kristopher_lawrence
Member
- Joined
- Oct 25, 2007
- Messages
- 122
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- Medium Format
Hi,
I wanted to share a personal experience that might be of interest.
I am getting more an more involved in the fashion photography market, and part of this is due to the fact that I offer a very different product, aesticaly and from a technical point of view. I shoot everything on film, absolutely everything. The digital part is limited to scanning and MINIMAL adjustments, nothing that cannot be done in the traditional darkroom either in color or BW. As most analog photogs, I try to get it right out of the camera, and it works.
When I shot a whole project on Kodachrome, the desingners were amazed by the quality and found it pretty usefull and fun to work with slides and a projector. The next collection will probably be made using the same method...
Two days ago, I had a meeting with the representative of an agency, he was septical at first that I was using film, but when he saw the results, I got very excited about it. Many times trough our meeting, he asked if I was sure that no photoshop was involved, never, I responded, and I showed him a 4x5 slide and he stopped asking. How many megapixels? About 400... Oh...
I always have two conditions for working: Film and no touch ups. There is a way of doing really creative fashion shots witout photoshoping. I really feel that something will change in this milieu, people are getting tired of plastic looking girls, and more and more of the models don't like being touched up too much.
What I have learned is that I have a very (paradoxally) innovative approach by working traditionnaly and I manage to sell it pretty well. Why should I take the plunge into the digital crowds where photogs are eating themselves up for contracts when I can do something different witout plugins that can be copied fairly easly by a photoshop wizard...
Finally, working with slides and a well calibrated scanner is as fast or faster than trying to get the colors getting right out of a digicam, plus no post prod effects needed, they are embeded in the slide. By the way, a girl told me that it was the first time her hair (she'S redhead) was looking real on a picture.
Long live Kodachrome, long live film.
Kris
I wanted to share a personal experience that might be of interest.
I am getting more an more involved in the fashion photography market, and part of this is due to the fact that I offer a very different product, aesticaly and from a technical point of view. I shoot everything on film, absolutely everything. The digital part is limited to scanning and MINIMAL adjustments, nothing that cannot be done in the traditional darkroom either in color or BW. As most analog photogs, I try to get it right out of the camera, and it works.
When I shot a whole project on Kodachrome, the desingners were amazed by the quality and found it pretty usefull and fun to work with slides and a projector. The next collection will probably be made using the same method...
Two days ago, I had a meeting with the representative of an agency, he was septical at first that I was using film, but when he saw the results, I got very excited about it. Many times trough our meeting, he asked if I was sure that no photoshop was involved, never, I responded, and I showed him a 4x5 slide and he stopped asking. How many megapixels? About 400... Oh...
I always have two conditions for working: Film and no touch ups. There is a way of doing really creative fashion shots witout photoshoping. I really feel that something will change in this milieu, people are getting tired of plastic looking girls, and more and more of the models don't like being touched up too much.
What I have learned is that I have a very (paradoxally) innovative approach by working traditionnaly and I manage to sell it pretty well. Why should I take the plunge into the digital crowds where photogs are eating themselves up for contracts when I can do something different witout plugins that can be copied fairly easly by a photoshop wizard...
Finally, working with slides and a well calibrated scanner is as fast or faster than trying to get the colors getting right out of a digicam, plus no post prod effects needed, they are embeded in the slide. By the way, a girl told me that it was the first time her hair (she'S redhead) was looking real on a picture.
Long live Kodachrome, long live film.
Kris