Jamie Kripke, GoLite campaign

I helped Jamie Kripke out with this campaign for GoLite which is shown over at The Denver Egoist.

Sukle Advertising & Design, Denver just finished up a new campaign for GoLite, highlighting the company's Spring/Summer ‘11 trail running, hiking and travel apparel. The images were shot by Jamie Kripke of Boulder. Here's what they had to say about the campaign.

"Since its beginning, GoLite has been all about lightweight gear made for the trail. Whether it’s an after-work out-the-backdoor loop, backpacking the Colorado Trail or connecting the dots on an overseas adventure – the more time we spend on the trail, the better we feel.

The insight for this campaign is about choices. The choices we make determine how much time we have for the trail. Do I choose to watch some reality TV or do I get off my ass and go for a run? Do I pack the blow-dryer, the curling iron, the straightener AND the krimper? [Or GoLite?]"

Really fun smooth project. Jamie has such a great eye for subtlety that taking his images to the next level is effortless. He is the example of a photographer who understands that this look does not entirely happen in Post and has everything to do with the photographer's eye. Many photographers just lean on the post way to heavily to achieve this look and it never gets to this level.

I should be posting the before and afters in the portfolio as soon as I get some free time.

Neil Burgess on the death of Photojournalism

We have now reached the stage where magazine supplements offer me less for a story which might be used over a cover and eight pages than their associated papers pay me for a single picture of a celebrity. The picture editors shrug and say, “This is just the way it is.” But, it is an active decision that has been taken by the managing editors who believe that photojournalism is not valued, it can be got for free, and so needs no budget. Money is still around in newspapers, it’s just that it’s spent on other things.

I woke up this morning with a dream going around in my head. It was as if I’d been watching a medical drama, ER or something, where they’d spent half the programme trying to revive a favourite character: mouth to mouth, blood transfusions, pumping the chest up and down, that electrical thing where they shout “Clear!” before zapping them with 50,000 volts to get the heart going again, emergency transplants and injections of adrenalin …, but nothing works. And someone sobs, “We’ve got to save him we cannot let him die.” And his best friend steps forward, grim and stressed and says, “It’s no good. For God’s sake, somebody call it!”

Okay, I’m that friend and I’m stepping forward and calling it. “Photojournalism: time of death 11.12. GMT 1st August 2010.” Amen.

<A href="http://www.epuk.org/Opinion/961/for-gods-sake-somebody-call-it">Neil Burgess on the death of Photojournalism.</a>

Sad but true. But I have to say there is a glimmer of hope and that is the iPad / tablet computers. I know I have said it before, but you just can not fuck around with shitty images on those things. Plus it seems like people are willing to shell out $5 a issue for it. That is some serious revenue for the magazines who no longer have to print and ship dead trees around.

VIA wood s lot who proves yet agin he is a much netter blogger then I.

Lighting Studies #3

[gallery link="file" columns="2"] Had a lovely BBQ the other day (Thanks to all who made it!) and when the wife walked in with these tomatoes for the salad.... well, she had to put off making the salad for a bit. 9 lights were used along with everything and the kitchen sink. Turns out tomatos are stupidly difficult to shoot and I am still not entirely in love with these.  I could not get a good background to work so I just went with default black.  But since these are just studies I am posting them anyways.

I had to use a diffusion screen above for the backlight which also had some diffusion clipped to it.

Metal screen on two other side back lights to bring them down and scatter highlights. These are what are giving the highlights around the stem on the horizontal.

A focusing lens so I could get a dollop of light onto the stem. Metal screen with a postage stamp opening focused pretty harshly. Took some effort to get it blended with the other lights.

Sculpting wire underneath the tomato so it would stand up.

A Prism in front of it that took the front light and bounced it up a bit more focused.

I think that's all. I should really start photographing the lighting set ups I guess... lol.  And so much for B&W formalness. That lasted all of one post....

Lighting Studies #2

More Lighting Studies done over the weekend.  Here I busted out my old set of oil paints and found some of these wrinkled old gems in there.  The oil paint was still good after 20 years, crazy stuff.  Six light set up for this series but once I had the lights set right I could just move in new tubes of paint and position them as I wanted.  The hardest part was getting the composition and backgrounds set up in a interesting way. I had 5 different sets I went through till I just went to close crop and black BG. I could see this mounted all into one frame in rows of three.  Hope you like them.

Lighting Studies

Did a couple lighting studies yesterday here in the studio. Man, I just have to say it again,  I love my Dedolights. I am using those with a Foba Combitube System here and it's addictive. Very enjoyable to throw light around with this set up.

This cymbal was just a attempt at stark and clean. Used about 4 lights on this as you can see by the streaks of light on the top. Had 4-5 little flags all around to help keep the highlights at bay. The glove had 6 on it. 3 from the back, 2 from each side and one snooted just on the fingers in front for some fill.

Forcing myself to explore B&W imagery again as well. I get a little too distracted by color sometimes and I want to bring these back to more of a formal study of texture and light. The goal is to shoot some random object a day. Hope you all enjoy them.

The glove is supposed to be a bit creepy by the way.  The wife comes in and says, "Nice murder glove." ;-)

Book photo for art project.

Jason Leisge just finished a art project for Parking Block Publishing where he used a book as a sketch book. You'll have to wait for the inside pics. Me no post sneaky pics of it for you.

You can check out the blog behind Parking Block at Such Luck, quite a nice Chicago-centric blog on art, skateboarding and food.

Shot this with some awesome Dedolights, which are crack for any still life shooter. These puppies are a whole lot of fun to use. Thanks goes out to Hill Street Studios for doing a work swap for these.

I'm tired and need more coffee.... and I'm grumpy... Bah.

Silver Falls Painting

Here is a painting I worked on yesterday based upon This shot of North Falls. I have been messing with Painter for about 6 months but I still do not really have a good take on it. This is inspired by the painter Gerhard Richter.

I did some test prints on canvas but I am not to thrilled with the blacks right now but I plan on trying some varnishes to see what those do. The idea of working with oil paints and mediums again is kind of exciting, hoping to get this moving forward.

Silver Falls Images

[gallery link="file" columns="2"] Here are some images from the recent Silverfalls hike we went on. I went for a different approach to my composition on this shoot and I am happy with the results. I tried to pull back and really get the falls in the environment not just by themselves. I plan on printing the North Falls Pano on stretched canvas. Excited about getting into that.

The one South Falls shot I made look like a aged beer ad in your favorite pub. That one was cheesy-riffic so I went with it.

New art print.

New art print available, printed this at 12 by 40 and that seems to be the perfect size for it. Black border like back in the cibachrome days. The macros were shot on a G9 and the tree moss on a 1ds M2. It was a fun series I was doing about a year ago though I never laid them all out into one print like this.

Silver Falls, North Falls Panoramic

Went on a the 8.9 (8.7?) mile Silver Falls hike this past weekend. Here is a panoramic I took of the North Falls while there. Awesome hike but my old ass knee started doing funny stuff about mile 5-6.

I should be posting some more images from there shortly. Backed up with work so the fun stuff has to wait. Actually really enjoyed shooting and working on these. Been awhile since I have really enjoyed my own photography. You may know the feeling.

Hand held pano even though I had a tripod with me, go figure...

Non-Destructive Cropping!

I actually found something in Photoshop CS5 that makes me a happy Panda.  Non-Destructive Cropping.

Cropping non-destructively After you create a cropping rectangle with the Crop tool, select Hide from the options bar to preserve the cropped area in a layer. Restore the cropped area anytime by choosing Image > Reveal All or by dragging the Crop tool beyond the edge of the image. The Hide option is unavailable for images that contain only a background layer.

RIP

Dennis Hopper, 1936 – 2010

I didn’t use a light meter; I just read the light off my hands. So the light varies, and there are some dark images. Also, I’m sort of a nervous person with the camera, so I will just shoot arbitrarily until I can focus and compose something, and then I make a shot. So generally, in those proof sheets, there are only three or four really concentrated efforts to take a photograph. It’s not like a professional kind of person who sets it up so every photograph looks really cool.

-Dennis Hopper

Scott Davis

Upon returning to California after his studies in New Mexico, Davis took the unique moods of the desert and applied them with deftness to urban settings. By nature, Davis is a loner and seeks settings that can be as much one place as any other anonymous spot on a street or lost highway. His saturated nightscapes are composed with a single existing source whose light hugs and frames elements in the subject matter. This effect yields work that is luminescent in a manner that evokes night as much as day. You can feel the heat and lingering effects of drenching sunshine imbuing the streets, pavements, parking lots, buildings, valleys and billboards. Moreover, in his latest work he explores by taking pictures of buildings specifically on San Fernando Road. This focused survey has brought his work to a new plane that culminates his vision and training. In 713 N. Victory Boulevard, Davis captures a desolate corner that makes a viewer look twice because its richness and depth evoke a tangible painterly sensibility that makes one look back for confirmation that it is a photograph, rather than a hyper-real painting. There is no trace of Hollywood glamour; solitude is palpable and LA takes on a majesty unlike its actual, sprawling self. One can imagine if Edward Hopper were a photographer these are the pictures he would have taken.

Scott Davis, another fine photographer at Hous Projects.