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The Luminous Landscape – What’s New
We had a look at the AERO from Tether Tools a while back (Read that review here) well, I’ve been in touch with the photographer who did that review for us, London based commercial photographer, Nathan Pask. He was on his way out to a shoot and did indeed have his Aero with him – Nathan snapped a couple of shots for me of the Aero in action and had this to say when asked “are you still using that Tether Table?” (I love a review that actually has a few months of use and a recap! Two weeks to get a proper feel for a product is a bit silly, really)
“Sure do mate. All the time! I get a lot of admirers ask about it. I like that its light. It does have a little bit of flex, but I have the big one because of the 17″ lappy so I guess that’s to be expected. I never feel like its going to topple though. So I mostly attach it to my carbon sticks and it becomes a really nice lightweight option when I’m on location particularly as myself or my Digi-op can easily pick it up and move to the next spot without too much fuss and the strap over the laptop keeps it pretty secure. Can’t recall ever having a scary moment that the table has been responsible for. It is quite expensive for what it is, but there isn’t a product I’ve seen that can compare, so they kinda have the market sewn up currently.”
Nathan Pask on a shoot using the Tether Tools Aero Master
Since getting hold of my own Aero, I’ve been using her for a lot more than simply shooting tethered on a set or in the studio – the Tether Tools Aero has become a second desk space when I need a little more space – as you can see below, the option for pretty much anything else besides my frequent cups of coffee isn’t really an option. It takes me about 45 seconds to set up a tripod and my tether table to use as an extra desk.

Since our last look at Tether Tools, their quiver of gear has expanded to include a desk full of extra handy stuff that is set to make your life easier, from iPad holding gizmos to cup holders (I’m not even joking) – I wanted to bring some of it to your attention, perchance you’re struggling and these will bring a smile to your face and a bit of extra speed and security to your workflow. I went across to visit the terribly attractive team at Kayell in Melbourne and picked up the “essentials kit” it has Jerk Stopper and the super handy USB light in a little case, as well as a couple of the TetherPro cables – I got them in orange as, on a darker set, they’re “less easy” to trip over… (I’m a clutz ok..!)
For those of you still unfamiliar with exactly what tethering is, here… check this out!
I’m using the Aero Master and an Aero XDC to run my external “on location” disc underneath the Aero.. This way, as Mark mentioned in the video, I can shoot straight to my laptop and have a copy load into my external disk via folder actions. I also have the CF in the camera with a copy on should something go horribly wrong. Some other examples of where I’ve used my Aero – most of which you may find a little amusing – include a coffee table (yes, with a tablecloth over it) as a work desk to use my Macbook Air on when I’m sitting outside working while watching my 3 year old ride his bike around and around… I’ve used it on a 3LeggedThing “Keith” as a tabletop recipe book holder AND I’ve also used it as a flag to block light on a shoot. (I usually use a NastyFlag or similar if I’m simply shaping light to shoot a product, but hey – I needed something bigger!)

The bottom line I guess is that the Aero has sooo many other uses than simply being a great, portable tethering accessory and workbench.
I’d like to close todays proceedings with a couple of actual photographs from the set Nathan was working on, you can see his Aero with a thinkTank Pixel Sunscreen on top, combining these two means you have a stable work surface and a non-glare option to make sure you’re shooting and getting exactly what you need. I agree that the Aero may not be for everyone, but if you’re a semi-pro or pro that is continually moving that annoying coffee table around to rest your laptop on, well, it may just be for you….


The Tether Tools Aero is a great bit of kit, though as Nathan mentioned, it is towards the pricier end of the scale, but I’d say for a working pro that does a lot of tethered work on location, the Aero is invaluable. (And my mum always said “buy well, buy once)
~Sime
Post originally from: Digital Photography Tips.
Check out our more Photography Tips at Photography Tips for Beginners, Portrait Photography Tips and Wedding Photography Tips.
TetherTools – Shooting Tethered and other Fun Things..
Habt Ihr bereits Reisepläne? Unsere Artikelserie „Fotogenes Deutschland“ zeigt, dass man für gute Motive gar nicht weit fahren muss. Wir stellen hier Orte aus allen Ecken Deutschlands anhand von atemberaubenden Bildern vor. Seen, Berge, Wasserfälle, Felder, Wälder – hier ist sicher für jeden etwas dabei.
Fotospecial: Kirmes
Flickr

500px

Deutschsprachig
• Stephan Kleinert ist stinksauer. Sein Vater dokumentierte die Zerstörung vieler gut erhaltener Gebäude in Karlsruhe, ein Buch war schon fertig geplant, doch nun sagte der Verlag ab. Wir hoffen, dass jetzt ein anderer Verlag gefunden werden kann.
• Denny Lang zeigt Bilder des Architekturfotografen Alex Fradkin.
• Polaroidfans aufgepasst: Marc von Martial macht auf die Roid Week aufmerksam, bei der Impossible-Filme verschenkt werden.
• Lomography und CUT haben einen Wettbewerb gestartet und suchen das schöne Lochkamerabild des Sommers. Zu gewinnen gibt’s natürlich auch was.
International
• Lust, mal wieder einfach schöne Hochzeitsfotografie anzuschauen? Dann werft mal einen Blick in The Pretty Blog, dort gibt’s vorbildliche Paar- und Doku-Fotos einer Hochzeitsreportage.
• PetaPixel hat eine umfangreiche Liste mit Dokumentationen über Fotografie zusammengestellt. Der kulturvollen Unterhaltung steht jetzt nichts mehr im Wege.
• Mit Separate Amenities hat Vincent Bezuidenhout untersucht, wie sich die Politik der Apartheid in Südafrika in den gebauten Landschaften noch heute abbildet.
• Und auch darüber hinaus bereiten die Photo Essays, die Domus sonst so zeigt allen Vergnügen, die sich an Architektur und Stadt nicht sattsehen können.
• Die Gewinner des Action on the Streets Photography Contest stehen nun fest. Aus 686 Einsendungen wurden die besten inklusive Kommentaren der Jury hervorgehoben.
• Die US Transportation Security Administration (TSA) ist auf Instagram. Was die posten! Hui!
• Der Franzose Jean-Paul Bourdier bemalt seine Modelle so, dass sie mit Landschaften verschmelzen.
• Ricardo Moraes fotografierte franziskanische Mönche, die Obdachlosen auf den Straßen Rio de Janeiros helfen.
• Da läuft einem das Wasser im Mund zusammen: Dennis J. Wojtkiewicz malt Früchte zum Sterben schön.
Neuerscheinungen und Tipps vom Foto-Büchermarkt

• DieNacht präsentiert „Haunted“ von Andy Reaser. Für 9,50 € kann man die eindringlichen Portraits hier erwerben. Zudem gibt’s einen kleinen Einblick ins Büchlein.
• Jörg M. Colberg stellt neuerdings für den Hatje Cantz Fotoblog Fotobücher vor. Seine erste Besprechung widmet er „Disquiet“* von Amani Willett.
Videos
Stolen Moments: Matt Stuart spricht über das Faszinierende an der Straßenfotografie.
Schaut diese Doku über Vivian Maier. Sie ist großartig.
Ausstellungen
Anton Corbijn – INWARDS AND ONWARDS
Zeit: 25. Mai – 28. Juli 2013
Ort: Kunstmuseum Bochum, Kortumstraße 147, 44777 Bochum
Link
Albert Watson: 14 days in Benin.
Zeit: 28. April – 28. Juli 2013
Ort: Rautenstrauch-Joest-Museum, Cäcilienstraße 29-33, 50667 Köln
Link
Jan Paul Evers – Momentum ignition
Zeit: 18. Mai – 28. Juli 2013
Ort: KUNSTHALLE LINGEN KUNSTVEREIN, Kaiserstraße 10a, 49809 Lingen
Link
Die Gärten Kyotos im Wandel der Jahreszeiten – Fotos von Mizuno Katsuhiko
Zeit: 15. Mai – 31. Juli 2013
Ort: Japanisches Kulturinstitut, Universitätsstraße 98, 50674 Köln
Link
Reiner & Riedler »CAMERA-LESS«
Zeit: 7. Mai – 31. Juli 2013
Ort: Anzenberger Gallery, Absberggasse 27, 1100 Wien
Link
Andrej Pirrwitz
Zeit: 1. Februar – 2. August 2013
Ort: Berlin Hyp, Budapester Straße 1, 10787 Berlin
Link
Double Bound Economies
Zeit: 22. Juni – 3. August 2013
Ort: Galerie Thomas Fischer, Potsdamer Straße 77-87, Haus H, 10785 Berlin
Link
RITUALE – Fotografien aus den USA und Lateinamerika von Bastienne Schmidt
Zeit: 28. Juni – 10. August 2013
Ort: Galerie argus fotokunst, Marienstr. 26, 10117 Berlin
Link
Torsten Warmuth: Die Rückeroberung der Freiheit
Zeit: 14. Juni – 11. August 2013
Ort: HAUS am KLEISTPARK, Grunewaldstraße 6 – 7, 10823 Berlin
Link
Mimmo Jodice. Transiti
Zeit: 7. Juni – 11. August 2013
Ort: Kunstsammlung Jena, Markt 7, 07743 Jena
Link
Marek Po?niak | Berlin – London – New York | Photographien von 1985 bis 2010
Zeit: 1. Juni – 24. August 2013
Ort: Galerie Johanna Breede, Fasanenstraße 69, 10719 Berlin
Link
»Selection«
Zeit: 25. April – 24. August 2013
Ort: CWC GALLERY, Auguststraße 11–13 , 10117 Berlin
Link
Die Deutsche Aussicht – Fotografien von Oliver Kern
Zeit: 23. Juni – 25. August 2013
Ort: Museum Schloss Fellenberg, Torstraße 45a, 66663 Merzig
Link
Adieu la Suisse! Bilder zur Lage der Nation
Zeit: 8. Juni – 25. August 2013
Ort: Fotostiftung Schweiz, Grüzenstraße 45, 8400 Winterthur
Link
Mehr aktuelle Ausstellungen
* Das ist ein Affiliate-Link zu Amazon. Wenn Ihr darüber etwas bestellt, erhalten wir eine kleine Provision, Ihr bezahlt aber keinen Cent mehr.
kwerfeldein – Fotografie Magazin
It is time for another of our polls – this one revisits a topic that we did a poll on back in 2009 – What Type of Photography Do You Do?
Please choose all categories that apply to what you do (as many as you like).
Note: There is a poll embedded within this post, please visit the site to participate in this post’s poll.
If there’s a category that you don’t see in the list – feel free to tell us about it in comments below.
Post originally from: Digital Photography Tips.
Check out our more Photography Tips at Photography Tips for Beginners, Portrait Photography Tips and Wedding Photography Tips.
What Type of Photography Do You Do? [POLL]
[ By Delana in Art & Photography & Video. ]

We’ve all seen hipsters in the wild, and even if we can’t perfectly define what a hipster is, we know one when we see one. Parisian artist Léo Caillard does too, and he wondered what this modern trend would look like if it were transported back in time…back to when ancient Greeks paid homage to the perfect human form by immortalizing it in stone.


Caillard got the idea while walking through the Louvre and looking at the masterful statues. He wondered what a juxtaposition of modern fashion and ancient art would look like together. And because a question like that simply can’t go unanswered, he set out to make that unlikely combination happen.
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About 5 seconds after I purchased my first professional camera, long before I hung a shingle or had any idea of what I was doing, the requests to shoot weddings came flooding in. Because let’s face it; someone’s always getting married. And your cousin’s dentist’s cleaning lady’s daughter would love a deal. And you are maybe just the photographer to give her one.
There are thousands of opinions regarding if non-wedding photographers should ever even consider taking a stab at shooting a wedding– free, favor, or otherwise. For the purpose of this article (and my sanity) we aren’t going to touch the politics of that with a 10 foot pole. Instead, we are going to assume that for whatever reason, you are shooting your first or near first wedding, like, tomorrow and you need a little reassurance that going ahead and shooting it as planned is a better idea than attempting to break your leg on purpose so you can be hospitalized and therefore legitimately unable to work. (The recovery time for this is longer than you would think. I’ve looked into it.) Here are 5 tips for the preparation of said wedding/non-purpose-leg-breaking.

Never, ever, ever shoot a wedding for free. I know it’s tempting. Maybe you’ve never shot one before and you feel awkward about charging. Or maybe it’s your brother/sister/neighbor/dry-cleaner’s wedding. Still, absolutely no.
Here’s why: these pictures, even if they aren’t of the caliber of work you hope to produce in the future, have worth. Great, amazing worth. A worth that is only increased when they aren’t just handed over for nothing in exchange. Now, in the right situation, I do a TON of work for cheap or trade and always have. But there has to be an energy exchange of some kind.
Work for trade, work for the slightest possible fee to cover your time and equipment rental or wear, but don’t work for free. Never, ever.
You don’t want to work with people who would expect you to and they don’t want to work with someone who doesn’t value their abilities. No matter how new you are to photography, you are right now reading an article on a website all about photography. That says that you have enough interest to research it, and I’m willing to bet, enough skill to pull it off.

I’m pretty high energy. I inhale coffee like it’s air and have to constantly remember to slow down when I talk. And walk. And drive. (Though that one probably doesn’t have much to do with caffeine.) Even so nothing lays me out like shooting a wedding. I don’t care if I have two assistants and the kindest, easiest, and most photogenic couple on the planet; it’s still exhausting.
Plan nothing the day before, and nothing the day after. The night before, sleep like it’s your job. Ice your eyeballs. If you’re into that kind of thing. You will likely be carrying twice as much equipment as normal, working five times as long, and running around like a toddler that mistook Red Bull for apple juice. No matter if you accepted actual compensation for this job or not—you owe yourself and the resulting images the best possible set-up. Day of, that set-up is comfortable shoes, a shirt that gives you renewed faith in human kind, and your lucky underwear. Or whatever.

Most brides have been told by wedding planners, magazines, and overzealous soon-to-be mother-in-laws that they need to provide their photographer with a “shot list”. If you can avoid this upfront, do. Instead tell them that you plan on taking all the typical and expected shots you can and if they want to provide you with a short list of requested special shots that you may not think of on your own, they are welcome to. You may not know that it’s very important to the bride that all of her uncles fifth removed on her father’s side get a picture together.
But you darn well know that she wants a shot of the kiss, a shot of the wedding party, a shot of cute flower girls doing cute flower girl things, and all the other standard shots that these lists tell brides they need to ask for. If they have a few simple unusual requests, this list goes in your pocket and is all you need. Everything else will happen as it’s supposed to, when it’s supposed to, and if you worry about it, you’ll just miss the cute flower girls doing cute flower girl things.

Pack a lunch, water, and easy to eat snacks. I’m not even kidding. I know what you are thinking right now—but they will have food there! Yes, they will. But the logistics of you and said food meeting up for a little break time rendezvous are extremely complicated. Trust me.
Also, you’ll want gum, Advil, and safety pins.
Correction: someone will want these things. It may be you. It may not be. But everyone will assume you are packing minty freshness, pain relief, and an emergency dress fix, so you may as well pleasantly surprise them.
Finally, and this may seem a bit excessive to some but I am nothing if not a bit excessive; I bring an entire change of clothes. A lesson learned after a waitress carrying a tray of full wine glasses and I collided at the very beginning of a reception. I got to spend the rest of the evening smelling like a winery and everyone else got to wonder why the photographer had already hit the free bar when they hadn’t even gotten to the front of the buffet line yet.

Whether you have an assistant or not, you need a friend. A go-to. A pal. A person on the inside. A free Girl Friday, if you will. I don’t know who that person is. Right now, you don’t know who that person is. But it will be obvious who it’s supposed to be and you will find them early on. And you will latch on to them in a way that will have you trading BFF necklace halves by the end of the night.
This person is going to explain who is who to you. Help you out when cousin Johnny is begging for your number and you still have 3 hours of dodging him while trying to remain professional.
This person knows who is giving the toast, every bridesmaid’s name, and will happily fetch you bouquets when you have everything set-up for the perfect shot but everyone forgot their bouquets in the bathroom. It’s a bridesmaid, an aunt, an unofficial wedding planner, a step-sister, or maybe just a knowledgeable family member that is only there for the free food.
And to help you, it turns out.
Post originally from: Digital Photography Tips.
Check out our more Photography Tips at Photography Tips for Beginners, Portrait Photography Tips and Wedding Photography Tips.
So You’re Going to Shoot A Wedding: Part 1 of 3 [Preparation]
Fotoblockaden sind ekelhaft. Zumindest bei mir. Ich verspüre dann so absolut gar keine Lust, irgendeine Kamera in die Hand zu nehmen und schon der Gedanke ans „Fotografieren gehen“ führt unweigerlich zu Augenrollen. Zwar sind diese Zeiten in den letzten Jahren seltener geworden, aber ich bin mir sicher, dass ich nicht gegen die Fotoblockade gefeit bin.
Und jedes Mal, wenn ich davon lese, wie jemand ehrlich darüber schreibt, in einem kreativen Loch gefangen zu sein, fühle mich mich ein bisschen weniger allein. So schrieb Marit neulich:
Aber letztens packte mich die Kreativ-Neurose bzw. -Depression. Ich konnte plötzlich nicht mehr fotografieren. Alles, was mir vorschwebte, alles, was ich dachte zu beginnen, braute sich zu einem übel stinkenden Brei zusammen.
Daran erkenne ich zwei Dinge: Erstens, auch Marit kennt das Gefühl. Zweitens, bei Marit ist es anders als bei mir. Ich brauche also erst gar nicht zu glauben, dass es ein Patentrezept gibt, das allen Fotoblockierten hilft.
Und trotzdem ist es interessant und spannend zu lesen, wie andere damit umgehen. Was sie tun oder nicht tun, um dem ganzen Schlamassel zu begegnen. Und damit seid Ihr dran: Ich möchte von Euch wissen, wie Ihr damit umgeht, wenn Ihr in einer Blockade steckt.
Was macht Ihr dann?
Erzählt doch mal. Schreibt doch mal. Sagt doch mal. Nein, keine klugen Tipps. Ganz persönlich. Von Euch, über Euch. Ich bin gespannt. Sehr sogar.
Übrigens: Es gibt Leute, die lesen kwerfeldein nur, weil sie die Kommentare so toll und lehrreich finden. Also gebt alles.
kwerfeldein – Fotografie Magazin
Image by MonkeyMagic1975
After our post yesterday on using colour boldly we thought it might be time for a ‘colour’ related challenge this week. The colour we’re nominating for you to feature in your shot is – YELLOW.
Your challenge is to take some great photos that feature yellow. Lemons, rubber ducks, cheese, sunsets flowers…. I’m sure you get the picture!
Once you’ve taken your Yellow photos upload your best ones to your favourite photo sharing site either share a link to them even better – embed them in the comments using the our new tool to do so.
If you tag your photos on Flickr, Instagram, Twitter or other sites with Tagging tag them as #DPSYELLOW to help others find them. Linking back to this page might also help others know what you’re doing so that they can share in the fun.
Also – don’t forget to check out some of the great shots posted in last weeks 50mm challenge – there were some great shots submitted.
Post originally from: Digital Photography Tips.
Check out our more Photography Tips at Photography Tips for Beginners, Portrait Photography Tips and Wedding Photography Tips.
Yellow: Weekly Photography Challenge
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