Saturday, 10 May 2014

The Barber






I've had quite a few people inquiring about the picture of the barber that is currently on the front page of my website.

It's an image that is part of a long term project I started at the end of last year with local businesses. The man in the picture is Jose Ramos who owns the Browns Bay traditional barber shop. I had walked past his shop so many times and was always fascinated by the array of paraphernalia on display.

So I decided to approach him and see if he would be interested in having a portrait done. With all the detail inside his shop I knew the exact style I wanted to achieve, the challenge being that the shop is actually a very narrow space.

Not wanting to interrupt his flow of customers, I only had a small window to get the shots I needed. I set up a single speedlight in a brolly box and got my camera and tripod ready to go. In the space of two minutes I took some shots of the environment and then only had time for three shots of Jose before his next customer came in. No pressure, phew!

The image was then made up as a composite with the background getting treated first and Jose placed into the image and blended to the environment. This gave me the most flexibility with the tight timings onsite and allowed me to cheat the perspective of such a small space.

It has really surprised me the amount of people locally who have commented on this image after Jose posted it on Facebook. It has certainly got many other local businesses interested in working with me on the project, which is all good!

I will post more of this project as it comes to fruition! And for those of you who know me, no I didn't get a hair cut!

Saturday, 19 April 2014

A 'Great Adventure' indeed













Recently I was fortunate enough to be involved again in the Great Adventure Race for Cure Kids. Alan Nelson had once more put together a thoroughly challenging course which ran from the Firth of Thames into the Hunua ranges and back to Orere Point on the coast.

An interesting drive in the dark saw me there at 6.30am and heading out onto the course with some of the support crew. All volunteers, they are an amazing bunch of individuals with a wealth of outdoor, search and rescue knowledge. Oh and did I mention one of them is in his eighties, extraordinary and inspirational people!

Covering the event with another photographer, the plan was for them to photograph all the transition areas while I headed out on the course with the teams. This was not a job where I was going to be short on exercise!

Hiking out onto the course as the sun rose was just magical, with amazing views out across the Firth of Thames to the Coromandel. I ran, trekked, climbed with teams as they navigated their way from the coast into the hills across the first five checkpoints to a river crossing. Fast paced and ever changing light kept me on my toes!

From here I returned to the start to pick up my car and headed to the first transition station where the teams switched from foot to pedal power. Always surprising how quick the first teams go through, no chance to catch your breath or you miss the action!

Next was a mad dash to the FourFourty Mountain Bike Park to catch the competitors as they headed into the forest. The challenge here was catching the action in the low light of the dense trees, without everything looking overpowered by the flash. Much to their delight teams found me lurking behind trees at the bottom of steep drops, which gave me some great shots.

Back into the car and a drive out to the coast gave me my first breather of the day and the chance for a sandwich! With my water bottle refilled and a change of cards in the cameras I set out along the coast from Orere Point to Puatiti point. More stunning views and not a soul around, I positioned myself in amongst the rocks i knew the teams would have to negotiate and waited…and waited.

I knew it would take even the fastest teams a while to get to me, but you are on constant alert. After what seemed like an age, repositioning myself many times as the tide went out, suddenly some heads appeared amongst the rocks and the PWC Wellington team clambered fully into view. Within seconds they were past, onto the beach and in the home stretch to the finish line. Close behind them came the Fonterra Flyers who somehow still had big smiles on their faces, just as I remembered them from the previous year!

Once I had shot as many teams as I could in the coast section, I raced back along the long stretch of beach to my car and headed to the finish line. Teams arrived in various stages of exhaustion for the next couple of hours, to a fantastic reception from everyone at the finish line.It really is an amazing event to cover and I take my hat off to all the teams, support crews, course officials and everyone from Cure Kids who make it happen! Just brilliant to be a part of something so worthwhile.

A 15 hour day, 12 hours on my feet, I slept well that night!

Tuesday, 11 March 2014

Shortland Street goes boom!








Towards the end of last year I was asked to work on an unusual assignment, one that really did end the year with a bang! My good friend Rohan Rimmer put Amie Mills at Blacksand in touch with me. The team at Blacksand had come up with a great transmedia campaign for the TV show Shortland Street while it was off air over the holiday season.

The final show had climaxed with an explosion and left viewers with the classic cliffhanger, wondering who had survived and who hadn't. They had worked out 34 days of clues to keep fans on tenterhooks! Some were video clips others audio clips and where I came in was to produce still images to throw in the mix.

The first set of images needed as clues had to look as though they were shot at the location of the explosion the following morning by a passer by. Of course the props had to look as though they had been through the explosion... enter the trusty BBQ! It was more than a little sketchy at times, but I managed to grill everything from Jandals to fence posts, all very well done! God knows what my neighbours thought with all the toxic smoke that was blowing over the fence!

Next stop was to find a location that would match in with the reference footage I had been given and after a couple of false starts I found the perfect spot at Stillwater north of Auckland. It was remote enough for me to put up crime scene tape (you wouldn't believe how hard that was to get hold of) without any inquisitive passers by getting involved. I had a field day shooting melted Jandals, Santa hats, tinsel wrapped fence posts and gas cylinders all strewn around the place.

The next shots were of a variety of actual props from the show, supplied to us by South Pacific Pictures. The key here was to find abstract, interesting angles and lighting that didn't give the game away too easily! We had everything from beautiful Maori feather cloaks to bomb wiring to play with, giving us plenty of scope to create interesting images. Amie also put together a very convincing detectives desk which with some clandestine lighting looked absolutely great. She also created a large evidence board which we shot to be used as a huge billboard outside the TVNZ building.

My final contribution to the project was to retouch in some palls of smoke on some of my location shots and fire damage to a gas bottle laying in the grass... even I wasn't silly enough to throw that one on the BBQ!



Thursday, 16 January 2014

Down on the farm with Giltrap





A very happy healthy and prosperous New Year to all! My run up to Christmas was a very hectic one so I'm afraid the blog got a bit neglected! But I've dusted the mince pie crumbs off, peeled myself off of the lounger and am back in the saddle again! 

Towards the end of last year I found myself standing in cow pats, shocking myself on electric fences and running away from clouds of lime fertilizer… and loving every minute of it!

I got a call from Sanjiv Menon at BRR who had taken a look at some of my work and decided I would be a good fit on a project he had. His client Giltrap are a supplier of high end agricultural machinery to the Australasian market and as part of a recent rebrand were looking for some fresh imagery for their advertising.

Rather than concentrating on the technical aspects of the machinery, as had previously been done, he wanted the images to convey the environment they are used in. Particularly the many different times of day and the long hours that farm machinery is used! Cue the early starts!

As a back up I had come prepared with generators, 4kw of lights and all sorts of gizmos, but it quickly became apparent with the terrain involved and the need for mobility around the machinery, most of it was staying in the car! Luckily the weather gods were smiling on us and although we had to pick our moments, we could work with available light and some bracketing to cover our exposures.

We had a fantastic farm environment to work with just outside Te Awamutu in the Waikato. Gary who owned the farm was just about the most helpful person you could meet, absolutely nothing was too much trouble for him! As you can imagine getting heavy farm machinery in the right place, at the right time, with the right light, had it's challenges! However not once did Gary show the slightest impatience with the townies requests and took great pride in helping us to get it right! Eric from Giltrap was also on hand as a mine of information and pretty damn handy with a tractor too!

We spent the first day working out all the best locations and timings for the shots. It was important to make sure the machinery was being used in the correct environment at the right time of day. The target audience wasn't going to put up with shots just because the photographer said it was artistic! We proceeded to get shots of log splitters, effluent stirrers, spreaders and forage wagons. We had some very interesting rides on the back of quad bikes to check out various locations and I don't think Sanjiv and myself stopped grinning! What an office! Gary once again delivered above and beyond when he drove the spreader over terrain I would of been nervous walking up! We continued until the sun finally dipped behind the hills around 8pm and took our tired limbs off to our motel to review the days work. Time for a few hours sleep!

Day two saw us up at 4.30 in the morning with a sunrise shot all planned out, bales were loaded and machinery was moved into place. Right on cue a bank of cloud decided to form on the horizon and we had to frantically move the machinery! With one tiny window of opportunity before the cloud completely obscured the sunrise…the trailer came unhitched from the tractor and with several tons of hay started rolling backwards down the hill! Now this wasn't a small field, but right bang in the middle was a concrete feeding trough and you guessed it, the brand new trailer unit was heading straight for it! Gary quick as a flash spun the tractor round and with a bale loaded on the front forks, overtook the trailer and swung round to stop it hitting the trough! Luckily it stopped about a metre short! Far too much excitement for 5.30am! So plan C then and thankfully this one worked, we ended up with a great image!

With no time to catch our breath we made the most of the early light and captured several more pieces of equipment in action, including the image of the bale feeder above. Next was a rather interesting encounter with a fertilizer spreader full of lime. Knowing we only had a few chances to get this one right as once the lime was out, it was out. We'd worked out our positioning, got the views we wanted, allowed for the wind direction…what could possibly go wrong? As the spreader was fired up and I started shooting, the wind direction completely changed and a huge cloud of lime started pursuing us across the field! I kept clicking until the last minute, grabbed my camera and then three of us ran for the nearest pickup! Eric, made of far sterner stuff, closed his eyes, held his breath and was last seen being swallowed by the giant cloud! When the dust settled we retrieved my tripod and Eric, both of which resembled snowmen! She'll be right mate!

I have to confess I absolutely love this kind of shoot, the opportunity to be out on location in beautiful surroundings, thinking on my feet and meeting people from a completely different walk of life. Just brilliant! A huge thanks to everyone involved for all the help that was given to make the shots happen, a truly great bunch of people to work with.

I think gum boots may be joining my list of photographic equipment!

Tuesday, 12 November 2013

Northland









I recently headed up to Northland to gather some stock, and not so stock images for my library. Here are a couple of my favorites.

The first is from the harbour at Opua where you can take your car across to Russell on the ferry. I set myself up on the ramp where the ferry docks, the sun had not been up long and all was calm and quiet... and then I heard some diesel engines rumbling through the silence, the first ferry of the day was coming! To be honest I hadn't originally intended for the ferry to be in the shot but as it came into view it totally completed the scene, a lucky break indeed! The biggest problem I had was keeping my footing on the algae covered ramp, but I wanted to keep close to the water so I would have nothing but reflections in the lower half of the image.

The next image was taken in the Bay of Islands at the Waitangi treaty grounds inside the beautiful Maori meeting house, Te Whare Rūnanga. I've always marveled at how amazing and intricate the detail in these buildings is. Surprisingly enough I found I briefly had it to myself, but realised I had left my tripod back at the car! Doh! I had a quick scout around to see if I could sit my camera on anything for the long exposures I needed and luckily enough found a guitar case sitting behind a screen ready for a cultural show! So I rather precariously balanced my camera on top of it and used a cable release so as not to disturb it. It worked a treat even though it drew some strange looks from the next group of people who entered!


I'll process all the other images when I can in between assignments and post some more as I do. Now where can I go next please!

Sunday, 3 November 2013

Charlotte S


















I've been eagerly waiting to post some images from a shoot I did with a great company called Charlotte S. They are going to be releasing some new and unique beauty products to the market. The plan was to have them in the shops for Christmas, but due to some delays it looks like being in the New Year now.

Candice and John who own the company have kindly allowed me to post one of the images from the shoot. It's one of many favorites I have from the day we spent in the studio with our model Luna.

We had a range of scenarios to photograph from a very natural look, to a smart/ casual business feel, right through to the sophisticated evening look you see above. Candice was a dream client who had a clear vision of what she was after but allowed us creative input to achieve the results. Not only that but we were fed and watered like royalty. I don't think I have ever been so well looked after by a client, so thank you very much Mr & Mrs S!

I put Luna forward for this assignment as I have worked with her before and she really does make life easy with her professional approach and ability to adapt to a variety of looks. On this occasion she even handled her own hair and makeup, which kept things easy and economical.

The shot seen here is one of those situations that wasn't initially planned, but developed from being let loose creatively. We were shooting at Kingsize studios, a great place with heaps of gear and well thought out spaces. The background in this shot is actually the reception area to studio 3, one of their upstairs studios. We moved the reception furniture and placed the white couch from the studio into the scene. I have to confess that this couch has been a prop in a few shots over the years and i'm sure i wouldn't be alone!

The mood lighting was created with a gridded beauty dish, a medium octabank as fill and a gridded 7" reflector as a rim light. The dress selection, hair and makeup completed the scene perfectly. A great collaboration of ideas gave us a great result.

We made great time with our schedule and so I suggested some spontaneous family shots with their lovely daughter Charlotte who arrived from Kindy and she was only too happy to be in the limelight! A fun way to end our day.

There was only one complaint from Candice… 'You've given us too many great shots, we want to use them all'! And that's the kind of complaint I can live with.

Friday, 6 September 2013

Kids, helicopters and lots more






















I've had a few people asking me about the image shown at the top of this page. So here's the story behind it.

The shot was actually taken while I was on an fantastic assignment for the Cure Kids team. They had arranged a dream weekend in Queenstown for a dozen of the kids who had been through serious challenges in their young lives. A team of helpers, celebs and staff were on hand to make sure they had an amazing time, so a group of around fifty in all.

My job was to capture all of their incredible adventures over the weekend and boy was it fast paced! They went luging, bungy jumping, snowmobiling, flying in helicopters, golfing and jet boating! Not to mention some amazing lunches and dinners supplied by very generous local companies. It really was an epic event to cover and I don't think my feet touched the ground as I tried to capture everyones special moments. You are certainly not going to get fat doing this job!

The kids just blew me away with their energy and ability to take everything in their stride. The helicopter flight from Coronet Peak ski field down to The Hills golf course was a prime example. Some of these kids were from very small town New Zealand, not often seeing a taxi let alone a helicopter! It was sprung on them that they were going in a helicopter to get down from the mountain and they were all "sweet, no worries", even the real young ones.

The panoramic shot with the helicopter is actually a series of stitched images that I took as the first chopper arrived. It is made up of 5 images that I put together in Photoshop and came out pretty well considering it was shot hand held, whilst being buffeted by the rotors of the helicopter.

I grabbed the shots inside the second chopper and love the look on the kids faces, 'just another day at the office'. I had to bounce a flash of the roof and shoot over my shoulder which had it's challenges while harnessed in! The final shot is the helicopter bringing in the last kids to the Hills golf course. The herd of animals you can see below are actually on hundred bronze statues of wolves with a warrior. Truly spectacular, as was the rest of the Hills course which we got to see on a convoy of buggies.

This was such an amazing and humbling event to be involved in. Once again I found myself feeling very lucky for the people and places that photography allows me to experience.

Sunday, 18 August 2013

Blown away by the Sony Shake-5!





















Getting paid to do photography is great... getting paid to do photography while listening to rock music on a monster speaker system, well that's just too good to be true!

I did a recent shoot for Sony NZ with my good friend Dag Young from Platform 29, all part of the 'love music loud' campaign. We had a range of new audio products to capture over two days, shot as lifestyle images rather than just product shots.

So how do you show off a 2400W mega system that is bound to be a big hit with the neighbours? With a teenage air guitar hero of course! We set the stage in a basement room with a rather low ceiling which gave us some interesting perspective when shot from a low angle. Also the opportunity to send our air guitar hero through the roof hee hee! We created our own blazing sunny day with a large octa with the diffusion removed outside the window. This was our key light for the shot and two soft boxes and reflectors from either side of the camera gave some fill and clean reflections on the product. Finally we strategically placed various teenage rock god paraphernalia around the room.

Enter the Rock God, Sebastian Irontooth! Now I don't know who was more excited to get some loud rock going, me or Dag! Poor old Sebastian looked a little overwhelmed as we explained to him that 'yes indeed' it really was necessary to have the volume up to 11 to set the scene! Nothing to do with the fact that the two old rock dinosaurs were having a blast! It took a little while for Sebastian to get warmed up, but soon he was hitting his stride and literally bouncing of the ceiling! With the shot captured we had to grab some wigs and have some more fun (see below)!

The next location took us from basement to roof, garage roof to be precise. Outdoor party time with the GPX77 (a mere 1800w!) system as the sun went down. Logistically getting the system and talent on the roof proved fairly interesting, particularly as only the outside edges of the roof proved strong enough to hold any weight! 'She'll be right mate' was the mantra for this setup!

To add to the fun it started to rain the minute we got everything in place, so business as usual then! We waited in place with our gear under umbrellas and were rewarded with a short break in the rain. So with the talent quickly in place, myself precariously balanced on top of a trailer and the rest of the crew down below providing much hollering and dancing, we got the images. The neighbours must of loved us!

Lighting came from a brolly box boomed overhead and the challenge was to balance this with the rapidly changing ambient and the lighting on the system itself. 
Bracketing is definitely your friend in these situations. As with so many shoots it was all about the setup, as our window of light and weather was very brief.

The guys on the roof did so well to make it look like it was a balmy evening when it was far from it. There were a few passing pedestrians in winter woollies who looked more than a little amused at the strange scene they stumbled upon!







Sunday, 4 August 2013

Shooting with a leaf blower!


 

Blimey it's been a while! What can I say other than I've been busy, REAL busy! I have had
a fantastic run of back to back assignments, that just didn't leave me a moment of free time. So apologies for the blog hiatus and thank you to those of you who inquired after
my well being!

I guess one advantage of having a break is that at least I can put up some of the images that have now been published rather than the usual 'watch this space' line!

Of the many bits of gear that I head to shoots with, I have to say that a leaf blower is not usually amongst them. Let alone do I usually use a leaf blower as a weapon of mass destruction, but recently I did! The shot required a lot of wind and debris flying around on top of a hill. Knowing that the weather was bound to not co- operate in the gusty department and rather than lugging generators and wind machines up the hill, my weapon of choice was a large leaf blower!

So the plan was hatched and lots of carefully selected debris was assembled, newspapers, coffee cups, plastic bags, crisp packets, hats, umbrellas, leaves, oh and of course the target aka Tod the talent! It was always going to be a composite image with that amount of elements involved.

So just after sunrise there we were on top of Mount Victoria and as predicted not a breath of wind! To add to the fun a huge bank of cloud was swallowing up the blue sky at a rapid rate! So 
once we were set up in the best position I grabbed some background shots and set up a couple of lights to ward off the impending gloom. A bare bulb strobe off to the right and a soft fill coming in from above the camera. Then it was out with the blower and we started bombarding our talent… it was all going just fine until the blower started firing missiles at Tod! Fortunately I wasn't aiming at his face at that moment, so he just took a few to the chest before I killed the missile launcher rather than him! I'm guessing the blower was also a sucker and at some point had been used as such. Oops! Luckily he saw the funny side. So after I told him to harden up, we continued firing debris everywhere and of course chasing it all over the hill to pick it up again! 

The whole image came together in just over a day and a half from start to finish, so I'm really pleased with the result we achieved on such a tight deadline.

For my next shoot I think I'll use a less dangerous prop… like a rocket launcher!

Thursday, 21 February 2013

Bum steer


I seized the opportunity to get my rodeo fix this weekend and headed down to the Waikato rodeo at Kihikihi, try saying that after a few Waikato draughts! It was a scorching hot day as many have been of late, which meant everywhere was looking very brown and dusty. I could see my gear was going to need some tlc after this trip!

I checked out good shooting positions and noted that most of the other photogs were shooting from higher viewpoints. I felt getting down nice and low made the shots much more dramatic even if it did add to the dust problem.

Around one side of the arena was a double fence to keep the crowd nice and safe. So naturally I climbed over the first fence to stick my lens right in amongst the action at the closer fence. Which was working all very well and good until all of a sudden I heard thundering hooves! I thought 'that's strange, the steer in the arena I can see is currently in a headlock sooo…..'??? That's when I turned round and saw only a few metres away was a large pointy horned steer heading my way at a rate of knots! It would seem they use the channel between the two fences to get stock from one end of the arena to the other! Doh! Trying to not look totally terrified I rapidly leapt the outer fence and proceeded to try and look cool about it… judging by the laughter behind me it didn't work! 

The whole rodeo was fantastic and as per usual I cannot believe how tough the competitors are! The bull riders seemed to have a particularly rough time, with many limping away holding various parts looking rather broken. I think the heat may have been making the bulls even more ago than usual, with one or two very reluctant to leave the arena once hay had deposited their riders!

Above is my favorite sequence of shots that I captured. This bareback rider defied gravity and somehow lasted the distance on this bronco, truly amazing! My trusty 70-200mm caught most of the action at about 1/800th of a second before I had to dive back to avoid the worst of the cloud of dust and debri that followed him to the fence.

Mental note, next time plastic wrap my camera and fit a rear view mirror to spot incoming bovines!