Wednesday, August 29, 2007

converting a Mercedes into a cottage?

"Quaint my ride."



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Thursday, August 16, 2007

model test - Inna

NY Fashion Week is fast approaching, and I know this because of all the new models in town. Yesterday I shot a test with an amazing new model, Inna, from Supreme Model Management. I did the wardrobe styling myself (with a little help from Jimmy at Trash and Vaudville on St. Mark's Place). Hair and makeup were handled by the very talented Ana Sicat.

INNA @ Supreme

This one was shot with my Pentax K10D and a 35mm lens:



I also did a couple Polaroids with my late 1960's-era Polaroid 440 camera on nifty Fuji 100 ISO black and white pack film.

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Friday, August 10, 2007

Karl Lagerfeld Profile

ARTICLE

This article on Karl Lagerfeld was in the March 19Th issue of The New Yorker, and though it is quite long I really enjoyed the reading. It's good to know that the people at the top of the fashion food chain are crazy-seeming artists just like me. I especially liked the part describing the work environment in his home and the descriptions of his diversity of interests.

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Monday, July 23, 2007

slide show: The Decline of Fashion Photography

This is a fantastic little slide show (with commentary) over on Slate.com.

The Decline of Fashion Photography
An argument in pictures.
By Karen Lehrman

I don't know that what is shown is a "decline" so much as a simple progression. Fashion was never about the clothes. Stories are certainly still being told through the images. I do like the idea of going back to not allowing gratuitous text to be plastered all over the negative space in images printed in magazines. It's usually a blank area for a reason.

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Saturday, July 21, 2007

style is easy to see, grace is more rare than gold

I was wandering around Soho last night with my friend Echo, and we stopped outside an apparently popular nightlife corner (Spring and Renwick Streets) where there are several bars clustered together. I like watching people. How they communicate, interact, represent themselves, it's all fascinating. I was really surprised how obviously bad most of the clubwear outfits looked. Granted, this seemed to be a college and Wall Street wannabe crowd, but you ought to be at least able to get one piece of an outfit right.

Choice questions for the girls came to mind...
  • "Sweetheart, are you color blind?"
  • "You've got money for cosmopolitans, but not a mirror?"
  • "Did you loot that during a blackout?"
A few had put in some effort and they really stood out, especially when they walked to the bar across the street and nearly tripped every other step clomping along in their expensive high heels, looking more like they were wearing ski boots than anything in the range of a Jimmy Choo.

One of my first thoughts as we had approached this corner was "hey, look, cute girls hanging out on the sidewalk" (they were in line for the door), but after hanging around for a few minutes my somewhat jaded fashion photographer sensibilities kicked in full force and all I saw was sad confused people.

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Wednesday, May 30, 2007

model test - Cristina

I shot a test with a fantastic new model last week, Cristina from Supreme. I did the wardrobe styling myself, with a little help from the model. The hair and makeup were done by Mark Weiss.


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Saturday, May 5, 2007

Andre Austin's Seminar - Notes

Today I went to a seminar about fashion styling, held by celebrity stylist Andre Austin.

He was very knowledgeable and candid.

A couple of notes on things that caught my ear as a photographer:

He said that commercial styling is like wardrobe styling for a movie, as you are creating a person from clothing, which I found interesting.

He also talked about acknowledging the financial investment required of a stylist for testing. For a small shoot, even if all the clothes are free, the stylist could easily spend $100 on cabs picking up and returning outfits.

Apparently, "metalics are in right now," which I had sort of noticed but was trying not to because I'm not crazy about people wearing metal, it just seems unnatural. I wonder if there is a psychological link between the metal sheen clothing and a need for armor in the post 9/11 environment. Sort of like SUV's. They aren't really tanks but they make people feel better.

He spoke briefly about the insecurity level of celebrities, especially artists, and their real need for attention and support on a set. I think probably every artist on a set needs attention and support, but he's right in that when celebrities don't get it they can cause trouble that will disrupt the shoot. So be nice and let them work at their own pace as much as possible, I suppose.

I'm feeling less guilty about mixing Canal Street discount clothing with the high end stuff, and I intend to go check out Target and H&M for some test shoot stock items.

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Saturday, April 28, 2007

Compositing is everything.

I learned to value layering effects when I was into computer animation in the mid-90's. The concepts of good compositing translate to fashion photography and many other art forms.

Complex things tend to look more special.


If it looks like it took a long time to do by hand, that's less common now than it used to be, so there is value assumed. Add considered detail to make things look expensive. Just don't over-do it.

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