Casey – The drain shoot

Casey is an incredible athlete who swum Cook Straight in under 4 hours, and my client definitely wanted him for the website. In scoping graffiti locations I had found a stream that ran under the Hutt Road and came out by Belmont School. I thought that it was an interesting location as it also meant we could combine water and graffiti without the need for Photoshop.

We shot on a Saturday morning in bright sunshine around the base of the pond. I thought Casey was very brave to actually get his head under the water.

We then scaled the sides to shoot in the drain itself. Using a bare flash certainly brought out the muscle definition that Casey had.

Kids

The Ministry of Swimming range also includes some kids gear so John arranged for three of his younger, but no less talented students to come down to the pool.

There is an adage in showbiz “never work with kids or animals”. Well that certainly didn’t apply her. The kids were great and followed instructions well. They didn’t seem to mind repeating things until we got the shot.

Amit & Manjit

I agreed to act as a second shooter for my friend Peter McDonald on the wedding of Amit & Manjit which was a very modified Indian wedding.

We started on the Thursday shooting the Henna party which unfortunately I couldn’t attend the whole event and ran a lot later because the bride was late.

On the Saturday I went to the hotel where the groom and family were staying and got shots with him. That was very easy going.

The venue for the wedding was the Pines Cabaret in Houghton Bay, and the starting time was advertised as 4.00pm so I made sure to leave the groom in plenty of time so that I could scope it out. The moment I arrived I saw problems. Firstly the wedding was take place in a small conservatory on the corner of the building with glass on every wall. To make matters worse this part of the building faced directly into the afternoon sun. Only one row of seats was placed for old people and the rest of the congregation would be standing so there were no nice aisles to shoot down.

I decided that the best thing to do was to get a meter reading of the place where the wedding party would stand and not worry about the background blowing out, so I grabbed a willing guest and did just that. The problem was that rather than arriving at 4pm the bride arrived an hour later by which time the sun had changed positions dramatically. There was nothing I could do. I just had to shoot and hope for the best.

We had planned to shoot the formals on the beach below the venue. With the main ceremony late our time was severely shortened so it was very much a rapid fire affair.

At the end of the day I was exhausted but the bride and groom were happy with the images and that was the main thing.

Conscience

This is still a work in progress. I had an idea of recreating a cartoon style image where a person conscience is represented by an angel and a devil. Sarah and Renee agreed to be my subjects and even co-ordinated their outfits. Morgan agreed to do the makeup and also to be the main person in the image.

I have decided that I would shoot in front of a green screen, and because of the number of people had to use my garage. This was not idea as it has a very low ceiling.

The shoot was extremely funny event as the girls kept cracking up all the time to a point where in the end it was easiest to shoot them separately.

Unfortunately Morgan could stay for the shoot so my daughter Samantha ended up as a fill in. Once Morgan is available then we will finish this project.

Sarah on the Street

Sarah is an accountant who likes to model on the side who I met through model mayhem. I asked her to help me with three separate elements that would be shot on the same day.

I met her by the Te Aro shops where there is an old petrol station that is covered with graffiti art and also has a high wire fence perfect for what I wanted.

We then moved on a carpark in Vivian Street. I wanted a shot of a girl in a bikini walking towards a large motorbike. Motorad kindly loaned us the bike.

We ended up shooting Sarah wearing a hoodie over the bikini because I won’t make models freeze in the name of art, as the weather has turned quite nasty.

Tips on Shooting People

As some of you will know over the last year I have been shooting a lot of models. Now I do not claim to be an expert in this regard, and we have members with way more experience than I have, but I thought I would share some tips that I have gathered both from reading articles as well as practical experience that I hope you will find useful. While the tips are specific to shooting people, many of them apply to other subjects.

Get to know your subject

It pays to plan to spend at least the first 10-15 minutes of a session not actually taking any photos. During this time you actually talk to the subject about either what they want from the shoot or what you want from the shoot (or both).

If you are shoot full or half body shots of women (and they are the client), it is important to ask them what parts of their body they like and what they do not like. Now this will be very subjective and quite often the person will come up with things that you cannot see (or necessarily agree with).

The reason that this step is important is that if you present someone with an image that has an area they do not like prominently displayed, the odds are that they will not like the image (unless you are an incredible good photographer). People are also much more comfortable having their image taken when they believe you will be emphasising their good points.

Have a close look at your subject

Again you do this without the camera because the second you pick that up you are likely to miss things and you should do this each time you significantly change a pose.

Now if you are a married man you will know that your wife probably doesn’t like you staring at beautiful young women who may or may not be wearing many clothes. However in name of art this has to be done.

Basically you are not actually looking at the subject but rather the individual elements that will eventually form part of the image. You are looking for two different types of issues

  1. Body Shape
    Supposedly the ideal of beauty is that the body has perfect symmetry running in a vertical line across the nose. The reality is that few people have this and one side of their body will be a slightly different shape to the other. The old adage that a person has a “best side” is actually true in fact.

    For example noses very rarely run straight but often curve towards one side of the face. If you shoot the nose with the curve running towards then you end up with a nose looking larger that the same shot with the face turned the other way.

    If you examine the images below you will see what I mean. Bruce through Karate and Rugby has broken his nose several times so that it angles off to one side. Notice how the nose appears larger from one direction than the other.

  2. Wardrobe issues

    By this I means the likes of labels, tags, hanger strings, bra straps hanging, and loose threads. Before taking the shot you should also ensuring that clothing that should not be in shot is not.

    While you can fix a lot of these issues in Photoshop, if you can eliminate these issues at the time of the shoot you will save so much time. Obviously there are times when you simply can’t avoid an issue but at least you are pre warned that you will need to fix in post.

Green Screen – Grace & Janelle

Part of the concept of doing the MOS shoot was to introduce an urban feel to the photos, and this was being achieved by having graffiti in them. I knew that there were too approaches to this. I could drive all over Wellington, models and gear in tow, and shoot on location, or I could shoot in the warm of the studio in front of a greenscreen and composite the images later.

I had shot both Grace and Janelle before so I knew that they could pull off what I wanted. Grace had the added bonus of having some really nice tattoos that I knew could incorporate in the look that I was after.

The shoot took place over two Sundays while at the same time I scouted locations around the valley as well as on the net.

Boys

John did not want the whole shoot dominated by pretty girls so he arrange for two of his top male swimmers to come into the Nae Nae Pool one Friday night. We shot a range of shots up on the stands, and the diving board and then I shot them in the water.

The shots came out really well. What was surprizing was that the lights in the pool produced a very good blue light and with no one else in the pool the surface gained mirror qualities.

Zoe & Lucy

As Zoe was responsible for getting me this gig it was only appropriate that she was involved in the project somewhere, so we arranged to take a series of shot on location starting at Petone beach. She also asked that her friend come along as well. Fine I said as long as she was willing to be a model as well.

The beach shot was probably one of the most traditional shots in the whole process, and in all honestly was the only one that really did not impress John.

We had planned to travel on into Wellington but at the western end of Petone we found graffiti under the Petone road interchange that was more than adequate for the rest of shoot.

We finished a Lucy’s place where we shot the rocker image with one of the amazing guitars that her father had.

Ministry of Swimming

I was always believe that you should be nice to everyone you meet because you never know what their connections are. This was certainly the case when I was approached by the owner of the Ministry of Swimming website to shoot new images of their products.

John was a professional swim coach and Zoe Young was one of his pupils and she had recommended me.

John was looking for new images to be the page headers and profile images on the website. The Ministry of Swimming sold a range of high performance swim gear. He had a specific look in mind and wanted the images to be funky and not at all like you typical swimming shots.

I decided that an urban feel would be the most appropriate and this would be achieved by incorporating graffiti into the images. What made the shooting interesting was that the banner images were intended to be reasonably close so essentially they were to be crops of larger images.

When a tally was done we discovered that there were 48 pages that needed images so a details plan was worked out to get the shots, and a number of models were contacted.

The shoot took place over several weeks and each section of it will be detailed in the blog as they came together.

A photographic journey