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February 12, 2019

| by Spicyjello

From Brides to Post-Apocalyptic

Posted in creativity, Inspirtion

As a creative and full-time wedding photographer, I spend a significant amount of time creating. It’s not always in the real world, but nonetheless, my mind is always looking for inspiration and resources for the next image or “thing” I want to build.

With my day to day often consisting of emails, phone calls, and other distractions, I seem to “feed the artist” less than I would like. So when I’m part of a photography group (IEPPV) and am tasked with helping organize a “Post Apocalyptic” model shoot in the desert, you can bet my inner creative gets very excited.

My job was to find the best location to make this shoot fun for both the models and attending photographers. The Salton Sea is a little over two hours away from me, and a place I try to visit often. It really is the most beautiful and desolate place I know. I love the starkness of it. When first-timers come to the Salton Sea, they are usually greeted with a wonderful stench and a lot of dirt and dust. Despite the day’s rain, mud, and only mild odor, it was a perfect location!

In addition to getting to revisit the Salton Sea, I was looking forward to photographing a set of humans I don’t regularly get to put in front of my camera—Post Apocalyptic models! On top of being fantastic performers, the models we had were such cool humans. It’s not an easy job to be thrown at a group of image-hungry photographers and remain so enthusiastic. I want to thank all our models and the groups to which they belong for coming out and playing with us.

Sarah and Brita making it look easy. Costumes provided by The Ciccarellis

The reason a shoot like this matters to me as much as it does is that I get to play. I get to experiment and test new ideas. I get to step outside of the world that I know so well, and in turn, force myself to see differently and work with different tools. It’s absolutely wonderful, and I find it essential for me to maintain my creativity.

Pushing your creativity

I’ve had many conversations with other photographs about “why should they want to shoot models when they are landscape photographers”, or “what’s the point of learning macro and focus stacking if they only shoot sports”. In short, I believe studying all disciplines of photography will give us skills that can be used in any other photographic discipline.

For example, focus stacking works great for macro, landscape, and commercial. Also, as a portrait photographer, I never saw the need to better my landscape photography until someone helped me see—All my landscapes at the time were focused 1/3rd of the way into the scene and shot with a very shallow depth of field as if there was a person in my plane of focus. It sounds silly now that I write it out, but that’s all I knew. Once I learned to capture the entire scene, I realized I could place a person into the landscape, and as a result, have a more unique image featuring the scenery and the added subject. It’s a Win-Win. So in the end, learning to shoot landscapes helped me be a better wedding and portrait photographer.

Monique & Blake

Turning the tables

Brides wear dresses, veils, and don’t tend to move fast, while post-apocalyptic models have swords, clubs, and other cool toys that shoot fire while riding around on a 2-wheeled machine driven by a snowmobile in the desert—Two very different creative opportunities. The challenge of being presented with something totally different is that the methods of posing and lighting that you’re used to won’t always work. This forced me to take a step back and think about my surroundings more, looking for the direction of light and how it enhances or detracts from the costumes. Also, I had to consider what lens would tell the best story. Anyone that shoots regularly usually has a tendency to fall into a routine and risk becoming mundane. Shooting something completely different from our norm helps promote the thought process that leads to new ideas. I’m pretty solid at posing a bride with a bouquet and managing a veil, but when I have a model sporting a shotgun, bullet belts, a sword, and hair that would make any 80’s hair band jealous, it’s a whole new challenge and I love it.

I try to really embrace the challenges that force me to stop and solve a new lighting situation or pose someone on a pile of concrete. The new and unfamiliar environment is just familiar enough that my set of skills can get me the shot I want, yet I’m still required to think out each step rather than rely on muscle memory. This is when the magic happens: Initially, my brain doesn’t know what to do with the new scenario, but after a moment or two I begin to go through my toolbox of what I know. Suddenly an idea comes, so I pre-visualize the shot and begin to calculate the route needed to make the image. This is when I push my regular skill set and require myself to work off intention rather than instinct.

Sarah and Brita. Costumes provided by The Ciccarellis

Light is light

Ultimately, I see this experience as an exercise for my creative muscles. If we don’t push and challenge ourselves, we can’t grow in the same way. Whether I am photographing a landscape, fire, brides, or models in the desert, I will always have an opportunity to learn and add to my photographic bag of tricks.

Regardless of what we are photographing, light is light. Light scraping across a mountain range at sunset revealing the texture and depth of the canyons behaves the same as an off-camera strobe positioned to scrape light across chainmail or the subtle beading of a wedding dress—Quality light matters regardless of the subject. You can use a handheld reflector in the studio or position your subject outdoors to benefit for light striking the side of a light colored building. Shadows from trees or building are just gobos in nature.

Feylan

At the end of the day

Regardless of your skill level or what type of photographer you identify as, saturate yourself in other disciplines of photography. As a portrait artist, you may not think there is anything to learn from landscapes, but I would suggest that you’re missing out on a valuable set of skills. Having the ability to read a vast area of light, shapes, and lines and knowing where to place a subject can be a game changer. The same goes for you landscape shooters—Learning to shoot in a studio with 100% control over your lighting and the opportunity to experiment with lighting types/direction could offer an edge when planning a location.

Understanding how light falls on an object, whether it’s a person, a mountain or even the moon, could be the difference between a simple image or an extraordinary one. Take a leap and learn a different skill, and at the same time, teach someone yours.

IEPPVSalton Sea

February 6, 2019

| by Spicyjello

Embracing Tough Lessons

Posted in creativity, Inspirtion
Fisherman on Dillon Beach

Sometime in 1995, I attended a workshop with a portrait photographer named David Peters. He is a fantastic portrait artist and taught me that the people I was photographing were more important than the gear used to create the images. Throughout his workshop, we worked to create images that conveyed emotions and told a story of love and connection between our subjects. We were never distracted by looking at the backs of our camera to see if we got the shot—We instead trusted our skills and turned our attention to our clients.

Yes, I rocked the mullet and needed a tripod for that beast of a camera.

The first turning point

At that time in my career, I was shooting film with a Hasselblad 500cm. The Hasselblad was a fantastic camera, and although fully manual, I found it easy to work with. At that time, I used a huge Quantum Q-Flash for every shot. This flash was huge and required a separate battery pack. No speedlites with TTL for me. Outside the studio, David rarely, if ever, used a strobe. Not shooting with strobes took me by surprise since that was all I knew. If you had asked me before the workshop if I thought there was a better way to light, I’m reasonably sure I would have said no. After spending several days shooting without a flash and working with David and other students in the workshop, I decided then and there—No more flash for me unless the lack of available light demanded it.

Now imagine: You’ve just come home from a week-long workshop and in two days you have a big wedding with your photographer wife, and you break the news that you are no longer going to use flash. Oh, the look on her face! To her credit and having spent time at the same workshop, she trusted me. That wedding’s couple, Angie and Ott, are still married today, and I proudly remember that day as the first step to radically improving my photography from that moment on. Not only did I learn a new technique, but I was also humbled to realize that I didn’t know as much as I thought I had. From that point on, I never wanted to feel as if I was behind on my education again. I haven’t spoken to David in many years, but I will always be grateful to him for helping put me on the path I’m on today.

Who moved my cheese?

In 2008 the market took a significant turn for the worst. The tech bubble popped and the Dow made its 3rd largest drop in history losing 778 points. For me and my business, this was hard not only to see some retirement investment take a hit, but it was a low year for booking weddings as well. Up to this point my wedding business, Imagery Concepts, had been growing year after year with no paid advertising—Just good old word of mouth. In the years leading up to 2008, we averaged 30 weddings a year and were considered expensive in our area. We were doing great, and until the crash, we had no real worries about future bookings.

In contrast, we did 16 weddings in 2008 and didn’t do much better in 2009. We figured it was the market and all we needed to do was be patient and wait it out. I was very wrong. As I got more worried I started talking to my vendor friends, like DJ’s, event coordinators, and other photographers. For the most part, we all felt the same way. There were a handful of people, however, whose businesses had continued to grow throughout all the market drama. I was shocked and more than a little upset at myself for being so complacent. It turns out that, yes, my industry was affected by the market, but the brides had not left—The market and how I reached them had merely shifted. My cheese had been moved. If that reference doesn’t make sense, check out the book “Who Moved My Cheese?” by Dr. Spence Johnson. A great little book about how we get too comfortable while the world changes around us without us noticing the trials and tribulations that often follow.

Once I realized that, although the market did create a shift in my business, it was me that was ultimately responsible for the decline in business. I immediately got to work on how to regain the ground I had lost. I learned that to stabilize my business and gain year to year success, I needed to diversify my offerings. I still needed to do weddings but also the maternity and the families that followed. In addition, I dabbled in commercial, worked on a stronger website, and built more effective marketing materials. Since 2008, I have taken better control and direction of my business avoiding many of the industry ups and downs.

Shot from a 2008 wedding at Kimberly Crest in Redlands, CA. Daniel and Audrey are still very happily married with two amazing kids.

A punch in the gut

I’ll admit that in 2010 after the recovery from 2008, I was not ready for any more slaps upside the head, but then again, whoever is?

I attended a wedding convention in Las Vegas that I had been to before but never really engaged. WPPI (Wedding & Portrait Photography International) is a massive event with significant learning and socializing opportunities. This time I was ready to dive in, learn, and meet some new people. I spent several days watching speakers and attending workshops.

By this time in our career, my wife and I had been shooting weddings full-time for 18 years, and there wasn’t a lot of new or revolutionary content at the show that piqued our interest. I was not expecting, though, to see the WPPI image competition images on display. I can only describe what I saw as a punch in the gut.

I’m a full time working pro, I thought.

I make a great living shooting weddings and my brides are excited to see the work I have created for them.

I started in film, transitioned to digital, and my work only got better. I’m good. I know I am.

How can the images I’m looking at be that much better? Have I been living under a rock?

I’m creative, why didn’t I try that?

I must admit, I was a little more than taken aback by what I saw—Brides underwater, hanging from a helicopter, riding a dirt bike, or sitting in a fairytale style landscape with a castle in the background. Many of the images were composited and many were in places I could never go with a couple on a wedding day. However, what I saw were images of my peers pushing their ideas, skill, and creativity outside what at the time would have been the acceptable client-level imagery. Seeing those images ignited in me the idea that I can be more artistic and take more risks with my work. I felt justified to experiment a little more when the wedding day schedule allowed and push my creative boundaries. In practice, the most fantastic experience happened. My couples loved what I was doing—Another growth moment!

After more than 25 years of shooting full-time for my groceries, I have come to learn that the moment we believe we are either good, learned all we need, or take our eyes off the ball, we are setting ourselves up to fail, and if we are not careful, someone will move our cheese. Competition is a fierce drive, but our own creative desire to be better should drive us even more. It’s a little cliche I know, but it’s so very true. Never stop learning! Never stop growing and never think you have arrived.

Our groom Andre on his wedding day being amazing! This image was featured on the cover of PPA Magazine.

Still growing

I feel the next big growth moment for the creative community will be the management, and often the moderation, of how social media plays into what we create. Social media is terrific for sharing our art but can often be one of the greatest enemies of creativity. Pablo Picasso said, “The chief enemy of creativity is good sense”. I would add that chasing followers and “likes” can be even more destructive and certainly more distracting than even “good sense”. I’m not advocating for total social media abstinence, but I suggest that you remove yourself from the praises of strangers and put yourself in a place with just yourself and your work. Without the constraints of trying to impress the masses and creating for the purpose of acceptance by those masses, I believe you can and will create more freely and truthfully. Use social media to share your amazing gifts as a creative rather than letting it dictate to you.

A good friend of mine recently told me that he once spent $25,000 on some of the best gear the industry has to offer just so he can make images for Instagram. He lost sight of his creative voice and got hung up on the “like culture”. Good news, though, he’s now on track and back to creating. Checkout Michaels latest work on Instagram @michaelcoutts_photography  and an interview he did with Frederick Van Johnson on ThisWeekInPhoto.com. Episode 540

In the end, never be complacent, never stop growing, question everything, and always strive to be a better you regardless of whether it gets you “likes” or not.

 

This post contains affiliate links. If you’d like to learn more, see my affiliate disclaimer here.

Recent Posts

  • Love, Engagement, and an Umbrella
  • Visualize the Masterpiece
  • From Brides to Post-Apocalyptic
  • Embracing Tough Lessons
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All images posted here are available for purchase in a variety of sizes and methods from Premier Artists Collection, a gallery featuring select artwork by myself and other photographers throughout the globe. You can visit my collection to learn more.

All Images Copyright © Troy Miller. All rights reserved.