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Posts Tagged ‘celebrity’

Interview: Celebrity photoshoots in the era of COVID-19 – Jesse Dittmar shares his experience

16 Jun
Jesse Dittmar was recently hired by The Washington Post to photograph 16-year-old TikTok star Charli D’Amelio in her parent’s backyard.

All photographs by Jesse Dittmar

Jesse Dittmar has been photographing high-profile celebrities since late 2013. He’s used to photographing the big names on short notice with a limited time-frame for publications like The Washington Post and The New York Times, but when COVID-19 hit, his typically busy shooting schedule dried up quickly.

Ordinarily, celebrity photoshoots require travel and large teams working together in extremely close quarters. In the month’s since COVID-19 has swept through the world, we’ve seen magazine’s like Essence and GQ asking stars to photograph themselves for features in the publications. Luckily for photographers like Dittmar, the celebrity selfie doesn’t seem like it will become the new normal in the photo world.

Dittmar photographs big names on short notice for publications like the Washington Post and the New York Times

The Washington Post recently commissioned Dittmar to photograph Charli D’Amelio – a 16-year old from Norwalk, Connecticut with over 60 million TikTok followers. She is one of the rulers of the social media platform, which she uses to share short-form videos of herself dancing in her home, lip-syncing to her family’s dogs and more recently using her influencer status to urge teenagers to stay at home during the global pandemic.

We caught up with Dittmar to learn more about his photoshoot with D’Amelio, his experience shooting in the era of COVID-19 and what he thinks celebrity shoots will be like moving forward.


This was your first shoot since COVID-19 hit the states, how did the opportunity come about?

The first shoot of the COVID-era happened earlier than I was expecting, to be honest. I thought it would be well into the summer before I was going to get that first call, but I got an email out of the blue, like I normally do. The photo editor was very understanding in the email, everybody has different levels of risk tolerance in this new era – it depends on your personal health and your family situation – a whole variety of factors. The shoot made sense for me and I was itching to make some art, because I hadn’t in so long, so it was a no-brainer to say yes.

The editor really encouraged me not to bring an assistant, keep it small, and that’s what I did

The Washington Post was very explicit about how they wanted to keep it safe. Typically for a shoot like this I’m taking at least one assistant if not two, possibly a makeup artist and a stylist. The crew for a shoot like this could easily be 4-5 people. But sometimes a shoot can even be up to 10 people. It was clear that wasn’t going to happen. The editor really encouraged me not to bring an assistant, keep it small, and that’s what I did.

What was the experience like of working without an assistant, I imagine it’s been a number of years since you’ve worked in such a stripped down way?

It reminded me of when I was first starting out doing photo shoots, early on, when I was my own everything. It wasn’t completely foreign to me, but it was a big flashback. I have not worked in that way – especially with famous people – in a long time. Typically when I know I’m photographing someone who is accomplished and whose time is short, it’s important I bring all the people. We have to execute a level of professionalism and deliver a quality product in a very quick amount of time. The way to do that is to make sure you have the support you need.

What other precautions did you take to make sure that the shoot would be safe?

Part of the deal was we were going to photograph in Charli’s parent’s backyard. We were outdoors the entire time, staying socially-distant and keeping six feet away from each other. I met her parents before the shoot, they came out to the back deck and we had a little chat. It was very low key, there was no one around. The only people that I saw were her family and the dogs.

It ended up being very intimate, just us in the backyard, I haven’t done a shoot like that in so long. There were no distractions

She self-styled and we went through two outfit changes. With someone like Charli, she does her own makeup. I knew what her vibe was going to be like, I liked that vibe, and I wanted the photos to capture that. We also didn’t want to make her feel older than she is. She’s a teenager, she has a clear strong visual aesthetic and a sensibility that I wanted to embrace. It ended up being very intimate, just us in the backyard, I haven’t done a shoot like that in so long. There were no distractions.

How did your technical setup change without having an assistant with you?

Because I was the one doing all the heavy lifting I was cognizant of not bringing anything that I wouldn’t use. I’m not 23 years old anymore, so carrying hundreds of pounds of equipment isn’t as appealing as it once was. I made sure to pack light. Ironically, the first thing I rented was sandbags.

One of the best parts of working with an assistant is you’ve got a fully automated human brain running around with you and can make sure that stuff isn’t falling over. If you want to move a light fast and you are outdoors and you know you are only going to do that shot for 30-60 seconds, you just have an assistant make sure that light is not going to fall over.

I also rented a much longer lens than I would normally use. I’m usually shooting much closer, but for this I rented a 70-200. That and the sandbags were the big two rentals. I wanted to be as simple as possible because I didn’t have any help. I went into the shoot with the idea that I was going to use natural light if possible. I didn’t want to break out a bunch of lights and modifiers if I could help it (I still brought a light as a backup). The more stuff that you have out the more stuff that can fall over and the more stuff that can go wrong.

Ironically, the first time I rented was sandbags, I also rented a much longer lens than I would normally use

I also brought an 8 x 8ft frame, clamps, stands and bleached muslin cloth; this is a system that I use a lot when I’m photographing people against white, outdoors. The cloth interacts really well with the sun, it really absorbs the light, but also has the reflection. When I scouted out her backyard I found a spot where I knew by the time she came out, the sun was going to be coming through the trees and I could use the muslin as a projector. I thought that was a really nice effect.

When I’m shooting in a scenario like this, I’m typically trying to put my background in a shaded area which has a lot of blue sky. That provides a really nice broad luminous light source. It’s usually soft and bright, and that’s what this is, but with the added effect of the sun coming through the tree behind the backdrop.

Typically your time with celebrities is very limited, 15 or 20 minutes max, was that the case for this shoot as well?

Her publicist was treating this like it was a normal shoot, from a timing perspective. They only wanted me to photograph her for about 20 minutes, which is pretty typical. I didn’t push back while we were setting up the shoot and I was prepared for that, but I knew in the back of my head we’d likely get more time, which is what happened. All in all, I probably spent about an hour with her. I was on site for pretty much the whole afternoon to set up. I took my time with that.

Do you think your experience shooting with Charli is representative of what photoshoots will be like moving forward?

I’m expecting more photoshoots to come back later this summer and into the fall and I’m expecting shoots to be a lot more like this. Photoshoots of people are inherently risky because you are meeting people that are not in your COVID circle. I think that everyone is going to be very aware of being safe. But I think portrait sessions will happen. I don’t think all portraits will happen, but portraits like this, of personalities and newsworthy figures that are doing things that people want to read about, will. And the process in which they will be made will be very similar to my experience.

I see photoshoots up and down the spectrum of budget and production, all to be smaller

Photographers will be taking every precaution that they can and utilizing the smallest footprint and crew. I think they will be a lot more self-styling. Hair and makeup may become remote or the hair and makeup people will be super masked-up. I also think the timing of these shoots will continue to be quick. But in general I see everything happening at a more intimate, small scale, and I see photoshoots up and down the spectrum of budget and production, all to be smaller.

I think folks like myself who are used to working like this will have an easier time. I think photographers that are used to leaning on the production value heavily are going to have to make big changes in the way that their work looks and the way they physically operate, or they might be left behind.

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Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Why celebrity photographer Manfred Baumann uses ACDSee Photo Studio Ultimate 2019

22 Oct

Celebrity photographer Manfred Baumann has been using a pre-release version of ACDSee Photo Studio Ultimate 2019 for a while, and in this article he shares his impressions of using the software.


As a photographer, there are plenty of software programs out there that all want my attention (and my money). ACDSee is a name that will be familiar to many digital photographers, going right back to the 1990s. Designed originally as an image organization tool for digital photographs, ACDSee has evolved over more than 20 years to become a fully featured digital asset manager and editing platform. These days it’s basically a ‘one-stop shop’ for digital photographers.

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Like most photographers, I prefer taking pictures to sitting in front of a computer. For that reason, the software I use has to be fast, uncomplicated and self-explanatory. A Raw Converter is like a digital darkroom for me – everything else is optional. I’ve been using ACDSee for years. The latest version, Photo Studio Ultimate 2019, competes directly with the world’s best Raw editors, offering in-depth editing features alongside advanced image cataloging and organizational tools.

New in the 2019 version is face detection and automatic face recognition,

One of my favorite things about Photo Studio Ultimate’s editing power is the option to use layers when working on my Raw files. New in the 2019 version is face detection and automatic face recognition, which allows you to find photos of clients, friends or relatives at the click of a button. I don’t think many people would have difficulty recognizing some of my portrait subjects, but face detection and recognition are useful features when I’m organizing images for my clients.

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Photo Studio Ultimate also brings improvements to black and white editing, which let me individually adjust the contrast and brightness of different channels. I can even use the Edit Brush to paint these adjustments onto specific parts of an image. Monochrome editing is at the heart of a lot of my workflow, and the improved black and white mode features in Ultimate 2019 are really useful.

ACDSee is ideal for photographers who prefer to take photos rather than sit in front of the computer

It is important to continue growing, and as an artist, you always want to make sure that viewers can recognize your signature in your photographs. I like to think that I catch what others might not have seen. My primary focus is using images to say something about the essence of the person I’m photographing, and it’s all about the imagery: quality before quantity. Quality can be recognized by the fact that a good image doesn’t go out of date.

I would say ACDSee is ideal for photographers who prefer to take photos outdoors or in the studio rather than constantly sitting in front of the computer. It is cost effective, fast, and offers more features than most of its competitors. With Photo Studio Ultimate I really don’t need to use additional software in my workflow; I can usually do everything I need to do without leaving the app.

When it comes to image organization and cataloguing I do this exclusively in ACDSee Studio Ultimate now. It’s the quickest and easiest way for me to work.

Learn more about ACDSee Photo Studio Ultimate 2019


Manfred Baumann lives and works in Europe and the USA with his wife, Nelly. Throughout a long and varied career he has photographed celebrities from the worlds of acting, sports, and fashion for some of the top publications in the world.

A passionate advocate for animal rights, images from Baumann’s ‘Mustangs’ project have been exhibited in the Natural History Museum, Vienna.

See more of Manfred’s work


This is sponsored content, created by ACD Systems. What does this mean?

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Interview: Celebrity photographer Jeremy Cowart speaks to us about The Purpose Hotel

20 Jul

Imagine staying at a hotel where everything in the rooms – and the nightly rate of the room itself – benefited someone in need. That’s the idea that lodged in commercial and editorial photographer Jeremy Cowart’s imagination, and which has since evolved into ‘The Purpose Hotel’.

With a Kickstarter campaign launching this week, Cowart hopes to open the first Purpose Hotel in Nashville within three years. So why would a successful photographer switch from taking pictures of some of the world’s biggest celebrities, to get into the hotel business?

We spoke to Jeremy recently about his work, and his plans for The Purpose Hotel.


What is the Purpose Hotel?

It’s going to be a hotel where everything in the building is connected to a cause, or a non-profit. So everything you’re interacting with is helping someone, somewhere in the world. Our tagline is ‘Change the World in Your Sleep’.

The Purpose Hotel will be a for-profit hotel, so in that regard it’s a normal hotel business, we just have a very serious cause at the core of our mission, and that cause is to help as many organizations as possible.

There are a million hotels out there, and obviously some are trying to think more along the lines of giving something back, but I’m not aware of any hotel that’s doing it at the level that we’re aiming for.

What inspired you to create the concept of the Purpose Hotel?

I was on a photo shoot four years ago, and I was staying at the Standard, a hotel in LA. And the room number was designed like a name tag – it said something like ‘Hello, my name is Room 121’. And for whatever reason that inspired me, and I took it a different direction, and wondered what if that room number was a story that you felt connected to? And what if that story was a child’s face, and what if by staying in that room you were sponsoring that child?

So it started with that simple idea, and then as I was looking around that hotel room I started thinking, well, I know there are non-profits that make soaps, and shampoo… what if the TV showed inspiring documentaries from filmmakers all around the world… what if the Internet fee went to fight human trafficking… what if room service was connected to Food for the Hungry?

I just had this lightbulb moment – what if everything was helping something? And it grew from there. 

Instead of going out and buying soaps and shampoo from whoever, or artwork just to fill the hotel, we’re going to go and source those from companies that are already supporting non-profits.

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Is photography core to the concept of the Purpose Hotel?

In a way, yes. It’ll obviously still be a hotel, but as a photographer and an artist I want there to be an amazing display of both, in the hotel. I can’t wait to personally curate those galleries because I have so many friends and peers in the industry whose work I really want on the walls of the hotel.

My dream is for the whole hotel to be a living, breathing art gallery, where we sell the artists’ work, and that money goes to them. I want to help artists make a living through the hotel, and I hope that we can also give a percentage of sales to organizations that do art therapy. So that kids around the world can process their past, their history, through art therapy. I got to do that in Uganda and it was amazing.

At this point, would you say you’ve made a transition of sorts, from making a living purely from photography, to more of a philanthropic way of life?

Sure, it could be called philanthropy, it could be called being an entrepreneur. But at the end of the day I think of myself as an idea chaser. When we have those whispers of ideas, a lot of people don’t pursue them because they think they’re impossible or they think they can’t, but I love the challenge of chasing those ideas no matter how big they are.

I’m passionate about the intersection where creativity and helping people meet. If I can help the community and do it in a really interesting, creative way, I’m passionate about that.

Was there a single experience, or trip that lead you to be more interested in philanthropy?

It was a sort of building, escalating thing. From my first trip to Africa in 2005, followed up by many more trips, doing projects overseas. I’m the founder of Help Portrait, which is a non-profit where we have photographers all over the world giving portraits to people in need. So yeah – I’ve found so much fulfillment from all of those projects. 

Do you see yourself potentially making a living out of projects like this, or will you always be a commercial photographer as well?

Good question, and I’m not sure about the answer. I’ll always be a visual artist first. I think that will continue to morph into different forms – I’ll always have a camera in my hands, I’ll always shoot, but I hope that there are humanitarian projects and personal projects in my future.

What has your photographic career taught you?

Every photographer wants to build a name for themselves, and wants to be famous and all that. But I’ve learned that it’s a lot less fulfilling than you think it is. It’s not that great, it’s not going to change your life. I like to say that greatness should be used to serve a greater purpose. So how do you use greatness to do something even bigger than yourself? That’s a lesson I’ve learned, and I’m continuing to do things that are bigger than me, and which aren’t about me.

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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100 Luxurious Celebrity Instagram Accounts to Follow

06 Dec

Celebrities live at the mercy of the camera of the paparazzi and always try to look perfect in accordance with the canons of Hollywood liberal elitism. They know that millions of curious eyes are watching them all the time, whenever they go and whatever they do. We follow celebrity lives throughout the years and always wonder what they eat, where Continue Reading

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Celebrity Interview – Roof Topping: Standing on the Edge with Tom Ryaboi

19 Jul

As a photographer and aspiring writer, I’ve asked myself a few times before, “What subject or person in photography hasn’t been done to death, and is worthy of an article I’d actually read myself?” The answer, I found, is a formula. Take a young, talented photographer. Give him an idea, unlike any other you’ve encountered in the field. Make him Continue Reading

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Celebrity portrait shoot – Full resolution Pentax 645D image

30 Nov

Check out the full resolution, 10mb Jpeg, from the Pentax 645D medium format digital camera. See the 645D here: goo.gl You can see the image on our flickr page – use this direct link: goo.gl Join our new Flickr forum: www.flickr.com www.facebook.com www.mattgranger.com https
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Behind the Scenes of a Fashion Photo shoot.
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WARNING! MAJOR CELEBRITY MAKEUP MISTAKE!

25 Nov

www.styleite.com In make up for ever’s defence this was designed for HD filming and not photography so they never said “looks amazing in photographs” but clearly the proof is in the pudding and this stuff doesn’t look good. Remember that i used a LARGE amount, so when a small amount is used – as the company states – this result does not happen. Does this mean that this powder is not good? No. It’s a great powder but one that you should be careful of when you use for flash photography if used to heavily. I used the same amount of product (ish) with both the HD powder and the Super Matte Loose Powder. The Super Matte Loose left no powder residue at all, just normal looking skin and I used a very light (nearly white) shade. So, what d’ya think? Do you feel let down? Do you love this stuff? Tell me your thoughts. NOTE: I applied this to Mandy and friends on many many occasions and they all loved it. So I guess, to each his/her own. Some pictures where taken and no white marks were visible – but remember i applied a very small amount. No heavy application like in this video. Sometimes the most beautiful makeup doesn’t last as long and i think accepting this rather than trying to fight it goes a long long way to getting great results! ps – How unflattering was that photo! Still wanna marry me now? Ha! double note: I have been asked this now too many times so i’ll answer on here. MAC’s Prep and Prime powder does not leave the same tell tell sign behind as HD powder. I tested it
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Brian Smith’s Tips for Exceptional Celebrity and Portrait Photography,

09 Nov

Go to www.silberstudios.tv to see full version! Brian Smith is a Pulitzer prize winner who has photographed one luminary after another: Bill Gates, Anne Hathaway, Samuel L. Jackson, and the list just goes on. In our interview Brian discussed his process for getting intimate environmental portraits that truly capture the essence of his subjects. He gives down to earth tips for portraiture that can be applied to photographing anyone, not just movie stars but every day stars who deserve to have a great photograph taken of them, for their personal 15 minutes of fame. With a career full of accomplishments he speaks from experience which behooves any photographer to pay attention to and take notes. Be sure to look at his work closely on his site briansmith.com
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Behind the scenes celebrity photoshoot

25 Oct

I took some promotion pictures of Maria Popko. The images is going to be used for promotional purposes for her involvement in the TV show Skåne Wives in channel 5. This day the TV crew followed us to make an episode where they showed our photoshoot. We took the pictures at a beautiful castle and we were also at an undisclosed location where we had access to a crashed train. www.jenschilner.com
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Fashion & Celebrity Photographer, Scott Hugh Mitchell: How’d They Do That?

03 Aug

Adorama Photography TV presents “How’d They Do That” featuring Scott Hugh Mitchell. In this episode, Mark talks with Scott about his unique style of photography. Scott has been published in numerous magazines and is the youngest Hasselblad Photographer of the month ever. For video interviews with other fashion & celebrity photographers and related articles, go here: www.adorama.com See more of Scott’s work at: www.scotthughmitchell.com Buy some of the products in this episode at Adorama.com: Profoto Softbox 1×3′ Striplight www.adorama.com Profoto 26 Degree Silver Softlight Reflector www.adorama.com Profoto 65 Degree White Softlight Reflector www.adorama.com Profoto Softbox 4×6′ www.adorama.com Profoto Pro-8a 1200 Air Power Pack with Pocket Wizard www.adorama.com Visit www.adorama.com for more videos! Send your questions to: AskMark@Adorama.com
Video Rating: 4 / 5