5.20.2023
Checking out the new adapter and a relatively new lens. How? With photos, of course.
5.19.2023
New Hobby: Tossing out stuff. Trying to figure out how to give away gear in a milieu when no one really wants studio lights, softboxes and light stands....
That's all the news I've got fit to print. Have fun out there.
5.18.2023
Wooden Slats in the Paris Metro.
I photographed this image one evening, after rush hour, in the Paris Metro, under Le Place de L'Étoile back in 1986. I was using a Leica M3, loaded with Tri-X film and sporting a 50mm Summicron lens. It sums up how I feel about work these days. I think I'm sliding into a gradual retirement from standard commercial photography. I'd like to do more commissioned portraits and fine art work. I won't pass up money thrown at me in exuberant abundance but I'm tired of chasing it and I think we have enough. I'll never give up being a photographer.
sometime in the early part of last year I just flat gave up marketing my services to the usual clients. No more mailers. No email blasts. No cocktail parties. No lame Ad Club happy hours. I didn't plan it all out and I didn't really discuss it with anyone but B. I didn't actually need much feedback. My feeling was (and is) that the business of photography had changed so profoundly; at least the way I had always practiced it, that it was no longer "what I signed up for." And it seemed further and further from something fun and challenging and more like a relationship gone sour where one is just going through the motions solely from decades of momentum.
Even though my advertising pushes disappeared I still was (and am) regularly asked to bid on projects. But once the spark goes out one tends to finally bid jobs for the full amount they should be at. And clients are loathe to pay what the work is really worth. At least that's my perception.
I could retool and find a new commercial purpose but I'm not particularly interested in ramping up a business again and doing all the hard work of establishing it only to decide, a few years from now, that I'm going to shut it all down anyway.
The work I really want to do now is more or less like the work just above. Wandering through life with fun cameras and snapping whatever resonates with me in the moment.
This blog, VSL, started out as a series of posts about the business of selling photographs. The commercial aspects of doing the work. The marketing and the selling. The 'nuts and bolts' of how we produced jobs. Things will change here as I run out of client anecdotes and pratfalls to discuss. I'll be much more self directed in my work and I hope to be discussing how to find one's passion in projects, how to do art, how to show art, and how to embrace the joy of playing with fun cameras and lenses too.
A number of years ago I wrote a book for Amherst Media called, "The Commercial Photographers Handbook." It was a general guide to the business of photography and it was used by several big college programs as a text book. It was a success in the marketplace and we sold enough of the books to take the rough edges of the Great Recession of 2008-2010 down a notch or two. Enough in royalties to keep my hands off the retirement accounts and still make the mortgage payments and stuff. It was an effective antidote to panic.....as were the other four non-fiction books.
The one thing the book never got around to discussing was "How to Quit." or "How to Wind Down a Profitable Business." There is a secret, I think: Leave in the black. Under your own steam. When you realize that you and the current market are no longer a good match.
I'm looking forward to fewer scheduling obligations for clients (who love to cancel at the last moment anyway) and more focus on swim practice, time at the gym and time playing with cameras and the resulting images.
My passport renewal is being expedited. My Global Entry Trusted Passenger card is renewed. Fall 2023 will be the start of a busy travel schedule. (We don't go vacation much in the Summer because that's when everyone else goes. Fall and Spring are our favorite times).
Just thought I'd let my readers know my direction for now. NOT stopping the blog. It's too much fun.
I might not be posting any more images on the blog unless I can sort out the "how's and why's" of Google's new Application Changes. I'll explain.
For the zillions of years I've been writing the blog I've been able to upload as many images as I like with, really, no preconditions. Blogger is a service that has always been offered free of charge by Google but with any free service there are always strings attached. Somewhere...
Usually, when I upload images here it's a very straightforward process. I hit a little photo icon in the menu bar, a window opens and I have choices of where to source my images. The could be on my computer, in a Google archive or in Google Photos. I usually prep the images in a folder on my desktop computer and then upload to the blog post from there. Easy-Peasy.
Yesterday I decided to photograph a photo of Ben running a race as an illustration for my post about the Sony a77. Once I hit the preference to upload from my computer I got a new window asking me to accept cookies. If I did not accept cookies I could not upload in the way I always have.
Why not accept the cookies? Well, here's the message I get:
"Cookie Icon
Allow cookies
If you disable cookies, this application won't work properly
Close Accept."
If I hit accept I get a warning message from my operating system that says accepting these cookies will allow Google.com to track my activities.
Seems pretty sucky to me. An overnight change. No notice. More restrictions. I'm not sure I want to trade the ability to post my images here for Google having access to all my online activities. Which I am sure they are packaging and selling to endless numbers of vendors. I'm pretty sure I'm firmly against the change but I'm going to try some research and see if there are settings I can change to remediate the issue.
I really like being able to post the images. Not doing that diminishes my interest in blogging here. I'm pretty sure you can understand that since I have uploaded and shown thousands and thousands of images over the years.
I'll get back to you on this. If you are super tech savvy and have some sort of solution, please let me know in the comments.
Thanks, Admin Superior
5.17.2023
Does anyone remember the Sony SLT-a77 camera?
5.16.2023
The Rumors around the launch of a Leica Q3 are expanding quicker than Takata airbags.
Across the web I'm starting to see everyone referencing the imminent launch of the latest Leica "Q". Destined to be called, if we believe the web, the Q3. I guess it's time to update and upgrade but I was just settling in to the Q2 and no one has come close to cobbling together anything to rival it so I'm not sure why Leica is in a hurry to push out yet another camera... but let's take a look at the rumors.
The exterior of the camera is supposed to be a dead ringer for the current camera....at first sight. But in a gigantic and earth-shattering departure from Leica's usual design ethos of structural integrity over popular feature spread it looks like they might be going with a flippy screen for the rear LCD panel. Not a swivel-ly screen. Just a flippy screen. I don't need one. I didn't ask for one but I guess I could get used to it in a pinch. I imagine enough "street" photographers like to shoot surreptitiously, from the waist level, and so the addition of this capability will be seen as a plus by them. Personally, I like that there are fewer pieces to break off on the first two iterations of the camera. LCD screens that move around are one of the mechanical parts that fails most often on other camera brands. I just happen to be a fan of structural rigidity and simplicity...
The next big change seemed destined to arrive at Leica from the moment Sigma launched their fpL camera. It's the inclusion of a 61 megapixel imaging sensor which also includes (for the first time on a Leica camera) PDAF. I suppose this means that we'll see two effects. One good for advertising and one a headache for the Wetzlar marketing team. The first effect (the bad one) we might confront is that very few of the current Leica lenses, or Panasonic lenses were designed to take advantage of PDAF and might not be able focus any faster or better than on the older cameras, which are contrast detect AF only. On the other hand, given that the AF system will be brand new and only needs to be integrated with a permanently attached, single focal length lens, I think we'll see much hyperbole about the "fastest AF camera in the world." At least until some enterprising website does an A/B comparison to disprove the marketing hype.
But wait! There's more.
If we can believe the "leaks" the camera will be the first of the Q series to feature either wireless charging (not thinking this is so great....) or charging through USB (which I think is a good idea). Either way, users will be able to charge the battery without removing it from the camera. And what a battery it is supposed to be. The new battery is compatible with the current battery across the line of SL cameras and the latest Q2. The big news is that (as Panasonic improved two years ago) the battery will now be more powerful. Something like 2100 milli-amp hours, up from 1800. It's not a dramatic increase but I'll take any increase in battery life they can give us. I just hope it doesn't come packaged with an excuse to raise the price of batteries to $325 from $285. The current price is already in the realm of sinister capitalist fantasy. I hope it doesn't spread.
I haven't read it yet but I can't believe Leica would launch a Q3 in 2023 without increasing the EVF resolution to what has become standard across the SL line. That would be just a hair shy of 6 million dots. And that would be a worthwhile improvement. It would move the EVF from pretty darn good to spectacular and I can only think the standardization of parts would benefit...everyone.
All of this Germanic magic and craftiness in one small box is supposed to hit the market, according to the shadowy sources on the internet, by the end of this month. But par for the course I'm sure Leica will have made a couple hundred copies at the outset in an attempt to fill thousands of orders. After all, the Q series has been their most successful seller in the digital space. Why would they want to satisfy all consumer demand in the first week, month or even year of the launch? Inconceivable. If they stretch it out they can milk the desire for years to come... ... ...
So, will I get one? That's an unknowable question. If past trajectory gives us any sort of launch target I'm sure I'll eventually get one. Maybe five years from now when it's long in the tooth and prices have stabilized. Maybe in the next quarter if the markets don't crash. Maybe never if I can convince myself that the current Q has more than enough resolution, focuses quickly enough and with complete accuracy for my needs, and if I can convince myself that the addition of a flippy screen is an aberration and that making the decision to shamelessly appeal to the masses Leica will have ensconced the Q2 as the last super quality contender in the space. More robust and well sealed than its successor and blessed with a sensor that is the perfect compromise between noise performance and resolution. Then I'll just buy a second Q2 to have as a back up and go on with life. You can't have too many Q2s. And you can interpret that two different ways.
I'm happy though that Leica keeps making and marketing new cameras. It gives the Sony and Canon users among my group of photographer friends something more to tease me about. And the prices keep imparting a subtle frisson between my rationale brain and the bigger, more robust, impulsive shopper part of my brain which is...enervating. Oh hell. You see where this is going, right?
Are you now lining up to pre-order one at your favorite Leica dealer? Should I try to beat you to the punch? Or maybe we should just all go out for another walk.
5.14.2023
Happy Mother's Day. From Rome. 1986.
Photographed with a Hasselblad 500 C/M and a 100mm Zeiss Planar. Hand developed Tri-X film. Printed on Seagull paper and then scanned. One of my favorite "mother and son" portraits. At the outdoor tables in a café. Hope you celebrated well today!