Thursday, December 22, 2011

CHOICES - My Help-Portrait Story

When Jeremy Cowart introduced Help-Portrait in 2009, I had originally planned on getting involved. Something happened and I was unable to do it. I heard about the amazing and often heart-wrenching stories of the people involved.

Last October, I had an opportunity to be involved in a mini Help-Portrait event with Jeremy Cowart himself. Jeremy offered me the opportunity to shoot, but I declined. I thought I should give the people the opportunity to be shot by a top photographer instead of a hack like me. I was in awe of the effect of the portraits. I was not going to miss this year's.

Fast-forward to December 8, 2011 at the Union Rescue Mission in an area of Los Angeles that we call Skid Row. So while we did not have stories as compelling as the ones I've heard, there was a small series of events that I still think about, almost two weeks after the event.

I met this man named James. We got off on the wrong foot. I introduced myself had a 30 second conversation about the URM and we proceeded to our shooting station. He was wearing a black jacket and a red button down shirt underneath. He asked me if he should take off his jacket and I said yes since we were shooting against a dark background. He replies with a scowl "What a waste, I really wanted the jacket ..." So we ended up shooting with his jacket on.

We were having problems with printers at URM and James was getting impatient. It was quite a tense situation. I was not in the good graces of this man. Then I noticed he had an old Sports Illustrated magazine from 1986 with Darryl Strawberry and Doc Gooden on the cover. I tried to make small talk about it. He says he has another one - with Len Bias on the cover. Len Bias was a very talented basketball player who overdosed and passed away shortly after getting drafted by the Boston Celtics. I remember those events quite clearly as they were hyping him as the next great one. I thought it was a very sad story. So I said it ... "That's a sad story, the kid had everything". James empathically replied "ain't nothing sad about that, he made a choice. Every choice has a consequence. I made choices, I don't think I'm a sad story."

That statement stuck with me. So much that I spent an awkward minute or two in silence with him while we waited for an available printer.

Unfortunately for me, he declined to write his story on his printed portrait. I guess I will never know. He has, however, changed the way I look at my daily choices.


* If you would like to learn more about Help-Portrait, please visit www.help-portrait.com

Thursday, March 10, 2011

Let's Go Hair

So this ...
Studio in a car

turns into


to produce:

KW-6837

Friday, January 7, 2011

Off Camera Flash

These days, I don't get excited about shooting something unless I can light it. It's a matter of preference, but whatever it is, I like it better when its lit.

So, with a bit of free time today, I had to test a lens that I'm selling on eBay. This should enable me to show the difference between lit and natural light shots.

For today's exercise, I used a Canon EOS 5D Mark II with the Contax Carl Zeiss Sonnar T* f/2.8 lens. It's actually a fantastic portrait lens, but I didn't have anybody around, so I'd have to settle for some object.

photo

Here is the natural light shot:
CY_6379

And here are two shots that were lit by a single light. That was a Vivitar 285 at 1/4 power coming from camera left.

CY_6371

CY_6377

These shots were processed the same way. Not a whole lot into it, but I shot these in RAW, so it needed some sharpening and a little tiny bit of adding fill light to bring out some details. I kept the amounts the same though.

So while the natural light shot is not bad (or at least, I think), I prefer the punch of the lit shot and that the background is not blown out.

But that's just me.