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Observations & Photos by photographer Stephen Schafer of SCHAFPHOTO.com

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Related Posts with Thumbnails

A real day of Architectural Photography Workshop @ Julia Dean

I'm doing my (in)famous FAST & FURIOUS Architectural Photography Workshop again. Walking into a building sight-unseen with a troop students and trying to make the best editorial/architectural photos possible in half a day... then back to the studio to edit, retouch and hit the send button. (@ juliadean.com studios in LA)

Here's the link to the class in September 2012:  

http://www.ssreg.com/juliadean/classes/classes.asp?courseid=11525&catid=1807

Julia Dean Fast & Furious
Check it out online at Juliadean.com

Hope to see you there! 15 students max...

Posted by Schaf Photo in Magazine Photography, Pondering Photography, Teaching Photography | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

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HABS Photographer Stephen Schafer Selected for Best of ASMP 2011

San Fran County Jail 3-schafphoto

 

I'm excited to be one of twenty photographers chosen from more than 150 projects submitted by my peers for the seventh annual Best of ASMP 2011 (and the first HABS photographer).

The American Society of Media Photographers, founded in 1944, is the premier trade association for the world's most respected professional photographers. Promoting photographers' rights and providing education in better business practices.

The selected 2011 photographers run the gamut, from documentary to digital shot using a remote-controlled helicopter... and beyond. The twenty photographers have some pretty interesting stories about how and why they chose to execute their photographic vision, I'm just glad I could round out the mostly digital group with my state-of-the-art-1933 approach to HABS photography on the Ahwahnee. The interview has some fun photos of SF County Jail #3 along with photos of the Kaufmann House and Ennis House that will be donated to the Library of Congress HABS, HAER, HALS photography collection in the future.

The 20 Interviews at this link:  ASMP Best of 2011 Link

 

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Posted by Schaf Photo in Architectural Photography, Commercial Photography, Documentary Photography, Film, HABS/HAER/HALS, Historic Preservation, Photography, Photography Technique, Pondering Photography, Travel | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

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A photo is worth 2 words...

In this case the two words were U-Turn, because when I saw the two words on this sign, I was compelled.

IP_960Ontario1-PH-scout-8196

2 Words (One arrow). 

( 900 East Baseline Road, Claremont, CA )

Posted by Schaf Photo in Architectural Photography, Documentary Photography, HABS/HAER/HALS, Photography, Photography Technique, Pondering Photography | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

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Photography quote of the day...

Schaf_photo-holeinthebuilding


  "Everyone has a photographic memory... Some just don't have the film."

 – Stephen Wright

 

Posted by Schaf Photo in Architectural Photography, Commercial Photography, Documentary Photography, Film, Photography, Pondering Photography | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

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My Family Homestead, Bad Laasphe, Germany

One side of the family had great taste in slate siding and a view of the whole Bad Laasphe Valley. Alas the house was sold long ago... but as soon as I have an extra million Euros, I'm buying it back as a summer getaway...

Posted by Schaf Photo in Architectural Photography, Photography, Pondering Photography, Travel | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

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A quote from Albert Einstein –

IP_960handcolored_Cat_Ojai

"A photograph never grows old. You and I change, people change all through the months and years but a photograph always remains the same. How nice to look at a photograph of mother or father taken many years ago. You see them as you remember them. But as people live on, they change completely. That is why I think a photograph can be kind."

    -Albert Einstein

Posted by Schaf Photo in Photography, Pondering Photography | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

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EVERY PICTURE TELLS A LIE

EVERY PICTURE TELLS A LIE, that was my bumper sticker in the 90s... I was so stoked and ironic...

Is there such a thing as an anti-HERO photograph? Can a photo be trustworthy and impartial? This is the dilemma of the ethical photojournalist, how to illustrate a story with photographs, being fair and equitable yet still creating compelling images that sell newspapers (and win awards). 

The National Press Photographers Association Code of Ethics (NPPA LINK- nine standards) has as its number one standard:

 "Be accurate and comprehensive in the representation of subjects."

NotAdoctor-schafphoto

I was fortunate to learn early that newspaper photojournalism deadlines did not appeal to me. I was promoted to the position of Photo Editor of the local college newspaper, and soon found my staff photographers even worse with deadlines than I. There wasn't really ever a discussion of what ethical standards might be or what constituted an ethically a gray area. If there would have been a controversy over one of our photos we may have had that lecture, but it never happened while I was at the VC Press. 

I then went on to Brooks Institute of Photography in Santa Barbara, and the concept of photo ethics remained nonchalant. Had a crisis occurred with a student or instructor photograph at the time, I'm sure there would have been a "Memo from Ernie" read in all the classes, and we may have debated it over beer(s) at Peabody's but it never happened while I was at Brooks. 

I decided to go into commercial photography and opened a studio in downtown Ventura. I started knocking on doors with my portfolio looking for work. No one ever asked for my diploma, no one cared if I was Democrat or Republican, they just felt my price was fair, and took my word for it that every image in my portfolio was actually mine. They had to trust that the images I showed them exemplified the quality of work I would deliver.

Ah, Marketing. I caught on real soon that the objectivity of photojournalism is not a requirement for advertising, just look at the healthy-looking cowboys in the cigarette ads. 

At Brooks we used Crisco when we needed scoops of vanilla ice cream.

My first big client made refrigerator-sized industrial equipment. They took my advice and allowed me to use blue, yellow and red gels on the lights (hey it was the 80s), I taped blueprints up on the walls of the research department we were photographing. We then moved every new computer in the building (with 5.25 inch floppy drives attached) into the frame so it would look "High-Tech." Photojournalistically unethical? Yes, yet just another day in advertising. 

In the 90s I photographed so many scientist/doctor-like models, I eventually bought a white lab coat and a stethoscope to keep in the studio so that I wouldn't need to rent wardrobe. The photos depicted a white male wearing a lab coat over a shirt and tie with a stethoscope around his neck. If you assumed that the man was a doctor, then that was merely a lucky coincidence for the client du jour. 

I now spend almost all my time photographing architecture and bridges and the like, and also the people that design them and live in them in their context. In this age when Adobe Photoshop is used on virtually every image seen in public, photographic ethics and the "Photoshop Propriety" of each photographer has more bearing than ever on how a project will look. Much of my work is documentary structure surveys (HABS/HAER/HALS) and in those cases I strive to be as informational and objective as possible. I'm more comfortable with the "Honester" approach to my subjects and since I'm not entering any competitions, I don't have the added temptation of winning awards. Often the final project has never seen a computer, the film is printed in the darkroom and delivered without the aid of modern technology.

Schaf-8600Sunset_3-2010-schafphoto--1189
   

However my architectural portfolios and editorial assignments call for HERO shots and the most attractive views. The only thing keeping me from spending even more time in Photoshop is a belief that my retouching has reached a point where I think more manipulation stops telling the story and enters the realm of "CGI" (Computer Generated Imaging)(where reality has no bearing on what can be done). Like the Bionic Man, "We can make him stronger, faster..." we can make a building look better than it really is: That paint color is a little dull, let's brighten the hue, the windows would have been bigger if they hadn't run over budget, let's make them bigger, the trees will be mature someday, let's clone in some old trees from the park, etc., etc., etc...

I'm not sure we can proscribe how much a commercial photograph can be changed before it becomes "false advertising." Everyone – viewer, photographer, client, architect, art director, advertiser – will have a different standard. Some photographers will feel more Photoshopping is normal, and others will feel that any manipulation is too much. So today the body of work that a photographer exhibits in their portfolio and website shows not only their talent and point of view, but also the tremendous influence of their "Photoshop Propriety". 

I have given away the lab coat, the clip-on ties, the stethoscope, the makeup kit, etc. (It was a long list.) I kept the lights – I use them to illuminate dark places. While teaching a California Preservation Foundation Workshop on Photography last week, someone asked if taking a generator and lights into a dark building was indeed honest documentation when the room has been dark for decades and has no windows or electricity. Hmm – we had an answer – but is there a right answer? I'll leave that question open...

-Schaf

Note: when I wrote this, I heard a nice story on the radio about Food Stylists and photography, makes advertising photographers look tame... listen here (NPR LINK)

Posted by Schaf Photo in Architectural Photography, Commercial Photography, Documentary Photography, Film, HABS/HAER/HALS, Photography, Pondering Photography | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

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Our HERO

Where did the term "HERO," to describe the most impressive photograph in an architectural portfolio, come from anyway?

Schafphoto-WAV_4-2010-1600

This is the HERO view of the Working Artists Ventura (WAV) sustainable artists complex in Ventura that was dedicated this month; and it wouldn't have been possible without the help of my three heroic assistants and the artists and staff of the WAV who allowed us to light up their studios and neaten up their balconies, etc. 

<<<CLICK PHOTO TO ENLARGE

For the uninitiated, this photograph took about six hours on site to light, an hour to capture and about eight hours in the computer to create the final HERO. That eight hours is what I would call enhancement & subtraction. No pixels were harmed in the Hero-ification of this image, but some were lightened and some darkened, some were covered up by others, and over time, a "Still-Frame-Movie" was created from about twelve still frames all taken from atop a 10' ladder on a digital SLR. The car streaks came from one view, the clouds from another, the best view of Paul's artwork in the window was chosen along with the Avenue windows with the best car reflections to make the empty commercial space look brighter. The best views of people leaning on the railings were added, and the blown-out Ventura Ave. street sign was replaced from a darker exposure. The prominent Do Not Enter sign and the ratty fence were covered up with ivy and cleaned up link-by-link.

WEB-Schafphoto-WAV_4-2010-3235

WEB-Schafphoto-WAV_4-2010-3183

Now, I know you're thinking, "That's Cheating." Yes, guilty as charged, but in my defense, every picture tells a lie. Trust me, I could make this a bigger lie, or I could offer up the plain exposure before the sun went down, or I could show it in the rain, but is a view in the afternoon or in the rain really any truer than a morning view or one with a bus parked in front? I do a lot of documentary photography, and this is not that, but no one asked me for a documentary image of the WAV, they wanted a HERO.

Credits for the WAV HERO "Still-Frame-Movie"

1st assistant/lighter: Hannah Fitzgerald

Key Grip: Lisa Dodge

Best Boy: Ricardo Miranda

Casting: Paul Lindhard

Catering: Spencer McKenzie's

The Dude: Chris Velasco

Sets: Paul Benevidez

Landscape Lights/communications: Sara Wiley

Documentist: Jessica Lindley

Starring Building Exposure: 7:41:48 PM

Offramp and Ivy: 7:55:14 PM

Sky: 7:41:27 PM

Offramp tail light streaks: 8:02:54 PM

Street Lights: 7:23:51 PM

Cars on Avenue: 7:42:55 PM

People on WAV deck: 7:34:04 PM

Guy on the ladder: Stephen Schafer

That cast and crew came together to compress five hours of lighting and 39 minutes of photography into one still frame. THANKS!

-Schaf

Posted by Schaf Photo in Architectural Photography, Commercial Photography, Documentary Photography, Photography, Pondering Photography | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

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Fifteen minutes, sometimes less.

WEB-TA-Dawn_Hero-5972-EDIT3  

The secret to successful architectural photography:

Knowing which 23 & 3/4 hours NOT to take the photograph. 


     -Schaf

Posted by Schaf Photo in Architectural Photography, Photography, Pondering Photography | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

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In the Beginning ( Ventura commercial photographer Stephen Schafer starts a PHLOG )

Snow-bench

In the beginning there was darkness, and the photographer said there was not enough light for a good exposure. So on the first day a photographer said, "Let there be lights," and the strobes flashed and the subject was illuminated. And for six days the photographer commanded his camera to bring forth the subject in his images. And on the seventh day the subject was fully documented and the photographer wanted to rest but had to pack up his lights and coil his cords and put away the umbrellas, and pack his tripod, and... Soon thereafter, there was conjured from the RAW pixels the "Hero" shot... And the Hero was blessed by the client, when the client said "WOW". After 30 days the photographer was paid, and all was good with the world. 

And that, my friend, is why photography is just like life...

Posted by Schaf Photo in Architectural Photography, Commercial Photography, Documentary Photography, Film, HABS/HAER/HALS, Infrared Photography, Photography, Pondering Photography | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

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