Friday, August 21, 2009

GreenPeas


I had an assignment to shoot some panhandlers for a story that was talkinig about a proposed city ordinance that would make aggressive panhandling illegal. This would also include some canvassers. Greenpeace was mentioned so I sought out a GreenPeace canvasser. His name was Brent and it turns out that Greenpeace has a policy against allowing their employees to be in a photo unless otherwise authorized by Greenpeace. So this kid got fired because of my photo. Dang. I felt awful. Today they reversed their decision. I get the sinking suspicion in might be because the WW was asking around about it and they didn't want the bad PR.

Shooting Monkeys


Then Monday morning I was off shooting monkeys. They've got about 4200 macaques of different species. Pretty cool. I had a really hard time shooting anything that didn't look like a Simian Auschwitz photo and that's really unfortunate. Aside from the medical testing, these little guys seem to be really well taken care of. Also we had to stay about 15-20 feet away from the cages so we didn't infect them with Tuberculosis or other pathogens, assuming we were carriers.

What a wonderful day in the neighborhood....



This week started off with a pretty fun story. I shot a soap box derby team getting ready for their race(which happens this Saturday on Mt. Tabor. I'll be there shooting, don't you worry your pretty little head over that!). The team name is Mother Pluckers. Here are some of my photos.

For the above portrait I have a single monolight(AB800) on camera right firing at full power to overpower the harsh 1pm sunlight.

Sunday, August 9, 2009


Wednesday, August 5, 2009

Busted Fareless Square


Last week I was assigned to shoot some photos featuring Busted magazine, which shows mugshots from around the Portland area(but it's also a national publication so you can find the convicts wherever you are!). Initially kind of a boring assignment right? Brittany Moody(a design intern at WW) initially posed for some 'anonymous reader' pictures but I needed something more. I asked a few different people to pose like they were reading it. I also put it into a newsstand at the Lovejoy Market. I like this one the best(and I'm glad the ADs did too). His name is Casey Enns and he was waiting for the street car when I showed up. It was about 101 degrees that day, terrible weather and light. I think this was probably around 1-2pm. I was trying to focus on the magazine so I hit it with a full power burst from my sb-600 on hi-speed sync and then brought the ambient down, this also really brought out the colors in his shirt and the sky which I'm stoked for. I wish this would have run in color but it looks pretty good in BW too. For what could have been a scanned in copy of Busted, I think this adds something to the page even in BW. It might be posed and maybe not the most journalistic photo, but essentially Casey is a prop for the real subject of the photo and so in that way I'm okay with posing him.

Yesterday, I was running a bit late and got a call from Tom Humphrey saying they had a story for me to shoot if I wanted. It was about how Tri-Met is going to cut buses from the. Fareless Square Service, beginning in January(here's the story). Again, not a terribly exciting visual right? I got my bread and butter shot of two buses and a bicycle, with heavy pedestrian traffic somewhere on 5th. It would've told the story just fine, but didn't really add anything visually. Then I got some panning photos of buses, but they were just bus pictures kinda neat but nothing terribly special. I had 10 minutes to get the shot I wanted and walk 8 blocks back to my car before the parking meter expired. I was looking for a parking structure that had windows looking out over 5th or 6th Avenue, easy. But the view from the street couldn't be obscured by trees, ruh roh this might be a bit more difficult. I found a decent spot at the Metropolitan Garage on 5th and Taylor, 6 floors up, with lots of windows and a really cool old elevator with a gate instead of the solid doors so you can see the inside of the elevator shaft as you're going up.



I got up there and I had my tripod but it wasn't able to lean far enough out over the ledge to get the view I wanted so I super clamped the camera to the railing (initially I wanted to use ND gels to allow for a blur in the people, buses, cars and keep all the buildings and signs sharp). I thought the ND blurred shots were pretty cool and showed the story better than an image with a sharp bus. I thought that blurring out the busses into soft blobs(still very recognizable blobs) would underline the fact that something about downtown bus service is changing.

Either way though, I was very happy to try some high angle/aerial stuff. I don't know why but I love aerial photos. Even from this low height, but if I could have been another 100 feet in the air, directly above the streets/buses, everything that would have been amazing. I really hope my kite is able to lift this my video camera when the winds pick up this fall. It feels a bit lighter than the P&S camera I was using(which was way way way too heavy for this kite).

Gonna try to do a multimedia story on Chess players this weekend and hopefully will also get some athlete portraits done as well!