I've been going through a few more of the images from the recent Arsenic Magazine shoot I did last Thursday in Venice Beach, here are a few random selections of the beautiful Tatiana Dieteman. You can follow her on Instagram at @tatiana_dieteman.
I've been going through a few more of the images from the recent Arsenic Magazine shoot I did last Thursday in Venice Beach, here are a few random selections of the beautiful Tatiana Dieteman. You can follow her on Instagram at @tatiana_dieteman.
Here's a random image I picked out of a batch of photos from my most recent shoot for Arsenic Magazine, this is model Alyssa Smith.
Even though I've shot with Alysha Nett before she's still on My Model Wish List. Alysha is an amazing model and an all around awesome person. Her hard work and drive are extremely inspiring to models and photographers alike. She has had great success and has built a huge following due to her dedicated work ethic. Her career continues to flourish through both her ability to be a professional hard working model, as well as her social networking skills. You can follow her on Facebook, Twitter, Tumblr and Instagram. To see a few of the shots from our session at the Roosevelt in Hollywood back in September of 2011 click here.
photo by Edric Chen
photo by Art T.
photo by Cameron Rad
photo by Kenny Sweeney
photo by Kesler Tran
photo by Art T.
photo by Steven Williams
photo by Steven Williams
photo by Steven Williams
photo by Steven Williams
On Thursday I was in Venice Beach, CA shooting for another project with Arsenic Magazine. This particular project was a collaboration with writer/director/producer Scott Z. Burns (Bourne Ultimatum, Contagion, The Informant) and DP Bryan Newman. I was shooting stills for Arsenic as well as some behind the scenes footage. In between takes I was able to leave the set to shoot a few outdoor shots with the beautiful models Alyssa Smith and Tatiana Dieteman represented by Next Model Management. It was really bright out when we were shooting, luckily William Painter was there to provide some comfort from the midday sun.
Sasha Grey . . . she's different from the other girls you'll find in My Model Wish List. I've done shoots with a Playboy model, a Penthouse model and a European porn star before, so shooting someone from that industry wouldn't necessarily be something new for me, but there's something that sets Sasha apart from those other models. It's probably because she seems like a bad ass that just doesn't give a fuck about what you think and there's something really sexy about that, not to mention she's extremely intellectual and well spoken which makes her that much more attractive. Awhile back she released her own book titled Neü Sex in which she gets behind the camera and documents her own life, I haven't checked it out yet, but I am interested in picking up a copy.
Sasha, if you stumble upon this post and want to shoot, send me an e-mail!
I'm sure I've posted this before, but I never get tired of watching the beautiful Daisy Lowe dancing. This video was shot by Greg Williams for Esquire.
Recently Allen Murabayashi from Photo Shelter conducted a webinar with Nikon photographer Ami Vitale to discuss tips on how to prepare for photo contests. She has some great advice on how to select images to enter as well as how to apply for grants.
I'm sure Emily Ratajkowski is on every photographer's wish list after her appearance in the Robin Thicke music video for "Blurred Lines", but that doesn't mean she can't be on mine as well. Now I just need to figure out how to arrange a shoot with her . . .
Awhile back I was talking to my good friend Brian Lima, who is also an amazing photographer, about whose work he follows. To my surprise he told me Bryan Adams was one of his favorite photographers, to which my response was "Bryan Adams, the musician?" Turns out Bryan Adams is an extremely well established fashion/portrait photographer and a lot of people don't realize it. He's had a very successful career in music, but even without his music income he'd be pretty busy as a working photographer. He's worked on campaigns and has been published in a lot of popular magazines. You should check out some of his work and you'll see why he's been successful in this arena outside of the music industry www.bryanadamsphotography.com.
Yesterday I started a new blog series called "Music of the Moment" and today I'm starting "My Model Wish List" which will show models I've met or stumbled upon online that I would really like to work with. Kicking off this series is the beautiful Katey, an incredible model from Budapest, Hungary that I've been wanting to work with for quite awhile. I was first introduced to Katey through Gabriella, another amazing Hungarian model that I've worked with a few times and have become good friends with. If you have a moment you should follow Gabriella on Facebook, Model Mayhem and her website to get updates on where she's working in case you'd like to shoot with her.
Katey and I have been talking for quite some time about trying to shoot. I've actually been wanting to go to Budapest to shoot with her and Gabriella and to learn a thing or two from some of the amazing photographers (Norbert Baksa and Peter Juhasz) they work with in Europe. Aside from that I've been wanting to do a road trip through Eastern Europe to check out all the historical sites, especially Castle Dracula in Transylvania. Anyway, Katey is trying to plan a trip to the US early next year. I think it would be a great opportunity for her and for any photographers wanting to work with a truly professional model. If you or anyone you know is interested you can check out her travel notice.
Model: Katey
Based: Budapest, Hungary
modelmayhem.com/1250212
website
portfolio
Samples of Katey's Work:
Last week I was helping some friends of mine by taking some pictures for a look book they're putting together for their William Painter brand of sunglasses. We were definitely in a rush and had about 30 minutes for each shoot. Here are a few rough random shots taken through out the week:
Last week I posted a few shots from a shoot I did for Arsenic Magazine up in Beverly Hills. I wanted to share one more sneak peek:
This past Sunday I was shooting at the Nelson J Salon in Beverly Hills for Arsenic Magazine. It was my first time working with a team of people and much different from the one on one shoots I normally do, but it was a great experience and a lot of fun. I drove up Saturday night after a gig with my band in San Diego and when I arrived in LA the hotel had overbooked and had to put me up in their Presidential Suite which ended up being 2,100 square feet of awesomeness without the $3,500/night price tag!
Here are a few teaser shots of Chanon Finley and Anastasia Chentsova, the real ARSENIC shots will be posted soon on the Arsenic Magazine website www.arsenicthemagazine.com.
Corey Rich is one of my favorite modern day photographers, I would love to be able to work on some video/photography projects with him. Check out his reel and the story behind his work.
Corey Rich - Director+DP Reel
There are two specific cameras that entered my life and changed it forever. Both cameras were keys opening the most interesting doorways. I walked through, cautiously eager, only to realize that there was no turning back.
The first camera was an old Pentax K1000 that I picked up at age 13. It was my father’s camera, and that old brick of a body was glued to my eye for years. By the time I was a student at Quartz Hill High School in the Mojave Desert of California, where I grew up, I was shooting black and white negative film and E6 slide film for the year book and high school newspaper. My buddies and I tried to orchestrate multi-media slideshows using multiple projectors. With upwards of six projectors running through a dissolve unit, we attempted to sync music and a voice over with our photographs. Inevitably, it never really worked.
But the right intention was there: We were trying to do and say as much as possible with what little we had. Sometimes we were successful, but mostly it was a lot of failure through experimentation.
So what? The learning process—riding that steep curve of progress that comes through tireless experimentation and improvisation—is a special period. Theoretically, it only happens once. But I’d also argue that being on the sharp end of a steady learning curve is also when it’s the most fun.
This burgeoning passion for photography took me to San Jose State University for school and a photojournalism internship at the Modesto Bee. By the time I had landed my first big professional photography assignment, I knew what I’d be doing for the rest of my life.
All along the way, I dabbled with video cameras because I loved the idea of recording motion with sound on a single device. I experimented with carrying a my film camera on one shoulder, and a video camera on the other. But it never quite worked. I had read up on other photographers’ methodologies for how to simultaneously capture motion and still, but frankly, the people who were trying to juggle a film camera, video camera and microphone all at once were producing rather mediocre content.
Of course, this has all changed in recent years with the emergence of DSLR cameras that capture high resolution stills, Full HD video and crisp audio all in one body. But the very first video-enabled DSLR camera was the Nikon D90, which launched on August 27, 2008. That very date, when I ran out to buy a D90, marks the beginning of the second stage of my professional life as a visual storyteller.
In the last five years since the D90’s release, I feel as though I’ve been gifted a second learning curve to ride as I’ve taken what I know from photography and applied that to becoming a filmmaker and, now, a director and a DP.
In the last two years, nearly half of my time has been spent directing motion projects, almost all of which have been shot on Nikon DSLR cameras. Shooting cinematic-quality motion with cameras that allow me to control the depth of field, and use a form factor I’m familiar with, has taken me back to when I was 13 years old and I first picked up my father’s camera. To have your creative energy stoked and reignited in such a way—more than two decades into a career, too—feels like nothing less than a gift.
Because directing motion pieces is such a major part of my career, not to mention my new passion, I finally had to do what you do in the motion world and put together a Director’s Reel. I hope you enjoy this glimpse into the last five years of my life. I know it’s a little long but … one step at a time, right? Just as a young photographer’s portfolio will contain 60 images while a veteran photographer might only have 20, it takes the confidence and experience of a whole career to be that concise.
As for right now, I’m just happy to be a guy with a toe in both puddles of water. I’ll always be a still photographer, and now, I’ll always be a filmmaker. There’s no turning back.