Saturday, January 28, 2012

Those silly silhouettes

Wikipedia defines a silhouette as; the dark shape and outline of someone or something visible against a lighter background, esp. in dim light.

A group of young adults and teenagers play basketball.
Over the years I have made my share of photos where the subjects were in silhouette. I enjoy them, but I rarely go looking for them. They just kind of happen. Sometimes it is because the background is incredible and sometimes it is because the subject is not.

I still remember a portfolio critique I had with the director of photography at the Minneapolis Star when I was sill in college, (yes, they had cameras back then).

She told me that a silhouetted image in a newspaper was a cop-out and to shoot such a photo was just an example of laziness on the part of the photographer. I guess her words made an impression on me as I have remembered them all these years, but to be honest, I don't completely disagree with her.

Her point was that if you are going to take the trouble to photograph people you should be able to see their faces and get some good expressions. I agree. I do think that sometimes it can be a good thing to let the reader (viewer) use his/her imagination as to what the expressions on the faces of the subjects might be. I know that when I look at the image above of the basketball players, that I tend to see the subjects as faces of my friends or at least of young people I had seen playing before. You might even imagine yourself as one of the people in the photo since you can't see who they actually are.


A batter gets a hit during a softball game at a local park.
On the other hand sometimes I will use the silhouette in an effort to make an interesting photo from a pretty UNinteresting photo assignment. The softball photo at the right is just such a case. I had been assigned to get a photograph to illustrate softball as a recreational activity here in town. When I arrived at the diamond I found that there was a pretty unremarkable game going on and that to get an image that was going to grab someone's attention I was going to have to try something a little out of the norm in the way I approached the photo.

Fortunately for me the dusk sky here in Southern Colorado can make for a striking back drop to a silhouetted image. I try not to use it too often, but from time to time I don't think that it is a bad way to go.

I guess you might say that I get a little lazy from time to time.

Thursday, January 19, 2012

It's FotoCats time again!!!

The 2011 FotoCats class poses in front of Carlile.
It is time to dust off the digital cameras and stock up on juice bags and granola bars. That's right, It is time for another edition of FotoCats at Carlile Elementary School.

FotoCats is a photography class that I teach to a group of (no more than) ten 5th grade students at Carlile Elementary School.  We meet once a week for six weeks after school. Our classes are 45 minutes long. During that time I share the little that I know about what photography is, and what makes a good photograph.

After a few weeks of talking about it the kids get their hands on some digital cameras. We let them loose around the school first and then when they seem to be getting the hang of it we hold our breath and send the cameras home with the kids.

Each student is given the assignment to photograph "what is important to me". When they return to school we edit their images. With a little help the budding young photographers chose an image and an 8 x 10 print is made of the photo.  The photograph is then matted and framed.

After the framing is completed the real fun begins. The students, their families and members of the community are invited to a photo auction of their work. The kids are interviewed about their work, and each photo is auctioned off as the students walk around the room showing off their photo.

The cool part of this auction is that it really makes a difference. Oh sure, it is fun and cool for the kids in the class. They get recognition and some fun surprises, but there is more.

Prior to the event a family in need that is in the district, (not the same school) is selected and invited to the auction. The event is designed to benefit them right then and there. The past two years the families helped have had children who are leukemia survivors. In both of the last two years the families left the school with more than one thousand dollars in hand!

I have been blessed more than I could have ever have imagined by this event. I believe that God is doing His thing by making use of so many people from so many backgrounds to step up and make a difference.

Classes start in February and the auction will be Thursday March 22nd at 7pm in the media center at Carlile Elementary School. Please come and support these kids and be a part of making the difference!

Monday, January 09, 2012

Playmakers IV

Carlee Chain sliding & splashing her way through the playmaker photo shoot.
"Uuuuuhhhhh, okay?" Was how Carlee Chain responded when I explained to her what we were going to do for her "playmaker" photo shoot.

 I told her to get her varsity uniform and meet me in the front yard of my house. Oh, and I told her to bring a towel and prepare to get wet. I am sure that I totally confused the Pueblo East High School catcher. I doubt that it help things much when she showed up to find about 8 feet of black plastic staked into my front yard with a flash on either end pointed toward the middle. Ha!


So what we did was put this plastic down in the yard and stake it down with tent spikes. Then I placed a flash on a lightstand at each end of the plastic pointed at the place where I expected her to be in the middle of the plastic. I used a couple of Pocket Wizard radio remotes to trigger the flashes with the transmitter that I placed in the hotshoe of my camera.

After explaining to Carlee how I wanted her to back off and get a run and slide across the plastic my friend Joy Walker went into action. She made use of a plastic mop bucket to shuttle bucket after bucket of warm water from the bath tub in my house and dumped them on the plastic.

Carlee would get one or two slides out of the water and then Joy would be off again to get more water for the next shot.  After the first couple of slides I think Carlee was really starting to get the hang of sliding across the plastic.

When  I showed her a sample of what the photos were looking like on the screen on the back of my camera she seemed to be getting even more excited. She was a great sport and of all the photos I did for the fall "playmakers" I think that she probably was the athlete who had the most required of her for the photo.

I bet that when she had dried off and was driving away she was probably wondering something like, "What did I just do?"

But the best part of the photo isn't the lighting, or the action, or even the water. The best part was that if you look close inside of her batting helmet...she was smiling.

How cool is that?