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It’s A Family Affair

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Sherry MacLean, the CFO of the MacLean Agency, a Princeton based insurance agency (Business & Personal Insurance, Employee Benefits, and Wealth Management) contacted me to talk about a series of corporate portraits of the entire team. There were many sets and groupings to meet all of their needs. We set up a simple portrait station for the corporate portraits – and then tried a more casual approach for a second image. The light in the main lobby was so bright all we needed was a reflector to bounce a little more light onto the subject. We alternated backgrounds depending on contrast  – so there would be a variety, either wood panel or white wall. Either way we’d get the tone I’m all about.

I am loving this approach of different crops, textures, eye contact or none for this series – I think it’s such a smart approach to corporate portraiture. Perhaps I had in my head that things needed to be the same – but they don’t, after all we are all different – how could they ever be the same.

The featured image of Sherry and Jerry MacLean (founder of the agency) is something that came to mind on the way to the shoot. We had discussed a two shot of Sherry seated and Jerry standing, as well as Sherry standing and Jerry seated – but would they let me throw tons of paper in the air as well for a concept image? Heck, why not – these folks were fun! I think I may have got the flying paper in the first shot – but it was so much fun I wanted to do it again and again and had more and more paper repeatedly thrown.

Special thanks to my very experienced, and hard working crew:
Dwayne Dunlevyhair, make-up and styling | Diana Mooreassisting and styling

 

 

THE WOOD CUTTERS

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Meet the Willard Brothers, Steve (left), Matt (center) and Glen (right). Sam Willard started a tree service company in 1950 that became Shearer/Penn. Steve and Glen are brothers and sons of Sam Willard. Matt is Glen’s son. Willard Brothers has a showroom of exotic woods for making furniture or turning, or anything you can think of.

 

The Mayor

I was thrilled and nervous when I was asked to the photograph the Mayor of Trenton. I did some research and looked up Mayor portraits – but wasn’t inspired by what I found. On the day of the photo session we had quite a comprehensive shot list to complete: an official Mayor Portrait for the press, a cover for a business magazine, a couples portrait with the Mayor’s wife, and some casual portraits.

I was worried we wouldn’t have enough time to complete all these set and lighting changes as officials are typically very scheduled. I asked Mayor Jackson, “How much time do we have you for today?” wondering if the answer would be in minutes, not hours – his warm and friendly reply was exactly what I needed to hear, “As long as it takes to get what we need.”

Mayor Jackson was so fun and lively to work with, he brought superb suit and tie options that looked great – and he was open to make the images dynamic and bright. Everyone pretty much agreed on which were their favorite images. I hope I get to work with him again, he’s a lot of fun.

The Aesthete

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My friend Michael asked if I would take his portrait for a new career opportunity heading his way. It’s great when you know someone well and they trust you creatively. Michael has always appreciated the work I do and is rather liberal with feedback. That said, I have found him to be the creative force with projects that suit his needs. Our work process is hard to pin down and put into words – parameters in sketch form are discussed, but with an openness of creative freedom. He is also someone that doesn’t need a reminder or check list – like a Swiss watch – and then the rest is left in my hands.

In a way, too much creative freedom can go in the wrong direction – hence, a good plan is worth the investment and exercising as much creative energy as possible.

About the time of this photo session I figured out a studio system – a way of working that cannot be quantified. The best I can do to describe it begins with referencing my notes, working though a plan and fiercely finding what is right. You cannot know or see it until it’s there – and that takes immense patience on behalf of the subject and myself, and perhaps a dash of pressure.

I think I also walked into a style the same time as this new studio system that I’ve wanted to do for a very long time – natural light and strobe mix, textures, slightly shallow depth of field and a little bit of image processing. Maybe this style is a trend and won’t stand the test of time, but for right now I feel that I have evolved as a portrait photographer.

Michael cleverly published his new images on Facebook and Linked-In the weekend before he took office with the City of Trenton and updated his public profile all in a moment and in unison. It’s great to see a client and friend enjoy their images as much as I do. And, I title him as the aesthete – a person who has or affects to have a special appreciation of art and beauty – as both a system and a style landed during this photo session.

Back To Front

 

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I was asked to photography a Psychologist – the need for the shots was for his speaking engagement at an art’s institution. We of course did fairly straight forward portraits in addition to the picture in picture concept.

I asked the client if we could try a shot at the end of the session. He agreed to hold a sheet of paper in front of his face. I then took a photo of the back of his head and digitally inserted the back image. I am very pleased with how the final image turned out and love how the background tones really match up.

I’m sure this is not the first time this idea has been done, although I have not seen it – it must have been done in advertising for something. The concept has certainly been done in fine art – Rene Margritte came to mind with his surrealist paintings. I think something interesting happens to your mind when viewing the image for the first time – mine flicks back and forth from back to front.

I really like the idea of self as the mirror, or taking a good look at yourself – perfect for a psychologist I thought.

 

Art Kids

An artist friend of mine asked if I’d photograph his kids. He liked the images and treatment of the ‘Riders’ series I did of the bicycle scavenger hunt. The artist goes by the name LANK, and is a very talented and creative fella – one of this art forms is stencils. Meticulously cut shapes and lines are the pattern or tool that is then used to spray paint through. So, his kids are around art a lot, and in my opinion have a creative advantage. So they were very patient and up for trying different sets and both assisting in the process.

We have a lot of props in the studio – and there happened to be some antlers out, so we held them behind the young girl’s head – to make a fantasy portrait – as if she were dreaming. We used a ring flash as the primary light. With the boy, his prop was a Nintendo DS – so I just left him with it. The three point light set up was on cell and strobe. The back light stayed on after the front two fired – leaving a silhouette. The photo becomes a graphic, much like the stencils Lank works with.

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Carnival

Every May the Upper Makefied Fire Department organizes a carnival in Washington’s Crossing, PA. It really brings a bit of excitement to the usually sleepy village. I’ve been looking forward to photographing the carnival for ages – what a great subject ! All the spinning machines, flashing lights and bright colors. I did several timed exposures during my visit. Low ISO, tripod of course, f/13 or so and 6 second +/- shutter.

Riders On The Storm

My studio was a stop on the ‘Trenton Rat Racers’ scavenger hunt around the city. A brave pack of cyclists headed out in the rain to ride around the city and check in at various points. I set up a simple three point lighting, one background and two 750’s at 2:1 with shoot through umbrellas. As each racer checked in at the studio, I took a quick portrait – only 4-5 shots per person and in post decided to split screen my two favorite expressions. I had planned ahead of time to shoot the portrait series in black and white, but the colors shots are actually really interesting. So I might have to work on those too. It was great having random visitors stop by during the race!

Andrew Wilkinson

Flora Noir

Still life photography is such a great pursuit between things – especially, when a series reveals itself right in front of you. I seem to end up collecting and keeping vessels of dried flowers at home and at the studio. Still can’t bring myself to throw them all away – just yet. With this series of images the plan was to photograph the still life sets as dark as possible – for a dramatic effect, and still be able to see the subtlety of form and tone.

TRENTON PUNK ROCK FLEA MARKET

Time lapse from dawn ’til dusk in the Historic Roebling Wire Works building in Trenton, NJ. I was asked by the Director of the Trenton Punk Rock Flea Market if I would be interested to make a time lapse of the event. At the site visit we settled on the best location for the camera to have the view be interesting. Since architecture is a such a feature in this building we framed the shot to be 2/3 rds architecture, and the lower 1/3 where the action would be.

One of my favorite parts about this time lapse is seeing the light, how it moves, how it changes color. There are quite a few unknown variables in projects like this, and sometimes, the unexpected results are more than you can imagine will be recorded.

SPECS. Time lapse was recorded on Saturday November 9th, 2013. trentonpunkrockfleamarket.com – We set the camera to take a shot every 30 seconds, from about 7:00 am until about 7:00 pm. This timeline translates into approximately 1600 images. Here was my starting point with the basic calculation. One shot every 30 seconds X 10 hours = 1200 images (divided by 12 frames a second) =  one minute 40 secs – or thereabouts. (I think I got that right).