link linkin clarinet musician photo

Photographing a musician in top form is a thrill. I photographed Link Linkin clarinet player, at Sound Bites Grill and worked up an image for the Sound Bites ‘Wall of Fame’. (see it here) Link saw it and asked to use it for his promotional materials on the web site and some 8×10′s. He asked for a few changes to make the image more generic and to clean up a couple distractions form the main subject. I was removing the SB logo and found it to be a little barren so after playing a bit I decided it would be cool to have Link’s name up in lights and he agreed. Small changes to a photograph in post production allow it to be used more effectively in promoting for different purposes.

I used the Lumix GX7 to make the photo. I gotta tell you that the extra dynamic range is really helpful when photographing live entertainment under LED lights… Especially when your entertainer is wearing a white jacket. The fact that you can fire off very fast bursts on the camera also allow the choice of very small changes that occur when a musician is in full movement to get the exact prime look at the right moment.

Here’s the final photo…

link linkin playing clarinet photoClarinet player Link Linkin Live on stage photography & art treatment by Bob Coates Photography

sunday photo/art quote 10/27

Today’s quote I found while cruising Entrepreneur Magazine and it was in the editor’s note.

“It is a happy talent to know how to play.” Ralph Waldo Emmerson.

The editor talks of playfulness coming to a halt as we get older. As children we are happy to push a button to see what it does. We proudly display our artistic creations. We run and jump just because we can! Then as age and other people’s opinions begin to beat us down we become more conservative in what ways are willing to experiment with new things while trying to learn. In my Photoshop classes I have always exhorted people to play, play and play some more. Push a button and see what happens. Ask your self, “What if I do this?” Then do it. A mistake? Cool! You just learned something. Try again… And, again. Then comes the, “Wow, that looks cool!” moment when the button you pushed or new technique you tried is wonderful.

This is really hitting home for me as I move to the micro four thirds format with my Panasonic Lumix cameras. The GH3 AND GX7 have so many new features and possibilities it can be a little overwhelming. I kept trying to create a really good image without trying new things. But, as I started to take my own advice and try new settings, see what happens when I push this or tweak that I find the wonder that I had when I first started photography. It’s like having a darkroom in my hands. I’m more excited and energized than I have been in years. (and those who know me know I am always pretty excited about photography so it’s really saying something!) Am I making mistakes? Yep! But it doesn’t matter. As I make the mistakes I am learning new techniques, creating new looks in camera that I was never able to before. And, as I play I’m able to get more and more creative with my image making. How cool is that?

So even though you didn’t ask for it let me pass on a little advice… Be willing to fail because in failure you find your greatest, and quickest, learning curve.

gregory heisler photographer photoGregory Heisler Portrait Photographer I love this look straight out of camera. High contrast Black & White with a bit of glow around the darkest areas. This look has already sold to a couple clients! (Thanks to my fellow Lumix Luminaries for the tip to get me started with that one!)

Kristen jensen ands Frederick Van Johson photoIn-camera panoramic stitching is a wonderful feature in the Lumix GX7 I’m having fun pushing it to limits. How well does it do in a moving person situation? That depends on how much the person is moving. If you get everyone relatively still it’s pretty cool… This is Frederick Van Johnson interviewing Kristen Jensen at the Lumix Lounge Live at PhotoPlus Expo in New York last week.

If you have a photo group and would like to have me or one of the other Luminaries speak it’s very possible Panasonic will cover the costs. You supply the venue and the photographers. Pick your subject and speaker and we’ll do the rest.

photoplus expo new york

PhotoPlus Expo in New York is quite a show. Been hanging out in the Lumix Lounge in booth number 137 and I gotta tell you it’s been pretty cool watching the live Internet broadcasts with the other Lumix Luminaries and the excitement with the people stopping by and chatting about the features of the GX7 and GH3 and the new GM1. Can’t believe they can get all the features of the first two cameras into one that’s a small as the GM1. It’s almost like a fashion accessory (read jewelry) that takes interchangeable lenses….

Here are some images of the Luminaries from the ‘set’ of booth #137. Come out and see Gulio Sciorio, Rob Knight and then myself today. If you can’t make it out you can catch the action here http://us.panasonic.com/lumixlounge #lumixlounge #panasonic #lumix #photoplusexpo

P1100877_kristenLumix Luminary Kristen Jensen at PhotoPlus Expo

P1100847_suzetteLumix Luminary Suzette Allen on the set at PhotoPlus Expo New York

P1100909_benBen Grunow interviewed by Frederick Van Johnson at PhotoPlus Expo New York

lumix lounge live photoplus

picture of invitation to Lumix Lounge LiveLooking forward to being in New York for the PhotoPlus Expo this week! I want to personally invite you to the Panasonic booth on the trade show floor Jacob Javits Convention Center in NYC, booth #137. We will be broadcasting live from the Lumix Lounge there. Various Lumix Luminaries will be interviewed by host Frederick Van Johnson Watch the Hangouts Live on Air at Google+ LUMIX
Here’s the schedule so far….

THURSDAY 10/24
10:30 – 11:30 am
MODERN COMMERCIAL PHOTOGRAPHY  with Lumix Luminary Suzette Allen and guests
1:00 – 2:00 pm
SIMPLE MIRRORLESS MIGRATION  with Lumix Luminary Kristen Jensen and guests
3:30 – 4:30 pm
MORE VIDEO WITH LESS CAMERA  with Lumix Luminary Ben Gunrow and guests

FRIDAY 10/25
10:30 – 11:30 am
ANIMATED PORTRAITS  with Lumix Luminary Giulio Sciorio and guests
1:00 – 2:00 pm
OUTDOOR AND ACTION SPORTS  with Lumix Luminary Rob Knight and guests
2:30 – 3:30 pm
FINE ART PHOTOGRAPHY  with Lumix Luminary Bob Coates (hey that’s me!) and guests

SATURDAY 10/26
10:30 – 11:30 am
PRODUCT PHOTOGRAPHY  with Lumix Luminary Patrick Gerrity and guests
1:00 – 2:00 pm
WEDDINGS AND PORTRAITS  with Lumix Luminary William Innes and guests

Follow Lumix on social media to get the latest updates on Lumix Lounge LIVE events.  Facebook.com/LUMIX, Twitter @LUMIXUSA, and LUMIX on Google Plus

charity photography

Let’s talk about raising your profile in the community. Many times you can do that by helping out various charities and/or fundraising using your photography skills. I don’t recommend doing this work for that reason only but a higher profile can be a by-product of supporting charities that you believe in.

Here’s an example of a recent shoot and blog post that I did for the Red Rock Rotary Club of Sedona. Make sure that you send an invoice for the work you do for the full amount. Then zero balance the total so that the value of the work you do is properly recognized. If you don’t let them know they will have their own thoughts on the value of your work.

passion & business

I’m a big fan of Roy Williams and the Monday Morning Memo. In this memo he writes about a word I see in many photographers’ descriptions of why they decided to get into the business. And, also why I feel so many don’t make it… Is this you?

The Follow-Your-Passion Myth

One of the books I’ll write someday is a collection of true stories gathered from extremely successful people.

My business as an advertising consultant and seminar speaker has put me face-to-face with many of the brightest stars in the entrepreneurial sky. And rarely do I miss the opportunity to ask them,

“Can you recall that fateful moment when you chose the fork in the road that led you to where you are today? How did you first get into this business?”

Never – not once – has a successful person said to me, “I followed my passion.”

But this is the answer you will hear again and again from people who are serving time in prison.

The world is full of rich people who are not, and never were, successful. People who stole the money, inherited the money, married the money, won the money in the stock market or in the lottery, cheated others out of the money or were awarded the money in court, do not qualify as “successful” in my admittedly subjective opinion.

The “Follow-Your-Passion” myth is pervasive because successful people are usually passionate. But those people would have been passionate about whatever they chose to do.

Their jobs don’t give them passion.
They give passion to their jobs.
The same is true in successful marriages.

Moon-eyed dreamers who say, “I just can’t find my passion” always act like I kicked their puppy when I tell them that passion is not a magical ether that can be located and tapped into. Passion is the shrapnel that flies from a three-way collision of determination, commitment and action.

While we’re at it, let’s pull the mask off a couple of other myths:
(1.) Passion doesn’t always manifest itself as happiness. Passion is also behind deep grief. (2.) Passion isn’t always confident. Worry is misguided passion, fearful passion, but it is passion nonetheless.

Don’t do what you’re passionate about.
Be passionate about what you do.
Don’t follow your passion.
Let your passion follow you.

Passion is created when determination and commitment are joined by the nitroglycerin of action. Leonardo da Vinci said it 480 years ago and he said it in Italian. Here is the clearest translation:

“People of accomplishment rarely sit back and let things happen to them. They go out and happen to things.”

Listen to Leonardo.
Go out and happen to something.
When we hear the laughter and the dancing,
the crying and the grief, we will know the shrapnel is flying.

Roy H. Williams

I highly recommend you subscribe to the Monday Morning Memo. A great way to start your week… get a taste of Roy here in this weeks Rabbit Hole… (It’s a place where, well, you have to spend time there to understand it. Click on the image of each page to drill down further and further)