Posts Tagged ‘phoenix creative photographer’

If you feel like some of your photo shoots are just lacking some umph, it might come down to the production placed into them. Production is a critical part of putting together a great photo shoot. Whether for a client or for my personal book I like to put as much production as time and money allows into my shoots.

Production is all the little (and big) details that go into a shoot. Location, permits, models, wardrobe, props, food/drinks/catering, image delivery timetable and method. The personal style of how you run your shoots and interact with your crew and team members can even be said to be a part of your production. It all comes down to knowing your vision and being able to put together the pieces to execute it, within a reasonable time frame and budget constraints.

Your budget is often the ultimate deciding factor in what you can produce. I’d love to be able to shoot on a three deck yacht through the Caribbean, but it’s simply not a budgetary reality (yet). That being said, I encourage any photographer looking to put together fresh images for their portfolio to put some personal money into it. That doesn’t mean you have to go overboard though.

In the photographs below I picked up these colorful pairs of socks at Target for $2 a piece and matched them to the outfits that these fun models from The Agency Arizona brought with them. The $6 investment was well worth an image that will help grow my book.

For these images I went to a local grocery store and picked up around $15 worth of different fruit. They helped foster a fun feel and style to a number of images.

And for this last set I spent a few more bucks at Target grabbing colorful sandals and an extra few at the dollar store for a snorkel and floaties. None of these are expensive items, but they help create the right atmosphere for the photos.

Lately I’ve been putting around $100-200 into my personal test shoots, and that number grows as I continue to book bigger jobs and more clients. It’s a repeating cycle. Larger clients want to see the time and production you put into your images and they want to see new personal work on a regular basis. It shows your passion for what you do. It’s one of the comments I hear the most in any new client meeting – my apparent passion for creating images. Passion + production = progress. Put some more passion and production into your own work and I guarantee you’ll start seeing similar results.

I know I promised to post a bit more, but things have been pretty busy lately and I keep forgetting. I promise I’ll get better at this! Anywho…

I went to scope out a shoot location for next weekend and met a fellow photographer there who made an interesting comment about my work.  Just before I left he said, “There’s a lot of different photographers trying to get into this industry. Everyone focuses on something a little different, but you know what people notice about you right away? You know exactly what it is that you want to shoot.”

It made me stop and think, and I guess it’s pretty true. While I don’t know exactly every single concept I’d like to shoot (I mean who does really?) I do think I have a pretty good handle on what I am trying to say with my photography, what the emotions are I’m trying to illicit from viewers and why I’m doing it. It continues to refine over time, but my general vision has remained in a pretty consistent vein.

Knowing what you want to say with your photography and what kind of work you’d like to shoot can take time. What are the emotions you want to illicit from people who view your work? Don’t stop at answers like, “Oh I want them to feel happy.” It’s like showing up to an interview and saying, “I’m a good people person.” So what? Get a little deeper and really think about what it is you want to convey. If you don’t know yet, keep shooting and keep browsing the work of other photographers for inspiration.

You’ll know when you’ve reached what you want to shoot. For me it was like a lightning strike. I was browsing the work of other photographers and became so captivated by lifestyle photography that I instantly knew this was the kind of photography I wanted to shoot. Since then I’ve been finding ways to put my own style and personality into my work and driven every day to do and learn more.

Do you know what kind of artist you want to be? Keep pushing on if you haven’t figured it out yet. One day the lightning will strike.

On a related note, I’m planning a really fun test with The Agency Arizona next weekend that I’m hoping will deliver a number of great new images for my portfolio. Really looking forward to this shoot and can’t wait to share when it’s completed.

the san diego lifestyle

March 15, 2010

Before you read any further, you have to play Phantom Planet’s California in the background. Go ahead and click on it. Ok, ready now?

I spent the past weekend in San Diego visiting friends and arranging two test photo shoots with Nouveau Models. I drove out on my birthday Friday (it’s a pretty good 5 and a half hour trip) and arrived in town just in time to grab dinner and celebrate with friends.

Saturday and Sunday I arranged two commercial photo shoots with Lauryn and Megan of Nouveau. Both of them have fantastic commercial/lifestyle looks and we had a great time playing around. They were also very enduring of wearing some not so warm clothing in the colder weather. It’s not quite beach season yet!

I’m hoping to make frequent trips out to the coast from here on out to continue building my lifestyle portfolio with the images I want. Fun in the sun! Hope you enjoy these previews.

Lauryn and I picked up a beach cruiser on Mission Beach and zipped around…

While Megan and I grabbed a kite and headed out to the La Jolla pier.