A Week of Storytelling Begins Here on Sunday

Photograph © Rick Sammon. All rights reserved.
Canon 5D Mark II. Canon 24-105mm IS lens.

Hi! I am just back from a two-week trip to China, where I could not get access to twitter or my blog. Hummm….
But now I’m back, and happy to be back blogging! Here ya go!

Photographers are storytellers, whether they use still photographs or videos to tell their stories. Although I shoot some videos with my Canon 5D Mark II and 7D cameras, I am still in love with the still image – because it captures a frozen moment in time.

I “see” like a still photographer, which I think is different than “seeing” as a photographer who shoots videos. The difference for the still shooter: you must anticipant and capture that exact moment in maybe 1/500th of a second, more or less. I truly enjoy that challenge. (Hey, let me know your feelings on how you see! Please comment here.)

On Sunday, I’ll start a week of storytelling here on my blog. For seven days, I’ll use my favorite pictures that I took this past April at the Sister’s Meal Festival, which is held each year near the city of Kaili in the Guizhou province of China. It was truly an amazing experience, as well as an incredible photography opportunity, as you will see.

The idea of this weeklong project: When you go to an event, on the other side of the world or on the other side of town, try to “tell the whole story” with your pictures.

Processing Note: All of the photographs you will see were enhanced in Photoshop to some degree. Mostly, I used the Recover feature in Adobe Camera Raw to recover some of the detail in the silver headdresses, as well as the Shadow/Highlight adjustment in Photoshop to open up some of the faces there were in the shadows. These features are a godsend in harsh lighting conditions, as well as when working on images that include highly reflective subjects and objects, as you will see.

Photography Note: All of the pictures were taken with my Canon 5D Mark II cameras and either my Canon 24-105mm IS lens or my 15mm lens. I also used my Canon 580 EX for some of the photographs.

I was in the province of Guizhou for two weeks leading one of my photography workshops. The Sister’s Meal Festival, a gathering of Miao women in search of a husband, was one of the highlights. I’ll share some of my other images and stories from the trip in other posts – starting right now.

Today, as a prelude to my people pictures, I’ll share one of my favorite people pictures that I took after the festival in Tianlong, a nearby ancient garrison town where we also saw the Grand Opera.

Like many of my travel portraits, this is a set-up shot. However, it does not look like a set-up shot – which is the key to a good environmental portrait.

We spotted this man smoking his pipe in his home and asked him if we could take his picture. He said okay.

Before we started shooting, we asked him if he could sit down and move closer to the door to this home so that we had nice light illuminating his face.

We chose a shooting position so that the background was much darker than the subject.

We crouched down and shot eye-to-eye, which makes the viewer of a photograph identify with the subject.

Finally, we used our wide-angle lenses so that we could shoot close: the closer you are to the subject, the more intimate the portrait becomes.

Shoot me an email if you are interested in joining my 2011 China workshops. I will have some guest pros leading some workshops, too. Email me: Rick Sammon at mac.com

Want more travel photo info? My current app, 24/7 Photo Buffet, offers a wealth of photo tips for photographers on the go – even HDR photographers.

Explore the light,
Rick
P.S. Okay! Here is a sneak peek at the Sister’s Meal Festival.

Photograph © Rick Sammon. All rights reserved.
Canon 5D Mark II. Canon 15mm lens.

"Social Media Marketing for Photographers" App Now Available!

NOTE: I am adding this short note after a few folks asked about using the free codes. Here is quick-how to.. for the next time we offer free codes. We gave away more than a dozen codes today on different sites! Also: Redeem is also available on the mobile version of iTunes. Once in the "App Store" application on your iPhone, select "Featured" and scroll to the very bottom.


• • •

Today, Social Media Marketing is marketing. Now, more than ever, photographers, as well as all those involved in all creative endeavors, need to market their work, locally, nationally and internationally. That’s the focus of my new and comprehensive app: Rick Sammon's Social Media Marketing for Photographers.

This app, basically a short course on the business side of photography, is a set of five Quick Time movies, narrated and illustrated with original pictures by . . . me!
This app was co-developed by Juan Pons, the co-founder, along with yours truly, of the Digital Photo Experience.

Social Media Marketing for Photographers is my second app. My first app, co-developed with Dr. Dave Wilson, is Rick Sammon's 24/7 Photo Buffet. This app is basically an e-book - with text/photos/videos - that you have in your pocket, 24/7. It was a Staff Pick on the iTunes store for several months.

Social Media Marketing for Photographers is an audio/video recording of my Keynote presentation, which I presented at the Palm Springs Photo Festival, on social media marketing. It's like taking a private 1.5-hour lesson on this all-important subject.

Hey! If this stuff works for me, it can work for you!


Movie times:
Part 1 – 24 minutes
Part 2 – 26 minutes
Part 3 – 17 minutes
Part 4 – 12 minutes
Part 5 – 11 minutes
Total: 90 minutes.

I recommend that you watch the movies in order to get the most out of the app.

Also: read the Read Me page before you get going.

I cover social media marketing tools such as Twitter, Tweetdeck, Google Analytics, Quitter and more. I try to get you to think about marketing your work daily. I also touch on traditional book publishing and apps.

In addition, I have included a few of my favorite photography techniques - because after all, you are, first and foremost, a photographer. Right?

The app is packed with marketing tips illustrated with my photographs that actually relate to the tips. I feel that this approach makes learning fun. So, you will find more photographs that charts and graphs in this app.

I have also included some of my favorite photography tips, and a few pages from my book, Life Lessons We Can Learn From Mother Nature.

To celebrate this app, I am giving away eight codes! Grab one while you can:

W6T63MXX77Y6
3A4KLL7AYJRY
963WREAMRFA9
PJKT66XHEF97
YWTL3TEWWPLX
4LY9YM7XYF44
FLK99A7YT73E
NJ9TLE7WTML4

To order the app, go to iTunes and type in Rick Sammon in the Search Window.

Explore the light - and explore social media marketing and grow your business!
Rick

P.S. From 1980 to 1990, I was the Vice-President, Group Supervisor on the Minolta camera account at Bozell & Jacobs - one of the largest agencies in the world at the time. I still use some of the same marketing techniques that I used way back then. However, no more suit and tie for me!

People Photography Week – Saturday

This week will be devoted to people photography – by popular request on twitter. Wildlife photography was the second choice. Over at DPE, my friend Juan Pons is offering a week of wildlife photography tips. So you get the best of both worlds!

I took all the photographs for this week’s blog posts on a workshop in Venice, Italy organized by VSP Workshops.


Saturday’s Tip: Dead Center is Deadly. Position the subject off-center for a more creative photography. When you do that, when someone looks at your picture, their eyes will move around the picture looking for other elements in the scene – rather than getting stuck on the subject.

Canon 1Ds Mark III
Lens: Canon 24-105mm IS.

For more tips on people pictures, see my book, Face to Face.

Explore the light - and people photography,
Rick

People Photography Week – Friday

This week will be devoted to people photography – by popular request on twitter. Wildlife photography was the second choice. Over at DPE, my friend Juan Pons is offering a week of wildlife photography tips. So you get the best of both worlds!

I took all the photographs for this week’s blog posts on a workshop in Venice, Italy organized by VSP Workshops.

Friday’s Tip: Be aware of the background. Always keep in mind that the background can make or break the photograph. Want it in focus? Use a wide-angle lens and a small aperture. Want it out of focus? Use a telephoto lens set at a wide aperture.

Also try to isolate the subject’s head – so background elements don’t distract the viewer’s attention from the most important part of the picture.

Canon 1Ds Mark III
Lens: Canon 24-105mm IS.

For more tips on people pictures, see my book, Face to Face.

Explore the light - and people photography,
Rick

People Photography Week – Thursday

This week will be devoted to people photography – by popular request on twitter. Wildlife photography was the second choice. Over at DPE, my friend Juan Pons is offering a week of wildlife photography tips. So you get the best of both worlds!

I took all the photographs for this week’s blog posts on a workshop in Venice, Italy organized by VSP Workshops.

Thursday’s Tip: Shoot with your shutter speed in mind. Blur or freeze the subject with the correct shutter speed. The choice is yours.

For the previous photographs in this week's posts, I used a fast shutter speed or a flash to freeze the action. For this photograph, I used a shutter speed of 1/15th of a second to blur the action.

Canon 1Ds Mark III
Lens: Canon 24-105mm IS.

For more tips on people pictures, see my book, Face to Face.

Explore the light - and people photography,
Rick