What.
A.
Weekend.
Clearly, I've got loads of editing to do. I'm going to write up each of these at length soon, but for now, I'm loving these sneak peeks! I hope you are too.
What.
A.
Weekend.
Clearly, I've got loads of editing to do. I'm going to write up each of these at length soon, but for now, I'm loving these sneak peeks! I hope you are too.
Well, this past week has taken me through the halfway point in my yearbook photo season. The toughest, most-travel intense weeks are now behind me. (As is, hopefully, my second and last cold of the season. What can you do? Little kids love to cough on strangers.)
It's a stressful couple months, where I never have enough time to edit my own work or see my friends and family. But it's also a lot of fun, and I get to travel a lot and spend a lot of time outside during the last beautiful days of the summer/first beautiful days of fall. (Seriously, I don't tan all summer, but by October 1st I'm rocking that farmers tan.)
This week I'll be heading to New York City and Massachusetts on a short, three day week... and then I have a day off to prepare for a properly intense three-wedding weekend. Thankfully the second and third weddings are short and very short, respectively. Still, busy busy!
I've seen a picture floating around Facebook lately that says "October is for photographers what April is for tax experts." Truer words are rarely spoken.
Back to work!
Petapixel recently ran an interesting article where a handful of photographers compared a photo from their first real gig, mostly engagements, to their most recent. It sounded like fun, so I thought I'd give it a try.
I've photographed, either as a primary or secondary photographer, sixty-three weddings (including a few elopements) since my first on January 8th, 2011. But that was as a second shooter for a friend of mine. My first wedding was five months later, when Abbas and Hanyia tied the knot.
Not bad, I'd say (and Abbas must have agreed since he gave me a referral just last year!) but everything gets better with practice. Here's another from my most recent wedding.
Here's to many more years of wonderful weddings, beautiful wedding photos, and killer receptions.
Erika and Nana's wedding brought my second shooter and I to Crissey Farm, an amazing venue in Stockbridge, MA, and the nearby Naumkaeg House and Gardens. Erika is a consummate planner, and from my talks with her (and reviewing her detailed itinerary) I knew that the wedding would go off on-schedule and without a hitch.
That said, this one still exceeded my expectations.
The weather was perfect. The locations looked better in person than in the photos I'd seen beforehand. Erika and Nana (and their families and friends) were amazingly fun, friendly, and easy to work with.
The photos always get done, but some days everything just clicks and it feels effortless.
That alone would have made for a great weekend, but I also spent Friday photographing the Women Entrepreneurs Empowerment Forum for UConn, which featured Joanna Coles and Governor Dannel Malloy. It was a great event - I just wish I'd had time to actually listen to all the talks and visit the booths. Just the scraps I picked up between photos have given me some great ideas for my business.
(Alas - no photos here from that event, due to a special arrangement between UConn and I. However, you can get the gist from their official Instagram hashtag.)
Time to post some Instagram photos, edit some more, and get ready for another week of yearbook photos!
Ugh.
One of the downsides of running a business which is advertised online is that periodically someone will try to take advantage of you. Which sucks, but, you know, it comes with the territory. If you pay attention and have some limits/standards, you can avoid getting burned.
But it's still disappointing.
Who wakes up and decides to impersonate a deaf person (they also claimed to be in the ICU elsewhere) just to try to rip someone off?
Anyway, two things to take from this:
I won't say something like "this ruins my faith in people", because it doesn't. Almost everyone who reaches out to me is not only who they claim to be, but wonderful people that are a pleasure to work with.
Y'all are great.
Just a quick update from the road.
I spend my autumns, besides shooting beautiful fall weddings and events, working for a New England yearbook company. It's loads of fun, I get to travel a lot and work with loads of great photographers (some of whom become my trusty wedding second shooters), and take lots of photos that I don't have to edit, which is always a treat.
Sadly, I can't show you any of the really fun photos I'm taking, because sharing pictures of other people's kids is creepy. (Also, they belong to the company I work for.)
But I thought I'd leave a little note here, to explain why I am so crazy busy in September and October. I make every effort to still respond to emails ASAP (usually successful) and to keep up my rapid editing turnaround (less successful - this season is why my contract says editing may take "four to six weeks"), but sometimes yearbook season will get the best of me.
Anyway, take care all, and happy back to school!
A few days ago, I had a major equipment drop, the first of my career.
It wasn't a great day.
I was photographing machines for a client (the same folks from All Hail Our Machine Overlords), with my camera on a tripod and lots of lighting gear and backdrops set up. It is, in theory, an exceptionally safe working environment. No moving people, the machines are infinitely patient, the camera is on a tripod. Despite all of that, while I was moving my tripod and adjusting the camera, the camera fell, tumbling forward off the tripod, falling about five feet, and smashed on the floor.
All told, my camera rig is worth about $4,000.
My initial assessment was really bad. The battery grip was in pieces. The body wouldn't turn on. The lens focus and telephoto were stuck. Worst of all (from a certain perspective), I hadn't brought a backup body or lens, so I had to tell my customer, "Sorry, but that's it for the day." (Disclaimer: I only left the backups at home because I thought, surely, nothing can go wrong at such a straightforward shoot. I always have backups for one-shot-only events like weddings.)
When I got home, I was able to revive my camera body. Whew. The lens and battery grip are dead, though, one an expensive paperweight and the other a pile of parts.
Some advice, for anyone who's prone to finding themselves in a similar situation, starting with the most general:
Thankfully, past me did a good job preparing for exactly such a situation. I have insurance on my equipment, and savings set aside for exactly this kind of emergency. If all of that fails, I have credit and family to fall back on. If I needed to replace the equipment immediately, I have a list of local places at which I could buy, rent, or borrow equipment.
So, business wise, I'm okay. Knowing that was a huge comfort while literally picking up pieces of my camera.
Even if you don't own a business, it's a good idea to take some time and think about where you are most vulnerable to an accident, and figure out how you can mitigate that risk.
My tripod hadn't felt right all morning. I don't use my tripod often, though, and it seemed to be working, so I carried on. I've since worked out that a key spring in the tripod head had come lose. It's an easy fix, but a critical failure.
First of all, if your tripod feels weird, you should have a hand on your camera constantly until you figure out the problem, and should not use the tripod until it is working correctly.
But more broadly, when something feels wrong, you should always stop and try to assess that feeling.
The image we did get.
Going forward, I'm in good shape. I was able to return and finish the photos a few days later, and I have a new lens on the way. I've been looking to add an additional backup body and lens to the ones I already have for a while - and while the cost of replacing this equipment makes that a little more challenging, I still think I may speed up that process. I'm going to see, as well, if Canon can fix my broken lens or not.
In short: It was bad, but it could've been worse.
I'm pretty new to maternity photos, but when I get a chance to do them, I jump at it. (Seriously, how great is my job? I pretty much exclusively work with people on their happiest occasions.)
Swati and Saurin are recent transplants from Texas, due next month. They're a sweet couple, and quite frankly their kid has a 100% chance of being adorable.
They brought donuts as well, which, you know, doesn't hurt. I also ran into a couple birders at our second location, who showed me a very rare bird.
Sunrise, beach, glowing parents-to-be, donuts, and wildlife, all before 9:00 AM? That's a good day.