Saturday, October 31, 2009

Images from Nollywood



Our teacher Mr Jones, showed us some images in class a few weeks back that have stuck in my brain. I cant get them out and wanted to know more about this "Nollywood" phenomenon. Nollywood is a booming Nigerian film industry. It is an industry with billions in revenue. I hope that their country is able to do some positive things with all of that money circulating. Here is a great article from American Photo on some images that are the result of this unique culture. Makes for some really interesting shots!


Images From Nollywood


Pieter Hugo captures the fiction and reality of Nigeria's film industry.

By Lori Fredrickson Posted October 27, 2009


On first look at some of the images in Pieter Hugo's new book, Nollywood (Prestel, October 2009; $50), you might think that this is a documentary of civil conflict: scarred soldiers in mud-covered uniform, or children sitting in rubble-filled fields. It's only when you flip to a portrait of a vampire, with red eyes and fangs, or a zombie sipping Coca Cola, that you realize you're being tricked.

And these images are meant to trick you, but they're also only halfway between reality and fiction. Nigeria's 'Nollywood', despite its low budgets and straight-to-DVD production, is one of the highest production film industries in the world. Its themes, like the images in this book, are often upernatural and melodramatic, with vampires, militants, and undead children. But though these images star Nigerian actors costumed with help from Nollywood makeup artist Gabazzini Zuo, they aren't photodocumentary--they're constructed filmic tableaux. Accompanied by essays by Chris Abani, Stacy Hardy, and Zina Saro-Wiwa (daughter of famed activist Ken Saro-Wiwa), Nollywood aims to unsettle viewers with their own preconceptions, and look deeper into a complex society often stereotyped in Western media.....

to read the rest of the article click here

Thursday, October 29, 2009

Local Culture



Out shooting our features for photojournalism has made me realize as photographers we definitely have a different view on life than others Instead of going to the pumpkin patch like everyone else to pick out a pumpkin, we go and hope someone drops it, or a kid has a temper tantrum, or an old lady bends over revealing everything to the world. So here is a laugh to kick off the weekend and good luck to everyone shooting features this weekend, may we have beautiful weather!

A Pirate & The Festival Tooth Fairy


While camping this weekend I had the privilege of meeting Simon, an eloquent and well mannered 5 year old from Florida. It seemed like he had traveled the world and back, with his wealth of knowledge. All week he fought with a loose tooth and by Saturday it was ready to go. I watched him for an hour or so across camp and then decided to grab some shots of Simon's progress and the agony/excitement he was going through. There is something very simple about the process and he made a reference several times about this all being part of the "circle of life". He referenced the comment again the last day when he threw a dead millipede into the fire. I have a friend for life. Go Simon Go!

Wednesday, October 28, 2009

Denver Post Photogs Win Top Prize In E&P Contest




Denver Post Photogs Win Top Prize In E&P Contest

A panel of distinguished judges has awarded The Denver Post team of Craig F. Walker, Meghan Lyden, and Tim Rasmussen the grand prize in Editor & Publisher's 2009 Photos of the Year competition.

The winning entry, “ Ian Fisher: American Soldier,” chronicled with extraordinary photographs, videos, and print—over the course of 27 months—the recruitment, induction, training, deployment to Iraq, and return from combat of Ian Fisher. This was the first year that video/multimedia entries were judged.

Twenty-four other winners in six categories (spanning four circulation groups), including in first-time Portraits and Video/Multimedia categories, were honored. This year also was the first time E&P recognized one winner in the Unpublished Photo on Assignment category and in the extremely popular People’s Choice award competition. Ten People’s Choice photo and six video/multimedia honorable mentions were recognized this year.

Walker took the Denver Post pictures and shot the video. Tim Rasmussen, the paper's assistant managing editor/ photography, and Lyden, the online photo editor, edited and managed the multimedia offerings.

A gallery of select winning photos appears in E&P’s November issue. All photos, including those from the multiple image category, and an audio interview with Rasmussen, will be available late Monday at www.editorandpublisher.com.

(Editor & Publisher, like PDN, is a Nielsen Business Media publication.)

Newspaper print photos, online news photos, and video/multimedia published since Sept. 13, 2008 were eligible for award consideration. Photos selected as E&P’s Photos of the Week or Photos of the Month between Sept. 13, 2008, and Sept. 13, 2009, were automatically entered.

“Despite budget cuts at most newspapers, the number and quality of entries this year remained strong,” said Greg Mitchell, E&P’s editor. “This was a year of firsts for this competition, including exciting new categories and a video/multimedia submission winning top honors. This also was the first time final winners were selected by photo editors from major newspapers and magazines."

Among the judges were Colin Crawford, deputy managing editor/visuals, Los Angeles Times; Santiago Lyon, director of photography, The Associated Press; Alan Taylor, Web developer and blogger, The Boston Globe/Big Picture; and PDN photo editor Amber Terranova.

As the grand prize winners, Walker, Lyden, and Rasmussen receive $1,000, with a sample of their winning submission appearing on the November 2009 cover of E&P.

Rasmussen told E&P that, in addition to his photos and video, Walker’s extensive written notes were “absolutely essential” in providing details and fleshing out the multi-part print series.

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Set Construction


     

 Today we tweaked a few plans for our holiday portraits and are well on our way to finishing the set next week. If you have any connections to donations for wrapping paper/or similar supplies please pass it on that anything donated would be much appreciated and a portrait session will be swapped in return. We have a busy week ahead! 

Tuesday, October 27, 2009

American Photo Magazine: PJ tips from the Pro's




7 Tips From A Pro Photojournalist
POPPHOTO.COMFEATURES7 Tips From A Pro Phot...
Being in the right place at the right time isn't the only way to get a great photo.
By Laurence Chen Posted September 15, 2009
STEPHEN VOSS

Photography is like a muscle that needs plenty of exercise. Slack off, and your creativity may fail you.

Washington, DC-based editorial photographer Stephen Voss (www.stephenvoss.com) learned this by heart early in his career. Dragging himself out of bed at 5 a.m. each day during a workshop he was taking with the nature photographer John Shaw, he mentally (and with a silent grumble) repeated his teacher’s mantra: “Don’t be late for work.”

He has never forgotten that lesson. “People think they can walk out at 2 in the afternoon and get a great shot.” You can’t, Voss insists. “You have to leave while it’s dark and be ready when the light arrives. You need to be at the right place at the right time.”

Sure, that’s work, but “the potential for payoff gets me motivated.”

With that combination of discipline and inspiration, Voss went to the National Mall well before sunrise one morning to work on a self-assignment. He uses personal projects to stay sharp and challenge himself to see things with fresh eyes.

This time out, he decided to wait at the Lincoln Memorial to see if predawn sidelight would illuminate the face of the famous portrait statue.

He was scouting the location when he turned to see a platoon of Marines coming up one side of the reflecting pool. As they began their exercises, Voss sprang into action, too.

Here’s his advice for capturing an unexpected scene like this on the fly:

1. Study The Masters.

Voss draws on the lessons he’s learned from poring over the work of master photojournalists such as Eugene Richards and Paolo Pellegrin. “I often spend 30 minutes looking at a great photo, figuring out where the photographer was, how the light was, what lens was used,” he says. “This creates visual memories that come out in the photos you make.”

2. Zoom With Your Feet.

Back at the Mall, Voss sensed he was out of position when the Marines appeared. Seeing the size of the men against the pool, he realized that his high angle would capture too much of the pool relative to the Washington Monument in the background. He needed a lower angle to include enough of the obelisk to make it recognizable—the photo would be much stronger with the sense of place a landmark provides.

So he ran down the steps of the Lincoln Memorial to a lower platform. There he found the angle that properly balanced the silhouetted figures with the monument in the distance and its reflection in the pool.

3. Narrow And Compress.

Telephoto lenses bring things closer and crop the field of view. With a 70–200mm f/2.8L Canon EF IS lens on his Canon EOS 5D, Voss zoomed to compose and saw that a looser crop balanced the visual elements best.

Long teles also compress the apparent distance between the foreground and background. Here, this effect enlarged the men while bringing them closer to their surroundings. This created a more proportionate composition, and at the same time strengthened its narrative and emotional impact.

4. Meter For Exposure, But Shoot In Manual.

Voss was concerned that if the highlights got blown out, the ruffled texture of the water would be lost. To ensure proper exposure, he shot in manual mode and used his Canon 5D’s spotmeter on the brightest part of the scene.

He generally uses the center point for both metering and autofocus, then recomposes his frame for the image he wants.

“I’m always on spotmeter—I’m looking for something where I know what the exposure should be,” he says. “Often, that means skin tones, and whether the subject has a lighter or darker complexion. For example, with light skin you open up 1 to 1½ stops” because the meter gives you a reading for middle gray.

For this photo, Voss set exposure to 1/100 sec at f/2.8, ISO 800. That’s 2 stops (that is, +2 EV) brighter than his meter reading, ensuring that the rest of the scene would be exposed correctly, with just enough detail in the highlights. “You learn how much to compensate by experience,” he says. “With digital you can check it before you move on.”

He didn’t have long to check his exposure this time, though: Voss managed to fire off just three frames before the Marines moved on, too.

5. Always Shoot In RAW.

That’s what Voss does to gain more latitude for tweaking the exposure when he processes his images later on—just in case he got it wrong while shooting.

6. Be flexible.

Looking at his final frame, “initially I wasn’t crazy about how the men overlapped, but afterward I really liked it,” Voss says. “I’ve learned that a little mess, a little uncertainty, or some unanswered questions are a good thing. They make a photo more intriguing.”

That’s an argument for not deleting images when you first look at them.

In editing this photo, Voss punched up the orange, pink and blue a little, but otherwise he left it as he shot it.

7. Stay In Shape.

This begins with your eye—and your brain. “You have to see things clearly,” Voss says. “I’ve only gotten anywhere through hard work and a lot of failures—learning the subtleties within light, looking at photographs and figuring out why you like them. Being observant, being open to what’s going on around you. Understanding the way light hits things and, more importantly, how your camera sees things. It’s an ongoing process.”


~ Check out some professional work and info about the Atlanta Photojournalism Seminar!

PJ piece of the week




After shooting the festival this week I decided the next PJ piece of the week would be a good flash and lighting accessories. I found myself in several difficult lighting scenarios. I owned the nikon sb-600, but the capacitor blew. In a pinch I purchased a vivitar. It is a great flash and puts out more light than my old flash. However, there are no off camera flash options and it is difficult to shoot in a limited light situation with your flash stuck in one place. I do believe until I buy a new flash, I will be buying a cord to use it off of my hot shoe, and the gary fong lighting kit to help soften the light and disburse it a little better. This weeks lecture in photojournalism is fill flash and I can't wait to get some questions answered.

This one is for the Ninja



Please do not post anymore Police music videos. We will post cheesy 80's videos in return.

:)

GTC Holiday Portraits



Its that time of year and the baton has been passed down to us. Each year at GTC the upperclassmen build and design the set for our Holiday portraits. We shoot for two weeks in November and the profits from the portraits pay for our portfolio show next September. I have been overly impressed with everyones hard work. The set is fun, whimsical and colorful! Everyone has a part in one way or another and it is really paying off for us. We should have the set finished next week. Check out our blog and be sure to come by for a great family holiday photo!

Monday, October 26, 2009

Where the wild things are

I got back today from the Magnoliafest in Florida. It was packed with great weather, music, friends and lots of shooting. Each festival there is something new and unexpected. Lots of street performers, people dressed in weird costumes and people who dress that way everyday. I am pleased with my images and cant wait to edit them. I spent a great deal of time with the fire dancers this time and some of them turned out really neat. Lots to come!

Thursday, October 22, 2009

MagnoliaFest 2009



This weekend I am heading out for a camping adventure! A few days of great shooting, my favorite bands and some peace and quiet. I cant wait to shoot this weekend, I always get fun photos from this trip and I haven't been to shoot since I got my new camera back in the spring. Hooooray!!
   

Sports Illustrated


Today we watched a behind the scenes video on sports illustrated and the photo editing process. It is fascinating and defintely a place where there is no room for tears or hurt feelings. An Image was shown that has haunted me a bit all day, in a good way. I can't stop thinking about it. I guess because it is so different than images out there. I hope that I am able to produce images that stick with people throughout the day. I want to know more about this image now, and the events surrounding it.

Wednesday, October 21, 2009

1st Page on Google



So I "google" myself frequently now. Only so I can keep track of my blog and images. I was married last year and just recently changed my name, I pretty much fell off the map! Three weeks ago we started new blogs with each of my classmates connected. In just three short weeks I went from being untraceable as Amanda Gardner, to being on the first page. My goal is to make it all the way to the top. There is another Amanda Gardner out there, she is a pro photographer and her stuff is pretty good! Looks like we all need to keep blogging and "googling" each other, its working :)

Photojournalism Seminar Volunteer

I was selected today to be a volunteer for the Atlanta Photojournalism seminar in December. I am so excited, I have been posting about this for weeks now and I cannot wait to go. I do suggest everyone come it should be an incredible four days. I am really looking forward to see things from the inside and just to be in the presence as some of these photographers is enough for me. I will be posting lots of details over the next few weeks. So fun!!

I am really interested in catching David Labelle's workshop on photographing the homeless and giving them a voice. It should be informative with some beautiful images!

Favorite 10 Images and Flickr

Last week our Multimedia teacher Mr Jones asked us to put together our favorite 10 images and create a new flickr account. I already had one, but it needed some work and I decided to start from scratch and really work hard on creating and marketing my business well. It was really cool to put together all of my images. Each one of them have a very different story to me, and really reflect where the last year has taken me. Check out my flickr account to see what I have been up to.

jernigan

Tuesday, October 20, 2009

The Liquid is still too close!

So photo booths are all the rage these days. I came across this video from a friend. Its quite addictive! The Jay Leno show has done a prank series where they place a "free photo booth" on a sidewalk in California. The photo booth gives a sarcastic comments in the booths, waits for the peoples reaction then fires the camera! What a great concept. Watch one, you'll be hooked there are a ton on youtube!

PJ piece of the week



Our photojournalism quarter is in full swing and I am getting a bigger wish list each week. I find a new lens I would want or a new flash acessory. I have decided to post a Photojournalism piece of the week as I come across equipment that is important in the field. It should be exciting to do research on all of the equipment. Looks like I will need to strike the lottery this week! I'll start with the big boy first. The piece of the week is a 70-200 2.8. I am a nikon shooter so this is the lens for nikon, the canon looks a bit different and it little bulkier. I love this lens. it is great for sports and events that may require covering distance. It is a bit heavy but a monopod helps. 




I also thought that this was really cool. It is a diagram of the lens construction on the inside.






Monday, October 19, 2009

Low Key Assignment




Today we had our lowkey/highkey shoot. What fun! It was a great day in the "girls room" We had so much fun and its a shame the guys missed all the excitement. Lots of creativity flowing and problem solving. The time flew by and I think everyone got some great shots!

Eugenio Recuenco




I have been thinking about the fashion/fantasy shoot we have coming up for our Portraiture class. I have been searching high and low for inspirations and have come across some great work. I found a new favorite photographer, Eugenio is well known for his fantasy style photography. I love his use of dramatic lighting and detail in every piece of the image. I cant wait to see what we all come up with for this assignment!
    Check out Eugenio Recuenco's work!

Friday, October 16, 2009

Spot News on Spot Rd

In our Photojournalism class we get extra credit for spot news. Late tonight there was a car crash just a few miles from my house. Well, i had to go! The police were friendly, and it ended up being a pretty nasty wreck. I hope everyone is ok, I arrived after the ambulences had left but the cars were in bad shape.










Thursday, October 15, 2009

Sports Assignment


Check out my shot from football this week! The critique when well and I am excited about going to shoot again after we learned so much yesterday about shooting sports! I went to Norcross and it was great going back to visit. Congrats to Norcross on a good season so far!

Wednesday, October 14, 2009

Atlanta Photojournlism Seminar

I am getting very excited about the Photojournalism seminar coming up in December. It will be held at the Marriot in Dunwoody. It is an annual event where photojournalists from around the world present there work in a competition. The quality is outstanding and I cannot wait to catch some of the lectures and presentations during the three days. Anyone interested in journalism should check it out!




Animal Portaiture


A day full of excitement! Last week our assignment for Advanced Commercial was pets/animal portraits. I do not have experience shooting pets in a studio, and this one was a bit challenging. I did not anticipate some of the problems that we encountered, like a 22 lb angry cat who had been in the car too long! Thanks to a very patient and helpful team ( Thanks Amy, Ana and Twitty ), I finished the shoot. Here is an image from the day and we will critique them on Monday. I think for now I definitely would like to do more. It gives me an even bigger appreciation for William Wegmans work, infamous for his portraits of weimaraners. It is amazing that he gets those dogs to do what he has the vision for.

The Glowing Eye




       3 quarters ago, our Multimedia teacher Mr Jones had our class share images that we wish we would have taken. Famous or not the images had to have substance behind them, and more than just snapshots
 I had a hard time narrowing it down and for me it really came down to a lot of historical photos and what great stories each of them told. I would love to revisit this as we learn more and we become more critical. I am curious what images people would keep, or replace. I came across this photo today and looked it over and over. Its just amazing.  I decided I am investing in a fancy telescope and hope to get into space photography soon. Until that takes off, I will keep shooting what I love and enjoy this image for a long time to come!

Monday, October 12, 2009

Photojournalism & Sports



What a great week! This week was our sports assignment. I went back to my high school (10 years away have flown by). The players, the cheers, the t shirts, and the parents are all still the same, just different people. My brothers both developed a love for football early on so I was raised as one of the "field rats"! We grew up with concession stand corndogs and nachos with gatorade as staples in our diet. It felt so good to hit the grass on friday night. Norcross took Northview 31-2 . It was a big learning curve and I highly underestimated the task at hand. It Started to rain early on but broke just before gametime. I learned it was better to watch the game beside your camera rather than through it. Warning: Watching football through the camera may cause dizziness and slight disorientation..All in all I am happy with what I got and look forward to going back this week, only in my neck of the woods when Norcross plays North Forsyth on their field. Hooray for the fall!

 

Friday, October 9, 2009

The Healthy Photographer: Injury Prevention Optimizes Business Success (Professional Photographer Magazine Web Exclusives)




The Healthy Photographer: Injury Prevention Optimizes Business Success (Professional Photographer Magazine Web Exclusives)

Thursday, October 8, 2009

Gwinnett County Fair

  
Two weeks ago I had the priviledge of shooting the Gwinnett County Fair "Livestock Competition" for 10 days. It was a great experience and I made some great connections. They invited me to come back next year. Tonight I came across this photo and it made me excited about editing these photos. Fun stuff!


Wednesday, October 7, 2009

1st Photojournalism assignment

 Today we had our first assignment for photojournalism class .We got an email @ 6am to go shoot a "rain feature" before class. We had to capture people, rain and some sort of scene that would help tell the story.I left the house and of course, no rain! As I got closer to school the rain came down and I was able to at least get a few that I was happy with. I do have to get people not smiling though, it looks too staged. Overall, a fun time and a great way to start an exciting quarter!!






Tuesday, October 6, 2009

Multimedia II with Mr Jones

So fall quarter is in full swing and one of my classes encorporates blogging. How to do it the right way and how powerful it can be. I have enjoyed blogging and am looking forward to finding new ways to use it to my advantage. We have to update at least daily so be on the lookout for lots of new and exciting post. We have also hit the ground running in our other classes, advanced portraiture and photojournalism! Sports shooting this weekend. Looking forward to a great fall!