There are three things to remember about photography. A photographer is a story teller, the same way a filmmaker or a painter is a story teller. Here are the facts: not all stories are worth telling, not all storytellers are equal, and no storyteller can tell all stories equally well.
The first concerns the subject to be photographed. Think of a filmmaker seeking the subject of his next film. Some stories he finds would be captivating, others utterly boring, and the rest somewhere in between.
The second concerns the photographer. It’s about how skilled the artist can be when he's in his element and at his best. Does he have the requisite skill to tell a great story well? The painter has to know what to do with the canvas and the paint. Some are skilled, others are not, and there’s a whole slew in between.
The third is related to the second and the first, but a completely separate point. This one concerns theme – an area many don’t really think about. A filmmaker might be great at making a particular kind of film, and horrible when he tries his hand at another genre. This is true in every form of art. A good artist has his or her forté, and the truth is that a genius at landscape photography might be mediocre at weddings – and vice versa.
To me, each of those points is subjective. I believe that any story can be captivatingly told, if it fits within the area of competence of a truly skilled storyteller. But that’s the issue! It’s important to realize that the magic happens when all three aspects come together.
The first concerns the subject to be photographed. Think of a filmmaker seeking the subject of his next film. Some stories he finds would be captivating, others utterly boring, and the rest somewhere in between.
The second concerns the photographer. It’s about how skilled the artist can be when he's in his element and at his best. Does he have the requisite skill to tell a great story well? The painter has to know what to do with the canvas and the paint. Some are skilled, others are not, and there’s a whole slew in between.
The third is related to the second and the first, but a completely separate point. This one concerns theme – an area many don’t really think about. A filmmaker might be great at making a particular kind of film, and horrible when he tries his hand at another genre. This is true in every form of art. A good artist has his or her forté, and the truth is that a genius at landscape photography might be mediocre at weddings – and vice versa.
To me, each of those points is subjective. I believe that any story can be captivatingly told, if it fits within the area of competence of a truly skilled storyteller. But that’s the issue! It’s important to realize that the magic happens when all three aspects come together.
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What about me? I show up at events lugging a backpack, a Pelican case, and sometimes a Tuffpak. I want to run about shooting everything. I want real emotion and I have to fight getting flustered when I have to be stiff and formal. I do not really have a checklist of poses, I just want to tell a story, and I need a compelling story to tell.
When I pack my cleaned and checked equipment and head to the airport, I know what I have to do and how to do it. What I don’t know is how, exactly, it’s going to get done, and that is what my clients have to give me – the opportunity to give them the kind of images they’ll cherish for a lifetime. I need to be free to work.
It’s like baking a cake. No matter how talented a chef you are, you’ve gotta have the right ingredients.
So I try to screen my clients as much as they screen me. Now, I do work for some resorts and I never get to meet the clients until the wedding day itself. I reason that it takes a certain kind of personality to want to get married at a beach resort in the first place. So, in all cases the result is good, and in some cases, spectacular!
I went to Disney World for my tenth anniversary. We tried to pack as much as we could into a three day blitz of the place, and with the help of our experienced friends, we got most of it done. It was quite a feat, but we essentially saw Disney World in three days. The thing is, I do not know when I'll be going again, and it had to be considered a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity.
I wish every couple would look at their wedding day in the same way. I wish that they'll resolve that they'll never pass this way again and give it their best shot. A few inconveniences here and there will be forgotten, but your pictures are "forever". Hire some talent, throw yourself into the affair, and let the story be told!
What about me? I show up at events lugging a backpack, a Pelican case, and sometimes a Tuffpak. I want to run about shooting everything. I want real emotion and I have to fight getting flustered when I have to be stiff and formal. I do not really have a checklist of poses, I just want to tell a story, and I need a compelling story to tell.
When I pack my cleaned and checked equipment and head to the airport, I know what I have to do and how to do it. What I don’t know is how, exactly, it’s going to get done, and that is what my clients have to give me – the opportunity to give them the kind of images they’ll cherish for a lifetime. I need to be free to work.
It’s like baking a cake. No matter how talented a chef you are, you’ve gotta have the right ingredients.
So I try to screen my clients as much as they screen me. Now, I do work for some resorts and I never get to meet the clients until the wedding day itself. I reason that it takes a certain kind of personality to want to get married at a beach resort in the first place. So, in all cases the result is good, and in some cases, spectacular!
I went to Disney World for my tenth anniversary. We tried to pack as much as we could into a three day blitz of the place, and with the help of our experienced friends, we got most of it done. It was quite a feat, but we essentially saw Disney World in three days. The thing is, I do not know when I'll be going again, and it had to be considered a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity.
I wish every couple would look at their wedding day in the same way. I wish that they'll resolve that they'll never pass this way again and give it their best shot. A few inconveniences here and there will be forgotten, but your pictures are "forever". Hire some talent, throw yourself into the affair, and let the story be told!