Good Reads

Forget Mugshots: 10 Steps to Better Portraits EBook

The good folks at Craft & Vision have held true to their promise to release 1 quality ebook per month by releasing today yet another title by David duChemin, Forget Mugshots: 10 Steps to Better Portraits. It is available through the Craft & Vision online store for a mere $5 and readable through any of your favorite PDF e-reading devices.

In this ebook, David instructs and reminds us of the fundamentals of portrait photography; those simple yet easily overlooked basics when engaging in photographing another human being in a mindful way. Filled with beautiful portraits taken on his many travels as a world and humanitarian photographer, the book also contains sidebar “Creative Exercises” to help the reader work through the steps and come to a deeper understanding of the steps.

This book is an easy and lovely read and one that will stay on your electronic bookshelf as a solid reference and reminder of how to do portraits well for years to come. You will be reminded, among other things, to play with the light, understand the smile, relate to your subject, watch the eyes, and be mindful of your background-good stuff for all of us to remember from time to time.

While at the Craft & Vision store, why not check out their other wonderful titles including the one you can get for free:

Special Offer on PDFs
For the first five days only, if you use the promotional code MUGSHOTS4 when you checkout, you can have the PDF version of Forget Mugshots: 10 Steps to Better Portraits for only $4 OR you can use the code MUGSHOTS20 to get 20% off when you buy 5+ PDF eBooks from the Craft & Vision collection. These codes expire at 11:59pm (PST) March 17, 2012.

Posted by Brian Miller in Good Reads

Close to Home And The Birth Of A Project

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Recently I posted a review of my goals from 2011 and found that I had ticked off most of them. Great. I got to feel a momentary sense of pride of accomplishment. But something was lacking a bit. At first I couldn’t recognize what it was but eventually, as I thought about it more, I came to realize that my checklist of accomplished goals for the last year failed to tell the fuller story of my photographic year. You see, I accomplished more than just my checklist. I learned a lot by surprise along the way.

Yes, I was focused on my goals, but not so much that I failed to pay attention to other opportunities which presented themselves along the way. Not only did my skills as a photographer grow, but my focus, intention, and attention all grew as well.

You see, for a long time my focus in photography was what is “out there”, outside of me and outside of my community. I wanted to photograph what was exotic, foreign, new, distant. My focus was on distant lands, distant ideas. But then I read Close to Home by Stuart Sipahigil (listed here on the Craft & Vision website.)

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Close to Home has become a highly regarded and highly quoted book in the past year. In it Stuart turns his attention to a challenge many-if not most-amateur photographers have: making compelling images out of their “ordinary lives”-close to home. People loved it! From what I understand it is one of the bestselling titles from Craft and Vision this past year, and rightly so.

But Stuart’s book influenced me in a slightly different way. I wasn’t just looking for a way to make compelling images close to home, I was looking for a direction for my photography as a whole. I was searching for meaning in my photography. I was becoming less content making singular images of pretty stuff. I was wanting my photography to mean something more-if not to others, then to myself. And as I sat and thought about what I wanted to do with my photography I realized I was limited by my current life situation.

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My young family and job prevent me from traveling to distant lands (Mexico, Vietnam, Thailand, Peru) to photograph exotic people in exotic locales. I am pretty firmly planted in New Mexico-a land I’ve inhabited for 16 years and feel pretty familiar with. But then, as I thought more about what Stuart was encouraging in his book I started to ask myself what I could photograph-what I would be excited to photograph-near home? And suddenly I realized, “holy cow, I live in NEW MEXICO!!!” This land is filled with the exotic, the new, the interesting, the fascinating, the joyful, the sorrowful, the pain, the hardship, the beauty, the sky, the sun, the mountains, the dust, the tumbleweeds, the cacti, the outdoors, the drugs, the mix of cultures…..well, you get it, right? This land is fascinating and enchanting and filled with wondrous stories of people and cultures and art and music and life!

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And out of this was born the idea of my Tierra Encantada Project as well as my direction, purpose, meaning, and excitement-to try to tell the story of New Mexico as I know it. To try to show you, the viewer and reader, what this land is like and about. To try to point you toward why this is an enchanting place.

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So, if you haven’t read Stuart’s book, Close to Home, do so! If you have read it, make a point to read it again. It is not a long book, but its depth is palpable. And I have heard from a small bird that he is working on another book due out possibly this Spring; I can’t wait!

Note: Those of you involved in the photography scene may be aware that my new friend and Blurb photographer at large Daniel Milnor (aka Smogranch) is also working on a very similar project. His work is absolutely fantastic and if you haven’t seen it go follow his tumblr blog where he is being completely transparent about the project’s process and progress for the sake of his subjects-people who would not otherwise see the results of their portraits. Also check out this video of him at work here in NM. He and I met recently and shared ideas on our projects.  It is great fun to watch how he approaches the same subjects and what he comes away with. At first I was concerned I would be repeating what he’s already doing, but he comes from outside the state and sees things in a much different way than I do. That combined with his mega years of experience, his photography education, his outgoing nature, and the fact that he tends to shoot with a Leica means his work is going to look wayyyyyy different from mine. Can you tell I’m a fan? Still, I hesitated when he began to make his project public until I realized I could not deny the push inside that drives me to work on this project.

All of these images were made after meeting with Daniel in Santa Fe with my manual film camera, a Pentax K1000. All except the second-that was shot in my driveway. Talk about close to home!

Posted by Brian Miller in Good Reads, Monochrome, Nuevo Mexico, Tierra Encantada

Learn How A Top Travel Photographer Makes Their Images

I have a new favorite photographer to add to my growing list: Mitchell Kanashkevich. Mitchell is a Belarusian/Australian photographer who has made great waves in travel and documentary photography in the past several years and has been on my radar for some time now as I followed his travels on his blog.

His photos and portraits are stunning, to say the least. But what garners my attention the most about him is his minimal use of equipment. The images he makes are so rich and inviting that I continually ask myself the photography fan’s ubiquitous question: “how does he do that?!?”

imageWell, today I found out as I was asked to review his latest ebook “Rabari: Encounters with the Nomadic Tribe” published by Light Stalking as part of their Inside Series To Travel Documentary Photography. I have to admit that at first, while honored in being asked to review the book, I wasn’t that excited. On the surface this looked like another “how to” book. A sort of “I went here and took these pictures and had an adventure you’ll be envious of” book. But this book is not like that.

Very early on Mitchell lists the equipment he used on this project and that made me sit up in my seat. Using only a Canon 400D (Rebel xti to US based folks), 3 prime lenses (50mm, 28mm, and 20mm) and a reflector, Mitchell reminded me of my other fave photog, Andrew S. Gibson, in the “less is more than plenty” category of photographers. Once I knew that I wanted to know how Mitchell could make such stunning images with wayyyyy less gear than I own.

Well, Mitchell is very generous with this information providing background information, his objectives, the light conditions and how he modified them (with only a reflector!!), his challenges, how and why he composed the images and posed his subjects, and the “what” and “why” of post processing for each of the 10 images.

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As I read along I noticed I was beginning to anticipate Mitchell’s writing by correctly guessing what he was doing and why; a clear sign I was learning. This is, after all, why I am interested in these ebooks: to learn. And that learning, the lessons, were beginning to sink in as I progressed through the book.

At $24.95 this is a premium price for an ebook. But I have to say that at 59 pages you get decent value for the money. Add to this a $5 discount until Christmas and a money back guarantee and the value gets a bit better.

A word of warning, though. If you want to discover exactly how Mitchell post processes his images, this is not the book for you. Those descriptions are general. If, however,  you want to know what he was trying to achieve while photographing his subjects, the challenges he encountered while doing so (from language issues, to cultural issues, to technical issues) then this book will be helpful. Some of the information is repetitive, but I think that is exactly what makes this book a good teaching tool-repetition is a key component of education.

Posted by Brian Miller in Good Reads

eBook: Square by Andrew S. Gibson

As my regular followers here know I often write reviews of ebooks released through the good folks at Craft & Vision. I just love ebooks! I know that is obvious. But there is something wonderful about paying $4 or $5 for a 40 to 60 to-occasionally-80 page manuscript of luscious photography writing. The advent of tablet devices like the iPad have made ebooks an economical means of distributing and consuming content, and these ebooks look wonderful!

So I was both humbled and excited when one of my favorite Craft & Vision authors contacted me and asked me to review his latest ebook: Square: the digital photographer’s guide to the square format. If you remember, Andrew is the author of the ebook on composition that was released last week as well as two of my favorite titles “The Magic of Black and White, Volumes 1 & 2”. Andrew has decided to release this ebook through his website.

Square explores the history of the square format, its challenges for digital photographers whose cameras photograph strictly in 35mm 3×2 format, and the possibilities this format encourages in composition. In addition, Andrew packs this ebook with beautiful new images all formatted square, two case studies with wonderful square format film photographers, and several tutorials for altering digital files into attractive square format photographs.

And to celebrated the launch of his book, Andrew is having a special sale for the first 7 days. Normally $5US, you can get the book for $4US by using the coupon code square20 at checkout.

This code expires on Wednesday 30th November, 2011 23:59 GMT.

 

Posted by Brian Miller in Good Reads

New Craft & Vision eBook: Beyond Thirds

The fine folks at Craft & Vision have been staying true to their mission of providing quality ebooks meant to educate photographers to increase their craft and explore their vision. Today, they released the latest publication by Andrew S. Gibson, author of “The Magic of Black and White, Part 1 & Part 2”: “Beyond Thirds: A Photographer’s Introduction to Creative Composition.”

In this ebook Gibson uses some of his beautiful imagery to explain basic guidelines of photographic composition beginning with the Rule of Thirds and moving beyond into aspects of the Golden Section, Balance, Dynamism, Contrast, Aspect Ratios, the use of Space and more.

This book is particularly useful to those photographers that are attempting to understand how positioning subjects in a photographic frame leads to stronger images. If you tend to adhere to-or have not even heard of-the “Rule of Thirds” this book is for you. Gibson is clear in his writing and explicit with his imagery and while he introduces the reader to varying compositional theories he also encourages the reader to work from feel.  For $5 this ebook provides what it promises-an introduction-but can also serve as a nice reminder for those of us that think we are beyond such discussions.

Click on the link in the text above or click on the images in this post and you will be taken to the Craft & Vision store where you can purchase and download this and other wonderful ebooks.

Special Offer on PDFs: Use the promotional code BT4 and you can have the PDF version of Beyond Thirds for only $4 OR use the code BT20 to get 20% off when they buy 5 or more PDF ebooks from the Craft & Vision collection. These codes expire at 11:59pm PST November 19th, 2011.

Posted by Brian Miller in Good Reads

New Craft & Vision eBook: Making Light 2

Not too long ago Piet Van den Eynde released an ebook titled Making Light that really helped my understanding of off camera flash. It was a $5 well spent for me. I don’t use off camera flash all that often but when I do I want to be able to do it well. Once the ambient light dips really low and I want to keep making compelling images a flash-especially an off camera flash-is essential. Making Light helped me a great deal.

Yesterday he released his second book in the series, Making Light 2 through the really awesome folks at Craft & Vision. Making Light 2 picks up where Making Light leaves off and takes the reader deeper into understanding working with off camera flash. Van den Eynde works through High Sync Flash, working with multiple flashes, advance triggering systems, different modifiers, and what to do when your small flash units just don’t cut it anymore.

I particularly enjoyed the 4 interviews he includes at the end. It was great fun to read about more takes on off camera flash and see the work of yet more people. This helped me understand what can be a mind blowing subject for some, including me at times.

So, if you enjoyed Making Light and want to explore off camera flash in more depth then this book is for you. If you have yet to read Making Light I would recommend it. Even though I don’t use off camera flash all that often that book helped me to notice and understand different qualities of light and how to work more effectively with them. Then I could add more light if I wanted to. Better to have more tools in the toolkit than less.

Special Offer on PDFs: Use the promotional code MAKINGLIGHT4 and you can have the PDF version of Making Light II for only $4 OR use the code MAKINGLIGHT20 to get 20% off when they buy 5 or more PDF ebooks from the Craft & Vision collection. These codes expire at 11:59pm PST October 24th, 2011.

Making Light Bundle: Get both volumes for just $8. There’s no product page for this package on the C&V website but you can make your purchase by simply clicking the direct shopping cart buttons below.

Posted by Brian Miller in Good Reads

New Craft & Vision eBook: The Inspired Eye, Vol. 3

David duChemin has been a tear these past three years or so. For a man who has chosen a visual medium as his profession he has also proven to be quite the writer and penning 4 print books and numerous ebooks as well as regular posts on his blog, www.pixelatedimage.com. Today he release the third and final ebook in his “The Inspired Eye” ebooks, The Inspired Eye, Vol. 3

Ever since coming across a copy of “Within The Frame” in my favorite local-and now closed(!)-Borders book store I have always enjoyed David’s writing. He writes about matters close to my heart and does so with eloquence and humor-though he would spell that “humour.” He tends to focus not on the “how to” of photography but rather on the “why” of photography. This book, and this series, focus on creativity: it’s joys and it’s challenges.

Having ridden some creative highs in the past few years, experienced the challenges of creativity overflow (too much going out with not enough coming in), as well as a personal low through physical injuries, surgery and months of rehab, David knows about the rewards and challenges of the creative life. And he pours it into this book.

Filled with humor, anecdotes, quotations, images shot mostly on his iPhone, and sound, soulful advice and direction, this book encourages us to take action on our creative path and warns against pitfalls along the way. Drawing from his own personal experience as well as the wisdom of creative people from history David weaves a wonderful read with a motivating and encouraging voice. I recommend it.

Special Sale:

you can get The Inspired Eye 3 for $5, or $4 if you use coupon code EYETHREE4 before Saturday, September 24 at 11:59pm (PST). As always during these launch discounts, you can get 5 for the price of 4, this time the discount code is EYETHREE20.

You can also get the entire The Inspired Eye bundle for $12. Volumes 1 & 2 have new covers but the content remains unchanged. Just visit the Craft & Vision store.

Posted by Brian Miller in Creativity, Good Reads
Daily Practice

Daily Practice

Submit to a daily practice. Keep knocking and the joy inside will eventually open a window.           -Rumi

Things have been busy here in monkdom. I know many of us have busy lives; it is one of the things that tends to define us as Americans, it seems, and I notice it often as a casual yet telling response to a friendly greeting in my parts. “What you been up to?” the greeter asks. “Oh, not much. Busy, busy…”

Not many more details are given and none more are requested, as if to say “well, if you won’t volunteer it, or don’t remember it, then it’s not that important to me.”

Well, here, we’ve been busy, busy. And I’m gonna tell you about it, mostly because I’m enthused about it and also because all this business is separating the wheat from the chaff for me and the role of photography in my life.

The quote above is a quick little ditty that has deep meaning for those spiritually oriented, but it also speaks true of those of us in the quest for that satisfying artistic expression: our voice. “Submit to a daily practice and have faith” that quote seems to say. Work daily, practice daily, be mindful, daily and what you seek or what you need will somehow, somewhere, present itself.

It is a challenging thing to do because submitting to this daily practice is supposed to challenge you. It is supposed to make you question what you are doing and why you are doing it. It is supposed to take you right to the edge of the limits of what you know about your art (and even perhaps yourself) and make you peer, seriously peer, over the edge at “what if?”

For me this has been coming through stress, challenging work, lack of sleep, deadlines, limits, and illness. Life has been full, my responsibilities feeling so vast, that there seemed to not be room for photography in it. I actually asked myself if I should stop for now; if I was trying to do too much.

I haven’t fully answered that question yet but I find myself coming through it all with greater clarity and with a realization that despite all the challenges some wonderful things have taken place throughout it all. I was recently paid to photograph a Baptism and was quite pleased with the result; I’ve had a photographic series published at Rear Curtain (the first and hopefully not the last); I’ve started lightening my gear bag as I wander and travel with wonderful results and more enjoyable trips; I’ve completed a new photobook I am excited about and awaiting the proof with anticipation; I’ve edited down a huge series to 6 images that I think tell a story with greater impact; I’ve begun to expose myself to varying art forms with greater enthusiasm and energy.

This past Saturday I convinced my family to take a drive to Santa Fe and had the chance to visit the Verve Photography Gallery there. It is a wonderful place with a welcome and accommodating staff and some of the most astounding photography gracing the walls. My purpose there was more directed than just taking in the prints displayed. I was after a book, or books, by Norman Mauskopf. Ever since Daniel Milnor (aka. Smogranch) had mentioned Mauskopf in a blog post I’d wanted to see his stuff. Both Milnor and Mauskopf are undertaking or have undertaken projects close to my heart: Milnor is engaged in a lengthy project on New Mexico and Mauskopf has completed fantastic works on horse racing, rodeo, and the Latino descendants of Spanish settlers in Northern New Mexico.  All of these projects rank in the “holy crap” level of difficulty.

These two are in the stratosphere of documentary photography and noticing my attraction to their work has made me realize the pull I feel in my photography. What that is exactly still remains to be seen-that will require more practice-but the idea and the way has begun to take form in the fog.

By the way, Mauskopf is teaching a visual storytelling workshop in Santa Fe this October through Santa Fe Photographic Workshops and Daniel Milnor is leading one in Peru.

Posted by Brian Miller in Books, Creativity, Good Reads, Monochrome, Photographic Mindset

eBook Review: Making Light by Piet van den Eynde

I really enjoyed this ebook, Making Light by Piet Van Den Eynde. It feels to me like just the right ebook for me at the moment and I have torn through it eagerly in both anticipation of writing this review as well as wanting to apply what Piet has to say.

You see, I’m on a “no new gear!” kick these days as I really want to learn the craft of photography better and I’ve been finding that buying new gear has not been effective in satisfying this curiosity. Along these lines I recently thought to myself, “I really need to understand light better, both cognitively and intuitively.” And learning to use off camera flash is a great way to do that. After all, I’ll be fully responsible for the quantity, quality, and direction of the light so any mess-ups will be mine. Rectifying those mess-ups will teach me gobs and gobs about light.

And along comes this book.

Now let me get this straight. This is a gear-heavy book. After all, when we begin talking about taking the flash off the camera we begin talking gear: flash/strobe unit, trigger systems, modifyers, etc. Thankfully, I’ve got most of that stuff or can figure out how to use a bedsheet or translucent curtain to begin to modify things. But despite the emphasis on gear, Piet explains how to go about obtaining and working with a basic lighting setup. In fact, he even shows how he got his whole camera rig and lighting setup onto a bicycle(!) for a trip through Asia, and then shares some beautiful portraits taken on that trip.

That got me humble. That got me enthused and curious!

This book is packed with the information and examples you might need to begin making fantastic photographs using off camera flash. Piet is clearly a master teacher and is clearly creating the foundation with which readers can move forth and use off camera lighting to enhance the photographic craft. I’ve been to classes on this stuff, I’ve taken the Flashbus workshop when it roared through town last year, I’ve practiced and failed and practiced and failed. But now I have a resource that makes sense to me and I will revisit over and over.

Do you get the idea that I really liked this book? I did. Have at it! Don’t restrict yourself to being only an “available light” photographer simply because you don’t yet grasp using a flash well (like me!) Increase your craft and repertoire and join me, won’t you?

For the first five days only, if you use the promotional code LIGHT4 when you checkout, you can have the PDF version of Making Light for only $4 OR use the code LIGHT20 to get 20% off when you buy 5 or more PDF ebooks from the Craft & Vision collection. These codes expire at 11:59pm PST August 21st, 2011.

Posted by Brian Miller in Good Reads

New C&V eBook: Andes: Print and Process by Andrew S. Gibson

Andrew S. Gibson is quickly becoming one of my favorite photographers as well as one of my favorite photography writers. I fell in love with his first 2 ebooks, The Magic of Black and White and The Magic of Black and White, Part II soon after he released them. I found they really taught me to “see” in black and white better and produce better overall images as a result, whether in color or monochrome. I return to those titles over and over reminding myself of his tips, suggestions, and direction as well as to receive inspiration from the absolutely stunning images included within.

Yesterday he released another ebook. It is a bit different from his earlier works for the Craft & Vision label in that this is not really an instructional book although the reader will get a pretty clear sense of how Gibson approaches photography philosophically. This ebook: Andes: The Print and Process Series features some of the same images in his earlier works but also delves into the journey that gave birth to those images as well as the thought process behind them.

Focused intently on several journeys to the Andes mountains in South America, Gibson recounts bus rides, exploratory wanderings, encounters with indigenous cultures, witnessing local festivals and really gives a sense of what it is like to wander and photograph the area, the land, the people, and their customs.

What struck me the most personally was the simplicity of Gibson’s gear and how it had a direct impact on the outstanding quality of the resulting images. On his first trip Gibson traveled with two simple Pentax 35mm film cameras with a 24mm wide lens on one and a 50mm lens on the other. On his second trip he traveled with a Canon EOS 350D (a Canon Digital Rebel XTi here in the U.S.) and 18-50mm kit lens. A kit lens!! Brilliant!! Just the proof I needed to be reminded that the quality of a photographer’s gear does not directly correlate with the quality of a photographer’s photographs.

So come take a tour of a gifted and skilled photographer’s images in this wonderful ebook: Andes: The Print and Process Series. If you’re anything like me you’ll be inspired to go out and make incredible images with simple gear.

Special Offer on PDFs
For the first five days only, if you use the promotional code ANDES4 when you checkout, you can have the PDF version of ANDES, A Print & Process Series for only $4 OR use the code ANDES20 to get 20% off when you buy 5 or more PDF ebooks from the Craft & Vision collection. These codes expire at 11:59pm PST August 6th, 2011.

 

Posted by Brian Miller in Good Reads