Professional Photographer - December 2014 UK

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&

DECEMBER 2014 4.20


for professionals, by professionals
www.professionalphotographer.co.uk

Zhou gets Google:


Architectural Ar t

DECEMBER 2014

BUSINESS:
+ Google
Analytics
Explained
+ Procrastination
Solved
+ Tax Return
Secrets

GEAR:
+ Nikon D750
+ Drones
The Future?
+ REDs 6K
Camera
ARCHIVES:
Bob Carlos Clarkes
Life on the Edge

Magic Mike actor Matthew


Bomer by Brian Bowen Smith.

48
-p IN
ag S
Ed e T ID
Sp uca urn E:
ec tio ing
ia n P
l
ro

PROFESSIONAL PHOTOGRAPHER

Taylor Wessing
Prize Winners

CELEBRITY HITS
& HERB RITTS:
Brian Bowen Smith

contributors

KATE HOPEWELL-SMITH

welcome
december 2014

TAY KAY CHIN

CRAIG FLEMING

RICHARD CORMAN

BRIAN BOWEN SMITH

EDMOND TERAKOPIAN

ADAM AIKEN

BRODIE MCINTOSH

FRONT COVER: BRIAN BOWEN SMITH THIS IMAGE: CONNIE ZHOU

KEVIN MULLINS

So, another bumper issue from the PP team here, with the inclusion of the 48-page
Turning Pro section, this time concentrating on education in the photo sector, from
university courses to workshops and further education channels. We interview Holly
Wren who has graduated through The Princes Trust, and is now one of their
ambassadors. We also take a closer look at some professionals in their first year to
see what we can learn from their experiences so far.
In the main magazine we have an eclectic mix, starting with the Taylor Wessing Portrait prize winner
and runners-up. We have a Big Interview with ex Friends actor turned pro celebrity portrait
photographer, Brian Bowen Smith. There is no doubt he has made the right move to now work behind
the camera.
Drones. No, not the military type but those remote control platforms for loading a 4k CSC or DSLR
to. We take a closer look at their development and how they are being used by pros to make money
around the country.
If you have a passion for fine art and architecture, Connie Zhous Working Pro feature will have you
gagging for your remote release and tripod. Boy has she got talent.
We have an in-depth review by a professional wedding photographer on the Nikon D750; the camera
is really taken to task by Ross Harvey and makes good reading.
In our art section, we interview a Dutch photographer who has shot a project photographing
clouds... yes, actual clouds, inside buildings! Clever stuff.
And our regular columnist Craig Fleming interviews Bob Carlos Clarkes widow about the man and
how his influence is still felt eight years after his death.
We have our regular business advisors and columnists, though you will see a new name, Richard
Corman, among the ranks he shares his experiences in his new regular letter from America.

CONNIE ZHOU

Adam Scorey, Editor, [email protected]

ROSS HARVEY

PP online
Visit www.professionalphotographer.co.uk for up-to date news,
reviews and comments, as well access to PPs apps and e-zines.

BERNDNAUT SMILDE

@prophotomag

Pro Photo Mag

+ProfessionalphotographerCoUk

48 page special

contents
we talk to...

EDUCATION SPECIAL

www.turningpromag.com

80 Big Interview: Brian Bowen Smith

MY
FIRST
YEAR

From Herb Ritts to Jennifer Aniston, Brian recounts his


colourful career to Will Roberts.

Motorsport
& Portraits

113 Working Pro: Connie Zhou


Architecture photographer Connie Zhou talks
skyscrapers, success and capturing the working heart
of the Google enterprise.

133 Art: Berndnaut Smilde

TRUST
IN THE
PRINCES
TRUST

Pixie Lott
by Holly Wren

Visual artist Berndnaut discusses his recent project


creating an indoor climate complete with clouds.

Lindsey Carlos Clarke and Ghislain Pascal remember a


late husband and friends life on the edge.

ACCREDITATION
EXPLAINED

business...

WORKSHOP
WONDERS

Starting on page 31, this months PP includes a


48-page special of Turning Pro our guide for
photographers starting out in the industry including
business advice, inspiration and training tips.

103 Personal Finance: Tax Return


Adam Aiken uncovers what you can claim for, in order
to reduce that tax bill.

104 Marketing: Google Analytics


Brodie McIntosh sheds some light on web statistics and
how to ensure youre engaging visitors from the
word go.

gear

106 Kevin Mullins

91 TIPA Survey

Kevin ponders procrastination and upping his game to


meet changes in the wedding industry.

Its that time again. The annual TIPA survey is here to


find out about your photography habits.

95 Dronography
Are the skies set to darken with their shadow? Edmond
Terakopian explores the future of the drone.

120 Whats Hot


We check out the RED Epic DRAGON 6k camera.

122 In the Frame


Adam Scorey takes a look at the high-end framing
option, on offer from One Vision Imaging.

113

125 Review: Nikon D750


A worthy opponent for the D3S? Wedding photographer
Ross Harvey puts the new Nikon through its paces.

HOLLY WREN

139 Archive: Bob Carlos Clarke

CONNIE ZHOU

THE DEGREE
DILEMMA

KATE H

MITH
L-S

EWEL
OP

An industry epidemic
KATE HOPEWELL-SMITH indentifies the epidemic thats photographers crises of confidence

P
8

hotographers sickness. That is what I am going to


and if Im totally honest, I had no idea what I didnt know. I solved
talk about this month, and I use the word epidemic
this problem by getting training and learning to control light, which
because it translates to mean extremely prevalent;
increased my confidence hugely. I talk about photography being like
widespread. From my experience of meeting and
an enormous jigsaw puzzle and each piece of the puzzle being a
communicating with lots of photographers, there is a serious
nugget of knowledge. Every time I learnt something new, the puzzle
problem out there surrounding confidence, which for some can
became more complete and, in parallel, my confidence built.
become quite debilitating.
At this point I am going to emphasise the fact that you have a
I thought that the December issue offered a good opportunity to
choice here. You may be someone who hates the technical aspects
tackle this subject we are all at the end of another year and
of photography and find you get the results you want without really
staring into the promise of the one ahead. Or maybe some of you
knowing how or why. This is absolutely fine, as long as you are not
are seriously considering whether to carry on or not? I read a lot of
taking on commissions that will expose your lack of knowledge. A
photography magazines but I cant recall ever reading an article
very simple example is that of winter weddings to do a low light
that openly discusses the confidence issues that plague
celebration justice, you need the right kit and you need to know how
photographers. Yet one brief post from me on Facebook recently
to use it. The benefit of training means that I can now walk into any
demonstrated, quite clearly, that people are
scenario (within my niche of lifestyle) with the
not only happy to talk about it, but need to.
confidence of knowing that I can deliver strong
Becoming a full-time photographer is often
imagery maybe not my best, but certainly of a
a shift from living a dream inside your head to
high enough standard for my clients.
something that others can see. It is often at
Practice there is no substitute for hard work.
this point that the doubts and fears begin to
Knowledge should help liberate you and allow
take hold the kind of thoughts that are
you to make pictures that you love. But only with
telling you that you are just not good enough.
some hard graft as, after all, your first 10,000
Im sure we all know that crises of
photographs are your worst according to Henri
confidence are common amongst creatives in
Cartier-Bresson.
all fields. Meryl Streep once said: You can
Be nice to yourself try to forgive your
have a perfectly horrible day where you doubt
mistakes, learn from them and move on. Getting
Henri Cartier-Bresson
your talent or that youre boring and theyre
to this happy place tends to need some serious
going to find out that you dont know what youre doing. She is
work and a plan. A plan will keep you focused and moving in the
talking about a very specific problem fraud fear and I know it is
right direction rather than in a static state listening to the doubting
something that many photographers can identify with. The reality
inner voices. Take the time to sit and identify your weaknesses and
of this insular experience is a horrible feeling of vulnerability which
work out what it is going to take to change the situation. This
can lead to a negative impact on the creative process and the
process alone, the act of recognition and positive action, will make
quality of our work.
you feel so much better about yourself and your business. Trust me.
Now I happen to believe that you become a better photographer
Finally lets consider that our end goal is often to be successful,
the more confident you are, and believe in your ability. Its
but what does that mean? Sometimes it is important to just
complicated, isnt it which comes first, the chicken or the egg? In
remember the reasons why you wanted to do this in the first place.
truth, if you arent able to believe and trust in your abilities then you
You might find that you have been taking on commissions that not
need to address the reasons why. You need to work out what is
only sit outside your comfort zone but are also at odds with what
stopping you becoming the photographer that you want to be.
you most enjoy about the craft of photography. Work out what you
One of the most common problems is constantly comparing
most want to shoot and then skill up to ensure that you can deliver
yourself to other photographers and finding your skills lacking. This
work that you are proud of.
is truly a losing game and you would be far better to focus on you.
So thats another 12 months of columns from me for better or
You can only be the photographer inside you and not a replica of an
for worse. Thank you for reading! I salute you all. Enjoy the
idol. Focus on what you can control and dont lose sleep over the
festivities and good luck with the year ahead.
things that you cant. A few years ago I had started putting myself in
[email protected]
situations where my lack of knowledge could let me down, and I
@Kate_H_S_Photo
www.katehopewellsmith.com
knew it. I was constantly on edge about the stuff that I didnt know

Your first
10,000
photographs
are your
worst.

Something only
booklovers will
understand
Following a sudden turn of events upon his arrival in Sweden, TAY KAY CHIN
recounts how the kindness of a stranger turned disaster into a happy ever after
didnt want to meet anyone who wanted to
talk about photography. The Swede ended
up staying in Santiago, for a decade, as a
social worker.
Jagare thought I was Japanese and it was
not hard to imagine his assumption. It was
both good and bad that he didnt ask if I was
Daid Moriyama. The Japanese master has
a similar style to Petersen, and enjoys a
huge following in Sweden himself. Anders
is very fond of Daid, the bookseller told
me, they are good friends. But Japanese
books are hard to come by in Stockholm.
Whatever I can bring in are usually sold
out instantly.
Jagare wanted to know if I knew Anders
and when I said I didnt but that I had
contemplated paying him a courtesy call, he
egged me on. Go ahead. He is a friendly
chap. He might just be a little busy
printing these days, but you should just
ring his doorbell.
With this, I passed the Jagare test, and
proved to him that I knew the difference
between Frank and Klein.
After telling me that Petersens Soho and
Rome were new books that can be found
easily, Jagare went to his back room to
retrieve a beautiful copy of first edition Caf
Lehmitz, one of Petersens most famous
books. The asking price was 3000 Swedish
Kronors about 300. I wanted the book
badly, but didnt have enough cash to pay.
My friends all offered but I declined,
because it just did not feel right to borrow
more money for something so extravagant.
Jagare was observing me and then made a
most unbelievable offer: If you really like
the book, you can take it first then send me
the money when you return home, he said.

I was touched and told him I would consider


that at lunch.
While walking to the restaurant he had
recommended, I told my friend Samuel that
I would like to leave Stockholm happy, so I
wanted to take up Jagares offer. I reasoned
that this would bring closure and I could
start trusting others again. Sam agreed that
I should and we walked back to the
bookstore. I also decided that perhaps I
should just offer all the cash I had 2400
Kronors and see if he would be willing to
accept that instead of waiting for my
remittance. Jagare suggested that I pay a
small deposit with my cash and pay the rest
later, but he insisted several times that he
would only take my cash if I could afford to,
otherwise, the offer to pay from Singapore
was still valid.
In the end, I gave him 1500 Kronors, and
he asked if I needed a receipt. I reminded
him that I was the one who still owed him.
He shrugged and said it was okay. The only
guarantee he got from me was a name card,
a handshake and a promise to pay.
Did he have to do it? Not really. Jagare
only knew much later about the loss of my
beloved Leica. He had no idea the value of
his kind gesture was way higher than 3000
or 1500 Kronors. It is priceless. I was at
peace now and could finally fly home happy.
Thank you.
www.fotoantikvariat.se/?p=photobooks
www.eastpix.com

www.taykaychin.com
[email protected]
facebook.com/kaychin

ILLUSTRATION: FLEE CIRCUS

10

hen I arrived in
Stockholm in late
September, one of my
big plans was to meet
Anders Petersen, a
Swedish photographer I admire a lot. But
when my bag was stolen along with my
Leica just hours after arriving in Sweden,
that treat for myself had to take a back seat.
Between teaching and dealing with the
administrative hassles of getting the
paperwork, including a 12-hour train ride
from Stockholm to Copenhagen to secure a
document that would allow my safe
passage back to Singapore, I was too
exhausted, both physically and mentally, to
even try to meet my hero. When things
were more settled, I found time to make
two visits to Petersens exhibition at
the Fotografiska: a truly stunning space
for photography.
On my second visit to Stockholm, just
hours before I was to fly home to Singapore,
I journeyed to Fotoantikvariat, a specialist
bookstore in Sdermalm, to see what
Petersen books might be available. Karl-Erik
Jagare, the friendly owner, proudly declared
that the Swedish icon was a personal friend
and a regular at the bookstore. In fact,
Petersen, whose studio was about 20
minutes walk away, had visited just a few
days ago.
Now 75, Jagare is a photographer
himself, and he totally understood what it
was like to be obsessed about a
photographer and his work. In his younger
days, the father of four went to Chile with
the intention of meeting Sergio Larrain, the
famed Chilean photographer I also adored.
But Jagare soon found out that the master

I forgot what my
columns called
Hes not a total scrooge hes bought new gear! But
despite his search for the best deal, has CRAIG
FLEMING lost out again?

I remember

12

buying my first
Macbook some years back. I researched it
online for weeks made sure I was getting
what I needed. Then one Sunday afternoon I
headed off to PC World and bought one. It
wasnt until the Monday morning that I set it
up for the internet and, when I did, Safari
opened up straight to the Apple page, where
they proudly announced the launch of Yup,
you guessed it, a shiny new Macbook.
Annoyed was an understatement. Im not
one of those queuing-up-in-a-sleeping-bagfor-a-week geeks, but pissed off didnt even
begin to cut it. I went back to the store only
to be told they had no idea when Apple
launched things, they just get told that day.
Well, can I swap it? I asked.
Not unless its faulty, is it faulty? he said.
Yes, its got jam on it
Did it have jam on it when you bought it?
Fine
And that was that. I was left to play with my
jam-splattered, obsolete piece of Macbook
alone. So lesson learned.
Last week I ordered a 5D Mark III online.
Yes it was a grey, but any opportunity to
give the Chancellor a middle finger salute
and Im in, plus the saving was huge and I
have a dog to feed. Forty-eight hours later
Calumet dropped the price of the Mark III by
about 200, and also offered a free battery
grip. So if Id waited two days longer, I could
have had it for much the same price as the
grey, and without the risk of the courier
people mistaking my package for a
basketball (that came out wrong), like they
did the last time. So it seems I didnt learn
my lesson at all.
Then again, the Apples and Canons of this
world dont help, and neither do the
rumours.com sites that are giving us
nothing more than something theyve heard
from someone about something that might
be being developed somewhere .

Theres only one reason to try and keep up with the latest cameras, and thats if you
do weddings. Those of you that do will all know Uncle Dick who sidles up to you at
weddings, shooting over your shoulder with a better model than your own and then
delights in telling you so. I only do one a year, and theres an Uncle Dick at every one.
Luckily, next year Im not doing any because they are the domain of the devil a fact
which I might have mentioned before.
What I will be doing next year, though, is running a series of lighting workshops for
fashion. Ive researched other fashion lighting workshops and, unfortunately, I dont
have any of those hand-on-hips, elbows-out, wonky-horizon shots that people tend to
use when advertising fashion lighting workshops. Nor do I have a shot of a girl in her
pants lit from behind a venetian blind, whos applied her makeup with a budget range
B&Q paint roller, but I might shoot some just for marketing purposes. Then again, I
probably wont bother. I do have a joke about a venetian blind though: How do you make
a venetian blind? Well youll need some fine-gauge cord, about 10 metres, and about 30
plastic slats, and a drill. Oh sorry, it wasnt a joke at all! It was an excerpt from my
latest venetian blind workshop. Disclaimer: The previous sentence is not true. Please
dont contact me or the editorial staff of Professional Photographer about booking on a
homemade venetian blind course.
On a recent shoot I asked the team why makeup artists always have better cars than
me. Its not hard I know, but I was told it was because I was tighter than an elephants
leggins. That is fairly true, but the last makeup artist I worked with had a Range Rover
Evoque, and the one before that drove a Mercedes with a roof that disappeared into the
boot at the touch of a button it looked amazing, even though it did bugger up a
birthday cake she was taking to her nephew, which shed forgotten was in there. She
hasnt forgiven me for that, but I still dont see how it was my fault. It seems the
demand for makeup artists is at a peak, so any of you wannabe snappers out there
considering getting into photography, think again. The money is in makeup. Think about
it they just have to turn up, then go home thats it. No retouching for three days after.
Theres nothing, and you get to drive a fancy car. Im seriously considering retraining.
By the time you read this Christmas will, yet again, be but a few sleeps away and the
world will glisten under a blanket of freshly-fallen snow, while children laugh and frolic
to the sound of distant sleigh bells, and deer dance with bear merrily hoof in paw under
a moonlit woodland glade. Or you might just be maxing out your credit card in a
crowded mall thats infested with influenza, whilst shopping for nine hours at a time to
buy things for ungrateful urchins that wont even read the tag and will then cry because
you didnt buy them the 12 D cell batteries it takes to make the thing work. I love
Christmas, in much the same way that I love a urinary tract infection. This year Im
going to give everyone a signed self-portrait of me along with a voucher to get money
off my lighting workshop. Oh, and Ive also bought myself a 50mm f/1.2L series because
Im not a total scrooge wont be an import though, or a basketball. And dont even get
me started on Christmas jumpers.
www.craigfleming.net
@CraigMFleming

letters page
Boudoir photography the subject that has really got you talking this month
Is boudoir photography a positive thing for
both photographers and their clients?

Does boudoir photography objectify or does


it empower its subjects?

Facebook
ESTHER WILD I love working on boudoir. Ive written
about it from my point of view before. Its a personal
choice, so is sharing it. Unfortunately the beauty and soul
captured is often perceived wrongly.

Facebook
CARRIE OSTREKO Why would any woman feel
objectified if she chose to do it? I say empowered!

JOE SPOWAL JR. Just a fancy word for soft porn.


SOUTHBAY IMAGE We say the boudoir portrait
experience is like no other. True intimate expression.

LENA POWER It objectifies, a lot of people can


appreciate the art but the majority of general society
dont even see the art.
ROBERT LEBLANC I think its simply a matter of intent
and consent. An axe can be used to fell a tree or as
a weapon.

Should men shoot boudoir?

14

Twitter
@IAPHOTOGRAPHY_O Art is art. It doesnt matter who
shoots it.

Twitter
@STEVECALDRIDGE Empowerment. Boudoir is all
about the element of suggestion. You can get some really
classy/beautiful shots if done correctly.

@IRIS_MCA Dont see why not. If the sitter is


comfortable and happy for a male to take provocative
images, why not?

@LOVEPHOTO13 I love how my clients react to seeing


themselves! Massive confidence boost!
#boudoir #naturalwomen

MEET
THE
TEAM

Group Editor
Adam Scorey
01242 216090

Deputy Editor
Emma-Lily Pendleton
01242 264767

Art Editor
Rebecca Stead
01242 264764

Features Writer
Daisy McCorgray
01242 211096

Features Writer
Victoria Dovey
01242 264766

Digital Editorial
Apprentice
Charley Yates
01242 214769

Join Catherine Connor, Lakshal Perera, Adam Scorey and Emma-Lily Pendleton in the

LIVE WEBINAR DISCUSSION


3 December 2014 7pm

Advertising Manager
David Lennox
01242 216054

To book your FREE place on the webinar and for further enquiries
email [email protected] or call 01524 782200
Account Manager
Carwyn Rhys-Jones
01242 264778

horizon

We take a quick peek at whats on the line-up for


the photography world this month

Dennis Hopper Double Standard, 1961.

micro trend
Dudeoir

GUY BOURDIN

Following our focus on boudoir last


issue, it turns out that stripping off for a
shoot isnt just for women. Googling
Dudeoir (or Dudoir) Photography
returns a staggering 46,600 results
still a long way from its female
counterpart, Boudoir Photography, at
241,000, but nonetheless, could this
niche genre be the next big thing? Will
you be considering this for your lifestyle
business? Let us know @prophotomag

check it out

Pentax calendar, 1980.

Guy Bourdin: Image Maker


Somerset House, 27 November 15 March 2015
DUNDANIM / SHUTTERSTOCK

16

wish list
Dan Rubin, travel photographer
and Instagrammer
Whats on your wish list?
10 8 Deardorff V8 View Camera,
5 x 4 Linhof Master Technika classic and a Linhof
Technorama 617s III

From Man Rays protg to an iconic image maker in his own right, the
photography of Guy Bourdin is provocative and avant garde. Featuring unseen
notebooks, sketches and paintings plus over 100 colour images, this exhibition
uncovers the vibrant work of an influential figure.
www.somersethouse.org.uk

Why do you want it?


Sure, this is three cameras instead of one, but its my set of equipment Id take
with me on landscape trips wish list item. These are some of the best cameras in
their categories: Id use the Deardorff for black and white; the new Impossible
instant film and the Linhof Master Technika for film and digital; and the
Technorama for proper panoramic film shots. Ill also need a pack mule to haul it.
Instagram.com/danrubin

Premium Photobooks
Professional Photobook Design & Print
The highest quality at unbeatable prices
Incredibly easy online ordering & proong
UK company with fast & friendly service

Visit our brand new website:

WWW.PHOTOPRODUCTIONS.COM

portfolio

special
The winner of the Taylor Wessing Photographic
Portrait Prize has been announced, and this
month were celebrating not just those who
placed, but a selection of shortlisted portraits

19
rganised by Londons National Portrait Gallery and sponsored
by Taylor Wessing, the competition attracts some of the worlds
best contemporary portrait photographers from gifted
amateurs to established professionals.
With famous faces and intimate moments captured, the diversity of styles
reflects the international mix of entrants. The judges selected 60 portraits from
4193 submissions entered by 1793 photographers that will feature in an
exhibition running from 13 November 22 February 2015, at the National Portrait
Gallery, before touring the country.
Sandy Nairne, Director of the National Portrait Gallery, says: The 2014
submissions for the Taylor Wessing Photographic Portrait Prize showed huge
amounts of creative talent and, with thousands of entries, the task of selecting
the shortlist was daunting for the judges. I am very excited about the shortlisted
photographs for this years competition.
Niri Shan, Partner and Business Group Director, Taylor Wessing LLP, says: I
was delighted to be part of the judging panel this year and found the whole
process enlightening, demanding, and, above all, inspirational. The quality of the
work was very high and I particularly enjoyed the variety of the images on show.
Photographers from around the globe had submitted their work, which evidences
the international esteem in which the competition is held. I am very proud that
Taylor Wessing is associated with such a worthy prize, and I hope that visitors to
the exhibition are inspired by the final selection as much as I am.
The Prize was judged from original prints and selected anonymously from the
open competition by Director of the National Portrait Gallery, Sandy Nairne;
Writer, Curator and Contributing Editor to Vogue, Robin Muir; Artist Bettina von
Zwehl; Head of Photographs Collection at the NPG, Phillip Prodger and Partner
and Business Group Director at Taylor Wessing LLP, Niri Shan.
www.npg.org.uk/photoprize

portfolio

first
place

20

First Place

Second Place

Konrad Lars Hastings Titlow by


David Titlow

Skate Girl by Jessica Fulford-Dobson

David Titlow is a London-based photographer


working in fashion and advertising. He has
exhibited widely and has been commissioned
by numerous magazines and newspapers,
including The Guardian, The Sunday Telegraph,
Vice and Vanity Fair. Originally a musician from
Halesworth in Suffolk, Titlow switched to
photography in the early nineties and has since
worked in the industry. His portrait Konrad Lars
Hastings Titlow was captured the morning
after a large midsummer party in Rataryd,
Sweden. It shows his baby son being
introduced to a dog. He says: Everyone was a
bit hazy from the previous days excess my
girlfriend passed our son to the subdued
revellers on the sofa. The composition and
back light was so perfect that I had to capture
the moment.
www.davidtitlow.com

Jessica Fulford-Dobson has worked as a freelance


photographer since 2000. Her photographs have been
widely exhibited throughout Europe and have been
published in The Telegraph Magazine, Vogue and the
Evening Standard. The shortlisted photograph Skate Girl is
from the series The Skate Girls of Kabul, which documents
young Afghan girls who attend the unique NGO Skateistan.
Born out of a small skateboarding school that originated
around an old, disused fountain in Kabul in 2007, Skateistan
now provides education for children, teaching leadership
and cultural awareness. She says of the photographs: With
the Skate Girls of Kabul portraits, I wanted to show these
young Afghan girls with their skateboards within the
liberating environment that Skateistan provides for them. It
is here that for a few hours a week, they are able to have
some semblance of a childhood in a place that is detached
from the war and their working life on the streets. Like so
many other girls across the world, when given the chance
to do something positive that they love, each starts to
discover their own identity and strength, their own
distinctive style and personality.
www.jessicafd.com

taylor wessing portrait prize

21

second
place

portfolio / taylor wessing portrait prize

Third Place
Braian and Ryan by Birgit Pve

third
place
22

Fourth Place
Indecisive Moment by Blerim Racaj
Blerim Racaj is a London-based freelance
photographer. Racaj grew up in Kosovo and
studied Economics before moving to London in
1995. Following the completion of a BTEC
course in Photography at City of Westminster
College in 2004, early photographs from Racajs
ongoing project, entitled Kosovars, were
published in the British Journal of Photography
in 2006. Photographs from the project have
since been exhibited in Italy, Kosovo, Croatia and
the UK. His shortlisted photograph Indecisive
Moment is from a recent and unpublished series
about young Kosovars a project triggered by
the socio-political landscape in Kosovo and high
level of unemployment amongst an increasingly
young population. The photograph was taken at
the base of the National Library, a place chosen
by the sitters as an escape zone. Racaj says:
The photograph signifies that moment in time
infused with uncertainty and vulnerability whilst
knocking on the door of adulthood.
www.blerimracaj.info

fourth
place

Birgit Pve lives and works in Tallinn, Estonia.


She has exhibited in numerous solo and group
exhibitions and has been commissioned by
publications such as The Sunday Times
Magazine, The Washington Post, Der Spiegel
and Ryanair Magazine. Her photograph, Braian
and Ryan, is from the series Double Matters.
Pve was working on the series for a
photography book on twins and triplets living in
Estonia. Pve visited the nine-year-old twin
boys at their great grandmothers house in
Saue, an area of idyllic countryside outside
Tallinn, where she spent a few hours
photographing them in different locations in the
surrounding land.
www.birgitpuve.com

portfolio

24

John Kobal
New Work Award
Chayla at Shul by Laura Pannack
For the third year, this award selects a photographer under the age
of 30. Winner Laura Pannack will receive a cash prize of 4000, to
include undertaking a commission from the gallery to photograph a
sitter connected with the UK film industry. Laura Pannack, who was
born in 1985, is a British social documentary and portrait
photographer, based in London. Her work often involves children
and teenagers and seeks to explore the complex relationship
between subject and photographer.
My father used to let me tip trays in the darkroom. He was a
photographer so from an early age Ive been familiar with
photography, says Laura about her start in photography. I didnt
actually become interested in shooting until studying Fine Art and
trying it out during my foundation course at Central Saint Martins
I was instantly addicted. I realised I could sketch people but with

less frustration, and the more I learnt, the more addicted I became.
Lauras inspiration comes from far and wide in photographic world,
as she explains: I have had and still have so many. There was
never one person who solely inspired me but instead different
books, films, talks, images etc. have always increased my love for
photography. I remember War Photographer by James Nachtwey
being a huge inspiration. Ive been fortunate enough to have
support and mentorship from some incredible people like the
photographer Simon Roberts and Mark Power. Ive also had support
from editors and other professionals.
She relays to us about one of the most outlandish things shes
done: I was briefed to get a shot of a famous lion at London zoo.
The cage was obviously not making my view easy and I wanted to
get a clear shot. I asked to go inside the cage and the attendant
allowed me to go in off the record. He said that he would turn
a blind eye and that I needed to be quick and careful. I didnt
really think about it to be honest, and just popped in for 10
minutes my mum wasnt too impressed when she asked how
my day went though!
www.laurapannack.com

taylor wessing portrait prize

shortlisted images

25

Top, clockwise: Jamila as her mum Olivia from the series The
Inheritance Project, by Hayley Benoit; M, P &JJ by Zed
Nelson; Felix by Tracy Howl; Marcus Henry, Meteorological
Station, St Helena Island by Jon Tonks; Arvi from the series
Father and Son, by Sami Parkkinen.

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professional photographer of the year 2014

Congratulations
and Celebrations
We had a wonderful time celebrating at
the Professional Photographer of the
Year Awards and now we have some
thanks and announcements to share

SAM IRVINE MODEL SOPHIE DAINTY

ongratulations are in order, not just to our well


deserved Professional Photographer of the Year
2014, Sam Irvine, but to all of the wonderful winners
and those shortlisted. Great enjoyment has been had
going through all of the entries, which came to us
from all over the world a testament to the reach and prestige of
the Awards. More than anything, we are pleased to see that
photography as a celebrated art form is alive and well. An
enjoyable night was had by all at the awards ceremony on
November 6 in the company of our winners, judges and sponsors,
all of whom we cannot thank enough for a wholly successful
evening and competition.
For those that havent caught our updates online, portraiture and
fashion photographer Sam Irvine from the West Midlands was
judged as our overall winner with his medium format portrait of
model and girlfriend, Sophie Dainty, in The Quiet Room. This image
was taken early on a Sunday morning back in April using my old
Rolleicord TLR, Sam tells us. The light was just perfect, no
preparation was needed, I just had Sophie sit on the bed and fired
off a couple of frames. This was one of those moments peaceful
and still, only the click from the shutter firing that I strive to
capture in my images.
We were struck overall by the intense atmosphere of the image
caused by the beautiful natural light, something Sam was very
conscious of: I have always preferred working with natural light
morning light is just perfect to work with for portraits. The image
was taken on a slow Sunday morning at home the light coming
through the bedroom window was scattered by the trees to the
back of the house so we grabbed the opportunity, dug out a
gorgeous Lipsy dress, and started shooting. No setting up was
needed. The muted colours of the room worked perfectly for the
set-up. I decided to use my Rolleicord, for composition sake, and I
had some Kodak Portra already loaded, which I thought would

27

Professional Photographer of the Year 2014 is Sam Irvine, with The Quiet Room.

render the scene well. For Sam, its entirely exemplary of his style
and flair: Some of my favourite images have been captured in this
way, always impromptu and relaxed. I love the sensuality of the
scene, the sense of peace and tranquillity. Sophie did a fantastic job,
I always find myself wondering, just what is she thinking? A
sentiment we found ourselves in agreement with whilst considering
the winners.
So how does Sam feel, now thats hes secured the prestigious
title? Im elated! he tells us. Its fantastic to know that I must be
doing something right. Having spent the last two years developing
my style and trying to get my images out to a wider audience, I hope
that winning this award will help me find a place to do what I am
most passionate about.

Watch out for the full run of winners and the launch of the 2015
awards in next months Professional Photographer magazine.

new columnist

All the worlds a stage


Time constraints wont suppress creativity, and navety can be the magic ingredient says
New-York based portrait photographer, RICHARD CORMAN, as he reflects on a recent shoot

28

or 30 years Ive had the


remarkable pleasure of
photographing people all over
the world. Some you might
recognise and, others, wonderfully
ordinary. There is definitely a special
group close to my heart; those fiercely
determined young artists who
consistently push boundaries and, if
fortunate, launch themselves in front of
my camera with total abandon. It fires up
my own spirit, where discovery and
relevance rule the day and must be
redefined on a regular basis. My intention
is not to discover the next icon, but to
photograph those individuals whose
image, conviction and destiny is yet to be
determined, whose vitality is contagious
and whose journey is just beginning.
I was asked recently to photograph 27
dancers from the senior class at the
Juilliard School, New York. The school aims
to provide the highest calibre of artistic
education for gifted musicians, dancers, and
actors from around the world, so that they

may achieve their fullest potential as artists, leaders, and global citizens. In testament
to this mission, Juilliard alumni have collectively won more than 105 Grammy Awards,
62 Tony Awards, 47 Emmy Awards, 24 Academy Awards, and 16 Pulitzer Prizes.
Needless to say, I was so flattered to have been asked to photograph these young
prodigies. I have heard many stories of the schools legendary history and the talent
level is dazzling. I was given one day to photograph all 27, which meant that I was able
to spend roughly 15 minutes with each student.
This is rarely an issue, as over my career I have photographed many individuals who
only have minutes to share. I remember in 1986 waiting five days on a movie set in
order to spend five minutes with Paul Newman and Tom Cruise for their advertising
shoot for The Color of Money. On a film set, every minute costs thousands, and every
minute is crucial to the final cut. At that moment, the last thing the production is
concerned with is a photograph that will eventually represent their film all over the
world. In preparation, after choosing a location, I placed two Xs on the floor for Paul and
Tom to stand. I used the fluorescent tubes above the billiards table for lighting in order
to replicate the palate of an old and decrepit billiards hall, before capturing them on a
Hasselblad 500CM with an 80mm lens. I usually compensate for fluorescent light, but
this absolutely recreated the sensibility of the location. Not a moment was wasted once
they stood in front of my camera; they remained in character and leaned on the
billiards table with great swagger and charisma. A few frames later, we were done and
had created a global campaign! This is where understanding your craft and ability to
communicate with others is mandatory.
Fifteen years later, I was given three minutes to photograph Nelson Mandela,
returning to his cell on Robben Island, South Africa, where he had been imprisoned for
17 years. What an emotional return from him and a very long flight from NYC for me,
for a three minute shoot! Of course I would have been happy to do this under ANY
circumstances. Mandela has been my lifelong hero and our brief encounter felt like
eternity. His warmth and humility was immediate as he welcomed me as if we had
known one another for years. Once again, I was prepared in our location; shooting with a
twin lens Rolleiflex 75mm Zeiss Planar f/3.5 lens, I chose to use the daylight filtering in
through his cell window. I had been pre-warned the prior day by his security team that
this 180 seconds would be the maximum amount of time allowed. But that was all it
took to capture Mandelas joy and radiance. Without question, the most memorable
experience of my career. The resulting image has now been donated to the Nelson
Mandela Foundation in Johannesburg, South Africa.
A few weeks ago at Juilliard, the dancers relied on my experience and I on their grace
and navety 15 minutes per subject seemed like more than enough time. It was a
diverse group; every nationality, colour, body type and personality came through the
doors. Some came in soaring with confidence, some absolutely immobilised due to
anxiety, and many others said with a bit of discomfort, they had never done this

RICHARD CORMAN

richard corman

Left: Tom Cruise and Paul Newman on


the set of The Color of Money.

before, to which I responded neither have I, having never before photographed the
Juilliard students we laughed and moved on. What a magical day it was. Im no
magician, but when that twinkle in their eyes is clear, their confidence builds and their
stories become transparent, the photograph gathers the potential to become
memorable this experience never leaves me.
We created a beautiful photography studio in one of Juilliards rehearsal spaces. I
wanted each of these young artists to feel the importance of this moment. We had a
number of Profoto strobe packs and heads firing in sync as we lit our subjects with a
beauty dish, octabank and strip lights; against a classic grey backdrop. I love shooting
with my Canon 5D Mark III without a tripod it allows me to move effortlessly with my
subjects and to create a very fluid atmosphere. My files were captured via Lightroom
onto my Macbook Pro. In this case, it was exciting to photograph and share the images
as we moved forward. It was important for me to collaborate and share the captures
with all the dancers. I think it inspired them and certainly created a cool energy that
they all responded to.
Often at the end of a long day of shooting, I think back at what could have been. My
own feeling of responsibility for those in front of the camera and the high standards I
set for myself, to this day, creates a hint of trepidation. It usually takes a few days for
me to live with the photographs and digest what was captured. In this case, I had 27
individuals relying on my expertise and I on their inexperience. I have felt many times
that knowing less is, in many cases, knowing more! In my case, the photographs I took
earlier in my career had a raw, organic quality that I continue to respond to today. I
encourage myself to enter uncomfortable situations so that this earlier sensibility
remains relevant and not reminiscent. In the case of these young artists, their lack of
know-how allowed us to begin moulding a likeness to them that they are only beginning
to discover.
www.richardcorman.com
@RichardCorman

29

EDUCATION SPECIAL

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MY
FIRST
YEAR

Motorsport
& Portraits

TRUST
IN THE
PRINCES
TRUST

Pixie Lott
by Holly Wren

THE DEGREE
DILEMMA

ACCREDITATION
EXPLAINED

WORKSHOP
WONDERS

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To find out more about the complete range of Samsungs ever growing lens range, go to www.samsung.com/uk

33

Welcome

Contents

35 My First Year
We talk to three photographers about the
challenges and successes of their first
year in business.
38 Charity Photography
Victoria Dovey speaks to Cheryl Johnson,
founder of Rememeber my Baby.
40 Catherine Connor
Inspired by her step daughter, Catherine
discusses how self belief and planning are
key to start-up success.
43 My First Year: The Princes Trust
Holly Wren reveals the benefits of
working with The Princes Trust and why
they have a lot to offer.
49 Off to Uni
Jade Price pin points 10 university courses
to help you decide exactly what and
where to study.
58 Further education
The alternative to university, Charley
Yates gets the low down on A-levels,
BTECs and Foundation degrees.
61 Workshops
Whether its a business workshop,
photography course or even online we
cover 12 of the best.

FRONT COVER: HOLLY WREN THIS PAGE: JOHN BAIKIE

67 Societies and Associations


Is there strength in numbers? We lift the
lid on four of the biggest societies
and associations.
72 Lighting training
We illuminate the top manufacturer-led
lighting workshops.
75 Quirky workshops
Learn outside of your comfort zone.
76 Next Issue!
Want to find out what were busy working
on for the next issue?

I am a true advocate of training and education. I wholeheartedly


believe that it is a fundamental to empowering ones self, in addition
to broadening the mind its the key to self-improvement in any
sphere of work.
So it was with this in mind that I came up with the concept for the content of
this months Turning Pro section, as a way to show that there is more than one
way to skin a cat. You dont have to automatically assume that there is only one
route to improve your photography and business skills. Some people do learn
more effectively in more formal settings rather than simply on the job after
all, it takes a certain type of character to do this while also trying to keep all of
the bills paid.
Largely, we have spoken to people who have actually been through the
training, university course or some of the workshops (including manufacturers
own lighting workshops) we have included in the section. We also have an
interview with Holly Wren, now a full-time lifestyle portrait photographer, and
one who has been through The Princes Trust system and come out of the other
side, now an Ambassador. In addition, we have a guide to some of the very many
associations out there too, mainly to complete the picture.

Adam Scorey, Editor,


Turning Pro [email protected]

Make sure you


visit the new
Turning Pro
website

www.turningpromag.com

35 36 37

My First Year

ROSEMARY WATTS

Where
do I
start?
The route to turning pro is different for everyone theres no right way. Daisy
McCorgray speaks to three photographers as they reflect on their first year in business
ROSEMARY WATTS: THE MASTERS STUDENT

Postgraduate study certainly isnt for everyone, but

a photo book as part of her final MA project. I took a bit of


a chance and got ten extra copies printed up to sell at the
awards evening, remembers Rosie. The gamble paid off, with
Aston Martin asking for a quote for the following years GT4

for sports photographer Rosie Watts, it was the key


to a track-side opportunity with Aston Martin. After

challenge. If youd told me last year Id be shooting for Aston


Martin, I would never have believed you!

hovering on the verge of turning pro for two years


following a BA in Fine Art, Rosie used event photography
work to save for an MA in Photography. I decided that, if I
wanted this as my career, I needed to learn my trade better
to step up and make it happen, she says.
The process proved an invaluable one. It was a challenging
year; going back to assignment writing and pushing well
outside my photography comfort zones, explains Rosie. But
it gave me the time to step off the merry-go-round of work
and concentrate on the genre that I wanted to shoot; sport.
Some of my favourite photos are ones I made during my MA
it was nice to have that time to apply my creativity. Now
at the end of her first year, shooting creatively for herself,
developing the slick, minimalist style that pervades her online
portfolio is something Rosie finds important to continue. I
have a lot of admiration for athletes in any capacity their
passion for what they do. I love getting something different!
Teaming up with two other students proved to be more than
a sharing of talents when Rosie was invited to work on their

While studying, shooting for free for the Gloucestershire


Echo and Citizen newspapers built strong connections and a
portfolio for Rosie. A few months down the line they started
calling me for freelance shifts. Its a fine line though, she
comments: It can be tricky to judge if a freebie will turn out
to give you more work or not.
The biggest challenges were how to approach unfamiliar
situations. Im grateful to have photographer friends
who I can turn to for advice. Occasionally I have a crisis of
confidence, but then I look how far Ive come in one year and
it drives me, she says. This summer has been pretty hectic.
But I have leads on work for the next race season from people
Ive met this summer, and meeting new local businesses as
I work for the newspaper is proving valuable. Her advice
about life in the fast lane for aspiring sports photographers
is simple. Be ready for a lot of work. Make the most of any
opportunities you get you never know what might come
from them.

Aston Martin GT4 project. The resulting stills were turned into

www.rosemarywatts.com

Motorsport and press photographer

PETER ZELEWSKI

35 36 37

Peter Zelewski: The graphic designer


Portrait photographer and PPOTY award winner

Why did you decide to turn pro?


Within my first few years of shooting street
photography, I started to receive positive press for
my work and even managed to sell a few images
to magazines who discovered my work through social media.
Then, out of the blue, a design agency in East London took

How important was winning the 50mm category in our


2013 Professional Photographer of the Year awards?
Winning the award was a huge confidence booster and a
real turning point for my career. I noticed immediately after
receiving the award, that the companies I contacted took
notice and I have no doubt that it helped me to seal a number
of major assignments.

What challenges did you face in your first year?

a shine to my work and asked me to shoot a campaign called


Strand East, sponsored by IKEA. It was my first professional
assignment and an amazing opportunity for me to go out and
do what I loved every weekend, and get paid for it. I knew
that if I was going to progress, I had to take the brave decision
to start up on my own and that is exactly what I did a little
under two years ago.

I was very fortunate in that when I initially set up on my own,


I already had a steady flow of design work from several former

How did you split your time with graphic designing?

How did you market yourself as a photographer?

One week it might completely be design work, and the next


shooting corporate headshots with the weekends spent
invoicing either way, it is great to have the variety in my
creative work, so that I rarely feel in a rut.

I use all the usual social media channels for both


photography and design. But my biggest source of new clients
comes via word of mouth. I meet some amazing people when
I am shooting portraits of strangers, which has acquired me
clients in the form of actor/model headshots, small fashion
shoots and photographing theatrical performances.

Did you consider going full time?


Im happy with my current split between the two fields. I
would be worried that, if I committed myself 100 per cent as a
professional photographer, the creative magic could somehow
fade through the pressures of the business. That is a risk
I am not prepared to take at this stage.

colleagues. With my website and social media presence in


place, I chose to go down the old school route and contact
people directly by telephone. Cold calling is hard work, but
I feel it is the best way to generate new business and to really
get to know clients on a personal basis.

Has the popularity of your People of Soho project


generated business?
Yes, the amount of work I have received from the project still
really amazes me. The most exciting assignment I received via

35 36 37

DANNY CARY

My First Year

Six months in: Danny Cary


After picking up a copy of Turning Pro,
Michigan based Danny was motivated
to pursue the ambition to be a fashion
photographer. It was quite serendipitous
finding Turning Pro on the magazine rack, he says.
Youve been shooting properties to fund your business
how did this come about?
I had never considered it, but a friend of mine told me
there was an estate agent looking for a photographer.
I called him and he hired me. He referred a few other
agents to me and I did a few more properties. Before I
knew it, I had enough to purchase my new camera a
Canon 5D Mark III.

the project was from consumer organisation Which?. I was


briefed to photograph 50 strangers on the streets of London
in five days, following the same look and feel as my Soho
portraits. Although it was very hard work, the project was a
huge success and it was fantastic seeing the final photographs
in the national newspapers and on billboards throughout
the country.

Whats your biggest success from your first year as a


professional photographer?
I think the immediate answer would be that I managed to
financially survive in this competitive industry, to the point
that I am now really looking forward to growing the business
side of things in year two. I have managed to maintain my
high level of photography standards, producing work I am
very proud of whilst still continuing to learn and grow as a
photographer you cant ask for more than that in your
first year!

What other work have you been doing?


A number of professional portraits for people who
have found me via social media. It has been quite the
learning process, as every shoot has been an exercise in
lighting and composition.
Has experience as a talent manager proved helpful?
Yes, the experience working with actors and
models gave me a view into the business side of the
entertainment industry. I learned the best way to
interact with industry people from casting directors to
producers, to the talent on my roster. Most notably, I
discovered the gravity of networking.
Where do you see yourself in a years time?
Once my portfolio is strong enough, I plan to submit it
to ad agencies and fashion magazines. Im aware of the
highly competitive nature, but I have come to realise
that this is what I am truly passionate about. Ideally, I
see myself in New York or Chicago. I would like to make
photography a full-time career and that means being in
a larger fashion market.
www.dannycaryphoto.com

www.peterzelewskiphotography.com

CHERYL JOHNSON

38 39

Remember My Baby
In August of this year, CHERYL JOHNSON set up Remember My Baby an
organisation which gives free photographic sessions to parents of stillborn
babies. Victoria Dovey speaks with her on the challenges shes faced
Could you a tell us a bit about the businesss, and
your, background?

Was this common practice?

There was a similar American charity I had been a member of


since 2007, of which there were about 20 photographers in

take pictures, others wont. With some, you get the medical
photographers in the morgue snap some awful flash

the UK who were left to their own devices. We got together


and decided we wanted to change things; to make it far more

pictures of the babies that make them look worse than they
already do.
My friend went on to have twins later. On her mantel piece
is this Polaroid blown up to a 10 x 8 frame with pictures of
her other children either side. Thats all she ever had and the
quality was shocking. It bugged me for all these years. Our
mission is now to have a photographer attached to every
maternity unit and birthing centre in the country.

widespread and known in the UK. We decided to do our own


thing. That way, we could be registered with the charity
commission which means you can get Gift Aid and apply
for grants.
Ive been a photographer for forever, but in business for
about 10 years. I do mainly family portraiture, so it was a
natural progression to help families like this. Only, instead of
meeting families in happy circumstances, I now meet them on
the worst day of their life.

What inspired you to set up Remember My Baby?


In 1989, a good friend of mine had a stillborn baby on
Christmas Day. Were lucky now that we have bereavement
midwives and so on, but back then there was just one of the
midwives using a Polaroid camera, who took one blurry picture
of her son.

Yes, it was. Even now, in some hospitals the midwives will

What are the services you offer? Are they free?


Yes, everything is for free. Each individual photographer
completely funds themselves. We take pictures of the baby and
hopefully the parents, though sometimes they are reluctant.
We try to encourage them because in the healing and grieving
process, the medical professionals say its beneficial. Generally
were looking at 15-20 minutes maximum, as we try to be as
unobtrusive as possible. Four weeks later, theyll receive a disk
of images. Having that gap helps them move on and its not

38 39

Charity Photography

too raw. All of the pictures are in black and white because its
much more flattering. We do minor tweaks and edit, mostly
because the lips are dark, but we dont want them to not look
like how they were remembered. Some photographers also
offer a DVD slideshow, which can be quite emotive. I normally
ask if people would like a special song. One couple even
wanted an Eminem song, but it meant something to them.
Its all anonymous. We dont promote our own businesses;
we have separate business cards, email addresses thats not
what we do this for. This is my way of giving back instead
of putting in that charity box or monthly direct debiting to
an organisation.

What would you say to photographers considering


giving their time to something like this?
Contact us. Ask questions its not as scary as it seems. People
worry about the emotion. What everyone says though, is that
when you put that camera up to your face, its like a shield.
You go into professional photographer mode. We have a
fantastic support group on Facebook and will always call you
after your first session, to see if you want to talk about it or
vent. We always try to get someone to shadow, so youre not
alone. When you come home or youre looking at pictures,
it might put a lump in your throat or a tear in your eye, but
an hour or so of discomfort or emotion is nothing. I can
give that to somebody, if it helps them. They go to hospital
thinking theyre going to leave with a baby and they leave
with nothing. We give them something. Maybe they put it on
the wall, maybe they look at it once and put it in a drawer.
Everybodys different, but it gives them something to
hold on to.
These people are proud of their babies. Eighty per cent are
the same as newborn shoots. You gauge the atmosphere when
you walk in. If theyre speaking then Ill talk, if theyre silent
then Ill be quiet, but Ill use the babys name and say, Oh
lovely curls, is that from you mum? and they appreciate it.

What are the biggest challenges youve faced?


Being accepted into the hospitals the suspicion. Theyre
quite cynical. We get CRB checked, even though we technically
dont have to, but its jumping through hoops for the hospital,
to give peace of mind. Theres a lot of red tape which is
understandable. When I first started, I actually had a midwife
come up to me and say: Why are you doing this? Whats
in it for you? I was taken aback and she couldnt believe I
would do this for a complete stranger. The next time I went
in I showed her what we do on an iPad, and she became my
biggest advocate. Theyre caring for their patients, at the end
of the day.
Doing a presentation, they say things like, Wow, this is
amazing. Why didnt we know about this before? But sending
an email or phoning, they dont get it. Seventeen babies are
reportedly lost each day this way. Thats a lot of families and
we have had ones we havent been able to reach.

Where do you see the organisation in a


years time?
Right now we have 32 photographers and were angling to
be around the 100 mark within 12 months. Ive been going
to a lot of shows and recruiting, and once our registration
with the charitys commission goes through, well be
looking for volunteers to fund raise, so the photographers
dont have to pay for their own stuff, like business cards.
We earn a living as photographers, but we can also give
back with a gift that is priceless.
www.remembermybaby.org.uk

40 41

Going into business is tough,


says CATHERINE CONNOR, but
with self belief and motivation,
success is yours for the taking

ow ARE you going to make it as a professional


photographer? This question was recently
addressed to my stepdaughter who, after
studying Geography (achieving a 2:1), decided
that the academic life was no longer for her,
as I did. Now she wants to train to become a professional
photographer. She is craving a creative lifestyle, to work
within an industry packed with happiness, celebration and
innovation. Welcome to my world, World Photography.
I have to thank Kay Young, Lisa Aldersley and Jenny
Heyworth for this massive turn and twist of focus! She
watched their world at a distance and it inspired her. She
watched an industry capturing beautiful moments and
celebrations, and simply thought, yep, thats for me!
I have watched her closely, like all mothers would (and
certainly this one, at the helm of the industry). After
recovering from the opening question, she thought with real
intrigue of her next steps and where to head first. Thankfully
she has made a beeline for those with experience. She wants
to be the next Kay, Lisa or Jenny. To achieve this she has to
learn from them; their actions, attitudes and motives. And like
my daughter, by placing your heroes in your radar, you too
can pinpoint what you can learn from them as you build your
business. Watch them with admiration, not envy.
This industry is educated, informed and savvy. Great
photography is crafted from excellence, knowledge and skill. If
my daughter wants to achieve, she has to be the master of her
gear! So she signed up on Getting Started with Photography
followed by a whole list of programs! Then Pinterest, creating
a board packed with photographer tips; she wants to become
the master of her camera. Second, she requested all copies of
Professional Photographer and Turning Pro smart girl. What
I witnessed was all that she had learnt at university being
implemented into her approach to becoming a professional.
She wants to learn professionally.

evidence, of a business in creation. The reason this, or any,


marketplace is packed with businesses that compete with you
is simply because they have to compete to be successful. And
the only way to be a true contender is to perfect yourself,
create a professional business, market it and remember to sell

Naivety will not bring success. We often hear that this


marketplace is over-saturated. But is it really? Or do we have

this is about earning a living in addition to creating


a lifestyle.

a marketplace packed with incredible photographers who


have trained to be the best they can be? What will remove

What is worrying my stepdaughter, already, is the


perception of her age, experience and knowledge. My

questions of doubt for my stepdaughter? Evidence. Real

response was: Its simple. Experience comes with gaining

Have
you got
what it
takes?

40 41

PHIL BARBER AT BARBER PHOTOGRAPHY

Catherine Connor

experience read, listen, shadow, shoot, and shoot some


more, and be trained! Perception is merely that; perception
age should not get in the way of anybody starting out, it
only will if you allow it. Its tough enough to be in business, so
dont create barriers for yourself.
But what might prevent the growth? Confidence and lack
of belief, not just from herself but others too; she has to
guard herself! From a negative voice that might waver her
confidence. From others that may not have the strength and
confidence she has to go into business. And as you read this,

guard yourself of all the things that might hold you back.
What does it take to become a professional photographer?
The harder you work, the luckier you will become. Sweat for
the business you build it and they will come. Make marketing
your friend, never over complicate and keep everything
simple. If you do all this, you cant fail!

www.aspirephotographytraining.co.uk

43 44 45 46 47

HOLLY WREN

The Princes Trust

TRUST IN ME

Not knowing where to start can prove a stumbling block when


setting up in business, but there are people who can help
Daisy McCorgray speaks to HOLLY WREN about The Princes Trust

n the last issue, portrait photographer Holly Wren


revealed the challenges and successes of her rst
year in business. Yet, without the help of The
Princes Trust, would she have told the same story?
Its crazy to try and summarise how different
my life is now from just prior to joining the Trusts
Enterprise Programme, says Holly. I worked in an
ofce job that was destroying my soul, I felt unfullled
and unvalued, and really couldnt see a way out of that.
I wanted to get up in the morning and look forward to
working; I wanted to make money doing something that
didnt feel like work!
Since 1976, The Princes Trust has helped over

programme is free and can offer training, business


planning, mentors and funding to unemployed 18 to
30 year-olds or those working fewer than 16 hours
a week. This all starts with the free, four-day Explore
Enterprise course that anyone meeting the above criteria
can take part in.
You start with taking your business idea and forming
it into a business plan looking at different aspects of
running a business; for example, nance, marketing,
logistics, says Holly. But its important to note that
the Trust cant wave a magic wand and transform any
idea into a money-maker. They read your drafts, ask
questions to challenge your assumptions and help point

80,000 young people become their own boss not just


photographers, but an eclectic range of businesses from

you in the direction you need. They never tell you what
to write though the mentor is very much there to

beauticians and barbers, to magicians and maintenance


rms (renowned-magician Dynamo, and Trunki-founder
Rob Law are Princes Trust success stories). The Enterprise

help you nd solutions and information, to guide you


and pass on their knowledge without giving you the
answers, she says. The aim of the four days is to

HOLLY WREN

43 44 45 46 47

give you a taste of running a business, its very pragmatic and


helps you decide if you want to proceed with your business idea.

Business planning
The process of writing the business plan really gets you to focus
on the most crucial aspects of your idea. It makes you challenge
the assumptions you made, look at the idea in detail and, if
nothing else, it teaches you the value of research, research,
research! says Holly. The more you do, the more questions you
generate, but thats invaluable in gaining knowledge and insight
into your industry and business idea. It can also reveal the ways
your competitors are not maximising opportunities, or that there
is perhaps a niche that hasnt been provided for.
The Princes Trust give a year for those turning pro to complete
their business plan before its presented to the panel. I was
convinced I was going to be the quickest to complete mine and
wanted to rush through it in the end it took me around 10
months and Im really glad it did, says Holly. That time allowed
me to really explore options, test ideas, speak to clients, build my
portfolio and understand the business.

Getting help
For the next step in the process, to apply for a free business
mentor and a low interest loan, candidates are required to pitch
their business idea to a panel. Funding from the Enterprise
programme can include a low interest start-up loan of up to
4000 for a sole trader or up to 5000 for a partnership. The
Princes Trust also offers small start-up business grants in special
circumstances. After that initial introductory course to the
programme, the support Ive had has taken many forms, says
Holly. There is lots of practical support available, from workshops

on writing press releases and mastering Google Analytics, to oneto-one support from specialist mentors. Through this, I had the
opportunity to meet the Marketing Director for British Land and a
Picture Editor from Channel 4. The advice and opportunities were
both generalised business support and niche to photography,
where required. As well as those practical opportunities, I was also
given support and encouragement on a more personal level. I had
an executive at the Trust assigned to me that I could call with any
issues, and who was responsible for keeping in touch and offering
me the help and advice I may have needed.

Meeting her match


With her business plan complete, and loan secured, Holly was
allocated her business mentor who would work with her for the
rst three years. A tough and potentially turbulent time, because
as she points out most businesses fail in the rst three years,
so they are really there for the hardest slog! The Princes Trust
business mentors come from a variety of backgrounds, including
entrepreneurs who want to pass on their experience to the
next generation. My mentor is an entrepreneur who set up his
own recruitment company, and although we are in completely
different industries, we work incredibly well together, says
Holly. Our businesses are similar ages and we both have similar
aspirations and ways of working. We meet around once or twice a
month, but are in contact weekly. We look at my business from a
strategic and logistic perspective working logically to break goals
down into steps and then tasks that I can actively do to get me
there. We also challenge each other often Ill nd myself giving
him advice or offering suggestions about his business where there
are similarities, its often a two way street and that way we both
get a lot out of it!

43 44 45 46 47

The Princes Trust

HOLLY WREN

After that initial introductory course


to the programme, the support Ive
had has taken many forms. There is
lots of practical support available
from workshops on writing press
releases and mastering Google
Analytics, to one-to-one support from
specialist mentors. Holly Wren

43 44 45 46 47

Because my photographs of Will.i.Am


were included in Hello! magazine, I
managed to secure a meeting with
their Picture Editor and Sub Editor
and hopefully, Ill get the opportunity
to photograph for them in the near
future. Holly Wren

It can be hard to motivate yourself when your list of tasks seems


endless compared to the commissioned work you are generating,
but Holly and her mentor have developed a particularly proactive
way of working together. Weekly, we try and do what I like to
term, business circuits, where we establish tasks that can be
done in 90 minutes. They can be anything from writing invoices,
to editing, to putting a bid together or even just ling paperwork.
Then we call each other every 90 minutes, at the end of each
session, to report back. It makes me super productive having
to be accountable every 90 minutes and breaking my work (and
sometimes more mundane tasks I avoid) into bite size chunks.
By the end of the day, I am exhausted but can tick so much off
my list, I often think Ive achieved more in a circuit day than the
entirety of the week!

New opportunities

The Princes Trust has really been a catalyst for the success of my
business, she says. When I met the Picture Editor at Channel 4 he
appraised my website, gave me some insider advice and answered
all the questions Id never be able to ask without looking clueless,
so that was an amazing experience for me. Holly has also
photographed Will.i.Am, Gok Wan, Pixie Lott and a number of
other celebrities as part of commissions shes had through the
Trust. Because my photographs of Will.i.Am were included in
Hello! magazine, I managed to secure a meeting with its Picture
Editor and Sub Editor and hopefully, Ill get the opportunity to
photograph for them in the near future. To me, its completely
surreal; two years ago I would never have dreamed Id be meeting
their Editor with the view being a photographer for them.
Those, like Holly, who successfully complete a programme with
The Princes Trust are able to apply to be a Young Ambassador. I
met the lady who heads up the Young Ambassador programme
when I offered to do some pro-bono work with them; she thought
I would be perfect for the role and encouraged me to apply. Once
Id read about what the YAs do and how they help, I was really
excited about being a part of the programme and applied for the
next intake, for which I was successful.
Its a volunteer role for one year, with new intakes every six

months. There are limited spaces, so I feel very lucky to have been
offered a place with so much great competition applying for
the role.
So how has life changed since Holly chose to set up in business?
Now, most importantly, Im happy. I feel I have a purpose and a
passion for life, because my job really is what I do 99 per cent of
the time, and mostly it doesnt feel like work! she says. I run my
own business, that is building year on year, and am actually paying
my bills. I have the chance to meet amazing people and work with
some incredible brands. It is no exaggeration to say I have literally
reinvented myself. I still nd it weird when people ask what I do
and I get to answer Im a photographer, and I wouldnt be able
to say that without the help from The Princes Trust.
www.hollywren.com
Unemployed young people are encouraged to submit
business ideas at www.princes-trust.org.uk/ideas
With thanks to Sophie Rawlings at The Princes Trust for her
help and information.

HOLLY WREN

Not only has there been a great level of support, but taking part
in the Enterprise Programme has opened other doors for Holly.

43 44 45 46 47

The Princes Trust

Katie Drouet
Suffolk-based wedding photographer,
KATIE DROUET, set up her business
with the help of The Princes Trust
four years ago
TP: Why did you approach The Princes Trust?
KD: I approached the Princes Trust when I was
made redundant from a photography job and
knew they could help me not only with my loan,
but also learning new business skills.
TP: How did they help you?
KD: For me, the business plan was a major aspect I
was yet to do. They really helped me think about
all the key things that I would need in place and
how things would work in a very logical way. It
certainly helped me focus on whether my business
was actually a working model and not just
a dream!
My mentor was a great help to me. He met
me regularly, we reviewed my accounts and he
kept me on track, helping me with any issues met
along the way. This was great, as it can be a bit
overwhelming at rst, running a business alone,
so it felt a lot more secure knowing there was
always someone I could trust and turn to, should
an issue arise.
TP: Would you be in the same position now
without the help of the Trust?
KD: I think I would have still have started my
business, but the loan was a great help with
boosting things at the start and my mentor was
brilliant. I think it helped me progress with things
a lot faster than I would, had I gone it alone.
TP: Where do you see your business in the future?
KD: My business is constantly evolving and
improving as I learn. Its nice to be in the position
to invest in new camera gear and workshops. I

KATIE DROUET

always want to be pushing myself to get better at


what I do, both creatively and in business.
www.kdrouetphotography.co.uk

49 51 52 53 55

Uni Courses

CAUSE FOR A COURSE

DANNI JEZIORSKA

To study or not to study? This is an increasingly difficult


question, and particularly pertinent for professional
photographers. Need you bother? Yes, says our guide to 10
top university courses and we tell you why theyre a worthy
cause in the long run

ith the huge increase in university and college fees in recent years, many
prospective bookworms have been put off by the idea of study altogether.
The decision can be even harder for those wanting to get ahead in
photography, with many asking if an arts subject really necessitates the
financial outlay. We have the answer.
Our guide to 10 top photography courses has whittled down the best of the bunch in terms
of what you get for your time and financial input and, more importantly, how these courses
can actively help you achieve your photographic goals. Sceptical? We heard it straight from the
horses mouths with these shiny success stories from current students and recent graduates.

PORTRAIT & STUDIO LIGHTING

BASIC STUDIO STARTER COURSE

BOUDOIR PHOTOGRAPHER PRIMER COURSE

ART NUDE CREATIVE COURSE

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ALL COURSES AVAILABLE WEEKDAYS & WEEKENDS

I thoroughly enjoyed the course the other evening, The model was charming and I got out of the course
everything I had hoped. From a pleasant and enjoyable experience point of view I cannot make any
suggestions to improve it. You hit the nail on the head with my expectations, but with others you may like
to ask them to give you their expectations on a mail before they arrive and then you can modify to suit.
Gary
The course easily catered for me as a studio beginner. Nothing was taken for granted, without teaching
me how to suck eggs! The model Paul had chosen, was the most patient person on earth and kept
smiling throughout the shoot. At the end of my time I left with a lot of excellent photos and a
condence to carry on with this type of photography.
Sam

WWW.PAULS-STUDIO.CO.UK
[email protected]
07930 462906

STUDIO HIRE MODEL PHOTO SHOOTS STUDIO EVENTS GLAMOUR & NUDE LOCATION GROUP SHOOTS

Model: Bexie Williams

STUDIO ONE TO ONE COURSES AVAILABLE:

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49 51 52 53 55

Uni Courses
London College of Fashion
BA (Hons) Fashion
Photography

University of Gloucestershire
Photojournalism & Documentary
Photography

Duration: Three years full-time


Cost: 9000 per year

Duration: Three years full-time


Cost: 9000 per year

Thinking outside the box this course is


ideal for those who not only hunger for the
glamour of catwalk couture images, but also
for those who like to wear their fashionista
thinking hats, studying advertising campaigns
and creating designer look-books. Students
have the opportunity to take part in industry
collaborations, with recent projects seeing
students work with River Island, Elizabeth Arden,
English National Ballet, and the Richard Young
Gallery. Graduates from this course are
reported to be working successfully across a
broad range of media including fashion, style,
music and advertising.
www.arts.ac.uk

This course blends practical photography and its creative production


with a critical analysis, theoretical studies and self-reflection aiming to
develop creative photographers with an informed narrative potential
of photographic practice.
Core modules include shooting with a perspective, documentary
assignments and a business module on the reflections of real
employability. This course hits hard and fast, moving with the pace
of the real world that a photojournalist has to live in, yet encourages
creative flair within the documentary and narrative side of the
industry, aptly preparing students for employability.
www.glos.ac.uk

Duration: Four years full-time


Cost: 1820 per year for Scottish and EU
students, 9000 per year England, Wales
and Northern Ireland, and 12,720 per year
international students
The course focuses on blending aesthetic and
conceptual thinking with a crisp technological
awareness of the modern world. It uses many
methods of study to push the creative and
academic boundaries of its students, including
seminars, group critiques, field trips, individual
study, project assessments and a chance to
exchange with a sister site in year three at any of
the institutes linked to GSA all over the world.
www.gsa.ac.uk

OLIVER TOOKE

The Glasgow School of Art


BA (Hons) Fine Art
Photography

How I did it OLIVER TOOKE, a Gloucestershire graduate


The greatest outcome of the course is that I have come
away with the ability to appreciate the subtleties of
skillfully editing images together. Today anyone can look
at online tutorials and learn how to use a camera and
figure out the basics of composition, but taking a good photograph
isnt the hard part of photography. Finding a way to make the images
work together effectively is a much greater challenge.
As for the course itself, the lectures were very informative, but I
often found speaking to the lecturers after class and having them edit
my work was the time that was most revealing to me. Since leaving
university I have been selected as one of 18 for the first round of the
IdeasTap Photographic Award 2014 with Magnum Photos, which more
than 800 people enter. The work I entered was my final major project,
which is about Syrian refugees living in Lebanon.
Before going to the University of Gloucestershire I was pretty
clueless about a lot of things; how the world of photography works,
what my photographs were saying, and how to get my work seen.
Going to university has helped me find the entrance to this community
and to feel truly connected.
www.olivertooke.co.uk

49 51 52 53 55

Birkbeck, University of London


MA History of Art with
Photography

Falmouth University BA (Hons) Marine &


Natural History Photography/
Fashion Photography

Duration: Two years part-time or one year full-time


Cost: Part-time UK/EU students: 3475 per year
Full-time UK/EU students: 6250 per year
Part-time overseas students: 6650 per year
Full-time overseas students: 12,975 per year

Duration: Three years full-time


Cost: 9000 per year

Students undertaking this course will be led


through the contextual process of studying art
in the forms of media, photography, film and art
itself. Taking the photography path alongside
the History of Art course encourages students to
take a more academic approach to studying the
movements and developments of photography.
www.bbk.ac.uk

With the campus situated in the idyllic and photographic setting of


Falmouth, Cornwall, the Marine and Natural History Photography
course combines intellectual art with a contextual awareness of
ecosciences, telling the history of the area from both a land and
sea perspective.
Graduates have worked across the globe as a result of the course;
some as part of a team researching turtles in Greece, others embarking
upon expeditions to Borneo, the Amazon and the rainforests of
Ecuador, whilst others have found employment with the BBC, National
Geographic and the RSPB.
www.falmouth.ac.uk

De Montfort University BA
(Hons) Photography and Video
Duration: Three years full-time
Cost: 9000 per year

CHARLOTTE SAMS

Moving with the times, the De Montfort


course explores the convergence of media with
photography and film to set its students up
with the necessary skills and experience to find
employment in a modern technological industry.
Beginning with the traditional film camera
and moving up to the medium of moving film,
the course will give students both hands-on
knowledge in the field as well as contextual
understanding of the effects of the movement
from film to digital. The outcome will be a
graduate who is able to effortlessly blend their
skills across any media platform.
www.dmu.ac.uk

How I did it CHARLOTTE SAMS, a Falmouth graduate


The course was, and is, unique. For those interested in this
field of photography there is no course comparable, it is
one of the only universities in the country, and in Europe
too, to offer a degree in this genre.
For me specifically, the support gained regarding the underwater
side of the course has been extremely beneficial. This is such a
specialist field, and not something it is easy to experiment with, given
the expense of all the equipment needed. Through contacts made
through a photography trip on the course, I was recommended for
a commission with WWF UK last June. I still have a lot to learn, and I
look forward to that, but I feel that I have a strong basis of knowledge
that will help me begin my career in this industry.
www.charlottesams.com

49 51 52 53 55

Uni Courses
Norwich University of the Arts BA (Hons)
Photography

Blackpool and The Fylde


College BA (Hons)
Photography

Duration: Three years full-time


Cost: 9000 per year for home students, 12,000 for
international students

Duration: Three years full-time


Cost: 7500 per year

Promoting itself as a leader in advertising, editorial and fashion


photography, Norwich has a lot to offer. With an important business
angle, the course includes how to understand your clients and their
importance, marketing yourself and communicating to an audience.
The course includes all the vital up-to-date knowledge on industry
issues such as copyright laws and client expectations. Students are said
to leave with a full professional body of work to set them up perfectly
for the transition from student to graduate with intent to be employed
in an already competitive industry.
www.nua.ac.uk

Guidance and encouragement are key principles


of this course, aiming to develop the practical
side of students photographic work with
seminars and hands-on practice working in
darkrooms and kit handling, whilst expanding the
creative thought process during shoot planning.
The course rounds off nicely with business
and presentations in the final year; building a
body of work, looking at how to market it and
taking on the task of professionally presenting
work in exhibitions.
www.blackpool.ac.uk

University of Derby BA
(Hons) Photography
Duration: Three years full-time
Cost: 9000 per year

and others as teachers, curators and critics in


the industry.
www.derby.ac.uk

DANNI JEZIORSKA

University of Derby easily meets the mark with


state of the art darkrooms, film processing
facilities, digital suites, studios and an extensive
equipment store for all its students. The course
is filled with high-profile guest lecturers, group
critique sessions, regular visits to galleries and
many technical workshops.
Successful graduates have made careers for
themselves as commercial photographers,
picture editors, news and sports photographers

What Ive learnt Danni Jeziorska, a third year


student at NUA
The course offered a variety of taught and practical options
to help with evolving my chosen career path and excelling
in this. In particular, the fully equipped onsite studios
and the opportunity to hire out a range of professional
equipment are all essential facilities to make use of. I am aware that
not all universities are able to provide such facilities.
This course has taught me that I need to go out there and be
proactive in finding a team that I can work with sourcing models,
makeup artists, hair stylists, locations and so on. Its simply not a case
of just attending daily lectures; you need to push yourself to achieve
your goals and visions.
www.danni-jeziorska.co.uk

Lana Dumitru Ion Paciu

Revisiting
Romania:
Portraits from London
4 October 2014 8 March 2015

Free exhibition
horniman.ac.uk
Forest Hill

55

Uni Courses
Open College of the Arts an online only
degree course
Duration: With part-time study, students normally take 4-5 years to
complete their degree
Cost: 8105 for the full degree, paid in instalments
If youre looking to fit study around the rest of your life, then an
online course could be just the thing for you. The OCA enables
students to take as many courses, studied in levels, as they wish
perfect for personal development as a photographer, or together
towards a BA (Hons) degree.
The aim of the online course is to progress the creative identity of
the budding photographer through both an academic and practicebased approach. Students can expect to learn the contextual history of
photography, ethical procedures and creative expression.
www.oca-uk.com

NCTJ

JOHN UMNEY

The National Council for the Training of


Journalists (NCTJ) offers accreditation for press
photographers, photojournalists and other
branches of journalism. A lot of employers in
this industry will ask for an NCTJ diploma as
a job requirement. Though this is becoming
less common in recent years, estimates still
maintain that as much as 73 per cent of all
sectors of media are NCTJ trained. The diploma
will normally take the form of a 22 week
intensive course or is included as part of many
undergraduate and postgraduate degrees.
Practical and classroom-based experience should
help prepare you for the world of employment,
and provide you with the necessary skills to be
confident and successful in your field.

What Im doing John Umney OCA Level 2 student


TP: Why did you choose this course? And what made an
online course more appealing?
JU: I had been an amateur photographer for nearly 30 years
and despite being published and exhibited, I had a desire to
develop a firmer foundation to the artistic and professional side of my
practice. The OCA provided an extremely flexible approach to higher
level education and I was able, initially whilst still engaged with my
career, to mix both.

Does it have the tick?

that students who do reach out are generally more likely to find
like-minded students.

One thing to consider when choosing a


university course is whether it has the Creative
Skill Set Tick. You can search for courses
according to a number of criteria via the
Creative Skill Set website and theyve teamed
up with a number of societies and associations
to tell you which ones have their quality mark
of approval. Courses are subject to rigorous
assessment by experts, ranging from how the
university prepares students for work to courses
with strong industry links. Whilst its not the
only criteria to pick your course on, its certainly

www.johnumney.co.uk

something to think about

TP: Do you feel you may have missed out on anything by taking an
online course?
JU: Open-enrolment for distance-learners denies the ready availability
of a natural cohort structure and it cannot be denied that not
having an instant set of associates can be a drawback. The upside is

57

Make sure you visit the new Turning Pro website

www.turningpromag.com
Enjoy Professional
Photographer every
month in the format of

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Zhou gets Google:
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GO FURTHER
Whether youre 16-18 or a mature student,
we take a look at the alternative routes to
take your education further with A-levels,
BTECs and Foundation Degree Courses

ach course route offers the student a different learning approach,


so there is a lot to consider when choosing the right course for
you. A-levels lean toward the academic side of education, whilst
BTEC courses are more vocational. Luckily, many colleges across
the country offer photography courses that you can sink your
teeth into, making it easy to enrol and take that next step! Go along to the
open days to ensure a smart decision and really get a feel for what youd
be signing up for.
Weve highlighted some courses and options for your consideration that
could really develop you as a photographer.

58 59

Further Education

BTECS
BTEC Level 3 Extended Diploma in
Photography at Plymouth College of Art
Plymouth College of Art offers you an opportunity to hone
your photography skills inside one of the regions
best resourced photography facilities. Right from the
beginning youll get stuck in with this course, taking
photographs with the aim of understanding the importance
of line, tone, colour, shape, pattern and surface structure. You
will learn the ins and outs of both film and digital cameras,
mastering techniques from both eras of photography as well
as delving into the historical and cultural factors that have
influenced the industry and photographers in the images
they make. The course is to be completed over two years
and alongside, you are encouraged to fine-tune your basic
Mathematics and English skills in preparation for higher
education and employment.
www.plymouthart.ac.uk

BTEC National Diploma in Photography at


Kensington and Chelsea College
This course is led by six course leaders, making sure youre
getting a rounded and inspiring learning approach. Being
a full-time course, there is plenty of time to explore every
aspect of photography. In the first four weeks, you will look
into using a camera, basic lighting and composition together
with an introduction to contextual studies and a trip to Paris
Photo, one of the biggest events in the photo calendar. Later
in the course, there will be an in depth study into digital
manipulation. Once completing the course, you will come out
with a solid understanding of photography, from the practical
to the historical side.
www.kcc.ac.uk

A-Level Photography with the City of


Oxford College
Get to grips with the world of photography by first learning
about the biggest figures in the industry that helped create
the phenomenon today. Soak up the inspiration and find
your own photographic voice in Oxford. This course is based
around building your skills and being creatively experimental
with your approach to mix media tasks in the first year. In
the second year your self-motivation is encouraged, as you
utilise your imagination when selecting a topic or theme to
photographically investigate. Intense, but beneficial, this two
year course will leave you full to the brim with knowledge and
ready to tackle the industry.
www.cityofoxford.ac.uk

FOUNDATION
Foundation Degree in Photography, Level
5 at the Sheffield College
Norton College, one of the leading photographic centres in
the UK, working in association with Nikon Academy, offers a
foundation degree level photography course that encourages
you to develop as a photographer and consider all aspects
of the industry. Different from the other courses weve
highlighted, this course exclusively focuses on the digital
age of photography with the idea in mind that the future
of commercial photography lies within this medium. For
this reason, the college has been credited as one of the best
equipped courses in the country for digital. Modules across the
two years aim to give you good background knowledge, and
not just the practical side of photography, but handling the
business side of the industry, including professional study and
progression, advertising and still life, self promotion through
publishing and much more.
www.sheffcol.ac.uk

A-LEVELS
A-Level Photography with the College of
West Anglia

where digital photography has evolved from. All work created


during the course will be backed up with sketch book work,
forming the backbone of your images and an exam will occur
at the end of each year.
www.cwa.ac.uk

SHEFFIELD COLLEGE

The aim of the course is to let your imagination run free


and to give you the opportunity to create some impressive
imagery, and be credited for it. There is a six week basic
introduction period, covering all things from lighting to basic
functions of a camera. You will learn how to process a film and
apply darkroom techniques, giving you a solid education on

61 62 63 65

Workshops

THE
COURSE
TRACK

KAY YOUNG

Looking for shorter, more


practical-based courses or
alternatives to degrees?
Workshop 1: Speos London
Founded in Paris in 1985, Speos provides higher education
photography training aimed at meeting the current market
demands. The courses aim to give students the opportunity
to gain the technical skills and creative freedom for personal
visual expression. During the programmes, students acquire the
prociency required by the professional world of photography,
training their personal passion into their professional career.
Courses offered include year-long training, part-time courses and
summer workshops. All are organised in small groups, with a lot
of hands-on practice, and are supervised by a team of highlyqualied professionals. Its facilities are spacious and equipped
with the latest equipment, and the graduates are supported in
their rst professional steps.
Prices range from 490 per workshop to 26,500 (approx.
20,730) for the year-long course
www.speos-photo.com

Workshop 2: London School of


Photography (LSP)
The London School of Photography is a high-ying school of
the arts. It runs everything from evening seminars to full-time
professional photography courses. The classes aim for intimate
numbers of eight and the courses pride themselves on their
practical nature, guiding photographers beyond the realms of
what they thought possible. Applicants can choose from evening,
weekend, week-long or six-month courses on a full or part-time
basis. The LSP lecturers and teachers are all professionals in
their eld and are happy to provide aftercare, long past the
courses completion.
There is much more emphasis on fullment than technical
success, though this is also likely to follow, with access to highly
skilled workshops and discussions.
Antonio Leanza, founder and CEO, has over three decades of
valuable expertise for students to reap from and other members
are highly praised in the industry. If traditional learning methods
have failed you in the past, LSPs philosophy is more coaching
than teaching, and boasts some impressive results.

Prices start from 295


www.londonschoolofphotography.co.uk

I have just completed the weekend Level One course and it was excellent! My thanks to Debbie
who delivered a well-paced, well-communicated course which was both fun and interesting. In just
a weekend, I have evolved from an everything on automatic photographer to a condent manual
settings photographer. Feels great! I have now signed up for the Level Two course and cant wait!
Ian Drew, who undertook the London School of Photography course

61 62 63 65

I saw an article in a magazine about a photographing kids


course and decided to book myself on it. It wasnt long until
she was completely hooked. I came away with my brain
buzzing and knowing that I needed to change things I
needed to make a career out of photography, and get paid.
I then went on a few other courses over the next year. It
was then that Kay made the decision to book on the Bespoke
course for a year. My youngest had just started school, so
I could commit to the time and to travelling from Kent to
Cumbria, she explains. By doing this, I changed my hobby
into a career. I learnt about branding, marketing, sales and
much more. Without it, I dont think I would be where I am
today in business; working full-time and earning a living from

Children and wedding photographer, KAY YOUNG


When I turned to Aspire, I was a makeup artist
with a very, very serious photography hobby,
says Kay. I had been to college for a few years
during the evenings and took lots of City and
Guilds exams all on lm! I was photographing friends
children, babies and the occasional wedding all for free.

Workshop 3: Aspire
Award-winning Aspire Photography Training is the largest (and
one of the most sought-after) photography training companies
around especially if you are a lifestyle photographer. Founded
by Catherine Connor, Aspire Photography Training boasts expert
knowledge of the industry with years of experience to share
with others.
Whether youre a hobbyist photographer looking to enhance
your knowledge, or a seasoned professional seeking to breathe
new life into your business, the range of courses available promise
to teach you every relevant component of a photography business
in todays economy, looking individually at your businesss
details: the photography, branding and wider portfolio. They
offer one-day training courses such as childhood portraits,
babies, food portraits, styled shoots as well as longer courses like
Inspire my Weddings or the renowned A-Z of Photography and

say to anybody who is thinking about changing careers


that its never too late. I did all of this at 39, and nine years
later, I cant even remember my other job. For the last two
years I have also been a trainer at Aspire, teaching the
Photographing Babies course, and next year I will also be
teaching Fine Art Portraits. I love being a trainer at Aspire and
meeting all the wonderful people who are starting out on
their journey, as I was nine years ago.
www.kayyoungphotography.com

Business, which is a four-day seminar exploring marketing, sales,


photography and post production. Aspires courses are delivered
by the worlds leading trainers with a passion and enthusiasm.
Its agship 12-month Bespoke programme is designed for those
looking to launch a career in their chosen eld. Big graduate
names include Damian Lovegrove, Kate Hopewell-Smith, Brett
Harkness and Tamara Peel. After the completion of the Bespoke
programme, the aftercare available in the transition programme
allows photographers to network and regularly meet to swap
trade secrets and share their knowledge with ongoing support
from the experienced trainers. One of the great things about the
trainers at Aspire is their belief in the distribution of knowledge:
sharing is caring!
Prices start from 99
www.aspirephotographytraining.co.uk

Business Workshops

The digital marketing experts at Jellysh offer courses


encompassing a great breadth of marketing skills, from
SEO to social media to analytics training and everything
in between. The courses are offered in ve locations: Reigate
(head ofce), Brighton, as well as Victoria, Paddington and
Farringdon in London. They also offer tailored training courses
where they deliver training at a location of your choice.
www.jellysh.co.uk

The City University Londons short course in Practical


Financial Management for Small Business will teach the
basics of nancial management as well as the essentials, including
preparing a cash ow forecast, bookkeeping, understanding
accounting procedures, preparing VAT returns, company legal
structures and taxation. You will examine how these techniques
should be integrated into all aspects of running a small business.
Duration: Two hours x 10 weekly classes. 395
www.city.ac.uk

KAY YOUNG

Case Study

something I absolutely love! And its growing all the time.


Would she recommend this career path to others? I would

61 62 63 65

Workshops
Case Study

Weddings and family portrait


photographer, SARA DALRYMPLE

SARA DALRYMPLE PHOTOGRAPHY LTD

I completed the academy course, which is The


Trained Eyes year-long program and ran from
February 2013 to March 2014, explains Sara. I
had always loved photography and wanted to
follow my dreams of becoming a professional, rather than
continuing in my day job which no longer excited me. It was
invaluable! From day one the tutors and mentors (who are
all very successful wedding photographers) shared all of their
worldly wisdom with us and couldnt do enough to help.
The course covers everything that you need to know when
youre starting out with your own wedding photography
business, from shooting styles to marketing, to getting ample
practice. And it has helped Sara in a million different ways
since. I met a load of great people and learnt so much about
what to do to develop my style and brand, and also what
not to do! Having a dedicated mentor who could answer all
of my questions any time as they popped into my head, was
invaluable to me. As a result of the course Im so much more
condent in my abilities Im now getting bookings that suit
my style and Im genuinely so excited to shoot every single

Workshop 4: The Trained Eye


Whether youre a relative amateur, just starting out, or an
experienced shooter, The Trained Eye aims to help you make
striding steps forward in all areas of your art: understanding light
and improving your shooting skills, developing a strong portfolio
and learning all the secrets of the digital darkroom. With a strong
reputation in the wedding and portrait market, its trainers can
also pass on sales and marketing skills to help you succeed in a
competitive marketplace. Having that much-needed edge these
days might be just the thing to propel you to success in your
photography business
The Trained Eye trainers are all leading lights in the elds of
wedding and portrait photography, including Mike Garrard,
and can guide you through everything from nding bookings
to taking that prize-winning shot. As well as short courses in

Braves Promote your business with PR one-day course,


presented by former journalist Paul Mullins, in Bristol, is
aimed at small business owners who want to learn to promote
their business through the media with free publicity. A practical
introduction to PR will equip you with the essential skills needed
to generate valuable publicity in regional, trade and online media:
create stories, write newsworthy press releases, identify target
media, pitch to journalists, and achieve PR goals. 42
www.brave.org.uk

wedding I have booked! I wouldnt have been without it for


the condence its given me.
Who would Sara recommend this course to? Anyone who
is thinking about taking the leap into wedding photography
and wants to cover all bases before they take the plunge. If
like me you like to learn by doing, then this is the course
for you!
www.saradalrymple.co.uk

wedding, portrait, ash photography and more, it offers the


academy a year-long mentoring programme to take you from
zero to hero.
Prices start from 150
www.thetrainedeye.co.uk

I recently did the Workshop One course and


thoroughly enjoyed it and learnt lots of useful
new things, along with learning what I was doing
wrong before. The location, training material
and our instructor Andrea were all excellent. I
met some new contacts and I hope to do the
Workshop Two very soon. Simon Elliott, who undertook
the London School of Photography course

Marketing consultancy Kerrmunications offer a Marketing


in One Day course, covering the latest marketing tactics for
sole traders and small companies. Create effective social media
campaigns, run promotional activities that will engage prospective
clients, build and implement a detailed marketing plan, learn how
to set marketing objectives, maximise brand exposure, and position
your company through messaging with social media, blogging,
websites, email, content marketing, and public relations. 99
www.marketinginoneday.co.uk

70%
DISCOUNT

This is your personal coupon code

ON-LINE DIGITAL PHOTOGRAPHY


COURSE ONE
REDUCED FROM 145 TO 39 A SAVING OF 73%
This offer can also be purchased as a present in the
form of a gift voucher. Coupon code: photo39
ABOUT THE COURSE
On-line digital photography course one has been designed in practical modules
which can be accessed in order or at random to suit your learning requirements.
Youll have unlimited time to complete the course which includes all future modules
and updates. The course is also kept up-to-date on a regular basis and incorporates an exam which includes submitting up-to ve images with personal feedback.

Qudos Photo Courses was set up


by Hugh Nicholas to help novices,
enthusiasts, students, companies and
up-and-coming photographers who
wish to have a greater understanding of
photography to get the best images from
their smart-phone, tablet or camera at an
affordable price, taught by experienced
professionals working in the industry.
With over thirty years experience as a
professional photographer and tutor,
Hugh Nicholas has worked with many
well-known London photographers and
has perfected his art over the years.

COURSE HIGHLIGHTS
20 modules updated on a regular basis explaining the basics and advanced techniques
Hundreds of images and diagrams with detailed explanations have been supplied by Hugh
Nicholas a professional photographer and tutor with over three decades of experience
Self-assessment exam with detailed answers and the opportunity to submit up-to ve
images with personal feedback

For more information, visit us at


WWW.QUDOSPHOTOCOURSES.COM

PROMOTIONAL OFFER

SPECIAL OFFER - OVER

61 62 63 65

Workshops

The Online Path


Want to learn at your own pace, and in
the comfort of your own home?
Workshop 5: www.PhotoSchool.com
Michael Muller and Patrick Hoelck are Hollywoods two most
sought-after celebrity photographers, responsible for some of the
most striking and globally-recognisable images. Their work can be
found on billboards, magazine covers, and art galleries all over the
world. Long time friends, Patrick and Michael decided to found
Photo School to ll a void in traditional photography education,
and as an online community to allow photographers at all skill and
professional levels to connect and advance their craft. We spoke to
Michael Muller to nd out more:

TP: Youve recently launched an online photography school


what inspired that?

MM: There are a couple of online sites, but in my opinion theyre


not being taught by the top photographers in their eld. To get
taught by the top theres a value to that. We are now in the
process of getting amazing photographers [including Brian Bowen
Smith] from different genres: snowboarding photographers,
wedding photographers, product photography, and having all
of them teaching the tricks of the trade the things you dont
learn in the classroom. Im showing them exactly the lighting I do
all my shoots with exactly how I do it. There are over 18 hours
of online, easy-to-follow videos. There are behind the scenes
explanations of how they achieve photos, from candid shots to
special effects, to the lighting techniques used on ad campaigns,
movie posters and everything in between. Im pulling up a portrait
and telling them how I got it. And also, how you can get it with no
light, or how you can get this beautiful picture with just one light.
Most kids dont have the means to have 23 strobes on a set, at a
studio. Were showing them how to do it in their driveway.

TP: Whos your school aimed at?


MM: Anyone who wants to learn photography. Maybe more
aspiring professionals, but anyone, actually. At most art colleges
and photography schools, you emerge with thousands of dollars
of debt after three years. So many people have come to me and
said they learnt more assisting me for two months than they did
in all their four years at school. Theres also a lot of people in
places who dont have schools to learn photography, so now a kid
in Ohio or in Sri Lanka can go on there and watch what we do,
where we put our lights etc. and learn it, and evolve. Theres also a
community for the photographers to talk to each other and where
they can send questions to us. Were making ourselves available.

TP: Arent you worried about giving your secrets away?


MM: Im in a place in my career where I dont care copy me!
Thats just one part of it. You can match my lighting, but its the
photographer that makes the photo.
Price: $25/month (approx. 16)

Workshop 6: www.Lynda.com
These online tutorials with accompanying videos will help you to
learn software skills, to develop your creativity, to learn lighting
techniques, and to gain the all-important business know-how.
The video tutorials are arranged into beginner, intermediate and
advanced, to cater for all needs. Courses include Small Business
Secrets (four hours, two minutes), and Twitter for Business (two
hours, 27 minutes).
Prices range from $25/month to $375 (approx. 16-235)

Workshop 7: www.QudosPhotoCourses.com
Qudos Photocourses was set up to help anyone wishing to grow
their understanding of photography, who wanted to get the
best from their camera and to learn at an affordable price. The
courses are taught by experienced professionals working in the
industry, but offer something for everyone no matter what your
skill level. Founder Hugh Nicholas says: If you want to learn a
skill, you need to start at the beginning and choose mentors with
knowledge and experience this is where I can help. I continually
perfect and update relevant information on my courses and
tutorials, offering unlimited free updates. The videos, written
explanations and supporting images work together to allow an
easy-to access and easy-to digest pool of knowledge.
Prices range from 9.95 to 350

Workshop 8: www.TheImageAcademy.co.uk
The Image Academy promises to provide its students with the best
online photography learning experience anywhere! This modulebased home study photography course offers feedback on all of
your practical assignments and (most importantly) a fully bespoke
personalised assignment with
in-depth and detailed feedback.
The 18-module certied course
Take an extra
plus exams can be completed
220 off the
standard 18-module
with no time limits, allowing you
online photography
to learn at your own pace. Course
course. Now only
content can be downloaded and
29 with the
viewed ofine and students are
redemption code
given unlimited, lifetime access
PM20.
to a learning portal. Learn basics
of photography to advanced
techniques and skills and as an Adobe approved course, students
are eligible for student discounts on all Adobe Products.
Prices start from 249

I purchased this course at a fantastic price and


its been a pleasure to work on. When I have
needed any kind of help or guidance Mark has
been brilliant and responds to messages in no
time at all. Overall I am more than happy and it
was great value for money.
Barry Sephton, who undertook The Image Academy course

67 68 69 71

JOHN BAIKIE

Societies and Associations

THE ACCREDITATION TRAIL


Victoria Dovey explores the collective
world of photographic societies and
associations to find out if theres
strength in numbers

hether youre looking for a group of


likeminded peers, need to do a spot of
networking, or feel its time to be assessed
to see if youre worth your salt; societies and

associations can provide the path. We lift the


lid on four of the biggest, and offer insight from some of
their members.

British Institute of Professional Photography


(BIPP)
The BIPP have been around for well over a century, after
a meeting on Fleet Street with the aim to better represent
photographers in photographys emerging professional format.
Essentially its a means of networking whilst offering support
and education. Like most societies, it has various membership
levels: Licentiateship, Associateship and Fellowship. All levels
will grant you various benets such as subsidised training, a
24/7 legal helpline, use of the BIPP logo and access to regional
meetings, not to mention those all important letters after your
name to give your clients a bit more condence in your brand.
BIPP membership also allows you to fast track a degree with the
OCA so it might be the perfect route for pursuing your studies.
If youre interested but not quite ready to commit, a Friend

67 68 69 71

of the BIPP level offers a lot of the benets to help


you weigh up the decision. Student and International
memberships are also available.
www.bipp.com

The Master Photographers Association (MPA)


The MPA is solely for professional photographers and
requires references in order to be a member along with
evidence of trading, liability and indemnity insurance. On
the one hand, this may sound like a hassle, whilst on the
other, your clients will have complete peace of mind when
searching for a photographer with an MPA membership. And
for your business, help will be at hand for everything from
lowest credit card merchant rates and discounted breakdown
cover to free mediation services and contractual advice. Your
portfolio will be reviewed to gain Licentiate, Associate or
Fellow membership grade.
www.thempa.com

The RPS offers a lot more than achieving distinctions


(although these dont hurt from such a prestigious society)
with regional and chapter meetings enabling you to meet
and network at events closer to home. Youll receive expert
advice on your portfolio as well as the chance to promote
it on their sleek, modern website. Perhaps one of the most
appealing features is the chance to join one or more special
interest group such as medical, travel or even 3D imaging
and holography, enabling you to focus more on a particular
subset of photography. You can apply for a Licentiate,
Associate and Fellowship distinction, though may be exempt
from portfolio review if you have recently received a
photography qualication. Creative Industries and Imaging
Scientist qualications are also on offer to give you a bit
more edge. A wide variety of memberships are on offer and
can be seen online.

Case Study 1
Award-winning lifestyle, portrait and wedding
photographer PAUL WILKINSON FMPA FBIPP
FSWPP is the chair of the Master Photographers
Association (MPA).
For me there were numerous reasons to join one of the
associations, but primarily it was to say to the world I am a
qualied professional photographer. You can create a website
overnight and ll it with images youve taken of friends I

The SWPP is the largest of The Societies with around 6000


members benetting from services such as discounted
insurance, seminars and workshops. Theres also a mentoring
programme which gives you the chance to have 20 of
your images assessed with a written report of areas for
approval. While your friends and family might not give you
constructive criticism when you really need it, your mentor
will! The annual conventions and shows are a great way
to network and the free listing on the site certainly wont
hurt business. The qualications are structured as follows:
Licentiate, Associateship, Fellowship and Craftsman. Your
portfolio will be reviewed and details online will tell you

wanted some small sense of distinction from the part-time


market, even if it was only for me.
The associations are valuable at all levels they are one of the
vehicles for providing education, seminars and viewpoints for
development, whether they are seasoned pros or students just
beginning their journey. Each of the organisations clearly has a
slightly different emphasis, but they all provide broadly the same
thing in this industry: structure.
This includes portfolio reviews, mentoring, peer-reviewing i.e.
the mechanism for attaining your Licentiate, Associateship and
Fellowship, print competitions, advice, legal support, seminars and
even reduced-price insurance and credit card machines!
The accreditations have also provided me with a driver to push
myself creatively. Its not just that the letters have helped us win
business, (although recently my commercial client referenced my
accreditations and awards as a form of assurance to her CEO), but
that each of the levels represents a group of my peers agreeing
that my work can be regarded to be of a certain standard. Its not
everyones cup of tea not everyone wants or needs to measure

exactly what is required, depending on which level you are


going for as well as the chance to look at successful entries.

their progression but for me it has been a huge motivation.


The biggest advantage for me has been that I have found a

www.swpp.co.uk

sense of belonging. Being a photographer can be a very lonely

www.rps.org

Society of Wedding and Portrait


Photographers (SWPP)

PAUL WILKINSON

The Royal Photographic Society (RPS)

67 68 69 71

Societies and Associations

JOHN BAIKIE

JOHN BAIKIE

Case Study 2

JOHN BAIKIE ABIPP ASWPP is a multi-award


winning photographer from Caithness,
specialising in a number of areas including
equestrian, fashion and portraiture with
subjects including the Royal Family.

member of others and dont feel there is the same networking


and socialising amongst them. It is more inclusive of all abilities as
well. They do more in the way of development and training, and
the convention alone is worth the membership fee.
Biggest advantage... the networking side. I have made so many
friends all over the world, and theres always someone to talk to

I felt it was important to have a professional qualication to show


people I was serious from the start. None of the local competition

about whatever aspect of the business you want. Being a speaker


at so many events has also been a big deal to me and has helped

had any and I saw it as a way of measuring where I was with my


work. It gives clients a bit more condence when they see the

me in many ways, both on a business and personal level.


Every photographer should join one of the societies, and enter

qualication after your name. However, Im not sure if they know


one from the other. It was of more benet to me immediately
after I achieved it and could blog it and send out press releases
than just now, where it just appears on a website or business card.
I would like to gain my Fellowship qualication, purely for my
own satisfaction, but business comes rst at the moment.
The SWPP is a friendlier, more open association. I have been a

their awards, as well as try for qualications. It challenges us and


helps to raise the standard within the industry, at a time where
that is at risk. Attending seminars, workshops and the convention
are a great way to improve your work, meet new people and keep
up with what is going on in a fast changing world.

career in spite of the widely held view that its incredibly sociable
and occasionally glamorous which it undoubtedly can be but,
in the end, it is you and your camera. For me, the MPA provide
a network of like-minded people who, once in a while, I can sit
down with, compare notes and stories with, and generally put the
world to rights.
www.paulwilkinsonphotography.co.uk

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RICHARD BRADBURY

Societies and Associations

Case Study 3

Portrait and advertising photographer RICHARD


BRADBURY FMPA FBIPP, counts Tesco, Sony
Playstation and The Guinness Book Of World
Records as clients. He teaches seminars for both
the MPA and BIPP on business and photography, and is
currently working on charitable book project, The Children
of London.
Its been proven time and time again that a large group of people
will always have a better solution compared to the individual. Its
important for photographers to speak to each other as the nature
of our business is very solitary. Photography is hard enough; its
a difcult business to be in, particularly when youre working on
your own. The more we can get together to discuss issues and
share experiences, the better. Anyone can go onto YouTube and
nd tutorials, but when you go to societies you know youre
meeting trained professionals you dont get a Fellowship by
sitting on your hands. After 30 years of being a professional
photographer, I still attend at least half a dozen seminars a year
because I still learn things.

The BIPP were rst on my radar, then the MPA and I think of
them on an even par.
Accreditation is extremely important in the same way that I
think awards are. Its not only that you have those letters after
your name, but its because it forces you to take what youve
done more seriously, to inspect your work. It motivates you to
look around you, take more pictures and think about what youre
doing. If you know that a panel of your contemporaries are going
to be looking at your pictures then youre going to take a lot
of care to make those pictures the very best they can be.
Everybody benets from that the client, you, the association,
and the industry as a whole benets because we all end up being
better photographers.
Winning an award or accreditation is a really good justiable
reason to contact clients and remind them youre still there and
they genuinely will want to hear about it and be impressed by
it. People wont come to you just because your works great its
about marketing.
www.rbradbury.com

Looking for something more specic?


There are professional bodies out there such as the Institute
of Medical Illustrators (IMI) who specialise in specic elds
of photography that may be less represented in the larger
groups. Simon E. Brown MSc FBIPP FIMI FBCA RMIP (www.
sharpenyourimage.co.uk) is a clinical and medico-legal
photographer who has found the IMI to be of great use in his
practice. There are very few medical Fellows and Im very proud
of my BIPP qualication, but for medical photography it gets much
more complicated, he tells us. Your best route for that is the IMI.
They represent most professional medical photographers, accredit

courses and training and point people in the right direction. The
BIPP represents a whole range of photographers which gives you
contact with those in architecture, forensics or portraiture. IMI
is the opposite; its such a specialist area. If youre looking for
a photographer for legal reasons then you would want to look
for someone who is extremely qualied and experienced in their
eld. Get as qualied as you can in your area of speciality and
promote that. Keep an eye out on social media for our full list of
specialised photographic societies soon!
www.imi.org.uk

FRANK DOORHOF

72 73

Illuminated Learning
Do you need to hone a specific area of your skill set? Leading manufacturers offer
workshops to brush up your talents when painting with light

ELINCHROM
UK Workshop tour with Nadine Stephan
and Frank Doorhof
The lighting workshop, recommended by Elinchrom, will teach
you how to coach and work with a model, how to maximise
use of flash and ambient light, choose correct locations for
both light and composition, navigate natural light and much
more. Each workshop gives you the chance to get all your
questions answered with a handy Q and A session where you
can ask anything you want about photography, lighting or
the business. There are three workshops on the tour, based
in Lancashire, Bolton and Newcastle, with unique shooting
locations in store for each session, such as an old smoky
factory, so make sure you dont miss out!
www.frankdoorhof.com
200

John Denton Training, Algarve Safari 2015


Flying out to sunny Portugal on 19 September 2015, embark
on a week long lighting workshop to ensure personal
development within photographic lighting and a well rounded
education. Shoots during the week will be a range of styles
from art nude to fashion. All shoots will include one to one
training and group tuition. The help from John on posing and
location selection will allow you to really focus and improve
your lighting skills. Within the week you will be trained in
indoor and outdoor sets, using flash and taught how to use
natural light to your advantage. You will be situated in a
fantastic holiday village, offering a great place for any family
members that want to come along. Early booking prior to 1
December 2014 gives a 100 discount on full price of 699.
www.johndentontraining.com
699

72 73

Manufacturers Workshops

BRONCOLOR
Hasselblad and Broncolor Studio Day

Lighting Studio Portraiture Workshop

Want to test out one of the worlds best studio lighting


systems for free? Hasselblad UK are the distributors for

Supported by Broncolor, with this two day course in January


2015, you will learn the ins and outs of lighting within studio

Broncolor lighting and their studio days provide you with


the opportunity to put Hasselblad and Broncolor equipment

portrait photography. Day one revolves around starting from


scratch. You will be trained in everything from flash and

through its paces. There is an expert on site to assist you and


to show you the ropes.
There are also variations on the standard studio day. The
Educational Studio days see leading colleges and universities
in the UK get a visit from Hasselblad and Broncolor. The day
aims to provide photographic students with the opportunity to
learn more about the brand, allowing the students to take as
much from it as they can to help further their studies.
Workshop Studio days are another variation, centred on
a particular theme or genre of photography. Hosted by an
experienced Hasselblad toting photographer, it takes place in
either a studio environment or on location.
Lastly, Portfolio Days offer another opportunity to
experience Broncolor. Photographers are given exclusive access
to a studio, with full creative freedom over the shoot, and a
model release included allowing the resulting images to be
used for their portfolios.
Most studio days are free of charge!
www.handsonahasselblad.com

continuous light, light control, background lights and flash


meters, to name a few. At each stage, plenty of time will
be allowed for taking your own photographs, making sure
you have a good understanding. On day two you will tackle
the more in-depth lighting techniques, from ring flash to
softboxes to the inverse square law, but dont panic, as experts
will be on hand to guide you through it.
160
www.rps.org

75

Quirky Workshops

Quirky Workshops
Its always a good idea to broaden your
spectrum of photography, so why not
sign up for a workshop that puts you out
of your comfort zone? The new interest
could even spark a new area of business
Art Nude Photography
Workshop

Street Photography
Workshop

Next Autumn, the Royal Photographic


Society will be running a one day art
nude course. The day will give you
the chance to produce high quality
photographs with training in lighting
techniques that would also be applicable
to maternity or pregnancy photography,
allowing you to expand photography
skills that can help your business grow.
You will learn in a relaxed and informal
atmosphere and a professional figure
model will be on hand who is used to
working in groups. The model will also
sign a release form, allowing you to
publish the photographs.
www.rps.org
115

Short but sweet, this four hour


workshop will leave you eager to
pound the pavement and test out your
new found street photography smarts.
Through the guidance of your tutor and
your peers, you will learn how to take
the best street photography and have
an enjoyable and sociable experience at
the same time. The workshop runs for
one day and it is aimed at intermediate
and pro photographers who are looking
to add this type of photography to
their skill set. You will be taught how
to capture candid moments creatively,
engage a narrative with your images
and more.
www.cultureclubphotography
workshops.co.uk
55

Automotive Studio
Workshop
Is car photography your secret

EMILY HANCOCK

passion? Join Hasselblad UK on an


automotive studio workshop with top
car photographer Ripley and Ripley on
28 November 2014. Located in Banbury,
just south of Birmingham, Rip, whose
work regularly features in Top Gear
magazine, will host an action packed
day where you will get up close and
photograph the brand new Lexus NX.
Throughout the day, you will be shown
the six-shot technique used to capture
some of the worlds finest cars, be
taught how to light and shoot a car
in a professional studio and gain an
insight into the workings of a high-end
car shoot, ultimately improving your
photography and leaving with wellrounded knowledge.
www.handsonahasselblad.com
110

Equine Photography
Workshop
Taking on photography outside of your
comfort zone can be daunting, but
also rewarding, and thats exactly what
Emily Hancock offers on her equine
photography course. Spend a day
shooting alongside Emily and see how
she prepares and executes a successful
equine shoot. You will join her on a
day-long shoot and will learn how
best to photograph and cope with the
unpredictable nature of animals. You
will be guided to create the best images
for you to add to your portfolio and
you will walk away having had a great
experience and a whole new perspective
on equine photography.
www.trainingbarn.co.uk
795

Wildlife Photo MasterClass


This intensive three-night program lets
photographers of all levels step into
the role of a nature photojournalist
as they capture some of the more
than 200 species of birds and native
wildlife within the protected sanctuary
of Mayakobas exotic forests and
waterways in partnership with National
Geographic. You will receive one-to-one
guidance and training on everything
from composition to lighting and how to
achieve those wow images.
www.mayakoba.com
Approx. 1573

Competition
In January 2015, Emily Hancock
is running an eight part webinar
series on the business of equine
photography and is offering one
of our lucky readers a spot on the
course worth 797!
All you have to do is answer the
following question:
When photographing a
horse, which direction should its
ears be facing?
a) Forward
b) Sideways
c) Backward
Email your answer to
[email protected] with
Professional Photographer
Competition in the subject box.
Make sure to include your contact
details in the email. T&Cs apply.
Competition closes: 12 December 2014.

76

On sale
11 March

WHAT TO EXPECT:
MY FIRST YEAR:
We go behind the scenes and
explore the valuable lessons
one photographers learnt in
their first year in business.
WEDDING PHOTOGRAPHY
SPECIAL:
We explore the best routes
into the wedding photography
business.

FEATURES WRITER
Victoria Dovey
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While reasonable care is taken to ensure the accuracy of the information in Turning Pro, that information is obtained from a variety of sources and neither the publisher, the printers nor any distributor
is responsible for errors or omissions. All prices and data are accepted by us in good faith as being correct at the time of going to press. Pound conversion rates correct at the time of going to press.
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big interview

The Life
of Brian
A pro athlete career,
Herb Ritts, Jennifer
Aniston celebrity
photographer BRIAN
BOWEN SMITH recounts to
Will Roberts the story of his
colourful career, both past
and present

BRIAN BOWEN SMITH

80

brian bowen smith

81

Marc Jacobs campaign.

you hear about Brian Bowen Smith, you might just want his life. This smoothtalking, laid-back guy, it seems, has it all: A house in LA, a beautiful family,
glamorous friends, an exciting job, a near-perfect beard, a motorcycle. Hes
even snogged Jennifer Aniston, damn it.
More on Jennifer later, but its worth pointing out that, just like every other
successful photographer in the industry, Brian Bowen Smith has had to work hard to
get to where he is. The walls of his palace may seem lined with platinum leaf today,
but he had to scrape off a whole lot of wood-chip first. Sure, Brian does have very good friends
in very high places Madonna is a close pal and Robert Duffy, the CEO of Marc Jacobs, is
godfather to his son but the most friends, and considerable contacts, were the result of
high-quality work produced over his 18-year career, which started when he moved to LA in his
late twenties.

big interview / brian bowen smith

I said: Look, I want to learn from you.

82

Brians past is almost as colourful as the life he lives now. A promising athlete as a youngster,
living in upstate New York, he had high hopes of representing the USA in the Olympics in
gymnastics. He modelled a bit during those days, before a torn rotator cuff put paid to his
sporting ambitions.
He later started to get some acting work and a friend eventually invited him out to Los
Angeles, where he worked on some TV shows, including Friends, and was signed by one of the
biggest managers in town: Sandy Gallin.
While he was in LA a photographer, the late Herb Ritts, approached Brian asking him to do
some modelling. Herb had already photographed Brian for a Gap campaign, so knew of him, and
it was this relationship which would provide the spark for his photographic career. He wanted
to shoot me again for one of his books and I said fine, Brian explains. He did all these pictures
of me naked and flipping in the air against a sky background with a couple of clouds. Really
cool stuff.
I couldnt believe how he was doing that, so I said look, I want to learn from you I want to do
more with you. He said: Okay, cool. Were shooting Gisele and George Clooney tomorrow for
Vogue do you want to come? I was like: Yeah!
Brian spent time shadowing Herb, but all the time he was combining his photography with
other work to pay the bills. The varied nature of his work meant something would inevitably
suffer he wouldnt go to an audition if he had work with Herb pencilled in.

I just busted in and everyone else was probably like:


Who the f**k is this guy?
In 1998, Madonna asked him to direct her stage performance for the MTV music awards with
Lenny Kravitz and, after the show, Brian approached Guy Oseary the CEO of Maverick Records.
He wanted Guy to consider him when thinking about photography for album covers, but the
response he got was unexpected. He basically looked at me and said: I dont know what the f**k
youre doing, recounts Brian. He asked: Are you a director? Are you an actor? A photographer?
A skater? You have so many things going on, how can you concentrate on one thing and excel at
it? Just because youre friends with Madonna doesnt mean Im going to give you a job. I work
with some of the biggest photographers in the world, why would I risk it on you?
On the drive home I was like, What a dick. Youre talking to me like Im an idiot. But in LA you
sit in traffic, so for a good hour and a half I sat in traffic and I realised that he was right.
Eventually he was called in by his acting manager, who told him that if his heart was set on
photography, he should focus on that. The leap of faith wasnt an easy one. As an actor and
occasional model, he was earning good money. His wife had just given birth to their son, Jonah,
and the family had just bought a new house in Los Angeles.
Suddenly he was a photographers assistant. He combined studying how Herb used light with
the menial tasks associated with a photographers studio picking up the trash, as he calls it. I
was on assistant money, which I was happy for, but at first I wasnt even letting Herb pay me
because I was happy to be on board, says Brian. I was his assistant and I know it takes a long
time to get into that realm. I just busted in and everyone else was probably like: Who the f**k is
this guy?
But I wanted to learn from these guys because they were the best. Herb made it very clear to
me that if I wasnt a help to them, then there was nothing he could do for me. So I busted my ass
to prove to them that I deserved to be there and that I could be a help.

83

Demi Moore.

Left: Clmence Posy. Right: Cindy Crawford.

Left: A friend, Ellie, on a lighting test that turned out to be very cool. Right: Hilary Swank.

big interview

85

When people say its very Herb Ritts, I almost get choked up. BBS

brian bowen smith

The hardest thing in life is to take a chance and to jump off that edge.

86

Brians first celebrity shoot was with Selma Blair. The pair became friends and, indirectly,
through Selmas recommendation, Brian was offered the chance to shoot the band Incubus for
their album cover. He was paid $5000 for the job, which bought him two months at the time he
was asking his friend for waiter shifts in his restaurant, just to help make ends meet.
Sometimes its hard to figure out what you want to do, says Brian. But the hardest thing in
life is to take a chance and to jump off that edge and say: This is what I want to do. Youve got to
get up and try to make that happen for you, because no matter what job you want in this world,
its already taken and its hard to get it.
Brian is now 45. It has been 18 years since he moved to LA and started to learn from Herb
Ritts a man who, by Brians own admission, he owes a lot to. I hope people see Herb Ritts in
my work. People will say dont be like them, but I say, by all means, be inspired by people. They
were inspired by people. How do you come up with something different? Get creative and put
your twist on it. To me theres nothing wrong with that. When people say its very Herb Ritts,
I almost get choked up.

Its a small world.


His career today can broadly be separated into two parts. There is the celebrity Hollywood side
to his game he seems to have photographed every A-lister in show business for magazines
around the world, and more recently has done the photography for prime-time TV shows such as
Ray Donovan and Shameless. Then there is his fine art work a side which allows him to inject
more of his own personality into each photograph. The commercial photography is undoubtedly
lucrative, though he has celebrities coming back for more, and recommending him to friends
who, in turn, become Brians friends. These are good circles to move in if youre in this industry.
Given all that, it was perhaps inevitable that he would, at some point, run into his old onscreen lover. It happened a decade after he and Jennifer Aniston appeared on Friends together
he was asked to shoot her for a movie she was appearing in.
I looked at her in the face and I was like: You dont remember me.
She said: No.
We made out once, I told her.
She was like: I doubt that.
Then she looked at me and she got it. She was like, Oh my God, no way!
We had a great laugh about it and then she used me for a ton of stuff. We have become good
friends. Its a small world.

They are the ones that make you who you are.
The celebrity world is a lucrative one, but also one littered with opportunities to damage your
career. Brian still says he has to hustle to get work, despite his glittering contacts book. Hes
now competing with the very best photographers in the world so, for him, the celebrity and the
client, the photographs have to be the best in the world.
His enthusiasm for what he does and his life is almost tangible. This vivacity is partly what has
helped to get him where he is. I do love what I do, he says. I have this extrovert personality and
I think it makes people feel comfortable. If Im going to go and ask you to do all this stuff, you
dont want to do it and be an idiot. If I do it too, it might make it a bit easier for you to go, okay.
People in my kind of business, with the celebrity world and all the portraits, are the ones that
make you who you are, I think. Youve just got to be able to give them something back but

big interview / brian bowen smith

87

Brian was Jennifer


Anistons love interest
on the set of Friends,
and photographed her
years later.

big interview

lets face it, its who I get to shoot that makes me, that gives me notoriety and gives me other
jobs. You get those people for a reason. Not everyone is shooting them. Brian doesnt take
his position for granted. Im in a really cool group now, so Im grateful. I enjoy it and they seem to
enjoy me, so that is big part of what I do. Its personality its not just talent. Its not just being
able to take a photo. I dont want them to go there and be like, Im working, this sucks I want
them to leave my shoot and be like, that was awesome, we should do that again.

You see them starting to get super sexy.


88

In just a few years, Brian has gone from picking up the trash to a status as one of the hottest
photographers in Hollywood. It would be easy for him to sit back with a smug grin etched
across his face, congratulating himself on a job well done. However, he still doesnt feel like hes
made it. Its that other facet to his work which he now wants to develop fine art photography.
For him its a simpler, more natural, form of photography, and more akin to the kind of pictures
he took when he first picked up a camera.
His latest project draws on themes from the other side of his work. Models are presented
naked, but wearing masks to hide their identity. Some may be celebrities, some may be
waitresses, and others are friends of his wife. Covering a face with a mask brings out remarkable
results, Brian has discovered. Its really weird to see when somebody covers their face, and
doesnt reveal their identity, how open they become and how cool the pictures start becoming
because of that, he says. They arent worrying about covering up so much any more they
arent worried about hiding any parts. They just go with the flow, and then you see them starting
to get super sexy you see a side of them that you didnt know they had.
The celebrity angle is also something that Brian has enjoyed exploring. It could be a celebrity
but you dont know if it is, he says. It can be this voyeuristic thing she knows that is her
and I know that is her, and shes very proud of it, but she doesnt have to have the press hounding
her ass saying shes naked. No matter how beautiful a photo is, if there is somebody that
shouldnt be naked, or someone that is famous, then it isnt as interesting because its is more
about the image of the person, rather than what youve created.

That excitement makes me feel like a kid again.


Brian has just started displaying his work in a gallery for the first time, and says his fine art work
gives him the drive and excitement to keep going in other areas of his career. He gets equally
excited when selling a couple of photographs at the gallery as he does when he sees his
photograph spread across a billboard on Sunset Boulevard. I need that excitement and drive to
keep me going. I need all the fine art stuff, even though Im doing the celeb work, because I still
need to inspire myself and push myself.
This is me. This is all stuff Ive created that people are digging. That excitement makes me
feel like a kid again. I hope other people see that. People will tell me Ive made it and Im like, not
really. I havent made it. Am I in great place? Yes, thank God. But have I made it? No, Im still
far off.
www.bowensmith.com

Kit Bag
Nikon D810
Nikkor 24-70mm f/2.8 F ED lens
Nikon 135mm f/2
Profoto lights
When shooting for fun?
A Sony RX1R

brian bowen smith

89

Its really weird to see


when somebody covers
their face, and doesnt
reveal their identity, how
open they become and
how cool the pictures
start becoming because
of that. BBS
Above: From Brians latest project Pigs.
Right: From the recent Marc Jacobs campaign.

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TICK AND

WIN
TOP GEAR!

In the search to find out more from


you, the readers about your
photography habits, where you get
your information from, how you use
our magazine and what you think of
it TIPA has collated this
questionnaire. Now, get involved!
Yes, its time for the annual TIPA survey where we take
a closer look at your photography habits, from gear to
subject matter. The Technical Image Press Association
(TIPA), is a worldwide association of 29 photography and
imaging magazines from 16 countries and is well-known
for its prestigious TIPA Awards. Not only is the
information gained from our survey interesting from a
gear and subject perspective, but we also draw on it to
help shape our editorial coverage. But you have to be in
it to win it... and yes, you can win prizes too! The
following award-winning products are up for grabs
with the exception of the OM-D, the bodies-only of the:
Best DSLR Entry Level Nikon D3300
Best DSLR Advanced Canon EOS 70D
Best DSLR Professional Nikon D4S
Best CSC Entry Level Olympus OM-D E-M10
Best CSC Expert Fuji X-T1
Best CSC Professional Sony Alpha 7R
Itll take you about five minutes to complete for a chance
to win; you can post or email your completed form. Entry
to win in the prize draw is free, so what do you have to
lose? Grab a brew and a pen, and get ticking!

1. I take photographs:
( ) daily
( ) several times a week
( ) once a week

( ) several times a month


( ) less often
( ) rather seasonal

2. As a photographer I characterise myself as follows:


(multiple answers allowed)

( ) I am an all-rounder without a main focus


( ) I take pictures mainly of everyday life (friends, family )
( ) I specialise in a few subjects (nature, fashion )
(
(
(
(

) Photography is my favourite activity


) I am a trained photographer
) Photography is my main profession
) I take photos within my profession (graphic design, media production )

3. My photographic equipment:
a) I regularly use ____ different cameras to take pictures.
(Please insert a number)

b)
applies fully
I never go out without my camera
( )
(
I keep my photographic equipment
( )
(
in line with state-of-the-art technology
I spend at least as much money on
( )
(
photographic accessories as on my camera(s)
I prefer to buy photographic products ( )
(
of a specific brand
I advise others on the purchase of
( )
(
photographic equipment

)
)

does not apply


( )
( )
( )
( )

( )

( )

( )

( )

( )

( )

4. My photos are generated:


often occasionally rarely
- in Micro Four Thirds sensor size
( )
( )
( )
- in APS-C sensor size
( )
( )
( )
- in Full Format DSLR sensor size
( )
( )
( )
- in Digital Medium Format sensor size ( )
( )
( )
and
- on film
( )
( )
( )
- in Raw file format
( )
( )
( )
- in JPEG file format
( )
( )
( )

never
( )
( )
( )
( )
( )
( )
( )

5. Per year I create approximately _________ printed photo books.


6. I use the following camera functions:
often occasionally rarely
- M-mode
( )
( )
( )
- TV-mode
( )
( )
( )
- AV-mode
( )
( )
( )
- P-mode
( )
( )
( )
- Video
( )
( )
( )
- WiFi /WLAN
( )
( )
( )

never
( )
( )
( )
( )
( )
( )

91

competition

7. I regularly inform myself about photographic products:


(multiple answers allowed)

1. in photography magazines
2. in computer magazines
3. in multi-topic magazines (digital photo/video/audio)
4. from my specialist retailer
5. at trade fairs
6. from company brochures
7. on the internet
The source of information I trust most is No. _______
8. Professional Photographer appears 13 times a year:
I read _________________ issues per year
This is the first time I have read this magazine ( )
9. How I obtain Professional Photographer
I am a subscriber
I buy the magazine from a retailer /newsstand
I read it after someone else has finished with it

92

( )
( )
( )

10. I pick up an issue of Professional Photographer


about _______ times to leaf through it or read it.
11. Of any one issue of Professional Photographer,
I normally read:
all/almost all pages
( )
about three quarters
( )
about half
( )
about a quarter
( )
only a few pages
( )
12. I read an issue of Professional Photographer for
a total of about _____ minutes.
13. Apart from myself, ______ people read any one issue of
Professional Photographer.

Up for grabs are the


Sony Alpha 7R, Fuji X-T1,
Canon EOS 70D, Nikon D4S,
Olympus OM-D E-M10 and
the Nikon D3300.

14. I rate Professional Photographer as follows:


important magazine ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) unimportant magazine
inspiring
( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) not inspiring
competent
( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) incompetent
high utility value
( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) low utility value
clear
( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) confusing
independent
( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) dependent
current
( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) not current
entertaining
( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) boring
likable
( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) dislikable
varied
( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) unvaried
15. If Professional Photographer were no longer published I would
miss the magazine:
very strong ( ) strong ( ) less ( ) not at all

TIPA Survey

16. About these topics I want to read in Professional Photographer:


very important important less important unimportant

- detailed camera tests


- comparative camera tests
- tips for accessories
- tests of accessories
- market overviews
- techniques of photography:
tips and tricks
- Photographers / Photo Art
- exhibitions
- competitions

(
(
(
(
(

)
)
)
)
)

(
(
(
(
(

)
)
)
)
)

(
(
(
(
(

)
)
)
)
)

(
(
(
(
(

)
)
)
)
)

(
(
(
(

)
)
)
)

(
(
(
(

)
)
)
)

(
(
(
(

)
)
)
)

(
(
(
(

)
)
)
)

17. A digital magazine version of Professional Photographer:


applies fully
does not apply
- I already use it regularly
( )
( )
( )
( )
- is generally appealing for me
( )
( )
( )
( )
- I would buy it instead of the printed magazine ( )
( )
( )
( )
- I would additionally subscribe to it, with
special features at an extra cost
( )
( )
( )
( )
18. In the next 24 months I intend to buy:
Digital SLR Camera
( )
Photo/Graphics Software ( )
Digital Medium Format System
Studio Lighting ( )
Camera
( )
Scanner ( )
Digital Compact System Camera ( )
Photo printer ( )
Digital Compact Camera
( )
Tripod ( )
Colour Management System
( )
Projector ( )
Interchangeable lenses
( )
Accessories ( )

rather more time ( ) rather less time ( )


as much time as I do today ( )
23. Personal details:
I am male ( ) female ( )
I am _________ years old
24. The net monthly salary of all household
members is:
less than 1200
( )
1200 to 1599
( )
1600 to 1999
( )
2000 to 2599
( )
2600 to 3199
( )
3200 to 3799
( )
3800 to 4399 ( )
4400 to 5000 ( )
more
( )

RETURN
By mail to:
Professional Photographer
Archant House
Oriel Road
Cheltenham
Gloucestershire
GL50 1BB
By email (scanned pages):
[email protected]

19. I read the advertisements and supplements in:


Professional Photographer
always ( ) often ( ) rarely ( ) never ( )
20. Advertisements in Professional Photographer:
applies fully
- have informational value for me
( )
( )
- have previously prompted me
to gather further information
( )
( )
- have previously prompted me
to make a purchase
( )
( )

Complete online at: www.presseforschung.de/


professionalphotographer
By fax (three pages) to: 01242 216094
does not apply
( )
( )
( )

( )

( )

( )

21. I visit the website www.professionalphotographer.co.uk:


several times a week ( )
every 2-3 months ( )
several times a month ( )
less often
( )
once a month
( )
never
( )

Thank you for taking part. Please send the


questionnaire to the editorial offices by 1 January
2015. You can also send it by fax. Please fill in the
coupon if you want to take part in the competition.
Legal proceedings are barred. Guarantee: The
coupon will be separated from the questionnaire
before the results are analysed. This way, your
answers remain anonymous.
Name ____________________________________
Address ___________________________________

22. In the next two to three years, I will spend time on photography:

___________________________________________
___________________________________________
Post code __________________________________

93

KURNIA AP

dronography

PROPELLING IDEAS
Is this eye in the sky idea much like its pie counterpart, or a
legitimate new area of business? EDMOND TERAKOPIAN
explores whether dronography is a photographers future

m a photographer from the time where an


aerial shot meant a dash to the nearest
airfield, the hire of a helicopter and pilot
locking a side door in the open position,
headset on, harnessing oneself in and making sure
no camera gear went rolling out of the helicopter.
There was always something very sexy about aerial
jobs. Nowadays, alongside budgets and expense
accounts, something else has shrunk; the size of the
flying machines and, often, cameras too. This is
definitely the era of the drone.
The new found freedom and cheap (at the lower end)
equipment means that aerial photography and filming
is now accessible to many. However, with these new
found freedoms also come certain responsibilities;
legal, moral and safety issues. Recently a tourist was
jailed overnight and fined 310 for flying over Notre
Dame cathedral in Paris. There have been incidents
further afield with one tourist being fined 1800 for
crashing his drone into a hot spring at Yellowstone
National Park in the States. It pays to learn about
regulations where you want to fly.

Its essential for any professional photographer to


realise that offering photography using drones as a
service makes it a commercial venture and needs not
only proper training, but a commercial licence and
insurance too. The CAA (Civil Aviation Authority
www.caa.co.uk) is the UKs aviation regulator and
should be your first port of call, followed by finding
training courses. As this technology is still relatively
new, theres a lot of uncertainty in the public. The
media have already started to run panic stories; be they
the paparazzi using drones in LA, the fear of terrorists
using them or people getting arrested for flying in
public places. The better we police the using of drones
ourselves, ensuring colleagues get proper training and
certification, the more chance there is of the authorities
and public not having an exaggerated reaction and
clamping down on their use.
We spoke to some experts and early pioneers in this
field to get their thoughts and guidance.

www.terakopian.com

95

dronography

The News View

96

Ive been a news photographer for 15 years and Ive made some good contacts with the emergency
services. My working life revolved around hard news and if we got something big, I was tempted to
jump in the plane myself and get something which someone else hadnt got. When I first started,
the fee for a light plane was 250 per hour, which soon shot up to 350. Nowadays its hard to get
a plane with photographic detail.
I became interested in this up-and-coming new technology as it gave me a different angle on a
story. It was a good accessory for my tool bag. The actual outlay on the equipment and the
course struck me as a good investment, but I realised that it was going to take off straight away. It
was an unknown and unmapped business venture, but I knew that it was a tool that would be
very handy to use at incidents as well as hard news stories. Times will change, but at the moment
its a tool which few have. With the quality of the new GoPros, you can get some fantastic shots.
We have to have a couple of drones. Its not worth turning up to a job with just one, in case its
not working. Ive got two DJI Phantoms and two F550s. The Phantom you can buy in Maplins and
theyre very good, very reliable; good staying power, with 25 minutes up in the air on a good day.
With each Phantom, you get the unit and a control unit. You also have to get a screen so you can
get a downlink from the GoPro. Its roughly around 1000 for the Phantom and all the bits.
This lets you see what the cameras seeing and you can move it up, down and sideways. If you go
for the next bigger kit, then you need to add roughly another 1000. The bigger the UAV can
handle faster wind, but the flight time is only about 7-10 minutes and can take a bigger payload.
Prices can go up to about 50,000 (Skyranger drone); the more you pay, the more you get in terms
of capability in wind, rain and even snow.
A lot of snappers are thinking of investing in drones, thinking theyre the golden ticket or
Shangri-La. Its such new technology and customers sometimes dont know what to expect. As a
marketing tool, Ive even offered a few freebies to several estate agents, but none have taken me
up the offer! Ive even I had an estate agent who wanted to come up in the drone with me when
taking pictures! The trade is in trouble and diversifying or giving a new lease of life to your
business is good, but even having all the qualifications and insurance in place, its hard to persuade
customers of the advantages. At the moment a lot of potential customers dont understand what a
drone can do, but drone now accounts for about 20 per cent of my work. Its like a specialised lens,
such as a 500mm it only comes out on certain jobs. Six months of the year youre up against
weather; wind and rain, which means you cant fly.
The training I did was with Resource UAS, which was a three-month online web based training,
learning about the weather, physics and how everything operates you have to qualify for each
section. Then you go on the three-day intensive course and youre tested again. They had good
teachers and it was good training well worth the money. At the end, theres a cooling off period
of 14 days, and then you do your flight assessment, where they pass or fail you. Each year youre
reassessed to renew your CAA permissions.
The biggest consideration is safety. Everything you do has to fall in line with your CAA
permissions and you need to make sure youre insured. Unless the people are under my control
and therefore part of the shoot, I cant fly closer than 50 metres. I risk assess every job and make
a decision accordingly. Ive been asked to do weddings and I just refuse to do them, for safety
reasons. Theres a video on YouTube with a drone flying into a brides face and that has to be every
drone operators nightmare.
I was recently in Eastbourne for the fire at the pier. I got up to the cordon and got authorisation
from the fire chief to fly. My concern was that I needed to fly over people and they needed to be
aware of that. I also needed people to know I was piloting the drone in case there was going to be
a police or coastguard helicopter in the air. The fire chief was also using it as an eye in the sky. I
probably went up around 15 times and got some great shots; both video and stills, so all the
newspapers and TV companies were screaming for my footage, even though they had (further out)
helicopters. I was at pier height, getting a nice close shot.
www.aerialnews.co.uk

EDDIE MITCHELL

Eddie Mitchell is a news photographer based in Brighton.

eddie mitchell

97

INES RODRIGUEZ

Above clockwise: Palace


Pier, as seen by drone; Eddie
Mitchell holding a DJI F550;
Eastbourne Pier fire;
Brighton as seen by drone.

MICHAEL KHENG AND SIMON WEIR

dronography

The Commercial Eye

99

I have been involved in aerial photography for over 18 months now. I started off initially
with a DJI Phantom with a GoPro, a copter I still love flying, but soon progressed to a DJI
S800 Evo with a Panasonic GH3 camera.
I have been through the BNUC-S training and hold a CAA Permission for Aerial Work
(PfAW) for the sub 7kg category and 7-20kg category. I am a director and compliance
officer of ARPAS UK (Association of Remotely Piloted Aircraft Systems). ARPAS
is the industrys voice, representing its communities including both operators
and constructors.
I originally got into the aerial photography via my consultancy company, Kurnia
Licensing Consultants, which deals with alcohol and entertainment licensing. My initial
thought was that I could offer a service to clients to take photographs of their pub, hotel,
restaurant, whilst visiting the premises for the client to update their website or brochure.
This soon changed as more ideas came to mind during the initial months. The original
investment was less than 1000, but once the BNUC-S training, CAA PfAW, S800 Evo
and all the ancillary kit was added, the investment soon crept up to over 20,000.
So what do I do now? Almost anything that is permitted within the regulations. I have
teamed up with a cameraman who is a great editor, so we are filming and producing short
videos. I also do a lot of work for an estate agent who has embraced the technology. One
particular use of the copter was on a shoot for a cleaning company. They wanted to film
a couple of their cleaners cleaning a cladded building that was over 100ft high. The only
way to do this was via the copter.
The main issue to bear in mind is safety. Safety is paramount and must be observed all
the time. The other issues are the current CAA regulations no higher than 400ft, no
further than 500m, not within 150m of an open air assembly of more than 1000 people,
and not within 50m of a vessel, vehicle, or building not under the control of the pilot.
There can be exemptions, given a safety case is presented to the CAA, which will result
in permissions being granted on a case-by-case basis.
www.kurniaap.co.uk

ANDY LESTER

Michael Kheng runs a commercial photography


business in Lincolnshire.

Above: Michael Kheng, pilot (left) and Simon Weir,


cameraman (right) test flying the S800 Evo over the
Lincolnshire Wolds.
Top: Running Shadows a still captured by Michael
Kheng and Simon Weir whilst filming the Mablethorpe
Marathon in October 2014.

dronography

The Globetrotter

100

I wanted to go to places where people didnt have a visual idea of what the place looked like; so if I
was going to Germany, people knew what to expect; if I was going to Cuba, people knew what to
expect. But if I was going to Uzbekistan, this was in 2007-2008, no one knew what to expect
visually, so it was really exciting. The thing was, I was young and working alone in places like that
and it was really difficult. If I did a good job, it was because I was really pushing myself out on
a limb. My work goes through Getty, Zuma and Rex Features. Turning freelance has been a
decade-long adventure and Im now a travel photographer.
Its funny because you can spend weeks trudging around a place and get a few sales, or you
spend 20 minutes and get a drone up in the air and it goes crazy all across the internet! Id
occasionally photographed from helicopters when I was working for the newspapers. Like a lot of
people, I was waiting for a solution. All these little companies would spring up and shut down
with these products and finally DJI came out with this thing (Phantom). The reviews were reliable
and the product was astonishing. It was so rugged. They waited to release the Phantom when it
was really ready. The camera I use is a Panasonic Lumix GM1, as I dont like the fisheye look of
the GoPros.
Its given me the ability to make something from nothing. No one cares about you, the
photographer, but they care about what you are seeing and what you can bring to them. To do that
as the man on the ground, you sometimes have to go well outside the average persons comfort
zone to get it; you really have to go to great lengths to get something worthwhile. With the drone,
Im in Paris and taking a photograph and its getting in the newspaper.
How can I get a picture that a newspapers going to run from a city thats a complete
photographic cliche? Suddenly you can do it with a drone. No one else is doing this stuff with
travel photography, so Im waiting for people to start doing it better than me!
I work in the middle of nowhere generally, so safety isnt as much of an issue. In a city its
harder. These things do crash sometimes. Anything that sounds like a giant mosquito is not a
pleasant thing to have hanging above you! Photography, often, is a beautiful thing, but not
necessarily a beautiful process and drone photography takes that idea to the next level! Its not
pleasant in any way, to see or to hear, or to have near you. In cities, its stressful for me as Im
putting other people in danger by taking it up. So Ill only photograph in cities, pretty much, only
the morning. My beat is often countries where people dont go to, so Im not really worried about
flying a drone in Kurdistan as long as I dont put people in danger.
Architecture is people designing buildings, in miniature, on tables. If youre looking at a building
from the ground, its like getting on your knees and peering along the line of the table at the scale
model of the building. Thats not their most evocative angle at all. So when you get above the
ground and youre close to the building, thats the angle where you see the eloquence of the
design. I was at this Bah Temple in New Delhi, called the Lotus Temple, photographing it from
above at dawn, when its deserted. You really feel that youre presenting this architects work in a
way that they would be happy with. It couldnt be done any better. What was really thrilling, in a
child like way, was the thought that youre photographing the Taj Mahal, thats stood there for
around 300 hundred years, and youre photographing it in a way that Im 95 per cent sure it has
never been photographed before. Youre 40 metres off the ground and 80 metres away from the
structure a helicopter cant do that, and a pole cant do that. Its like Im reaching back into
history in some way and these people will be happy with the 20 minutes work Ive just done. Im
presenting their work in the best possible way.
www.facebook.com/amoschapplephotography

AMOS CHAPPLE

Amos Chapple is a press turned travel photographer, now based in


St Petersburg, Russia. Originally from New Zealand, Chapple has
worked for UNESCO, photographing their various sites, which
gave him a real taste for being on the road.

amos chapple

101

Above clockwise: Amos flying a drone; Clouds swirl


through the pillars of Sagrat Cor Church, high on a
hill above Barcelona 20 minutes later a
thunderstorm hit the city; The Lotus Temple, dotted
with pigeons at sunrise. Designed by an Iranian exile,
the building serves as the centre of the Bah faith
in Delhi.

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personal finance

Tax Return = More Money


Does reducing your tax bill seem
a pie in the sky ambition? Are
you wondering what can you
claim for? ADAM AIKEN answers

orting out your tax return can be a thankless task.


The main thing to do is to make sure your declaration
is accurate, of course. But nearly as important as
that is knowing what you can and cant claim for, and
making sure you dont miss out on the various
allowances available to photographers. First things first, though
proper record-keeping is a must.

accounts year as opposed to the first day of the next will bring
forward tax relief by 365 days.
Make sure you claim properly. As a rule of thumb, the costs of
your cameras and other equipment you use for your job should be
claimed as capital allowances, rather than business expenses. Not
sure how to categorise your claim? Consult an accountant. Also
bear in mind that you might need to adjust your claim according to
any private use. For example, you may wish to claim only 90 per
cent of the allowance on a new laptop if your children sometimes
use it to do their homework, says Jo. Repairs should also be
tax-deductible. But if the work constitutes a complete overhaul or a
major improvement to a piece of equipment, it should be treated as
a new purchase and will fall under the capital-allowance rules.

YOUR CAR
UP-TO-DATE RECORDS
All businesses are required to keep accurate records for tax
purposes, says Jo Nockels, of TaxAssist Accountants. Good
bookkeeping practices also benefit your business by helping you
manage and control your finances, plan for future growth and
ensure that your accounts are completed more efficiently.
Complete your tax return in good time and that will have the
knock-on effect of helping you calculate your tax bill early, and give
you more time to find the money you need to meet your liabilities.
Simply stuffing them into a shoebox and hoping youll be able to
unravel everything in a years time could lead to a shambles. And
the taxman can fine you if it deems your records to be inadequate.

IS YOUR HOME YOUR OFFICE?


How much you can claim depends on how much you use your home.
If there is only minor use for example, if you just write up the
business records at home you may put through a reasonable
estimate, says Jo. Without question, HM Revenue & Customs will
usually accept 4 a week, but you could put through a larger
amount provided that it is based on what you actually spend.
If, however, your home is somewhere you do some or all of your
work, the tax allowances are obviously greater. The easiest way to
claim for this is to add up the number of rooms you have in your
home and then divide your household bills such as your utility bills
and council tax by that number. You can then enter that as a cost
on your tax return, as well as the proportion of your internet and
phone costs. Be careful, though, says Jo: When part of the house is
being used for the business, it must be the sole use of that space in
order to qualify for a deduction. If part of the home used for
business purposes is simultaneously used for some other nonbusiness purposes, no deduction is available.

You can legitimately claim back some of your motoring costs. Add
up your total running costs and then adjust the figure according to
what proportion of your driving is for business. Or record your
business mileage over the year and then claim back 45p a mile for
the first 10,000 miles, and 25p a mile for anything above that.

WHAT ELSE CAN YOU CLAIM?


Your advertising costs should be tax-deductible, as is the hiring of a
photographic studio. Props and software are also legitimate
expenses, although you might need to check with your accountant
whether they should be claimed as capital allowances.
Jo Nockels says the issue of setting up a website for your
business is where things get more complicated. Generally
speaking, the cost of setting up a website is capital in nature and
attracts tax relief via the capital-allowance regime, she explains.
But ongoing maintenance and web updates are deemed to be
revenue in nature and may therefore be deducted from profits like
any other business expense.

DONT FORGET YOUR PREVIOUS EXPENDITURE


If you are a new business, you can include start-up expenses from
as far back as seven years ago. But as with your ongoing expenses,
proper record-keeping is essential. Clive Lewis, of the Institute of
Chartered Accountants in England and Wales (ICAEW), says: It is
important that all start-up expenses are recorded and VAT receipts
maintained so that the expenses can be treated and proven as valid
start-up expenses incurred wholly and exclusively for the purposes
of the trade. These expenses include advertising, marketing and
promotion, the cost of raising finance, fixtures and equipment,
travel, and professional fees. The golden rule is that all expenses
must be incurred wholly and exclusively for business purposes.

CLAIMING FOR YOUR EQUIPMENT

WHAT NEXT?

Mark Curtis, a partner at chartered accountants Larking Gowen,


says: When it comes to the purchase of photographic equipment,
the value will directly reduce your taxable profits. However, timing
is everything and making the purchase on the last day of your

If you are unsure of anything when it comes to your tax return, basic
advice can be reasonably priced, and it will quickly pay for itself if
you can increase your deductibles or avoid complications. Dont
have an accountant? Start with www.unbiased.co.uk

103

marketing

U
104

analyse
this!
For most businesses, their website is the
crux of their marketing activity BRODIE
MCINTOSH shows you how to know if
youre engaging visitors from the start

nderstanding what is
important to you and your
website is vital in
understanding its success.
With an average site conversion rate of 3
per cent, you should be aiming for three
users (if not more!) in every hundred who
visit your site to be completing an activity
you deem to be valuable. Hard activities
or conversions, as they are more
commonly known, are thought of as
downloading a brochure or filling out a
contact form. Soft conversions are
considered as being actions such as
playing a video or viewing a certain page
for over five minutes.
But how do you know how users are
interacting with it? Google Analytics is the
answer: firstly, its free and, secondly, its
incredibly powerful. Offering up-to-the
minute, accurate statistics for your site and
its performance, it allows you to analyse
user behaviour meaning you can make
educated and informed decisions on how to
improve your website.

Installing Analytics
Simply visit the Google Analytics website
and sign up. Once you have an account, you
need to add your property. In this case, this
will be your website.

Add the tracking code to


your site
This can get a little technical as it depends
on your CMS (Content Management
System) as to where you will add the code.
Some systems have a box for the code, and
some will need you to add it to the HTML of
each page you want to track (all of them!).

Filter out your IP address


Unless you tell Google Analytics otherwise,
it will track all of your own activity on your
site. You probably visit your own site
regularly and this is the type of user
behaviour that will skew your results. To
filter it out, create a customer filter and
enter your IP address which can be found
by simple googling my IP address.

brodie mcintosh

Set Up Goals

Channels

Setting up goals is like creating a check list of actions you wish users to complete on
your site. Like previously mentioned, this could be downloading an item such as
a brochure, or if you have an e-commerce site, completing a transaction. Every time a
user completes a goal, a conversion is logged allowing you to view statistics such
as the conversion rate of the website, and even how much your site is earning if you
choose to add a monetary value to your conversions.
There are two ways of setting up goals through a template or from scratch,
known as Custom goals. A template does just what it says on the tin although
templates wont be an option for you if you havent selected an industry at the set-up
stage. Custom goals are a little more fun; there are four types available, all to allow
you to track specific user actions.

Understanding how many site visitors you


get, as explained above, is important. But to
really understand how your website is
working, you need to know what type of
traffic is working the best. Luckily, Google
Analytics provides this information at the
click of a button using the Channels section
of the reporting (which can be found under
Acquisition). In this report you will see your
visitors split into various sources from
which they arrived at your site, how
engaged they are and the conversion rate
for each traffic source. By understanding
this, you will know what is working best and
where to focus your efforts on acquiring
new or fixing existing traffic.

DESTINATION GOALS You would set up a destination goal for when you want to
know how many users reach a specific page. You would use this for something
like contact forms every time a user fills out a contact form they are usually sent to
a Thank You page. Track how many users land on this page and youll know how
many have completed a contact form!
DURATION GOALS This type of goal is primarily useful for tracking when a user
stays on one page for a stated length of time i.e. ten minutes. This would be a desired
goal if you have a brochure site, where users will be engaging deeply with
information or imagery on one page.
PAGES PER VISIT GOALS This type of goal allows you to track how many pages
a user visits during one session on your site. You may want to count a conversion
every time a user views more than ten pages which ultimately would show their
engagement and interest.
EVENT GOALS Event tracking allows you to decide what the event is, and
generally it will be an action on your site. For example, you may have a video on your
home page and you want to know how many people play it. You would set up
the event to track how many people click play and ta da, you can count this as a
conversion and know just how useful that video is!

Navigating your way around Analytics


Analytics can be overwhelming. With huge amounts of information on offer, you will
find youre not sure where to turn first. To ease the strain a little, here are three
pages you should give your attention to, which will give you simple and easy to digest
information. Before we start, its worth mentioning the date range, which can be
accessed in the top right corner. Make sure if you choose to analyse data, you do so
with the date range in mind!

Audience overview
This is the first page you will land on when you log in to Analytics. Its a great way of
seeing some top level statistics for the whole site, such as visits (known as sessions),
page views, average session duration and bounce rate (defined as a percentage of
users who land on your website and leave without interacting further). Another
interesting metric on this page is the % of new sessions. This figure allows you to
understand how many users who land on your site are new and how many are
returning. Although this metric comes with a warning Analytics tracks this
information with cookies that are placed on a users browser. These generally last
three months unless a user clears them sooner.

Device Overview
Find this by clicking Audience > Mobile >
Overview. This page allows you to see a
breakdown of what devices users are
viewing your website on. SEO experts rarely
suggest using a mobile website anymore,
so it is important your main website looks
good on the wide range of devices people
are using. To ensure this, a responsive
website is a must. This type of design shifts
itself to fit the desired screen size
automatically when the website is loaded.
You will most likely find that users
viewing your un-responsive website on a
mobile or tablet will be much more likely to
bounce off your site. Not only is this bad
news because you are losing potential
customers, but it will also increase your
overall site bounce rate. Your bounce rate
is a factor which Google considers when
it ranks you in the search results. The
higher your bounce rate, the lower you
may appear.
Any questions? Find me on twitter:
@Intergage or @brodietosh
www.intergage.co.uk

In next months issue, Ill be discussing


social media advertising and how best to
utilise it.

105

business

1440
= 1 day
KEVIN MULLINS meanders around the issue of
procrastination, and you know what? There are
1440 minutes in a day and thats not a lot
106

ts Christmassssss! Well, it may be, by the time you read this. I am, of course,
writing this in October with one eye firmly focused on mince pies, wine and
other over-indulgences.
Whether you are a festive fun maker or a seasonal Grinch, this time of the year really
should be a time of looking at where your business is doing well, where it is struggling and
where you can make it more streamlined. This article marks my third year anniversary writing
this column. Ive been proud of it, and am always grateful for the feedback and comments
I receive on Twitter and via email. So thanks to you, the readers of this column, and to that end
I want to focus on slightly less business, high-brow stuff.
In this festive season, I want to be a little more philosophical and talk generally about some of
the more wide ranging decisions and events of this year that have helped me, or at least changed
me, in some way. I was originally tasked with writing an ongoing business column aimed at
helping, advising and inspiring photographers who have their own small business. My remit to
myself, throughout this period, has been to offer anecdotal advice. Not preaching or lecturing but
simply relaying elements of my business practices that have worked for me. Occasionally, Ive
also relayed stories where things havent gone right and I hope they have been useful too to a
certain degree. So, this happened to me:
Daddy. Daddy. DADDDYYYYY. Put that down look, I built a rocket. Boom. It came along like
a bolt of lightning. I knew it was going to come, of course it was inevitable. My three-year-old
boy had built a rocket out of Lego and was desperate to show it to me. Me. His dad. His daddy.
His safe keeper and the custodian of all his embryonic emotions and feelings on the life around
him. Boom.
The that, of course, was my phone. Some totally irrelevant Facebook post, probably, or
possibly it was an out-of-hours email, or maybe I was Instagramming a picture of him, alone. I
may even have been playing chess with someone from the other side of the world. But one thing
is for sure I shouldnt have been doing it, whatever it was. Boom.
Immediately Ive gone from being a proud dad, to a bad dad. Thats the way I saw it and, of
course, its not true Im not a bad dad (at least I hope not), but this event certainly clarified a
few things in my mind. I think something that affects us all, to a lesser or greater extent, is our

kevin mullins

107

Kevin Mullins used to spend an unhealthy amount of those 1440 minutes social media. But times have changed...

interaction with technology most notably social media. When you wake up in the morning,
what is the first thing you do? Is it reach for your phone or your tablet? If that is switch the
alarm off, then great. For me, I used to check my emails, then check Facebook, then Twitter
then Instagram.
I wrote a while back about time management and on days when Im up against it in terms of
workload, I tend to be the least reactive to working. When I was in university I lived with six
other lads in the house. The oven was never cleaned until it came time to revise for our exams.
Then, and only then, did we decide we needed to clean the oven. The reason being it was
something to do, other than revise. Social media had become my new oven and I would sit at
my desk with a to-do list as long as my arm, writing on Facebook such gems as: Got a to-do list
as long as my arm. The answer, of course, was to ditch Facebook and other oven cleaning
paradigms when necessary.
The greatest barrier to doing something is simply starting it. Once a task is commenced, you
have a far greater chance of getting on with it and finishing it. To that end, Ill often unplug the
internet when Im in the office for large chunks of the day. The world does carry on spinning
when you arent logged on to Facebook. People who urgently need to speak to you will phone,
rather than email and you know what? Youll get a lot more done.
Remember there are only 1440 minutes in a day. Thats not a lot. If you are anything like I was
you would be spending an unhealthy amount of those minutes on places like social media. Im
very guilty of over burdening myself with my business. Despite my best efforts, Ill often find
myself grinding my teeth trying to sleep thinking about work. Then, when insomnia hits, I would
probably reach for the tablet and start checking email, Facebook etc. (see above).
Im a big fan of fiction, especially British crime novels. Typically I listen to these on audio book
in the car during the journeys to and from weddings. This is a good use of technology, of course,
but around a year ago I was given a copy of The Blackhouse by Peter May. I placed it on my

business / kevin mullins

If all the guests


at a wedding
have 4k video,
with the ability
to pull stills,
what will become
of the professional
wedding
photographer?

108

bedside table and there it sat for a few weeks when one night, the
impossible happened! Our home internet provider was down and I
couldnt check Facebook or emails. Surely the world would end. It
didnt, and I reached for the book. Fast forward three weeks and Id
read the other two books in The Lewis Man trilogy and my love of
tactile books had been resumed. Not only have I devoured all of the
Peter May books (Entry Island being a special favourite), but Ive taken
to reading almost every night again from photo books, biographies and
even my old passion, Agatha Christie. I usually slumber far more
peacefully after reading a novel than after having my blood pressure
raised in some Facebook group.
Back in August I was on holiday with my family and my deadline for this very column was
upon me. I was ill, tired and, frankly, out of ideas. So my wife stepped into the breach. Some of
you may remember the article which was penned by her and was titled: The Diary of a
Photographers Widow.
You can find it and read it on the PP website, and it was an article that I got a lot of great
feedback from. However, the reason Im bringing it up here is because it really opened my eyes
to the way that Gemma saw my business, my position in the industry and, to a certain extent,
how she saw me.
When I read the article I could empathise a little with what she has to deal on a day-to-day
basis with my business. Of course, its a symbiotic relationship, but actually having her sit down
and write about my business made me very aware and more conscious of how her role in my life
is impacted by my business.
If you have a wife, husband, partner or even parent that you live with try it. Take this
challenge: Get them to write 1500 words about you and your business. See what they come up
with and whether it raises any questions or addresses any issues that you thought may have
existed. Its quite therapeutic, kind of. And to bring it right back down to Earth, the reality of the
matter is it is the end of another year. Its another 30 odd weddings shot and it is time to
revaluate the business. This does happen each year and each year I try and figure out whats
working well, whats not and what needs to be changed. From the personal elements, the points
about technology above are definitely relevant but you cant ignore it completely.
The industry (at least the wedding industry) is changing. We have the beloved selfie sticks
now that protrude from the aisle at every opportunity and technology is leaping forward at a
rate of knots, whilst at the same time becoming cheaper and cheaper. Ive seen some amazing
stills pulled from 4k video footage and if you believe the rumour mills, well be shooting 4k
footage on our phones within two years. If all the guests at a wedding have 4k video, with the
ability to pull stills, what will become of the professional wedding photographer? Its something
to ponder and worry about or ignore, depending on your opinion.
For me, Im going to be upping my game to compete with the more and more amazing
photographers that are appearing on an almost daily basis. People like Neale James are
constantly evolving their offerings, whilst Im still just shooting stills. Over the festive period
and the new year Ill be looking at all the different ways I can move my business forward.
Ill be at the SWPP convention in January presenting several Masterclasses and Superclasses
and it would be great to see some of you there. For myself, however, when Im not presenting Ill
be busy attending workshops from some of the photographers who are moving things forward
in the industry at the convention and hopefully, in a couple of months, Ill be writing about just
that on these very pages.
www.kevinmullinsphotography.co.uk
@kevin_mullins

working pro

113

Younger
Construction
Victoria Dovey catches up with CONNIE
ZHOU a landmark of architecture
photography in the making, aged just 27

CONNIE ZHOU

Florida Polytechnic University, USA.

working pro

114

oogle is one of the most colossal


corporations anyone could name,
but for Connie Zhou size is not
something to find intimidating.
I like photographing things that
are larger than life, she says. Things that
I can, strangely, fit into the sight of my camera.
Connie made a name for herself shooting tall
skyscrapers and huge structures like the
Bullring Mall in Birmingham and NYCs World
Trade Centre, but her biggest break came from
a giant of another form. Google would be giving
one lucky candidate the chance to see inside its
data centres, and Connie clutched the key.
The resulting images set the internet alight.
Connies clean and polished work, combined with
the childish whimsy of the zany buildings, felt like
someone had set Stanley Kubrick loose in Willy
Wonkas chocolate factory. Her eye for leading
lines became literally highlighted by rainbows of
pipelines and wires running throughout the
warehouses and congregations of servers glowing
in uniform rows. With the surface of the Earth
available to view at the click of a button, were accustomed to Google photographing us, but its
a rarity for anyone to turn the camera on them. The enormous data centres in locations around
the globe are the price we pay for cloud technology; huge prison-like structures housing
countless cells of information. Being the first person from the general public to be allowed
inside, it was Connies job to show the world Where the Internet Lives the title of her
unprecedented project.
I wouldnt trade the experience for anything. Im so grateful to have worked with them, she
shares, with a sense of modesty that never falters throughout the interview. I was 24 at the
time it was a big moment in my career. You read that right: 24. So how does one receive such
a big break at such a young age? I was in New York for most of my life. I went to an arts high
school in the city, LaGuardia, and attended Parsons The New School for Design, majoring in
photography. It makes sense that Connie grew up in a city, especially one like New York home
to some of the most iconic 20th century architecture in the world. New York is a great place to

connie zhou

Left clockwise: Google Data Center,


Hamina, Finland; Chinas National
Swim Center, Olympics, Beijing, China;
Harpa, Iceland.

live and grow up. I was always


interested in shooting urbanscapes,
exploring abandoned buildings and
locations while I was in high school. It
wasnt until much later that I realised
I was mainly interested in capturing the
structures of buildings and
architecture. After worrying over
failing one of her classes, Connie now
considers professor and worldrenowned photographer Arlene Collins,
at Parsons, a mentor. Her parents are
cited as huge influences on her budding
creativity too, as her father a Fashion
Institute of Technology graduate and
graphic designer would fill the
childhood home with art. He can
literally create something beautiful
out of anything, she tells me. Its
insane! When I ask if they continue to
be an inspiration now she is an adult,
Connie replies without hesitation: Of
course everyday.
In terms of professional idols, Connie
has a couple: Gursky has always been
an inspiration; I am constantly
astonished by his work. I think he is one
of the reasons why Im so obsessed
with large-scale structures and
symmetry. Robert Polidoris work is
also definitely something I aspire to
emulate. Perhaps the most impactful
influence on her career, however, would
come after graduation, with an
apprenticeship under architecture
photographer Michael Weber, whose work helped define and establish some of the worlds most
recognisable hotels. Getting the real-world experience through work with Michael was
definitely valuable in starting my career, Connie comments. It exposed me to the industry
first-hand, and taught me a lot about lighting interiors, as well as the ins and outs of the
business. A valuable resource indeed, with Connie just a few short years away from landing
Google as a client: Going into it without knowing what the data centres looked like was both
exciting and intriguing, she explains. I did a bit of research while writing my proposal and had a
good idea of what a server floor would look like; I knew I could do a good job photographing it.
Connies confidence was not without merit. Before Google, her clients ranged from architects
and corporations to editorial and creative agencies. When it came to pitch for the keys to the
castle, she already had the skills to impress. I like to create a proposal explaining in detail my
vision for the project, she tells us. Its important to me that my clients know that Im 100 per
cent dedicated to their project, so offering ideas that are specific to their needs can also help. 

115

working pro

116

The most important aspect of having a


successful business is maintaining good
communication with your clients, Connie
continues. I think the most overwhelming thing
about my career is the business side of things. Im
a photographer and, thankfully, shooting and
seeing things in a different light comes naturally
to me. But starting out I learned very quickly that
photographers also have to be good business
people. In photography, as with any business,
having a great network of contacts is key.
Naturally, the most difficult part of the industry is
getting your foot in the door. The importance of
networking cant be stressed enough. Connies
passion for architecture is evident in her work
alone, but her organisational skills seem to be one
of the most important building blocks in
establishing herself. Jump-starting your career
can wholly depend on knowing the right people,
she shares. I always keep my clients and all my
contacts updated with new work, every time
I travel somewhere. In this day and age, the
internet and a social media presence are
important to anyones career. Maintaining a strong
presence can expose you to an infinite number
of clients.
The old-fashioned ways of networking seem to
be giving way to social media a little more each
day a well-timed tweet can now count for more
than a schmooze over lunch. Its not just in
aspects of business that Connie is forwardthinking. I dont change my gear drastically,
however I do update it every couple of years. The
biggest investment for me has been my Profoto
lighting system. Gear isnt a pressing element for
Connie, but when it comes to the buildings in front of her lens, to styles of architecture, she
certainly has a preference. I definitely appreciate conservative and classic architecture,
but there is something about futuristic buildings that I love; just the oddity of them is interesting
to me. Her favourite city reflects this. The dense neo-landscape of Hong Kong, picked by
Connie because its just such a modern city; everything is so easy there.
There will always be a conflict between the old and the new, she tells us, I enjoy the clash.
But to be honest, my dream is to photograph a structure in complete isolation with nothing
around it. I guess something that is larger than life; probably something that looks like its made
for space. Her portfolio as a whole reveals this attitude. Connies favourite building, the
National Centre for the Performing Arts in Beijing, looks like it has just arrived from Mars, and
the famous Jin Mao Tower in Connies birthplace of Shanghai appears to be sending a
message to the stars. Her favourite architects? Frank Gehry for inspiring me to photograph
architecture; every time I look at his work it makes me feel like Im photographing architecture
for the first time. Also Santiago Calatrava, for his beautiful structures that constantly put
me in awe always making me feel like Im photographing something from the future.
That word crops up again future. It seems Connie is consumed by it, by the need to look
forward, and to err on the side of modernity. I can only hope that, through my work, I am

Above clockwise: World Trade Center, New


York, USA; Florida Polytechnic University,
USA; Atocha Train Station, Madrid, Spain;
Caixaforum Museum Madrid, Spain; Florida
Polytechnic University, USA; Blue Lagoon,
Iceland.

connie zhou

117

constantly pushing myself and the boundaries of industry convention, she says, and pushing
herself is something she practices. Shooting exteriors is more challenging because the
weather is unpredictable. But I love looking at a structure or a building
and waiting for the right light to catch to get the perfect shot. Lately
shes been branching out, with a view to exploring multimedia and
video, recognising the importance of it in todays industry. A recent trip
to Iceland saw her try her hand at landscape too. Iceland is an
amazing place! Connie exclaims. Its so beautiful and otherworldly
there shooting came easily, even though I wasnt shooting
architecture. At the end of the day Im still a photographer, regardless
of what Im shooting: architecture, people, or landscapes.
Of the three, the most challenging for Connie initially was people.
Shooting the portraits for Google was very rewarding because I loved
working with the staff there but in almost all of my images, I work very hard avoiding people.
In fact, I spend hours taking them out of my shots! The crisp, clean images with grand
structures in sparse settings, characteristic of her work, dont work well with bustling bodies.
From a visual standpoint, a figure would be a blot an unsightly speck to remove. Famous 

I always keep my clients


and all my contacts updated
with new work, every time I travel
somewhere... the internet and a
social media presence are
important to anyones career.

working pro / connie zhou

Favourite
bit of kit?
16-35mm lens its
so wide! It captures
everything I need.
118

buildings or structures are always crowded with people and, in some cases, are under-going
construction, Connie continues. A lot it has to do with playing the waiting game but, in some
cases, there are just too many people. Thats when I work my magic in post. When Im shooting,
I always know what I need to capture for post in the back of my mind. I do my own retouching,
so I know what I need.
It seems that now, however, even people are on the table. There is a lot more I want to
accomplish as a photographer. I have been working on including people in my architectural
shots; its definitely a different style. I started shooting a bit of lifestyle, and having people in
them is essential. Perhaps gaining representation has given Connie more freedom to
manoeuvre? After Google, I felt it was time to look for representation, which led me to Michael
Ash, she replies. Agents are vital to the industry because they create great exposure for
photographers. More importantly, they allow the photographers to do what they do best while
the agency deals with the business end.
After such a big success, especially so early on in a career, it seems a photographer can travel
down one of two paths. The achievement can become unsurpassable, and loom over work for
the rest of your life. But for someone like Connie, whos more than used to dealing with all
things big and monumental, it can carve out the way to new opportunities, perhaps even larger
than before. Recently, Connie has been shooting the new Polytechnic University of Calatrava in
Florida. Im planning a trip to the coastline of the Northwest next, Connie shares. Of course
Ive also put together a list of architectural gems along the way. Im also working on a personal
project on airplane graveyards. Im not worried about my Google work overshadowing the rest
of my work, she assures. Im very proud of the amount of exposure it got. Ultimately, it gave
exposure to all my work. I think I have Google to thank for that. Its hard to disagree, but it may
also have something to do with Connies tremendous determination, and her ability to look to
the future. Gursky and Polidori, her photography heroes, didnt become well-established until
they were into their thirties. At 27, Connie Zhou is off to a running start.
www.conniezhou.com
instagram.com/connyay

Above: Aqua, Chicago, USA.


Right: TWA Terminal, New York, USA.

Kit Bag
Canon 5D Mark II I Lenses:
16-35mm, 24-70mm and 50mm
I I like to use my Acute Profoto
1200 pack with a regular
head or a ring flash when Im
shooting interiors.

connie zhou

119

whats hot

The gear markets in motion


If you were tantalised by the possibilities of 4k,
then the announcement of RED Digital Cinemas 6k
RED DRAGON sensor will come as welcome news
its set to blur the line between still and motion
cameras even further

H
120

igh-end video camera manufacturers are churning the markets


waters with innovative products that may change the way
photographers capture images the tide is turning in some fields
already, with magazines featuring motion stills on their pages, and
covers, even. This interest in the stills market has propelled a few names into
our inboxes, with a fresh market of video manufacturers pitching to this
emerging market RED, ARRI and Blackmagic among them.
RED DRAGONs 19 megapixels, in contrast to 4ks eight megapixel stills, has been
newly launched. Motion and, more specifically, the ability to take still from motion,
has been lurking on the horizon for many years, but suddenly were inclined to sit up
and listen alongside its megapixels, it features a new colour science, and higher
dynamic range, and is already in the studios of numerous high-end pros.
At Colognes Photokina, PP took the opportunity to see American digital cinema
camera company REDs offerings first hand, witnessing their cameras stills
capabilities. The fashion show was staged with the REDs EPIC DRAGON, with its 6k
sensor, capturing 100 frames per second at 19 megapixels, centre stage. It can fit
easily into a back pack, weighs 1.8kg (a Canon 5D Mark II weighs approx. 1.1kg, with
a lens) and can rival many DSLRs on the market in image quality, and theyre keen
to communicate as much.
They had a workflow set up, with live editing using the RED software to grab and
process the stills, before an Epson knocked-out wide format prints. A professional
might be able to tell the difference, but the fact remained that many couldnt.
It has catapulted above the Nikon D800E and Sony A7R in performance scores on
DxO mark. It is also offering more tactical options for photographers. The newly
reworked REDCINE-X PRO provides Raw workflow and now features frame tagging,
so shooters can mark and access specific frames while shooting. Also new within
this version of REDCINE-X PRO is ADD. (Advanced Dragon Debayer), a new
algorithm for DRAGON that carefully analyses every pixel to create the best
frame possible.
So whats the hold up? If youre not shooting natural light, setting up is going to
cost you a substantial amount. These cameras lack strobe triggers, and continuous
lighting is a more expensive game. Secondly, you lose the definitive moment and
have to sift through the 100fps results.
When theyve cracked synching flash heads, we may see more still turning their
attentions to these image-making machines, although the bulk of professionals are
unlikely to be trading in their DSLRs just yet the prices sit closer to high-end
medium-format cameras at $27,500 (approx. 17,000) for the RED DRAGON brain.
But the innovative role these companies are making is exciting, and narrowing the
bridge between the two markets, with companies including Panasonic, Sony and
Samsung inching closer to them in the opposite direction, with affordable highdefinition video CSCs. Things are certainly in motion
www.red.com

RED EPIC
DRAGONS
6k brain costs
approx. 17,000.

BIG IS

BEAUTIFUL
122

In search of a high-end option to offer within a bespoke lifestyle


package, Adam Scorey checks out the 30 x 30 multi-aperture frame,
created by One Vision Imaging

product review

or lifestyle and wedding photographers


alike, offering a tactile product in
addition to providing the commissioned
images in digital format is both good
practice, and complementary to a top
end service. With lifestyle photography particularly,
offering a way to display images, rather than hiding
them away on a memory stick, adds value to a
bespoke package and your brand. This framing
option from One Vision Imaging showcases the top
four images from a shoot, enhancing them rather
than merely presenting them, creating a high quality
piece of wall art for your client.
When looking through the One Vision website,
I had to find something that did these images justice,
but that was also simple enough to let the images
be the star of the show. The stars this time were
Craig Flemings beautiful editorial fashion portraits
from the October Pentax 645Z review. With
51-megapixel images of that quality, how best to
show them? My eye fell on a stylish black frame but
with multiple apertures. I wanted one large image
and then a few others, (in this case three), in a
supporting role. I wanted it big too. After all, these
are decent sized files.
Okay, OVI can frame and mount up to 48 x 36
inches, but I didnt need anything quite that size.
I opted for a 30 x 30in frame, a little over 1 inches
wide, in Confetti Black a satin-like frame with a
very contemporary feel. I then went for a bright
white top mount with a black under mount to set the
images off. The main image was 18.7 x 25 inches
so, huge with the rest being 7 x 8 inches, running
down the right of the main. About a week later, the
frame turned up wrapped in thick card and about a
kilometre of bubble wrap!
Stupidly, I am always surprised at just how big the
frames are when they arrive. It seemed massive,
confirming that I didnt need the larger size. It was
also millimetre perfect. No gaps in the frame joins,
equidistant mounting edges and razor-sharp bevel
cuts. Printing quality was OVIs usual professional
faultless standard it really is an amazing show
piece for the images and I cant wait to get it on the
wall so that I can start enjoying the images Craig
has shot, which really is the whole point to
celebrate beautiful pictures. And the cost? All in,
including delivery, 143.46.

www.onevisionimaging.com
www.craigfleming.net

123

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gear

The D750 had no problem finding contrast in testing environments.


The below shot was taken in darker conditions than the results
suggest thats the power of a top sensor paired with
top autofocus.

ROSS HARVEY

125

YOUVE
CREATED A
MONSTER...
Award-winning wedding photographer
ROSS HARVEY puts the Nikon D750 to
the test to see if it holds a candle to his
beloved D3S
WHAT THIS REVIEW ISNT: A pixel peeping and statistical
comparisons between various cameras.

WHAT THIS REVIEW IS: A real world account in a


professional environment from a gear lover with high standards.
Its not intended to be a catch-all review, its specifically tailored
for my own needs and shooting style. Every shot (except dance
floor) is ambient/available light. No flash whatsoever. 

gear

Ive been using two Nikon D3Ss for the last few
years. I adore this camera, and have often touted
it as the perfect choice for wedding photography.
Its arguably the best mix of megapixels in terms
of print ability and online/offline storage,
impeccable AF, low second-hand prices and the
greatest high ISO ability (in the context of
dynamic range) of any serious, professional
action camera.
While weddings arent as fast as sport, I move
quickly and shoot quickly. If you consider that poor technique, consider this: I dont
want a camera that cant keep up with me. I want a camera that is transparent; a
seamless element of my thought and action process. The D3S has been a faithful
servant in this regard, where many others have failed.

D3S upgrade path

126

With each body nearing the 300K shutter mark, its time to find replacements.
The logical choice is the D4S. Its incredibly capable, but do I need that outstanding
buffer? Not really. The D610 and Df, as good as they are, have less powerful
AF systems. While perfect for some, Im both spoiled by and used to Nikons best.
The D810 has the 51-point AF system, but at 36 megapixels and 5fps, it
doesnt have the speed however, its a revelation for studio, landscape and
portrait photographers.
Enter the Nikon D750. An upgraded D610 sensor with low light ability that
exceeds the D810, the latest and greatest Nikon 51-point AF system that focuses at
-3EV, dual card slots of the same format (SD), 6.5fps, only 2.5 shy of the D3S, and
24 pixels of the mega variety. At launch, in the UK, the D3S was 3500 new. The
D4S is 4800. The D750 is 1800.

Nikon 35mm f/1.8G (FX)


To not make it any easier on the D750, I paired it with the new 35mm f/1.8 from
Nikon. A smaller, cheaper and lighter version of its older brother my workhorse
lens for the last four years the Nikon 35mm f/1.4G. Its a perfect fit for the D750.
So thats a D750 and 35mm f/1.8 combo (2265) versus the D3S and 35mm f/1.4
(4980 at purchase). A tough ask.
The D750 and the new 35mm f/1.8 lens came with to a wedding and was used
alongside the D3S and, most importantly, used in the way I would use a D3S:
quickly and without compromise. If it could keep up, it was going to be a very
special camera at that price point and size.

Nikon D750 autofocus


Autofocus, along with sensor technology, is at the core of professional camera
performance. For the way I shoot (often wide open at f/1.4), manual focus is not fast
enough. Missed autofocus is a missed moment. A camera that nails focus boosts
your confidence, and confidence and creativity are intrinsically linked. I manually
select the AF point and employ continuous focus (AF-C). I dont need the camera to
determine the focus point my composition and eye does that. All the camera
needs to do is nail the object Im focusing on.
After running it through its paces, Im glad to report that the AF on the D750 is
outstanding my creative freedom of movement was unimpeded, and both centre
and outer AF points performed admirably. I pushed the camera and expected to see
missed focus shots, but nearly every time the D750 surprised me with absolutely
spot-on focus. It is better than I had hoped, and I had high hopes.

Before the D750 was released, one of my


concerns was the buffer. Id read reports that the
D610 was not suited for fast action. Coming from
a D3S (built for sport), it was a potential deal
breaker. Im (extremely) glad to report that the
buffer is ample. For the confetti shots I was able
to burst two to four shots every second, or
sooner, without issue. It did fill up and slow down
at the end, but by then it was over. I took 30 shots
in total, and 24 had completely nailed AF, three
were out (the very first three, which could have
been my own doing) and the last three were
slightly off, yet easily recoverable with minimal
sharpening. Very impressive. I was using the
excellent 24mm f/1.4G Nikon lens.
I have since tested the SanDisk Extreme Pro
95MB/s SD card and its even better. Even when
the buffer is full, the D750 shoots at around 4fps,
and the buffer clears itself much faster.
While the AF point spread doesnt cover the
frame as fully as the D3S, I didnt find it a
problem. Any extreme compositions could be
executed by locking focus (AE/AF-L button) and
recomposing slightly; something Ive always done
anyway. It occurred to me that if I overlaid the
12MP resolution of the D3S through the D750
viewfinder, the D750 AF points would essentially
cover that imaginary D3S frame. In the worst
case scenario (in other words, needing AF on a
subject in the corner of the frame) I could use an

nikon D750

127

outer point, then crop the image and still have higher resolution than the D3S.
While entirely unscientific, it made me grin at least.

Low light autofocus


This is next level low-light autofocus. I performed many tests in a darkened room,
focusing on objects in conditions that would stop every other camera Ive tested.
Time after time, the D750 exceeded my expectations.

Low light capability


Having been spoiled by the D3S, which had incredible dynamic range at high ISOs,
my hopes were high. However I wasnt expecting magic, but thats what I found.
Even with the cheaper lens the new Nikon 35mm f/1.8G it was outstanding. The
above photograph is straight out of camera, wide open (f/1.8) and ISO 9000. All I did
was desaturate the blue channel to remove a blue tint caused by the window.
Incredible! It made the dark church look like a brightly lit room with ease. Notice the
quality of dynamic range, even at ISO 9000. The 100 per cent crop (inset) shows
the quality of the noise. No chroma noise, no patches and no banding, uniform and
consistent quality stuff, guys and girls. Remember thats SOOC without any noise
reduction whatsoever.
How about on the dance floor, where things get hectic? I often pair the D3S with
the Nikon 24-70mm f/2.8G (which has fairy dust in its AF engine), using the AF
assist on the SB-910 speedlight. Again, the D750 with the tiny 35/1.8G performed
admirably (pictured right). I dont think it missed a single shot all evening.

Raw manipulation
The degree in which a Raw file is editable has a profound effect on post production
abilities. The higher the dynamic range in an image, the more you can do. This is
why higher dynamic range at higher ISOs is so important you maintain the ability
to manipulate the image to your liking. Below are a few SOOC and pushed
examples of how D750 files can be edited to a normal degree. Note the 

After running
it through its paces,
Im glad to report
that the AF on the
D750 is outstanding

gear

128

gear

quality and depth of detail, contrast and colour in


the pushed images.
Above is a 100 per cent crop of the pushed
shadow area. Again, note the high quality colour
and noise. Wide open, f/1.8, on the 35mm f/1.8.

Battery and card storage

130

With Raw recording set to 12-bit Lossless


Compressed and a 64GB card (Lexar x600,
90MB/sec), the readout displayed 1.5K shots. I
actually took 2.3K, and the shot counter still
displayed 200 remaining. You only need four
64GB cards to shoot 5000 images per wedding
with 1:1 Raw backup. I used two batteries
shooting that 2.3K figure, with only a fifth of the
second battery being used. Id been playing with
menus and Wi-Fi the night before, too.
The User Mode (U1 and U2 on the dial) profiles
are perfect. On the D3S I had custom shooting
banks (i.e. profiles) set up for switching between
AP and manual (used for dance floor and off
camera flash) you could select them through
the camera menu. I prefer it on the D750 using
the dial, its much quicker. To save settings to U1
or U2, choose the mode you wish to use on the
main dial (M, A, S etc.) and set the camera up as
intended. Then simply press the Menu button, go
to Setup Menu (the spanner icon) and select
Save user settings. You then choose U1 or U2.
It even saves the AF point selection! Remember
to reset it to the centre point when saving
user modes.
With regards to the shutter maximum of
1/4000, its negligible to me as the D3S was ISO
200 and 1/8000sec (with the D750 base ISO of
100, its identical). In direct harsh sunlight the
lowest aperture youll get is f/2.8, but Im usually
in documentary mode in bright sun. If you need
f/1.4 for direct sun portraits, you can always pop
an ND filter on the lens. The low light and AF
increase is game changing. Its exciting times for
both Nikon and Canon users, as competition
supercharges technological evolution.

The good

The could-be better

Tiny and featherlight, compared


to the D3S
Perfect ergonomic fit and
grip for my hands
Incredible AF in all light
Incredible dynamic range
D3S level high ISO ability
Wide exposure compensation
range: +/- 5 stops
Balances well with 24, 35 and
85mm f/1.4G primes
Fast shooting, great buffer
with the right card
Fast Live View
Excellent user mode profiles
Highly customisable
Built-in Wi-Fi
2.5K shots on a 64GB card
Good battery life (similar to D3S)

Live View: Double exposures dont


work infinitely easier with live
overlay, please add this Nikon!
Live View: Exposure Preview should
be on by default (shows real-time
exposure)
Live View: Button hold + D-Pad for
much bigger focus area control/
movement
Need an option to disable the LCD
activating when changing ISO
Quiet mode. Its not quiet!
AF point spread
1/4000 shutter

nikon D750

131

Above: I use the outer AF points all day, their performance is very
important for my style of shooting. This shot was taken
successfully using the outer focus points.

Extreme sensor test:


Five stop under exposure
While not a real world example, I took a five stop under
exposure at ISO 100. The same gear and settings as
before, the Nikon 35mm f/1.8G using 12-bit Lossless
Compressed Raw recording. This is the same image,
imported into Lightroom with the exposure pushed +5
stops. Mind boggling detail recovery! The depth of
detail in the dark shadow areas seems to defy logic
they are essentially black in the original image.

Verdict
Ive found my new wedding camera. My high hopes were exceeded, and
that was using a 460 lens. The next wedding Ill be back on the f/1.4G
primes and 24-70mm for the dance floor, and Ill use two D750s
throughout. My two trusty D3Ss will come along as backup (never thought
Id hear myself say that). To create a camera so small with such an
incredible sensor and autofocus system that not only offers great dynamic
range and quality at higher ISOs, but also focuses in darker conditions, will
be absolutely invaluable to countless photographers. I do a lot of travelling
for photography, so having lighter and smaller gear is always welcomed.
To have that with essentially zero drawbacks is a fantastic achievement.
The saving in size and weight, while maintaining and in some contexts
even exceeding the D3S performance, is nothing short of amazing. When
you carry two cameras with you all day these ergonomic benefits can not
be understated.
Nikon, youve created a monster. Throughout this review all I could think
was Return of the Jedi. This camera is an absolute gem. There is simply
nothing on the market that can match the combination of the Nikon D750
price, size, weight and performance.
The 35mm f/1.8G is a mini miracle: Crazy fast AF, essentially weightless,
small form factor and great image quality. Nice bokeh, too. Will it replace
my 35mm f/1.4G? No. The f/1.4G has better contrast and colours in
harsher lighting conditions (especially wide open), but thats to be expected
since its over twice the price and weight. Will I keep it? Oh yes.
www.nikon.co.uk
www.rossharvey.com
@RossHarvey

art photography

ALL PICTURES COURTESY BERNDNAUT SMILDE AND RONCHINI GALLERY

Nimbus Dumont, 2014.

133

whipping up a storm
Daisy McCorgray talks to BERNDNAUT SMILDE, a Dutch visual artist
with his head in the clouds and his feet in Europes architectural wonders

meteorological icon in art, from the nimbus


shaped topiary of Japanese gardens to the
golden age of Dutch painting, the cloud continues
to captivate and inspire an ever present but
impermanent motif.
Today, the clouds of history continue to engage our attention,
the cloud-filled landscapes of early 19th century masters Turner
and Constable, are both paid homage with major exhibitions this
year by the Tate Britain and V&A respectively. However, there is
one Dutch artist causing a storm (excuse the pun) this year by
creating the unexpected; an indoor cloud, hovering serenely over
the polished floors of well-known gallery spaces. With the help of
a fog machine he carefully adjusts the temperature and humidity
of a space to produce real clouds long enough for their uncanny
presence to be captured on camera.
I caught up with Berndnaut Smilde to find out the process
behind bringing the outside, in.

Daisy McCorgray: Why did you choose to create a cloud?


Berndnaut Smilde: I wanted to see if I could exhibit a rain cloud. I
imagined walking in an empty museum hall where there was
nothing to see except for a cloud hovering in the corner of the
room. Initially, I wanted to create an image of ultimate
disappointment as a counterbalance to what we would expect to
find in a classic museum hall.
DM: How long does the cloud last?
BS: It exists for only a few seconds and then it falls apart again.
DM: How did you discover the creation process?
BS: I started working with smoke because of the visual
resemblance to clouds. By trying and testing different techniques
I got the hang of it. I can control the space but the clouds are
different every time this makes every take an experiment until
I get the right shot. 

134

Nimbus II, 2012.

Nimbus Minerva, 2012.

Nimbus Visual, 2013.

art photography

Nimbus Sankt Peter, 2014.

DM: Would you describe the work as photography


predominantly, or something else?
BS: Yes, a photograph is for me the best way to capture and
present the work. I am not so much interested in the process of
making. The work is really about the idea of a cloud inside a
space and what people project on to it. This is best represented
by an image.

Portland Place, London, 2014.

DM: How would you describe your style?


BS: I see the clouds as temporary sculptures, made of almost
nothing, balancing on the edge of materiality, an image of
prospect in an empty (exhibition) space. You can see them as a
sign of misfortune or an element from a classical painting.
There is something ungraspable about clouds: it might explain
why people have been projecting so many meanings and myths
on to clouds for centuries.
DM: The project has been a popular one what is it about
the Nimbus series that people engage with?
BS: Maybe there is something universal and timeless about the
works which is perhaps why so many different viewers have
engaged with them.

Nimbus Platform 57, 2012.

DM: You have said that your work deals with deconstruction
and construction why are these important themes within
your work?
BS: An in-between state appeals to me as it doesnt have a
function yet, and is therefore open for interpretation. There is
not yet a finished outcome we can relate to. Transition shows
traces of history and a future vision.
DM: What draws you to create your work within internal
spaces as opposed to outdoors?
BS: I was curious to find out what it would be like to encounter
a cloud within an internal space. It is an image of the
seemingly impossible. Placing a natural phenomenon in an
unnatural context can appear threatening in itself, as an
unknown message.
DM: What inspires you?
BS: I often work reacting to the architecture or history of a
given location. A lot of my work centres on aspects of duality,
the landscape and ones position as a viewer. I am also
interested in how we perceive the ideal and give meaning
to this. 

135

art photography
Nimbus Green Room, 2013.

137

DM: Whats your sound track of choice when working?


BS: I often forget to listen to music when I am working.

DM: With the first installations, before any one had seen the
project, was it tough to get permission from the venues to
create a cloud inside?
BS: On the contrary. People have been quite open and helpful to
the idea of testing a cloud in their space.
DM: Do you think the popularity of Photoshop undermines
works such as this? With many people their first reaction could
be that the clouds are Photoshopped
BS: No, I dont think so. For me it is really important that the cloud
was created and photographed in a specific building. The
photograph functions as a document of something that took place
in that specific location. If I had Photoshopped the cloud inside the
space, it would be a totally different thing. Also I dont think you
would be able to catch the light in the same way.
DM: How important is lighting to achieve these images?
BS: There is always additional light. Most of the time it is fixed
but we also moved along with the cloud with handheld lights,
doing whatever means are necessary. The atmosphere is
very important.

DM: What are you working on at the moment?


BS: I am currently working on pillars printed with landscapes for
an upcoming show. I am also preparing for some future
projects abroad.
DM: What was the concept behind Iconoclouds?
BS: Last year Harpers Bazaar asked me to do a project with four
of the biggest designers for its September issue. We worked with
Karl Lagerfeld, Donatella Versace, Alber Elbaz and Dolce &
Gabbana. It was a successful experiment and a challenge to
incorporate another iconic character into the work. I was curious
to see if the work could function as a portrait.
DM: Is there somewhere you want to create a cloud installation
that you havent yet attempted?
BS: In Tate Moderns Turbine Hall.

www.berndnaut.nl
Berndnaut Smilde is internationally represented by Ronchini Gallery, London.
www.ronchinigallery.com

gone but not forgotten

LIFE
on the

EDGE
139

PORTRAIT: SCARLETT CARLOS CLARKE

BOB CARLOS CLARKE

Dita Doll.

Craig Fleming reflects on the


impact the late BOB CARLOS
CLARKE had on him in an
interview with his widow
Lindsey Carlos Clarke and,
long-time friend and agent,
Ghislain Pascal

t was the mid eighties when I first became aware of the work of Bob
Carlos Clarke. Up until then, my only real interests were Airfix kits and
Star Wars figures. It came in a copy of Amateur Photographer,
and I was at that age when I was beginning to think that maybe there
was more to girls than just targets for worm throwing practice a
dangerous time indeed.
Its many years later, but there are still things to wonder. What exactly was Bob
Carlos Clarke like, I ask. Wild, mad, dangerous, exciting. The most exciting man Ive
ever met, really his wife Lindsey tells me. Very much on the edge a risk taker,
staggeringly rude and unpleasant if he wanted to be, wonderfully charming if he
wanted to be mercurial, magical you know, all of the creative qualities. And very
eccentric, because hed had such an unusual upbringing, so I used to say to
people that he was like a cross between a Victorian schoolteacher and a, sort of,
delinquent fifteen year old.
Born in Cork, Ireland in 1950, Bob Carlos Clarke came to England over 25 years
later and made a mark in photography that, despite his suicide in 2006, aged just 55,
still stands today. Notoriously controlling and volatile, hes been described as a time
bomb in both life and death. It seems appropriate to measure time this way, before 

Infanta Electronica.

140

gone but not forgotten / bob carlos clarke

and after his death, for a man who bounced from one extreme to the other on a seemingly daily basis. Perhaps the
one thing larger than his personality was his art, with which his standards were exceptionally high. His work
encompassed high-profile advertising clients, photojournalism, celebrity portraiture and fine art; all of which were
laced with hints of darkness a lurking shadow that has, on occasion, been attributed to his bleak childhood
experiences at boarding school. Eight years after his death, its still receiving recognition, with acquisitions by the
National Portrait Gallery and the National Media Museum, to name a few. But its perhaps his most well-known
works of erotic mysticism which continue to dominate public opinion. Friend and agent for over 20 years, Ghislain
Pascal first met Bob in 1996 when he photographed one of his clients. Bob quickly became Ghislains photographer
of choice. He left the celebrity agent world in 2006, after Bobs death, to concentrate solely on his work and legacy.
Everybody gets so confused about Bob that they can only think of him in one way, Ghislain begins, and thats just
sex and rubber, which is so one dimensional. He was so much more complex than that. Its a point the Bob Carlos
Clarke Foundation hope to rectify, if plans for a film get the required funding.
The film were currently trying to raise funds for will be a short, inspired by the life of Bob, made by two female
directors called Bert and Bertie, Ghislain explains. Its very much a creative piece of work; its not a documentary,
its not talking heads it will feature the work of Bob. It will be a standalone creative work of art featuring his
images, his story and maybe some of his words. Theres no time limit to the film, were in no great rush, but its
something Im keen to put together, hopefully, in the next two years or so.
Conversation soon turns to his work, including the best-selling image, Adult females attack without provocation.
The key is not to flood the market, its to just gently let it happen
organically, Ghislain explains. Occasionally we release an
image, but we tend to let the market dictate itself. He goes on to
tell me that his personal favourite is Cry Baby, as well as all the
Marco Pierre White photographs taken for the now famous book,
White Heat.
White Heat featured a then relatively unknown Marco Pierre
White and revolutionised the way many people not only
photographed chefs, but the way they saw them. Essentially, the
appropriately named book became the catalyst for the celebrity
chef phenomenon we see today. White Heat came out 25 years
ago, and to commemorate that, a new version is to be republished next year featuring many images that were edited out
of the original book. All the chefs that were inspired by that book
now have Michelin stars, and theyve all written a piece in the
book, Lindsey adds.
Marco said to Bob, You must do this book and he replied, I
cant do it Im not a food photographer, Lindsey continues. Then
he went into the kitchens one night with that amazing PolaPan
film that develops instantly (terribly fragile, but rather amazing),
and he came back and said, Wow, its amazing its terrifying, its
not what I expected at all. I know how to shoot this book. It was
like a war zone everyones so peaceful in the restaurant, and
then theres all this screaming in the kitchen. Many chefs came
Marco Pierre White
from White Heat.
to us after that book and asked Bob to shoot their books, but he
just said, Look Im really sorry, I cant do it again. It was Marco, 

141

gone but not forgotten / bob carlos clarke

Cry Baby.

Donate
To make a film of
Bobs life, 80,000 must
be raised. To donate,
email info@
thelittleblackgallery.com
or telephone
0207 349 9332

he was the rock and roll chef. Its hard to imagine many photographers turning down those lucrative offers today,
but Bob wasnt a normal photographer certainly not in the commercial sense, anyway. To me, he operated very
much like an artist; a perfectionist in the studio, as well as in the dark room. Lindsey tells me they could often hear
him late into the night, screaming because he couldnt get a print just as he wanted it.
I know this feature is a Gone but not Forgotten piece, but I dont feel like Bob Carlos Clarke has gone anywhere.
His work continues to inspire many photographers the world over and, through Lindsey, Ghislain and the work of
The Little Black Gallery and the Foundation, it sounds like were going to see plenty more from the man over the
coming years. The existing archive, Ghislain says, isnt where it ends: Oh its just the tip of the iceberg. We havent
even got that far were eight years after his death and we havent even opened up the boxes to see what else is
there. Weve only just got to grips with everything he left with us. Obviously we cant create any more silver gelatins,
because Bob was one of the great printers, but in terms of his giclee prints, we use the same printer that he used
when he was alive so the continuitys there. It was really important for us that everything is as Bob would have
wanted it. Were not just banging out any old shit to make a few quid.
Bob Carlos Clarke wasnt just another photographer. He was the last of the mavericks, yes, but he was so much
more than that. His reputation came solely from the photographs he took and printed. This was pre-social
networking in the days when you really needed talent instead of just a camera and an ego. Its exciting to think that
theres still lots more work that weve yet to see from him and its good to know that his archive is in safe hands.
I still remember the day when I read about his death in The Guardian and the sense of utter loss that overcame me;
odd, considering I didnt know him and Id never met him I only knew of him. Despite always being a fan of his
images, I didnt truly realise just how influential he was to me until hed gone, and its something I still feel today.
Photography should be like rock and roll it needs a Carlos Clarke like music needs a Bowie, but the final word has
to come from Lindsey: There was never a dull moment, she says. It was life on the edge, I can assure you.
The Estate of Bob Carlos Clarke is represented exclusively by The Little Black Gallery London.
www.thelittleblackgallery.com

143

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PRESENTATION PORTFOLIOS

next
month
Professional
Photographer of
the Year 2014
winners images
revealed
Styling Your
Shoot
We go behind the scenes
with interiors photographer
Alys Tomlinson.

Gone But Not


Forgotten

GUY BOURDIN

We look back at the work of


controversial French fashion
photographer Guy Bourdin,
whose work is currently on
show at Somerset House.

146

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