Archive for May 15th, 2008

Albion opens Vietnam photography studio

Thursday, May 15th, 2008

Albion Associates, a photography and graphics studio here serving the home furnishings industry, has opened a satellite studio in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam.

The studio can photograph products on-site at showrooms and factories, or in its Vietnam studio. Images can be delivered four to 12 weeks faster than if the finished product had to be shipped to a U.S. studio for photography, according to Albion.

“The satellite studio will eliminate much of the cost and damage associated with conventional studio shoots,” said Miles Barefoot, Albion’s president. “This will allow manufacturer’s new product to get to the market faster, but still maintain the caliber and color management previously available only in High Point.”

The company plans to open a satellite office later this year in southern China, in the Dongguan area that is a center of furniture production.

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Photography tips from a Breckenridge expert

Thursday, May 15th, 2008

This will be my fourth summer in Colorado and my seventh year working as a professional photographer. This will hopefully mark the first of many articles on photography I will be writing to the readers of the Summit Daily. Hopefully my photography tips and tricks will lead you to create stunning images of your own.

Everyone is a photographer. Whether we photograph with a $5,000 SLR or a simple camera phone, we are all still searching for meaning in our images.

I imagine many of you started off as I did, with a hand-me-down camera from my parents when I was a small child. I photographed everything.

Flowers, friends and of course the family pet. The subjects themselves had meaning for me, but the meaning never translated through the images.

Twenty years later something has definitely changed. Today, I have top-of-the-line equipment, years spent acquiring technical skills, and a career that enables me to travel to amazing places and photograph beautiful people, but none of those things help give my images meaning.

What has really made the difference is the way I think about creating images. When I see a potential photographic subject that interests me, I don’t immediately photograph it like I would have 20 years ago.

I stop and ask myself what about the subject makes it interesting. And the answer I usually give myself has to do with some emotional response I have.

I concentrate on that emotion and make it the subject of my image.

For instance, last year I visited the Denver Zoo. My original desire was to make some pretty images of animals, and that is definitely how I started out. It changed when I came to the primate exhibit and saw the gorilla shown in the accompanying image.

We stared into each other’s eyes for several minutes, during which time I completely forgot about my camera. I was so moved by the experience, but before I could think about photographing the gorilla, I had to think about what it was that moved me. It wasn’t that it was trapped in a cage.

In fact, I was quite certain that if it had wanted to, it could have broken right through the thin chain-link fence. That is when it hit me. The gorilla wasn’t really imprisoned by the fence at all. He was really trapped in his own mind. It was a reluctant acceptance of the situation that held him behind the chain link. I became certain that if the fence was removed, he would have stayed right where he was. And that was when I was able to create the image of him.

I hope that next time you are out photographing you take this to heart, and think carefully about the meaning behind the image. Concentrate on the emotion that the subject evokes and not the subject itself, and you will see a huge difference in your photographs.

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Pick up a penguin at photography exhibition

Thursday, May 15th, 2008

Stunning photographs of the Antarctic are on show in a new exhibition at Cambridge University’s Museum of Zoology. Antarctic: An exhibition of photographs by Roger Slade opens on May 22 and runs until June 28.

To complement the photography exhibition, the museum will also host an Antarctic Sunday Funday on June 15 as well as a free public talk by Roger Slade on June 19.

Each Antarctic summer, Slade works as a photographer and lecturer running specialised tours to the region.

The astonishing photographs were taken over the course of five years and 11 expeditions and include locations such as the South Shetland Islands, South Georgia, the Falkland Islands as well as the Antarctic Peninsula.

All of the work exhibited will be available to buy.

“I am lucky I can combine my love of travel and my work,” said Roger Slade. “I am an unashamed Antarctic anorak and I have never lost the excitement and enthusiasm I felt when I first set foot on the frozen continent.

“It is probably the most beautiful place any of us are ever likely to see in a lifetime of travel and exploration.”

The difficulty of visiting the continent is one of the alluring features of photographing it, admits Slade.

He added: “We have all seen a few penguins at zoos, but landing on one beach I stood by a colony of around 400,000 King Penguins and chicks. The colony has been dated by scientists as older than the oldest city in the world.

“As well as the visual impact, the noise and smell was incredible. The birds are very tame and curious; you really feel as if you are visiting their land.”

Meanwhile, the Antarctic Sunday Funday on June 15 runs from 11am-4pm and will feature trails, crafts plus the annual public exhibition of the Cambridge Natural History Society.

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