 gigabyte cards. I'll be shooting raw. And if I need more than 600 images I think I'll have shot too much, too quick.
I'm not bringing a camera bag or a flash or a tripod. I'm not bringing a water bottle because I know how to get water when I need it. I am bringing shirts that breathe, comfortable shorts and good walking shoes. I expect to cover four or five miles over the course of the day.....
I'll definitely bring a hat. Love my hats. Can't decide between a boring khaki baseball cap (made out of very light weight technical fabric, not as one northerner conjectured, wool) and my straw cowboy hat. The cowboy hat does a good job covering my ears and the back on my neck but falls down on that whole "anonymous appearance" thing. I'll be leaving my crappy little Nokia phone in the car. I'll have a driver's license, a credit card and some cash in one pocket and my car keys and memory cards in another. That's it. No vest. No wild strap construction. No bags. No walking stick. No PDA.
Good Rules for street shooters: Just like dating, "No" means no. In this context it really means, "no, I don't want my picture taken and you're just being a pain in the ass if you keep begging me..." We're not acting as photojournalists so we don't really have an ethical right to make someone miserable in order to get an image. If you can't get complicity thur sweetness and charm-----let it go.
If you see a great photo in a restaurant or museum, by all means, "go for it." But let's try to be discreet and not involve innocent bystanders in the whole thing. You should have a shot mentally roughed in (composed) and you should have an idea of the exposure settings before the camera even comes to your eye. A quick tweak and a quick press on the shutter and you're done. If you circle someone for five minutes while taking variation after variation you will have stepped over the line....
If it's hot, take time to step into Churches (San Fernando Cathedral is one of the oldest and most charming in the country) Hotels (check out the lobbies at the Gunther and the big hotels on the Riverwalk) and shops in order to soak up a bit of air conditioning. Sit for a few minutes. Drink some water.....
If you see something be sure to shoot it now it probably won't be there (or won't be there the same) when you come back.
Getting the most out of Kirk......I'm hoping you know how to use your gear and that you've already bought and brought what you enjoy using. I want to help you feel comfortable walking along the streets and taking photographs. I've done this for decades and would love to share what's worked for me. Whenever we meet up (Alamo, restaurants, rest breaks, etc.) feel free to come on over and ask me anything relevant to street photography. I'll do my best to answer. Be aware that there are no private Kirk sessions so don't save your questions and then think you'll have me to yourself for an hour or so. Ask em proud! Let everyone in earshot have a chance to debate it and share it.
The whole point of the Anti Workshop is that you guys are all pretty smart, creative and individualistic. You don't need a lot of handholding. Most of us just need an excuse to get out and shoot. That's what this is all about. The framework of the experience is to have something to blame when you need to tell your boss or spouse that you won't be able to handle the saturday shift or scoop poop in the backyard. Come down to SA loose and ready to just soak up the ambiance of being in a place and letting the images come to you.
We're not providing models or food or drinks or tee shirts or pens with my business name on them. We're just providing an excuse to stretch those art muscles so you don't cramp up over the course of the year.
I'd love to have a "top shot" post on the blog afterwards. It would be great if everyone sent me their one favorite shot of their day with an watermark on the bottom and let me share it here on the blog.
That's all I know. Thanks. See you there. Kirk
Friday, August 27, 2010
Street Shooting. Part One. Why the hell would you want to do that?
Just hanging out at the Vatican soaking up the ambiance.
For a generation of old codgers, raised on the images of Henri Cartier-Bresson, Robert Frank, and that new upstart, Josef Koudelka, street photography is photography. Those artists fostered two or three generations of Leica M toting, Nikon F toting, Tri-X shooting fanatics. What were these guys thinking? I guess they were thinking that the world around them was going through tremendous upheavals caused by wars, human migration, the conflict of generations, the smell of the new, the evolution of fashion and so much more. And all of it was playing out right there on the streets.
Well, guess what? The world, right now, is going thru tremendous upheavals caused by wars, human migration, the collapse of the world economy and the move from post industrial service economies to a future we're not sure about yet. Gee. It all sounds very familiar. Except now it's playing out for the most part in front of big screen televisions in the service of endless video games, shopping and social excursions to ubiquitous and homogenous malls and in the sealed, air conditioned cars streaking back and forth from home to mall to quasi-fast food restaurants and back again. Makes it a lot harder to be a visual "cultural anthropologist" on the street and yet photographers are reconnecting with the old tradition of trying to get a handle on what is "now" by documenting the evidence of their eyes. Or maybe the thrill of street shooting never left us.........it was just napping through the Flickr age of endless cat whiskers, chunky girls lit by off camera flashes at dusk, and ninja's with smoke machines.
People at the Termini train station in Rome.
I've absorbed books like, "Why People Photograph
" by Robert Adams and I have a huge collection of photo books by Richard Avedon, Robert Frank, Garry Winogrand, Danny Lyons and many, many more. All of them shot in the streets. Many of their images are stunning and provocative. I appreciate them on two levels. The first is as a time machine to the immediate past. The descriptive content of these fractions of seconds shows me a time that seems so foreign now and yet it was occuring during my early childhood. But I appreciate more the well seen graphic images of humanity as a visceral force of emotion and motion. Flux and decay.
Street photographs are so different than set up photographs. For some reason I get the impression that millions of "enthusiasts" who, in our father's day, would have been roaming the street and putting in time hoping to become informed observers of the human interplay have abdicated the exterior life in preference for trying to "create" art in their basements and living rooms. Everything has become so self-referential as though we, as a culture, have lost our ability to attach to things outside our selves or to people outside our isolated, one degree of separation spheres. We seem to have lost the feeling that we are all part of an interconnected bio system that's interwoven and interdependent, not just physically but also spiritually. We've become a generation afraid to travel. Even if it's just travel across town. Or even fifty feet from our cars.
And so, in some ways, we, the new generation of street photographers, are like explorers out to show the mall and house trapped people what the world outside looks like. We're trying to show how people exist without cars or credit cards or iPhones or Blackberries or large bank accounts in order, I think, to find the common intersections that will allow us to have renewed faith in the intentions of all the people who seem less like us. Shooting in the streets gives us access to characters we wouldn't meet in the halls of our normal jobs in white collar America. It shows an existence without the intangible safety nets of privilege that most of us have hovering below us. But these images can show the same desire for fun, joy, love, affection and potential that drive us as well. And by finding the common touchstones of being human we can understand more about ourselves.
That's the big, philosophical point of view but it's not exactly why I photograph in the street. I do it because there is some energy there that I'm trying to capture, like a lightning bug in a jar, to take back to an audience I'll never know and show them things in the way in which only I can see things. I want them to acknowledge that I've looked at things from my very unique perspective and, by showing them, I can help people better understand me. What my mind must be like. What I think has aesthetic value. I'm sharing my perspective. I'm sharing what interest me now.
I don't always photograph people. Sometimes a Mexican fiesta banner of deep magenta flapping wildly in front of a talkative blue sky is enough to say, "look at what I see." An altar to Hispanic pop singer, Selena, surrounded by saint candles and flowers allows me to visually shout, "Do you think this is as weirdly different from my daily life in Austin as I think it is??????" But the very bottom line, figured out after years and years of intensive, daily pyscho therapy I've never had is this: Shooting on the streets gives me a chance, an excuse to walk around and just stare at interesting stuff without having to have a real reason. And it gives me something to share.
I think the best fiction writers and the best street photographers are the same. We love to tell stories. But we don't need to tell the whole story right away. Sometimes it's better to just tease our audience (and I include myself in my audience) with a snippet that tells a little part of a story but tells it in a way that's so poignant that it's worth savoring in it's unanchored and compartmentalized whole.
Can I tell you a story about "the one that got away" and how it has haunted me ever since? I was in Russia for a few cold weeks in February of 1995. The country was in tremendous distress at the time and no one was sure where the next food or money would come from. Times were very desperate. But just typing these words makes the scene so banal. What does desperate really mean? Everyone's mind and their own history create a subjective mental story when we use words to describe despair.....So let me tell you what I saw.
I left my hotel on Nevsky Prospekt one afternoon with the intention to walk the streets of St. Petersburg and take photographs. It was so cold you could see the breathe you exhaled ten minutes ago as it formed into snow and gently settled toward the earth. I was out of place in my western, technical, cold weather gear. My Contax camera dangling from its neckstrap. And as I walked down the street the light was fading and becoming a dark and dusky rose color. Street lights were flickering on and the cars crunched by on hard snow with their little headlights flickering.
And then I came upon him. Huddled against the stone wall of one of the ancient gray buildings was an old man. He was wearing bits and pieces of an old uniform. I could see a bit of newspaper tucked in around the tops of his worn shoes, put there as extra insulation from the biting cold. He was worn just like a photos of every sun damaged homeless person living on the streets past a certain age. His face had deep clefts and his eyes were worn, sad and vague. Battered by the chill wind of hopelessness.
He'd lost one arm. His coat sleeve was pinned up to his shoulder. This wasn't some faux display to evoke sympathy from tourists because I'll tell you that in the dead of winter in 1995 there weren't any. At least none that would leave their hotels without chauffeurs, body guards and cars.....And he stood there in the freezing cold.
In front of the man was a very small and delicate wooden table, painted a fading french blue, faded away by time. On the table was a glass case. The glass itself was old and filled with romantic imperfections and bubbles. The seams of the glass case were soldered bronze. All crude handwork. The glass case was the size of fairly typical home aquarium. Inside the case were three littles vases of flowers. Just two or three stems in two of the vases. The third held a small bouquet of flowers and the smallest sprig of baby's breath. In each corner of the case were small, white candles which gave off a peculiar, warm glow.
I say it was peculiar because the slight warmth of the inside of the case caused just enough condensation to diffuse the candle light as it would be diffused through the living room's winter window of my house back home. The job of the candles was to keep the flowers, and the water they sat in, from freezing. And as I stood there, riveted by this site the ambient light continued to drop until the streetlights, the daylight and the candles seemed to provide even amounts of illumination and the points of candle flame seemed so much warmer in the purple blanket that was slowly falling through the sky to cover the quiet city.
It was hauntingly beautiful and sad all at once. Deeply sad. And I couldn't figure out how to include all the pieces of the scene in a frame of film without impinging on the dignity of the old man. This was his life. He knew it was his life. It was all he had. To photograph it seemed wrong. It seemed exploitive. It seemed like trophy hunting. I left my camera dangling around my neck and I walked over and, in broken Russian, bad French and pantomimed English I bought the small bouquet of flowers. I paid the man much more than he asked. He gave me a memory that would haunt me for the rest of my life. What was that really worth? What can we ask from others except to make us kinder, more empathetic and more grateful?
What happened to the flowers? I was out shooting. I didn't want to carry around flowers. I walked several more blocks and then turned a corner and gave the flowers to the first young couple I saw. It was a beautiful day of street shooting and I returned to the hotel without having fired a frame.......

Detail of the entry lobby at the Alexander Palace in
Pushkin, Russia. 1995.
Wednesday, August 25, 2010
New Website goes up today. Still messing around with some duplicate images.
Self adornment is all the rage at kid's swim meets. This one is sweeter than the more common, "Eat my bubbles....."
Relaunching a website is always a work in progress. Or it should be. I don't think I've ever seen one go up perfect. That might just be the fluid nature of the web. That being said, I want to announce that I've redone my little website and changed a few things.
It's located right here: http://www.kirktuck.com
As with most things I life I like to keep things simple. I have many, many photographer friends who are doing LiveBooks sites and other templated sites and I guess that's good. Everyone I talked to (except Don) kept telling me to use just a handful of images. Like ten. Other people told me to use ten but use them really, really big. Others like the new "magazine" format. I figure if everyone is running in one direction with their sites then it just follows protocol that I'll want to go in the opposite direction.
It's an html (mostly) site with very few bells and whistles. I put images that I like on the site and I put in a lot. I figure people can always stop looking if they want to. I understand my markets pretty well so there's a lot of straightforward nuts and bolts in there. Very few (none) big national advertising/branding pieces....(it's just not my market).
People tell me never to include family so I made sure that Ben and Belinda were included. The dog is very unhappy because she is not represented. Can't have everything, and besides, I didn't want to alienate the cat people. No nudes because I didn't want to rile up the un-nude.
I've checked the site in all the major browsers and it looks pretty good. That's Firefox, Opera, Safari and Chrome. (If you are still using Explorer you've got bigger problems then how my site looks....).
I made the images pretty big because those damn people with iPads keep doing that annoying "finger and thumb" thing and looking at everything super big. I wanted the stuff to hold up almost to full screen.... But I'm sure I've done something that will enrage people who only look at sites on iPhones. I just don't know what it is yet.
But all this brings up the question: Are websites even relevant anymore? They are no longer entertainment. I see them just as an online portfolio. Am I wrong? As a photographer am I missing something?
I'm sure you guys will let me know what you think. Here's the beautiful thing about having dedicated readers of a photography blog: All of you will let me know about every single glitch and I'll have it fixed up and ready to go before one of my clients even fires up a laptop and gives it a cursory look. Pays to have friends.
Reminder: Sept 4, 2010. All day long.
We're doing the anti-workshop in San Antonio on Saturday the 4th. We're starting in front of the Alamo at 8:30 am, wandering around downtown in the general direction of the Mercado. We'll coalesce at Mi Tierra Restaurant to get revitalized with breakfast and then continue an unplanned and luck intensive search for interesting and inspiring stuff. I'll have suggestions and, if I get motivated, maps. Understand that this is not an invitation to stay by my side for a day. I have a camera for that. This is an opportunity to cruise by, ask a few questions and head off again. Meeting up by circumstance and destiny, from time to time.
I find the city of San Antonio (downtown) endlessly captivating and inspiring. It has a street life and enough cool artifacts to keep one visually interested.
In the late afternoon I'm heading over to one of the best private museums in Texas, The McNay, to look at a bunch of art and recalibrate my brain. I hope everyone else will want to come along too. If you get captivated by something else you can always meet back up with us at La Fonda Restaurant ( the one on Sunset Ridge: 6402 North New Braunfels Road. In '09) We'll get there pretty early, before 6 pm for sure. Good Tex Mex and good drinks.
Bring your own money. I'm not sharing my Special #1 with anybody.....
In all probability it's going to be stinking hot that day. Dress smart. Shorts, shirts with good vents, bring a hat. Suck down a lot of water. Find shade as you walk through the city. If you can handle it emotionally this might be a good day to practice radical formalism and bring only one camera, one lenses and as many memory cards and extra batteries as you can cram into a pocket. Wouldn't it be emancipating to leave the camera bag, tripod and 28-600mm zoom lens at home? Flash? As Hank Bresson once said, "It's like bringing a handgun to the opera." Of course he probably never went to an opera in Texas.
For all y'all in far away places you'll probably have just as nice a day as the rest of us. And maybe cooler. Hope we have lots of cool photos to show you. Maybe we'll be silly and put up a temporary Flickr gallery.......
I'm doing an actual workshop in October. Lighting. (Who would have guessed....) Stay tuned for details.
Now, back to the first part of the post.....Who wants to be the first to critique the new site?
Big smile. Kirk
Monday, August 23, 2010
Art teaches us what it is to be human......
Snapshot taken in the museum with Olympus EP2 and 20mm Panasonic lens.
This is a plaster cast from the Battle Collection at the Blanton Musuem. It used to live at the Humanities Research Center but it moved. I didn't get the change of address form but I found the collection on sunday afternoon. It had moved to nicer quarters. Corner office. I know they are plaster casts but they are amazing stand ins for their real counterparts.
I thought of some e-mails I'd received recently from photographers who wanted to know how to get much better much quicker so they could make "big" money. I laughed because I was thinking about a quote from Oscar Wilde, "Education is an admirable thing, but it is well to remember from time to time that nothing worth knowing can be taught."
Then I thought of the long paid apprenticeship (paid by the family of the apprentice to the artist!!!!!) and years and years of practice, and the years of learning about life and art that culminated in this work, and I just shook my head. Learning by precious osmosis. And repetition. The thrill of mastery. The wonder of discovery.
It's not the destination that makes the man (or the artist). It is the journey.
Two great books about art that everyone should read. One tells you how to keep at it. The other one explains what it's all about.
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Is life good? What's your perspective?
view of the Blanton Museum ceiling from opposite angles.
I think, very clearly, that your point of view depends on your angle of view. I am just human and as petty and selfish and self-indulgent as the next person. When I left the Blanton Museum on Sunday, with my beautiful wife, I caught myself thinking, "How do I get famous? Why do I struggle? "Why are we born just to suffer and die?" "Where's my Porsche?" Usually the universe takes its time to punish me for stupid and selfish thoughts but on this particular day the universe decided to instruct rather than to overtly punish. (If you are religious, it was God; if not, it was random occurrence misinterpreted by me).
As we walked back toward my shiny car, in the 104 degree heat, we came across a young, African American man in tattered clothes, carrying a mangled cane (the kind that blind people use to navigate), sweating profusely and obviously under emotional distress. As we can closer to the intersection he sensed our presence and called out, "Can someone please help me cross this street?"
Of course, we walked right over and introduced ourselves and offered our help. According to him he'd been tossed out of his housing because his social security check didn't arrive on time. Didn't matter to me what the story was. He was obviously in physical and mental distress. What he needed was enough money to cover his rent until his check came (a day or two) and perhaps some money for food. We led him to our car and got directions from him. He called his landlord and told him he had the money he needed to be allowed back into his room till his check arrived. We gave him a bottle of water and some packages of cookies we had in the car. We gave him the money he needed and a bit more to buy some food. A total of $30. He seemed genuinely appreciative.
For $18 we gained some insight into art at the Matisse show at the Blanton Museum. For a few dollars more I was able to confront my own selfishness, my lack of appreciation for the enormous luxury of my own life, my pettiness and, even my cynicism. It was an enormously small price to pay to be reminded how wonderful and comfortable my life is and how lucky I have been.
The cynic asked, "Was I scammed out of $30?" God no. I was given a chance to see reality thru a different prism. I was given a gift. I'm glad the universe decided on instruction yesterday instead of punishment. I hope I can hold on to the lesson.
The two images above show me two points of view. How radically different the same ceiling looks from two different sides. Shot minutes apart. I am so happy I can see.
Sunday, August 22, 2010
A trip to the Blanton Museum to see "Matisse as Printmaker".
Once again, this photograph has very little to do with the post itself. It's here because I like to look at it. Michelle in the studio. film. paper. scanned.
Belinda and I dropped the boy at the swim club and headed over to see the Matisse exhibit at the Blanton Museum today. I am famous for putting things off to the last and, as you might guess, the show closes tomorrow. I unabashedly love the Blanton. Their eclectic collections are usually just provocative and quixotic enough to intrigue and entertain.
Let's start at the top. This was a well curated collection of Matisse's lithographs, woodcuts, sketches, linoleum engravings and other kinds of prints. While the show displayed only a few hundred pieces it's interesting to know that Matisse had completed well over ten thousand pieces by the time of his death. And judging by the show and the information in the catalog the overwhelming majority of his works incorporated nude or nearly nude women. So, practice makes fluid and beauty is addictive.
Let's talk about the quantity first. It takes practice to get to the point where an artist can create a fluid line that, in one brief flicker, that belongs, without question, to that artist. Matisse used iteration after iteration to distill his vision. To hone his craft until he was able to create a fully realized work with a radical economy of line. Like the hauntingly simple melody from the first line of Gershwin's "Rhapsody in Blue". Hear it once and you're not likely to forget it. See the sure course of a Matisse pencil line and you're not likely to forget that either.
While he was alive Matisse was constantly experimenting with his vision and his style, not just in painting but also in sculpture and prints of all kinds. But his subject matter stayed focused on the female form, it's design, it's display and, very much, the sense of gesture. I believe that it was the constancy of his practice that pushed his art to prominence.
And he chose a subject matter that's been a major driving force of art since the dawn of man. Female beauty. While I looked carefully at the show I was reminded of a philosophy professor who once told me that all men are motivated by two things, The sensual and mysterious allure of women and the power of money. He further explained that men were drawn to the power of money in order to better attract sensual and alluring women. I told him that it was really only one thing then. He smiled a small smile and said, "Exactly."
To bring this all back around to photography I have several observations to make. I am certain that some of them won't be very popular but I guess we're not holding a contest.
My first observation is that truly influential artists do their work to the exclusion of everything else. While a few famous poets could work as doctors or publishing and insurance executives (William Carlos Williams, T.S. Elliot, Wallace Stevens......) and still be successful, people in the plastic arts need to be absolutely immersed and engaged to rise to the highest levels. Picasso is another artist who, like Matisse, was amazingly prolific. People who do photography as a hobby, with full time employment in other fields, do not want to hear this. But they've made a trade for other intangibles and it's not my intention to judge their circumstances or their choices. Wanna be a world famous photographer? Quit your day job.
My second observation is my own law called the "parabola of achievement and success". It goes something like this: If you fire a gun up into the air the bullet will follow a parabola or a curve. The angle at which you fire the gun determines how far the bullet travels, linearly, away from you. (Not its total distance travelled). If you aim a gun nearly straight up the bullet will speed up and then come down and it may only land a few inches in front of you (depending on the trajectory, which is mostly influenced by the angle of the gun when fired.) If you chart the success of most companies, fads, trends, styles and artists on a piece of paper you'll find that some catch on quickly and rocket to success. On a graph they are a curve that heads north very quickly. Some build slowly and organically. Think of a company like IBM that took decades and decades to become the biggest IT company in the world.
Here's my law: The faster the rise (the steeper the trajectory) the equally quickly they will decay and fall. The slower the rise the slower the fall. Die at the peak and all bets are off.
The photographers that tend to become hot "over night" tend to fall into two categories. The first category are the artists who've worked in relative obscurity before being systematically discovered by the cognoscenti of the art/photo world. They paid their dues and worked the long curve. The other over night successes are people who were launched into the market at a much steeper incline. Their launch corresponded with a hot style in which they worked on the sharp edge. The law, "the parabola of achievement and success" predicts that their fame will be short lived and their notoriety extinguished like the appeal of white tasseled loafers. Some of the overnight successes will build on their instant success to establish a new trajectory. But for most, the laws remain. But in the end all artists grow old and die. And when they are dead the only people who really care about the integrity of their trajectory are the ones who inherit their estates or have collected their work.
If it's all for naught then why even bother? I have no idea. Really, these kinds of questions are all tied up in the trauma and triumph of early childhood and how you respond to Rorschach tests and other bits and pieces best dealt with by mental health researchers. But I do know that if I gave my life in service to art I would follow the examples of Matisse, Rodin and Jeff Dumas and try to photograph, sketch or paint as many beautiful nudes as possible. You can have the landscapes............
Saturday, August 21, 2010
Continuing look at an Annual Report. The wide shot.
The wide shot. These rebar constructions will eventually be placed upright, within a form and will serve as the reinforcement for concrete columns. They are destined to become the support for elevated highway structures. The subject is an engineer with the firm that creates them. Canon 7d, 15-85 @ 15mm. One Canon 580 EX2 from the left side of the frame.
Another blog about the start of the assignment is here.
Just another "hotter than hell" day in central Texas. Someone will ask why we didn't do this shot some time other than the middle of the day and my response would have to be the question, "When were we supposed to do the shots we did earlier and later? On an annual report project you have a list of images that you need to produce and usually it's on a pretty tight time frame. A lot depends on when the people or projects you need to document can actually be scheduled. Usually a writer is writing or has written a small essay about the person you'll be scheduled to shoot. If you can't oblige their schedules you'll soon have some gaps in the project and that may eventually lead to gaps in your client list.
This engineer was ready to go at 1 pm so I was too. We just finished a shot on the other side of the highway from this location and it was on dry asphalt. For that shot we used the big lights. But as we started across this field several thoughts occurred to me: 1. Oh my God! This entire hundred yard trek is through the thickest, grimiest mud I've ever encountered. In some places our feet would sink in up to our ankles..... 2. There's no dry ground for the electronic flash generator, the stands or the sandbags. Yuck. And my final thought: We're starting run behind schedule.....
So this is one of the few series of shots that's not diffused by a four by four foot diffuser or lit with a 1200 watt second powered flash in a softbox. I brought the most intrepid person from the crew along with me through the sea of mud, oblivious to the insult her brand new track shoes were receiving and we brought along the bare minimum of gear. She held the flash and modifiers and aimed them at the subject, modifying her position as necessary. The Canon 7D with the 15-85mm lens, the Canon 580 Ex2, an eight foot ttl extension cord and a Speedlight Prokit mini softbox with 1/4 CTO filter plastered on the front diffuser. We used the high speed FP setting for most of the shots and I did some color shifting in the post processing to enrich the blue of the sky.
The image above is pretty much fun. The 15mm setting on the lens does fun perspective stuff with the rebar structures. I like the image below best because I like to see faces closer up.
And the tight shot. All the same specs but with the 15-85 zoomed in. You should see the full size file. Nice detail. Very nice.
You can see how versatile the lens is in these two variations and, to my eye, how sharp and well behaved it is as well.
When we get our shot list neither the client nor I are exactly sure what we'll find when we venture out onto the locations. We both saw and really liked the giant rebar constructions when we stumbled across them. Neither of us anticipated the treacherous mud we'd have to wade through to set up the shots. We also learned that the extra layer of a safety vest makes uncomfortable look comfortable.....
I was pleased by how well the small flash worked to fill in the subject's face and less pleased by how well hidden and by how obtuse the menu item is for setting FP flash on the Canon cameras. It would be nice if they just asked their friends at Nikon to show them the right way to integrate a flash feature set....
We stayed through ten or so variations of pose and composition, probably 100 raw frames in all before beating a hasty retreat to the nirvana of air conditioning. Here's another little tidbit: You leave the house in the morning with your work clothes and boots on and then, in the middle of the day, the boots get totally trashed with thick sticky mud. You'll be leaving this location to go to an engineering office in a class A office tower with plush carpeting and crisp, upholstered furniture. What's a pro to do?
Well, of course you have you emergency change of clothes in the back of the car. Right? Right. A clean pair of black sneakers (from Target) a second pair of pants and a dry shirt that doesn't make you look like a safari adventurer temporarily lost in the concrete jungles of downtown Austin. Nothing like changing in the bathroom of the closest McDonalds. But, you see, we were on a schedule....
Stay tuned for another installment from the AR project.
Happy, hot Saturday. Kirk
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