Thursday, August 21, 2008

Europe Report Part 1: London

Europe was awesome! So awesome, I'll probably have to report on it in multiple posts.

First off: London!



Scott's workshop was quite the ton of bricks. He covered A LOT of information, and my attempts to apply them were, let's say, challenging. More than half of the students in the workshop are returning alums, and I can see why. Scott's methods are not only constantly evolving, but his students appear to grow exponentially and are definitely hungry for more. I am definitely humbled by the amount of skill and artistry that was present at the workshop in London. God willing, I would like to attend another one of his world workshops next year. It'll also give me an excuse to travel.

Without further ado, here are some of my photos from the workshop:

Ama


Liz


Abigail


Fliss


Vanessa


Abigail @ The London Eye

Art director: Gavin Conlan

To top off the workshop. On Saturday night, we had a gallery showing of our work at The Jago. The piece I showed for that was this:

Kelly @ The Fashion & Textile Museum

Print Mastering: Gavin Conlan (I've since modified it from the print version, but he still deserves credit)

I picked that one because it was a different perspective than most of the other shots I produced. The low angle, the colors, and the impact that it had really stood out for me. To add to the fact that my print was hanging on a gallery wall was quite a confidence booster.

I'll also have to mention there was yet another awesome display of talent at The Jago by our very own photographer & model, Abigail Vander Hamm. After the crowds cleared and we were beaten and tired, she graced us by singing, "Over the Rainbow." I was quick enough to capture most of it on video. And with her permission, I'm posting it here. She is so spectacular that Scott states he's going to have her sing at his daughter's wedding. Yes, Scott, it's caught on video. No taking it back now!



Thank you to Scott, and all the students (Bandele, Linda, Daniel, Gavin, Christina, Abigail, & Arielle) for your knowledge, camaraderie, and artistic synergy. Thank you David Brubaker for making the gallery show a reality. And of course, thank you to all the models (Liz, Fliss, Ama, Kelly, Vanessa, Marco & Abigail) for your hard work, patience, beauty (handsomeness for Marco), and grace.

If this wasn't enough of London and photography for you, check out the other photographers' websites/blogs:

Scott Robert Lim
Bandele Zuberi
Linda Tamarpirat
Daniel Zihlmann
Gavin Conlan
Christina Chung
Abigail Vander Hamm
Arielle Langhorne

Stay tuned for more reports from my Europe trip!

Saturday, August 2, 2008

Europe - T-minus 17ish hours

Europe still doesn't feel real yet. But, as my friend Lindsy said, "It'll feel real when you get on the plane."

I'm still having trouble deciding on what to pack. Oh, I don't mean clothes, I haven't hit that bridge yet. I'm talking camera gear. After all, the main purpose of this trip is Scott Robert's Next Level Workshop. I want to pack light, but at the same time, I want to make sure that I have all the tools I'll need to succeed.

Warning: Camera gear geek speak to follow.

Anyways, this is what's going in my Think Tank Airport Antidote backpack so far (kickass bag, I must say):

Nikon D200 camera
Nikon 17-35mm f/2.8 lens
Nikon 50mm f/1.8 lens
Nikon 70-200 f/2.8 VR lens

Nikon SB-800 flash
Fujifilm F50fd digital camera (point & shoot)
30GB of CF cards in Pixel Pocket Rocket

Lexar UDMA CF & SD card reader
Phottix Cleon N8 wireless camera remote
AA NiMh batteries (16)
EN-EL3e batteries (2)
Chargers and adapters for all those batteries
Giottos Rocket air blower
The Pod Pro Series camera support "beanbag"
Gaffer's tape (20-10" strips)

Gretag Macbeth i1 Display 2 color calibrator
Binoculars
Raincover (it's supposed to be drizzling)
Lenovo T61 laptop
(thanks Gary!) - not shown, goes in flap of bag

Now, here are the things I have up for debate:

Nikon 28-70mm f/2.8 lens (my buddy Wes likes to call it "Big Bertha"):
I like this lens. It takes beautiful portraits. However, it's kinda big physically for it's range (hence the nickname), the focal length equivalent is a little odd on APS-C sensors (~42mm-105mm), and I can "almost" fill the range with the other lenses I'm bringing. But, it just won't be the same. I don't want to leave it behind, but I might have to. It's just not practical.

Gitzo 2560T carbon fiber monopod:
I wanted to bring a tripod, but my Calumet cheapy tripod isn't very portable, nor can the head support the weight of the D200 with the 2.8 glass very well. So, that leaves me with my ultra portable Gitzo monopod. I won't be taking 5 second exposures with this thing, but it will probably somewhat stable with 1 second exposures. It will also allow me some creative high angles when shooting the models and the Cheer families. It's light, portable, and fits neatly in a side pouch in my backpack. So, why the debate? It would have to be checked in during flight. Monopods are potential beat-down "clubs" and they can't be in the main cab during flight. Boo. I wish I had a Gitzo 1540 tripod. "The Pod" may have to do for now.

Anyways, pending internet access and fresh thoughts to share, I'll try to blog as much as I can on the trip. The next posts probably won't be as gear oriented, as well.

Now, I should figure out what clothes to pack. That should theoretically be easier than the gear.