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I just got back from a photographers' flea market in the wilds of suburbia where people have basements and garages to fill with stuff they never use and later sell at flea markets.

The score of the day? M42-mount Tonika f5.5 300 mm lens for.... $10!! I was looking at one of these on eBay a few months ago for an order of magnitude more money.

So why am I excited about this?

Here is the view from my living room with the lens that I usually shoot with when I am doing photo-booth in the club (12-60mm zoom, at 12mm - which is where it is usually at in the small space of the photo-areas), note the corner on the far side of the cross-street where, if you look hard just above and to the right of the yellow car, you can see a couple dark-blue dots that are two people standing on the corner in front of the Starbucks:


And here are those same two dark-blue dots with my "new" lens:


Now say "candid street photography."

And, again, $10!!

Ten measly dollars!
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I've been sporadically working on a complete redo of my portfolio site and think it is time to come up with a new artist's statement. I could use some new verbiage to get the words flowing.

How would you describe my work or my style?

No need to be fancy or long winded. I'm just fishing for starting points that I might not think of on my own. 
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A good job in Photoshop is like a great dress. If a woman is wearing a great dress people will think, "What a beautiful woman" when she walks in the room and not even notice the dress. A mediocre dress overpowers the woman. Likewise, with good work in Photoshop, people will only notice the beauty of the image and never realize what was done to get it there.
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I had to try my new IMPOSSIBLE PX 600 Silver Shade out, so a little animal testing was required...

Jazz

Tharsis
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When I set up my photo booth in nightclubs I frequently get asked if I can simply send an electronic copy rather than selling the print. This is a problem since I'm typically not making any kind of  wage, only earning from the sale of prints. It's difficult to afford new gear when I'm not making money, and hard to find time to do photography if I have to spend all my time working at other things to pay rent  and eat - and I have this irrational attraction to sleeping indoors and staying fed. Go figure.

I've read other photographers talking about giving access to the digital file in terms of a film paradigm, i.e. "Giving away the negative." In one sense that is true. Anyone with the digital source file has the means to make as many prints as they want. But unlike film, the digital negative is infinitely reproducible.

The record and DVD industries have a similar problem, but not an identical one, and they flail endlessly against it. In both cases the physical medium itself bears the digital file that can be copied with perfect fidelity. It's ironic that these digital media were obstensively introduced to "prevent" the easy copying that was possible with the antecedent analogue media, yet from the point of view of physical media sales analogue media had the advantage that copies were necessarily of a degraded quality. No audio cassette was ever going to sound quite as good as the record, and records eventually wore out and needed replacing. Likewise dubbed video tapes were never as good and all video tapes eventually wore out. For a time a similar argument could be made with MP3 sharing, where the compression of the MP3 required to make a file practically shareable over a modem connection caused a necessary loss in quality, but now with broadband and bittorrents entire CDs and DVDs can readily be copied bit-for-bit with no loss of quality. That's what happens when executives with no foresight and no technical knowledge get to make decisions. I can imagine a sales-monkey from a CD-duplication company with no real knowledge about the technology making the sales pitch to a record-company executive some time around 1984: "CDs cost less to produce than records, but you can sell them for twice as much based on the superior sound quality. Tapes will sound absolutely shitty compared to the CD so people won't want copies anymore. The audio files are so huge that no one will be able to copy them - you'd need thirty floppies to hold just one song. You can tell people that they are indestructible, you can even show how a scratch from the centre to the edge that would make a record go tick-tick-tick does nothing so they'll line up to replace their perfectly good records - but don't worry a horizontal scratch will screw them up worse than a skipping record so people will still be back again for replacements. You can't lose!"



Get this on a fridge magnet, t-shirt, or mug.
And they fell for it because it worked once before. One of the intrinsic features of wax-cylinder gramophones was the ability to both play and record. Connecting two machines with a rubber hose and dubbing cylinders was common practice. Records were introduced largely because they required specialized equipment to record and were sold on the basis of better sound, increased durability and long run times - sound familiar?

However, notice that I said the record and DVD industries, not "music" and "movies." Of course with the industry giants production and distribution are tied together and organizations like the RIAA and MPAA conflate and exaggerate the connections between these in order to protect the material product sales. But musicians. composers, actors, producers, script-writers and the like all managed to make livings before mechanical reproduction and broadcast media through performance. Live music, live theatre and cinemas got on just fine before records and video and artists outside of the giant industry grind-wheels still manage to get by because there is nothing that can compete one-on-one with performance or the cinema experience. And therein lies the big difference between digital copies of music and movies and digital copies of photographs: there is no performance in photography, only the image.

Visual art has faced this before, and it was actually photography that created the crisis. Walter Benjamin's "The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction" is the article on this issue and pretty much mandatory reading for any visual artist. Photography made visual artwork reproducible, and mimesis (i.e. making something look "real" in a drawing or a painting) became a rather lame measure of quality since anyone could do that with a camera. Over the course of the 20th century you see increasing efforts to focus not on the mimetic qualities of the artwork, but the visceral experience of the original object, elements of pure design, and the ultimate underlying idea of the work. Abstract painting develops. Performance art develops. There's enough nuance in this progression that you can spend the rest of your life studying art history, but suffice to say that it's clear that fine art has survived and reinvented itself for the age of mechanical reproduction and is also doing just, well... fine.

The following 15-minute presentation on reproduction and copying in the fashion industry makes points that apply equally well to fine arts. The most salient of which is that the customers buying the "original" are not the same people who are buying the knock-offs. Likewise in the art world the people buying the souvenir books and the postcards are not the collectors buying the original work.



But now what happens where there is no original? Or the copies are indistinguishable from the original? The "negative" in conventional photography is made obsolete once an appropriately detailed scan is made of it, and with digital photography it never exists. The new digital originals have no inherent aura. Reproduction carries no aura. While, like other visual arts, it's the design, idea and execution that makes a photograph good, great, art or a snapshot. But none of that is lost in reproduction. That makes revenue models for photographers difficult.

One model I work with relies on good faith and the legal power of a monster corporation. This is what happens when I upload to iStock. The digital file you can buy from iStock is as good as it gets for that image and there is no practical way to stop someone who has paid for that file from sharing it, using it in excess of their licencing agreement, or otherwise ripping it off other than relying on iStock to chase down someone reposting my content on Flickr or whatnot and having it removed or doing the chasing myself. I make a pittance of each sale and iStock gets the lion's share, but since it takes very little work on my part and income continues to trickle in whether I'm creating new work of not, so it's worth it. In this regard it is no better or worse than a musician allowing a record company to do their distribution. In fact it is marginally better since iStock doesn't preclude me from selling my own prints and licences.

Then there is the closest there is in photography to a "performance" - being paid for my time up front. This is good work when I can get it, but it requires a lot of gear, studio space, and competing with the new and desperate that will work for peanuts and reinforce this kind of thing:



Another model is to keep absolute control over the master file and only put lesser-quality reproductions out there for unauthorizedly reproduction and be the exclusive source of quality reproductions, which is the model I've been using all along for my photo booth and where I have a problem. Not everyone wants a physical print. I essentially give away low quality, watermarked versions of the images on Gothic BC. The dilemma that has brought me to thinking this all though is that the low-quality images that I have been sharing on the website for the past ten years don't cut it for screen sharing anymore but I don't want give away files of enough quality that there is no reason to buy a 4" × 6" print anymore. But at the same time I've become convinced, largely due to the TED video above, that there are customers who would pay for a decent-resolution digital copy who will never buy a print.

In the end this is a very long argument to convince myself that it is OK to try selling medium-resolution (i.e. bigger files that will print O.K. at 4" × 6", but not as good as what I print on the spot) on Gothic BC. I've decided on selling at 1050 pixels on the long side -  263% larger than the free pictures and unwatermarked, but only 58% as clear as what I print on the spot - for the same price as at the higher-quality prints, balancing lower quality with infinite reproducibility against higher-quality with limited reproducibility. 
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Above are two exposures of my friend Isaac, a.k.a. DJ Pandemonium, doing his thing at 560 Club last month, shot by another friend and fellow photographer, Michael Dicus.

The first exposure, with no flash, the lights on the DJ decks and in the background look great, but we can't see Isaac at all. In the second one, with the flash, Isaac is well exposed, but we lose all the interesting stuff around him.

Michael was kind enough to upload these shots to my website, Gothic BC and I wanted something for the opening shot of the gallery for the night and decided an combination of these two shots would work. Enter the magic of Photoshop.

see the magic )
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Yesterday I was shooting for Canvas for Cancer and while I was waiting for the MAU to finish with the models I stepped out on the balcony to see the sun hitting this little guy's web at a pretty much perfect angle. I went back in to grab f1.4 35mm lens and this is the result.

And for those of you not familiar with the Canadian wood spider, here is short informational video from Wildlife Canada and the National Film Board of Canada on some experiments done on wood spiders in the 1960's:


The shoot itself went well and I am really happy with some of the images, but contractually I can't show them until after the charity auction, next fall.

There was one horrific moment in the shoot where I managed subject my camera to a two-foot drop and snapped the mount off one of my lenses. Standing there, looking at my lens in two pieces on the floor was a little disheartening, but I swapped lenses and finished the shoot. I first I thought I was going to be out the cost of the lens (and, friends, lenses are not cheap.) However some time with my watchmaker's tools and some cyanoacrylate glue and the lens is fully functional again.
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A second logo variation based on feedback from the previous one.
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I've been toying with a logo for my photographic endeavours. Opinions welcomed.
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For those that scoff at television crime dramas when they create high-res images from grainy surveillance video:

http://people.csail.mit.edu/celiu/FaceHallucination/fh.html

"In this paper, we study face hallucination, or synthesizing a high-resolution face image from an input low-resolution image, with the help of a large collection of other high-resolution face images. Our theoretical contribution is a two-step statistical modelling approach that integrates both a global parametric model and a local nonparametric model. Our practical contribution is a robust warping algorithm to align the low-resolution face images to obtain good hallucination results. The effectiveness of our approach is demonstrated by extensive experiments with high-quality hallucinated face images with no manual alignment."
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Fun. I usually don't get to see what happens to my stock pictures from iStock, but as random chance would have it [livejournal.com profile] evilyn13 pointed out this flyer for the Merc in [livejournal.com profile] seattlegothic :-)
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I'm looking for some volunteers for a photo shoot in the afternoon (2 - 4 pm) of Saturday, April 25th. I need a total of 7 people. I currently have two, maybe three. Here's the criteria:

  1. Punk or otherwise awesome alternative hair - Mohawk, death-hawk, Chelsea, bald (ok for a girl, a bald guy will only work if you have an interesting head-piece, tattoos on your skull or some serious piercings/mods), fat-Bob, liberty spikes, bi-hawk, etc. The more dramatic the better.
  2. Punk, Industrial, Death-Rock outfit - PVC, vinyl, buckles, fishnet, ripped, plaid, but absolutely no band T-shirts or visible logos of any sort
  3. Body mods a bonus - Facial piercing, heavily pierced or stretched ears, visible tattoos, etc. are all definitely a bonus.
  4. I have to know you - This is important. We'll be shooting in the boardroom of an office belonging to people I know and who trust me. I need to know I can trust you.

This will be a TFCD (time for CD) shoot, meaning there's no pay, but you'll get a copy of all the pictures on CD to use however you'd like. There'll be coffee and some munchies at the shoot. I will need you to sign a model release.

If you fit the bill and want to help, leave me a comment, send me a message on Facebook, e-mail me.

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After a number of disappointing rejections for noise, JPEG artifacts, and model releases that didn't meet their legal standards I finally got my first acceptance notice from iStock this evening.

Behold iStock image id 8949876, "Black candlestick phone with metal dial":

Black candlestick phone with metal dial

Seriously - It may not be much, but it's a start. Everything has to start somewhere.
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I made the decision a while back to get a little more commercial about my photography and develop some additional income streams. My "photo booth" work and paid shoots are great, but they are piecework. Stock photography is appealing because it is a way I can develop some passive income. I got my first acceptance letter from a stock house today:

Dear Michael (Atratus),

Welcome to iStockphoto.com, the designer's dirty little secret. Congratulations, the iStockphoto administrators have determined that your files are commercially and technically ready for iStockphoto.com. Please begin uploading at your convenience...
[some yadda, yadda removed]...

Comments from the iStockphoto Administrator:

2008-P5180426.jpg: Approved
---------------------------------
2006-P7152186.jpg: Approved
---------------------------------
2008-P9063422.jpg: Approved
---------------------------------

Thank you for your time and effort.

Best Regards,
iStockphoto.com

Weird Tales

Feb. 2nd, 2009 11:27 pm
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Too bad my dad, who pretty much raised me on pulp sci-fi, isn't still alive to see this, but I have a photo published in conjunction with a feature about Elaine's store, Art of Adornment in "The Bazaar" section of the September/October 2008 edition of Weird Tales (Vol. 63, No. 4 - Issue 351, p. 11).

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Snow in Stanley Park, November 2006.


A couple of months ago I bought a slide/film scanner that just arrived today. Trying to get the 5P-format frames that my Stereo Realist makes developed as prints was just too much of an ordeal. Taking them to an 1-hour lab was a total crap-shoot, taking the film into a lab was hideously expensive. My back-lit flatbed can do a good job with sides, but negatives never quite worked right. I think this will work out nicely.

What I got is by no means a top of the line scanner (Nikon CoolScan V) but is seems like it will be more the adequate for what I want to do with it.
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If you want to book me as a photographer bear in mind that I am busy and I'm not going to have all day to wait around. I need a firm time in advance and I need you to stick to that time because chances are I have something I need to do right after. And if you set a time make sure you can stick to it. Models need to be there before me and should be ready to go before or as soon as I am set up. If I'm sitting on my ass waiting for the model(s) to arrive, let alone get ready, the meter is still on and you will be getting billed. If you can't tell me when the shoot is going to be until day-of, it's not going to happen.
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I was watching some old episodes of the Addams Family with Elaine and something seemed strangely familiar...
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While working my photo-booth at the last Sin City I was asked about shooting for Suicide Girls. Being aware of Lithiumpicnic's legal troubles with SG, and just plain being a stickler for knowing what I am getting into (just last week, for example, I found myself in a room with four people staring at me impatiently while I read every word of a contract, twice, before signing it) I was reading the photographers release contract for SG.

The Jesus-Fuck-I-Wouldn't-Touch-That-With-A-3.048m-Pole clause, similar to what has Lithiumpicnic in trouble from his contract, is the non-competition clause.
8. Non-Competition. Photographer agrees that for two (2) years after the full execution of this Assignment, Photographer will not directly or indirectly: (i) sell or otherwise provide Internet, photographic, video, film, audio, text, design, artistic or other creative content to any “SG Competitor”; or (ii) own, manage, operate, join, control, finance or participate in the ownership, management, operation, control or financing of, or be connected as an officer, director, employee, partner, member, principal, agent, representative, consultant or otherwise, to any “SG Competitor”. “SG Competitor” means any person, entity or organization other than SG that competes with SG, including but not limited to any person, entity or organization that creates, develops, manufactures, produces, distributes, markets, licenses or sells events, products or services that compete with SG.
Should, for example, at some point in the next two years Gothic BC or any of my other sites be deemed an "SG Competitor" I'd be screwed. If I shot for any other site I'd be screwed. If I so much as provided my professional services as a photographer, artist, programmer or consultant (how I make my living!) to any entity that happens produce any kind of material that competes with SG, even if my work is not directly related to the competing products, I'd be liable.

And for what? SG pays $500 USD (now worth only $471.97 CAD) per set. Split with the model I'd have about $235 taxable dollars in my pocket. In return they have me by the short-hairs for two years. How not worth it is that?

With this non-competition clause, no sane professional photographer would have anything to do with SG.
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Time-lapse done with my DSLR. Trust me, it is much better looking at 1024x768 and without all the compression artifacts.

[ Better version (no audio, though) on Facebook ]

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