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Published APUG members

Omedeto Gozaimasu

Tsuyoshi- The article was great. I enjoyed seeing you again Sunday and using your darkroom facility. Your new gallery is great. I still can't believe you have the skill to not only take great photos, but also be a skilled craftsman viz Project Basho facilities!
 
You should get a gold star for perseverance! Very impressive!!

Murray
 
Thanks everyone!

I just have to keep it going with this venture.

I just hope more people will come to our gallery space and other events to learn about the art and craft of photography.

Warmly,
Tsuyoshi
 
The most viewed examples of my work are the commercial things that I work on. Here is a popular website that shows examples of my commercial work within its design, both still and moving. If you click across the top navigation, each one features a shot on the top banner, and if you click TV, you can see some of the TV spots. Its all a bit different than what you might expect from knowing me through APUG:

http://www.warriorsagainsttobacco.com/
 
Those are great. (Nice bokeh, too on the outdoor shots--what's the lens?).
 
Those are great. (Nice bokeh, too on the outdoor shots--what's the lens?).

The longest lens ( the one with the nice bokeh) is an 85mm T1.3 Zeiss Super Speed. The spots are all shot with a Super Speed set, wich consists of 18,25,35,50 &85mm. They are my favorite cine lenses.
 
Very nice look they have.
 
Never did like to toot my own horn either, but;

Fashion & catalog work throughout the late 80's and 90's for the likes of;
Mademoiselle
NewYorker
Essense
Conde Nast [several mags]
LA Style
Several catalogs for what is likley, mostly closed companies.
Almost Every model agency in NYC
ETC..

After I stopped shooting in late '98;
several write-ups in various photo publications for dr5.com

Too many to list; clients published work of dr5 processing.

Thanks for asking.

dw
 
Alrighty ! My first published image was in NZ Musician this month ... It is certainly not my favorite image and is perhaps chosen only for the pragmatic quality of the content (a profile article of a local drummer, the pic is of him drumming) - Still, there it is on the shelves Once the online version is updated I'll link it.
 
My published work is pretty much limited to local stuff here in southeast Michigan. Ads, magazines, large displays for events & trade shows, annual reports, newspapers, etc.

Did the photo work for a bluegrass artist's CD (Dick Dieterle, "Iron Skillet Breakfast"). I also had some of my work on Jeff Daniels', Purple Rose Theater website and still have some of my work on Jane Seymour's website. It was just event work.

Been working on a book (just the photography) for the last year and a half. The book should be out next summer. It's about the history of a local farm area near Ann Arbor.

Everything was, and continues to be, shot with film only.

Marc
 
So far I've worked on 38 books. Three were published last year.
At first they only had a shot or two of mine in them but the last four books where coffee table books and contained mostly my shots. Some of the earlier ones I don't even have anymore.... cleared them out at a garage sale a few years back.

For magazines I've shot a bit for Sports Illustrated and ESPN Magazine but since my work is sold through Getty Images it turns up in mags like Cosmo every once and a while.

Lately I've been working as Photo Editor for Canadian Sports Magazine... so I end up getting a fair bit in the magazine as well.

I've done a couple assingment for the New York Times and some of the other big papers in the USA.

The coolest thing I've ever shot is the box front of Wheates Cereal when they used a shot of Roger Clements years ago..... maybe it was the Wheates that gave him the strenght to pitch for so many years.

One thing I've noticed though... a lot of times the best photos are never published.... because a magazine is looking for a picture to go with a story.... it might not be the best photo from the event.

-Rob
 
UK Black and White Photography Magazine - October 2007 issue... my first ever published pictures..... unfortunately also one of the issues discussed in the thread here dedicated to the magazine which took the shine off a little!!!!!...Still... a very exciting few pages for me!!
 
Cover photo for the magazine of the Belgian Alpine Club. Modest, but it was a start.

Four years ago I wrote and edited a climbing guide, including some pictures and a lot of drawings by myself.
G
 
I was published in Newspapers, Architctural mags, and Garden Mags some really huge pic storys some small ones pictures for ADs and prospects and homepages also a Frontpage of a health eating book and many things inside but the book is out of print its about 26 years ago!
I had most publishing going around 1997-2000 then I was a bit burned out and now I start again to rock'n roll!

One of a Garden Specialst Woman ist still somewhere around at Dead Link Removed
 
Some book covers, local Wildlife Trust mags, editorial material for Church in Wales magazines, the 2005 Royal Mint £1 coin brochure, E-On (European electricity generator) power station images, various misc uses including several Alamy sales. All 35mm slide/neg material.

TBH I put more effort into snapping photos of my kids these days. Some of these get 'published' on the walls and desks of a number of admirers
 
I am about to be published in a book on the history of Santa Fe (NM) county. Should be out by November 2008.
 
I have a number of scholarly publications about literary theory and Polish and Russian literature, but the latest is peripherally related to photography--"The Street of Crocodiles" and Other Stories by Bruno Schulz with a foreword by Jonathan Safran Foer and my introduction. Bruno Schulz was a Polish-Jewish writer who lived in the now Ukrainian town of Drohobych from 1892 until he was killed by a Nazi officer in 1942. He was also a graphic artist who used the technique of cliché-verre, which involved etching a negative by hand with a stylus onto a blackened glass plate and printing it onto photographic paper. Some of his drawings are reproduced with the stories.

Here's an Amazon link, if you're curious--

http://tinyurl.com/2ztg2s
 
creativeimagemaker.co.uk Issues 6 and 8. Hopefully more to come. I am also currently working on a longish article which one day become a book on the basics of photography. We shall see.
 

David, are you familiar with the brothers Quay? They adapted Schulz's story into a stop-motion movie (their medium)
http://www.zeitgeistfilms.com/film.php?directoryname=streetofcrocodiles