Archive for July, 2009

New Work: Second Act, Power Brokers

Tuesday, July 21st, 2009

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A quick drop by the newsstand this afternoon found a pair of new business clips.  First a portrait for Money Magazine’s Second Acts feature of Sarah Brazier, CEO of Liberty Academy in Miami. After a long corporate career, Mrs. Brazier and her super cool and helpful husband opened a daycare center in the rough and under served Liberty City area of Miami. It’s always a pleasure photographing such an important and successful program, and Sarah and the kids were great to work with. Here is an out take of Sarah, which has a hold on me for some reason.

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Next up another portrait, this time of first time real estate broker Dolores Murillio for a Smart Money feature on how some (very) adventurous brokers are cashing in on the (very) troubled economy. It was a difficult spring in Florida which made shooting outside extremely difficult (and moist), but we managed with Dolores somehow. Here is an out take of the young broker in front of her town house.

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Download: JLP bible

Tuesday, July 21st, 2009

There is in fact a John Loomis Photography HQ bible; really just a simple notebook with an ever-expanding list of hard-learned lessons, tricks of the trade, notes about techniques, clients, and subjects, sketches of lighting schemes, lists of assistants, favorite restaurants, and rental houses in various cities, and general photography theory that I’ve been adding to bit by bit for the last few years. Most photographers have one.  Following is an excerpt from the section titled (Working It) “On Set.”

  • Never be late… having time is one of the real currencies of magazine work.
  • Lean on past experience but go with your gut.
  • Build in time at the beginning of each shoot to go over your client’s needs and your personal goals at the location and get a clear picture what must get done.  Both are important: client needs and personal goals.  And beyond the checklist, take the time to just be in the location and let ideas find you.
  • Embrace the weird… each subject, no matter the type or cliched category (CEO, athlete, rapper etc) is unique.  Talk to them, learn what is possible, what their passions are, what they are willing to do.  Allow them to become your partner in making a lasting image.
  • Carry a small portfolio to show subjects who need reassurance.
  • Fall in love with something, no matter how little, on each assignment.  A texture, gesture, prop, background, wardrobe piece, smile, light, a single color, contrast, or anything else.
  • Your job is not to flatter the subject or make the most attractive image (usually). You are there to tell a story and to take an honest portrait.
  • Nothing is set in stone.
  • Slow down the pace and then speed it up again.  Allow your subject to be still, to breathe, to connect… and then give them the freedom to move, to literally jump.
  • Follow color, it’s extremely powerful.
  • Shoots are an island… do not let shit outside of the island play a role. If a client is not there in person, then they do not exist during the shoot. Do not let outside factors second guess your creative process mid-shoot. You are the king of the island.
  • Assuming you have time, make the effort to finish each idea, even if you have decided that it doesn’t feel like its working. Things often look very differently during editing.
  • Details, details, details.
  • It is basically impossible to get the lights PERFECT the very first try… don’t be lazy.
  • Always break apart group portraits into 1-shot, 2-shots, etc. You never know…
  • Don’t be satisfied with stereotypes, but realize that iconography isn’t inherently bad.
  • No matter the story or subject always get direct eye contact and a head & shoulder’s set-up in each portrait session.
  • When shooting running: arm & leg placement is crucial, so shoot a ton. Make the runner/model keep changing their starting point so that you are ensured to get as many variations as possible.
  • No matter how large the production, keep an eye on ambient/available light… God is a pretty decent lighting grip.
  • Never leave home without your ND filters on a lighting job.
  • The easiest way to make sure you shoot things for yourself on a paid gig is to actually use a different camera that has a different thing going on.  If the gig is all 35mm digital, whip out a 6×7 loaded with Tri-X, if its 4×5, bring out the SX70…
  • In addition to making your life easier, task your assistants to keep a wide angle/global view of the set… being a photographer is basically the definition of tunnel vision.
  • There is no problem that can’t be overcome, ever.
  • There is no such thing as too many sand bags.
  • Go with the flow… if its incredibly windy, maybe you don’t actually need a 20x silk 30-feet off the ground…
  • Get dirty, wet, and stinky… get on the tallest desk, rock, car, or ladder you can find/get down on your belly, under the water, in the sewer grate… move your ass. Magazine photography is not white collar.
  • Don’t let tools and technology bog you down. Just because you can view each set-up on a laptop before you commit, doesn’t mean you should.
  • Push the subject until they say no… you never can tell when someone will be game for a crazy idea or concept.
  • The best subjects create and respond to energy… if you don’t bring it, neither will they.
  • In each camera bag and lighting case, goes the following: Sharpies, business cards, gaffer’s tape, and copies of TSA/airline baggage regulations, ASMP card, equipment and liability coverage certificates.
  • If you are not having fun then what is the point. Surround yourself with good people, work hard, and keep things personal.

Fourth

Sunday, July 5th, 2009

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So happy birthday America! We celebrated it in true NYC fashion… with an open bottle on a friend’s rooftop (thanks Chris & Jess!). Here are a couple from the occasion… fireworks implied but not seen.

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New Work: …addicted to Olive Garden

Wednesday, July 1st, 2009

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Rolling into the July 4th weekend I dropped by the newsstand yesterday afternoon and found a new feature I shot for Fast Company appearing in their July/August issue on the Olive Garden franchise owned by Darden Foods. What could be more American than unlimited breadsticks and salad?!

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The shoot took place near Darden HQ in Orlando, FL over a single very sweaty and full day with three Olive Garden heavyweights who were all fun to work with if also really busy, so time was the name of the game. Assistant extraordinaire Scott Cook gave me a hand on the shoot which had us sprinting from location to location to do 3+ lit setups with each honcho in 60-90 minutes plus a headshot on black as well (one of which, of Darden CEO Clarence Otis, became the ToC cover). A strange highlight of the shoot was blowing one of my Hensel Porty heads during the first set-up (took 4+ full years of shooting to have to replace the 1st bulb!), which was loud but I always have spares so it only slowed us down for about 20 seconds.

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Business gigs that are packed this tight don’t have much room for creativity or error, and really you just struggle to add in any little bit of quirk or context that you can. Photo editor Jessica Adler and I had a few really fun concept ideas for the package, but there was just no time to pull them off in each sitting, because unless all 3 portraits were connected nothing would come together and that’s game over. Ultimately without a lot of pre-planning with corporate PR/HQ you nearly always are looking at the CEO show, but we tried hard to try to raise it above the corporate titan Glamour Shot low-angle power imagery of the 80’s and 90’s. Below is a favorite outtake that gets into the humorous concept we didn’t have time to fully pull off. At least Olive Garden president David “Dave” Pickens (below, having a sweet little breadstick picnic) won’t soon forget our shoot… he spent most of it in total disbelief, but was a good sport.

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