Friday, June 1, 2012

My Blog Has Moved


Hey all - just a quick note to let you know that I have moved my blog from my Blogger blogspot address over to my own personal domain at www.tallgrassphotography.com.au/blog

Shinier, more bells & whistles, and more frequent posts from now on. It felt right to smarten up the blog having just redesigned my website and portfolio... has been on my to do list for a loooong time now.

Thank you to all my readers to date, and I hope you follow me over to the new address. Please feel free to subscribe to my new blog using the rss button once you are there.

Thanks,
Simon

www.tallgrassphotography.com.au/blog


Thursday, May 24, 2012

My adventure with Joe McNally


"Um Hi, Joe, I'm Simon and I've flown across the country to meet you".
(imagine me with a silly grin and then insert incoherent mumbling in between each of these words).

That's about as intelligible as I could get the first time I met Joe McNally. And to make matters worse, this meeting was in the dimly lit lobby of a motel on the Gold Coast, late in the evening. I was having a quiet beer, on my own, and saw Joe and the Through The Lens Tour crew walk up to the reception desk ...and over I walked - in some dream like trance. After the introductions were done, I made my way back over to my beer feeling as if I had come across like some slightly out of kilter stalker.

Gold Coast workshop



I was in the Gold Coast to see Joe present a seminar on small flash & Nikon CLS followed by a keynote that evening on the 30 plus years of his life as a (brilliant) photographer. Then to participate in an all day workshop the day after that. To be honest, I didn't think I would ever get the chance to meet Joe in person, let alone do a workshop here in Australia. What an amazing time I had - first time I have ever been to anything thing like this. I learned a hell of a lot, not only about photography and the use of lighting - both natural & speed light/studio strobe - but also about professionalism and being a decent person. Yes I'm a big fan but I have met other people in this field who are very different when not in the 'promo light' - Joe is not only a great photographer but also a very decent human being, who has probably earned the right to be an ass if he really wanted to but he couldn't be further from that.


Just when I thought things with Joe were done and dusted, along came THE DREAM trip. About a week before heading to the Gold Coast the Through The Lens Tour guys announced an opportunity to join Joe on a shoot in Tasmania that was commissioned by Tourism Australia. When I saw that I damn near stopped breathing. As you would expect there was a fairly hefty price tag to go with something like that, and so after I started breathing again I resigned myself to forget about it and enjoy the already fantastic opportunity I had coming on the Gold Coast.

Wineglass Bay, Freycinet NP


If it were not for my wife Emma and my business partner Ros convincing me to do it, and to figure out the hard bits afterwards, I wouldn't have made the leap of faith. It was likely to be a once in a lifetime opportunity for me, and they know how high up on a pedestal Joe is in my eyes, so they didn't let up - and I think to be honest, they knew I would probably turn into a mopey grump for the next 6 months, kicking myself for not going.

Quad biking in Freycinet NP (Drew on the quad)


Well yes, it was expensive, and I will now be working my ass off even more to pay for it, but man what a ride! To say the 4 days was mind-blowingly awesome would be an understatement. The days began before the sun was up in order to be on location for sunrise, and then the nights were generally not early finishes but I was running on some sort of special internal vapour the whole time so it really didn't matter. I caught six flights in as many days, saw the sun rise more than I have in the last two years (strange for a landscape shooter I know) and saw (and ate) many things I never thought I would.

Sunrise shoot on the docks in Hobart
I will save some more of the story for another blog but let me just finish with a big thank you to Joe McNally, his first assistant Drew Gurian (who is an amazing photographer in his own right, and a great guy to boot) as well as the Through The Lens Tour guys who made the opportunity possible. There were also three other guys who made the trip too - Ray, Tony and Dave - all were great travelling companions and photographers as well.

Wow!





Thursday, April 19, 2012

Good gear = Professional results? Rant No.1

Firstly, I will confess that I am a gear-head. Love looking at gear, reading about gear, smelling gear...

BUT, gear does not make the photographer. It can definitely help, and make your life smoother / easier, sometimes, but it is not at the top of the list what makes a great photographer.

Lots of sayings going around that some it up well - "Gear is good, vision is better" by David Duchemin would be my favourite.

I am very fortunate to have some very nice gear these days for sure but this stuff didn't just miraculously land in my lap. I have worked my way up to the gear I now use over the last 25 years. It's really only been in recent years that I have been able to justify & afford new/pro gear over second hand. Funny thing though - my current bodies still make an exposure based on a combination of ISO, aperture & shutter speed, just like the Canon AE-1 or the Nikon F90 did that I used for a long time prior to jumping into digital. AND, the final captured image is still controlled & composed by ME, not my camera.

For working professionals, good gear more often than not translates to tough, consistent & reliable gear. Tools of the trade. When you are being paid to do a job, especially one you may not get a second chance to reshoot, you want good reliable tools in your bag. Just like a good mechanic has accumulated years of knowledge & experience in their field, and choose to use the best tools they can. The tools compliment their work but they don't replace that hard earned experience & knowledge.

The main reason for this mini-rant is the other day, for the thousandth time, I received a nice comment about one of my images (which I really do appreciate) ...which was then closely followed by "You must have a really good camera" or my other favourite "I could do that if I had a good camera like yours but I just can't justify the dollars".

Aaaaaargh !! "I pity the fool" - thanks Mr T.

Just like the nice gear didn't magically appear in my hands, the last twenty plus years of experience making photographs, reading books, going to courses etc. etc. etc. wasn't a matrix style instant download to my brain either.

It just seems more & more these days that the respect for genuine professional photographers/photography is gone or at best a rare & fleeting thing - certainly compared to the  days of film, and before the age of instant gratification that we now live in. I'm sure there are plenty of contributing factors - flickr, Facebook, cameras in almost every device imaginable (not all of these are bad things by the way... they all have their place). I think it is also fuelled to a degree by the number of cameras present at any given place & time now, many of which in their manufacturer's advertising campaigns are conveying the message 'you don't even need brain to use me'.

What a can of worms... there are so many more rant topics this could lead to (and just might down the track).

OK I'm done.
Taken with iPhone, whilst blind folded...
just kidding.