Sunday 13 May 2012

What skills I have learnt this year


I came to the college in September straight from A Levels. The first project we were given over the summer was a huge challenge for me as it all had to be shot in film. We had a small dark room in school, however I only went in there once and with the help of my teacher I developed one film, prints were never made from it. Instead of shooting freely like on digital, I had to really concentrate and think carefully about camera angles and composition as I only had a certain number of frames. Developing the film was fairly simple but when it came to making prints in the dark room this is where I had to spend a lot of hours practising. I found the workshops and hand-outs really helpful as these allowed you to work personally but having the lecturers there for support if it was needed.

We had a few more film projects after that not just using 35 mm film like in the summer project but using 120mm film too. I found that I preferred to shoot 120mm film on a Hasselblad rather than a Mamiya as I liked the 6 by 6 frame it created. For these film based briefs it was required to print on resin coated paper, this could be put through the ilfospeed machine which allowed a lot more prints to be done in a smaller space of time. We were then given a brief in which the final images had to be printed on resin coated paper, this paper is a lot thicker and has to be dish processed. I had never dish processed an image, however the times were written in the darkroom so it was quite simple. The only challenge when dish processing is mixing your own chemicals if they run out or if you are first in the darkroom. I find that mixing is easier when working in pairs as one of you can measure the water and the other the chemicals.

Over the term there have been a lot of technical workshops which I have really enjoyed. Being inducted on all different kinds of camera, digital and film opened new doors in how images can be created. Lighting workshops teaching us how to use a variation of lights including portable and stationary lighting have been really helpful. I really enjoyed the Lightroom and Photoshop sessions which we had because we learnt something new each week. I had worked with Photoshop before, in which I could completely manipulate an image; this is what I tended to do a lot of in sixth form. However now I try to create my whole image within the camera, this is why Lightroom is really good because it allows you to adjust colour, contrast, brightness etc. but relies on you creating your image before-hand. Within these sessions we also learnt about different file types and how to convert these to the correct size for printing.

Skills I have gained through each brief-

FD101-Still Life:

·         Studio and home lighting set ups

·         Using the Hasselblad film camera’s

·         Film processing

·         Dark room printing

·         Using Hasselblad extension tubes

·         Using the Hasselblad scanners in the digital darkroom

·         Research different photographers work



FD102-Formal intervention:

·         Deciding that I prefer to shoot 6 by 6 frame on the Hasselblad

·         Working with people within the image to create the intervention

·         Finding locations appropriate for shoots

·         Dish processing images

·         Printing images onto resin coated paper

·         Research different photographers work

FD103-Cover Story:

·         Enhancing my knowledge of digital camera

·         Research different photographers work

·         Learning new lighting set ups

·         Testing out lots of different types of lighting

·         Research into a career which I hadn’t thought of before

·         Seeing the work of our lecturer



FD104-Client Brief:

·         Finding a client

·         Contact between me and the client

·         Being professional with client and people who she introduced me to

·         Confidence around people who I had never met

·         Creating my own project within the brief

·         Researching different photographers work

Contextual Studies:

·         Research

·         Structuring an essay

·         Working in groups

·         Being confident in presenting work to groups

Complimentary Studies:

·         Learning something completely new

·         Meeting new people which have different interests to you

·         Creating products such as a Zine, Placard, T-shirt and badge.

My plan over the next few years...


I haven’t yet decided on a plan for the next 5 years, however below are my intentions for the next 2 years:

Year 1-

·         Continue my study at Plymouth College of Art for my FD year 2

·         Enter Competitions more regularly

·         Look for work experience around Plymouth

·         Hoping to continue working with Pamela Newman, photographing for Devon Life ‘Social Events’ page

·         Develop a website and professional business cards

·         Photograph events- Weddings, birthday’s, proms etc.

·         Assist in others shoots, whether this be through work experience or helping friends

Year 2-

·         Start the BA honours programme

·         Develop a professional website

·         Enter a photographic online library

·         Work experience covering a range of careers including newspaper and magazine work, commercial portraits and teaching experience

·         Gain more clientele within Plymouth and surrounding areas

·         Continue photographing events

By the end of year two I will be more aware of the path I want to follow. Over the next two years I am hoping that I will gain knowledge of different photographic careers through work experience, which in turn will lead me to fulfil my career ambitions.


 

Saturday 12 May 2012

Model Release Form

This is a copy of the model release form which I have used when working with my client. The model release forms that I have used for my client brief module are filled in and glued into my book next to the portraits of the workers in which I photographed.

Basic Copyright© Notes


What is copyright?

·         The right to authorise or restrict making other copies

·         An author’s right

·         A property right

·         A human right

·         A collection of rights



Ø  Ideas cannot be protected by copyright only when it becomes a material does it exist



Ø  Copyright applies to anything sold or produced



Ø  Copyright is protected in the UK under the Copyright Design & Patents Act 1988 (as amended).

This law came into effect on 1st August 1989.

The 1956 or 1911 Act will still apply to some older works.

Since the 1988 Act, it has been changed a number of times.

The most important amendment that has taken place, has affected the duration of copyright for photographers.  (Beyond the lens 2003)



Ø  The creator of the photograph is the Photographer



Ø  Employed photographers DON’T hold the copyright to their images, the company owns the copyright



Ø  Duration of copyright lasts for the lifetime of the photographer plus 70 years



Ø  The photographer holds the copyright to their images (unless they are employed)



Ø  If the photographer licences their image to someone the photograph can be reproduced in any media for a period of time stated by the photographer



Ø  If the photographer assigns copyright it means the copyright no longer belongs to them, it now belongs to the person who bought it. This should only be done as a last resort



Ø  Metadata needs to be updated to insure the photographers ownership and copyright details are displayed



Ø  Orphan works are works that cannot be unidentified-unknown



Copyright infringement:



Ø  Primary-reproducing a photograph without permission

Ø  Secondary-the selling of that image, for example on a t-shirt



Attribution Right:

Ø  The right to be identified as the author

Ø  Right to have name appear alongside photograph.

Ø  Understood as a by-line or credit

Ø  Applies to a photograph published; exhibited in public; broadcasted; or appears in a film.  (Beyond the lens 2003)



Integrity right

Ø  Photographers right to prevent work being mistreated.

Ø  Only applies to treatments of work which are damaging to the honor or reputation of a photographer (Beyond the lens 2003)



Attribution and integrity right

Ø  For the purpose of reporting current events

Ø  For publication in a newspaper, magazine or similar.

Ø  To employees for works made during employment.

Ø  Very few photojournalists are in the position  to assert their right to be identified.(Beyond the lens 2003)



False attribution right

Ø  Belongs to anyone who wrongly has worked attributed to them. (can be useful if a photographer finds he/she has been credited for someone elses work)

Ø  Can be deliberate where an advertiser want to use a more prestigious photographer, to create value. (when this photographer can not be afforded for campaign).

Ø  Can damage a photographers reputation if credited for something that is not worthy of their name. (Beyond the lens 2003)



Privacy Right

Ø  Belongs to anyone who wrongly has worked attributed to them. (can be useful if a photographer finds he/she has been credited for someone elses work)

Ø  Can be deliberate where an advertiser want to use a more prestigious photographer, to create value. (when this photographer can not be afforded for campaign).

Ø  Can damage a photographers reputation if credited for something that is not worthy of their name. (Beyond the lens 2003)












Gillian Wearing-Portrait Photography

Gillian Wearing is one of Britain’s most influential artists. Her portraits that interested me were from her collection 'Album.' In this series she photographed herself disguised as members of her family.

Portrait photography is used by contemporary artists to explore issues of identity-national, perosnal or sexual the portrait has moved away from its commercial roots to come a powerful encounter or exchange between artist, sitter and spectator.[Art Photography Now- Susan Bright]
Gillian Wearing as her 'Mother'

Gillian Wearing as her 'Sister'

Gillian Wearing as her 'Father'

Gillian Wearing as her 'Grandmother'

My Portrait Photography:

Here are two portraits I have taken this year of my Dad. Since starting the college course in September I have learnt so much about different lighting techniques. I have found the technical workshops really helpful because you can take notes and talk through the process and then after put it into practise. These photographs below used a Rembrandt lighting set up.





Zena Holoway-Underwater Photography

Underwater photography is a specialized type of photography that is most popular among scuba divers, snorkelers, and surfing photographers.

Zena Holloway is one of the worlds most well known underwater fashion photographers. She first became a PADI instructor/commerical diver and then became a self taught underwater photographer.

Underwater photography is something that I would be really interested in trying and I am hoping in my second year I can grab the opportunity.




Wish you were here 2012

I have recently entered a Sunday Express photography competition in association with Old Pulteney Single Malt Whisky. They are looking for nautical images which celebrate Britian's costal landscape. I had an image from a collection I took at Yealm Estuary which I have chosen to enter.


Thursday 10 May 2012

Nick Knight-Fashion Photography


Nick Knight is a British Fashion photographer, documentary photographer and web publisher of SHOWstudio.com
He began his career as a photographer when his book ‘skin heads’ was published in 1982. He was then commissioned by i-D director Terry Jones to create a series of black and white portraits for the 5th anniversary of the magazine.  In doing this he captured the eye of Marc Ascoli, who commissioned him to shoot the 1986 catalogue of avant-garde Japanese designer Yohju Yamamoto. After this taster of fashion photography, Knight has excelled working with clients such as Alexander McQueen, Christian Dior, Mercedes- Benz and many more.

My Buisness card designs

Wednesday 9 May 2012

Wedding Photography

The two approaches to Wedding photography today are traditional or photojournalistic.

Traditional wedding photography has a great deal of interaction and direction from the photographer. Traditional wedding photographs are very controlled, with the subject posed.

A photojournalist apporach to wedding photography has little photographer interaction. They take the photographs using an alternative approach often capturing spontanous emotion and movement.

A third style that is becoming more popular is a fashion-based approach. In contemporary/fashion-based wedding photography, photojournalist will combine images of the events of the day with posed images that are inspired by editorial fashion photography as would be found in magazines like Vogue or Vanity Fair. This style often involves more innovative and dramatic post-processing of images.

Vogue Fashion Wedding shoot

Kim Kardashian's Wedding featured in Vogue


Wedding Photography in Devon:

David Pullum is a wedding photographer who works in the area of Devon. For almost a decade he has travelled throughout the UK documenting weddings which his uniqye style and fresh perspective.

'My photography has earned me a nomination as one of Professional Photographer’s -Top 10 -wedding photographers in the UK'

Some of his work:




David Pullum's photographs are very unique and unlike traditional wedding photographs. Each couple will have their own idea of what photographs they want from their big day, even if they choose the traditional or contemporary style they know that choosing him will give them unique photographs which no one else has. This is one of the reasons for him being so popular.

Monday 7 May 2012

Examples of Tony's work






Tony Cobley Lecture


About Tony:

Tony is a professional photographer based in Ivy bridge. He studied at Plymouth College of Art and then qualified to associate ship level of the British Institute of Professional Photography. During his time at the College of Art he started his business using the module PCAD100.

His Commercial work:

Tony’s commercial work includes:

·         Corporate & advertising: He covers a huge range from food and drink to health and well-being.

·         Portrait photography: He said he keeps it simple using a white background with two lights with soft boxes behind. If the client requests an environmental portrait then the equipment will be taken to the location, and the background is then considered carefully. For example he photographs for the charity Devon Air Ambulance so he captured an image of three paramedics walking towards him with the red helicopter in the background. He explained how the location he was on actually had a road running behind it, but the way in which he positioned himself allowed him to avoid showing that in the image.

·         Property & architectural photography: Tony takes images for estate agencies in which the properties are in the range of around the million plus mark. For these locations he needs a lot of light and the lighting set up often takes a couple of hours.

·         Photography for health care, education & leisure: He photographs Maynard Private School in a contemporary style for their new prospectus. The school wanted photographs that promoted the school as a fun learning environment. The photograph which best captured this feel was of a group of children running towards the camera. Tony explained how ‘fly on the wall’ wasn’t really working for what he needed to capture. So he got the children to run at the camera whilst he lay on the grass, tilting his camera towards them. He told them to ‘rawr’ like lions and this in turn gave faces that looked the children were having an excellent time.

·         Domestic wedding and portrait photography

·         Stock & commissioned West Country landscape images: Landscape imagery was where Tony first started out. During our lecture he explained that Landscape photography is quite a hard industry to work solely at as there is not a huge market for it, however this doesn’t stop him doing it alongside his other work.

·         Photography workshop courses and camera tuition

·         Visiting lecturer: He came to the college to talk about his work and his stages of reaching where he is at today.



As Tony doesn’t have his own studio he visits the location in which the client is based and takes the ‘studio’ to them, such as lights, soft boxes etc.

Positives in going to location: the atmosphere of the shoot is easier to create as he is already at the location, the client is more confident if being photographed because they are in a familiar location, being on location the props needed for the shoot are nearly always there, this means Tony is less likely to have to employ someone to create the props.



Negatives in not having a studio: if people ask for studio based work Tony cannot provide this so has to recommend other photographers to take his work.



Advertising: Tony recommends social networking sites such as Facebook and Twitter to get work noticed. He did say to make sure you keep your personal and professional pages separate as no client wants to see pictures from your night out at the weekend.



Overall: I found the lecture by Tony Cobley very helpful, as he was a student himself at the college it made the lecture feel very personal as we could all put ourselves in his shoes. He also gave us his brochure and a business card which made me think about designing a card for myself.

Wednesday 2 May 2012

Marcus Nilsson-Food Photography

I found Marcus Nilsson when researching food photography. Before I wasnt really interested in photographing food but his photo's really grabbed my attention. He found his way to photography via food. He was once a chef who transitioned from kitchen to camera, and as he knew the food very well he has been incredibly successful ever since. He has worked for various clients:

Editorial

Bon Appetit
Cookie
Cooking Light
Departures
Details
Domino
Everyday with Rachel Ray
Food & Wine
Food Network
Gourmet
GQ
Martha Stewart Living
Martha Stewart Weddings
Men's Health
Metropolitan Home
New York Magazine
New York Times Magazine
Oprah Magazine
Real Simple
Travel+Leisure

Advertising

Anthropologie
Bird's Eye-TBWA Chiat Day
B.R. Guest Restaurant Group
Bonefish Grill – Y&R
Bushs Baked Beans – Marlin
Fancy Feast – AFG
Macy's
Pace Salsa – Y&R
Showtime – The Tudors
 
Cookbooks

Good Meat: The Complete Guide to Sourcing and Cooking Sustainable Meat
Goat: Meat, Milk, Cheese
Ham: An obsession with the Hindquarter
Martha Stewart's Cooking School








Researching Marcus Nilsson I found this interview that the website Fstoppers had done with him:
I have highlighted the points in which I found interesting about his answers.

Fstoppers: How did you get into photography?
Marcus Nilsson: I was always painting and drawing when I was younger, I was very much into fine art, but I worked as a chef full time for many years. After 10 years or so working in the restaurant business, I decided to go to school for art here in New York. I quit cooking at 28, and I went to school for fine art. I meant to do painting and drawing, but I took a black and white photography class, a 101 darkroom class, and I kind of fell in love with photography. Before that I didn’t really do any photography, just snapshots like everybody else. I fell in love with it there in the darkroom, the black and white and the film.

Fstoppers: Was it a natural progression to shooting cuisine?
Marcus Nilsson: That’s also something that I didn’t plan, even though I’d gone to culinary school and I’ve cooked. I know a lot about food and I loved food, but I didn’t like food photography at all. I read cook books and magazines, but I never really liked the way it was photographed and presented. I was photographing more fine art still lifes and there would be body parts in there, an arm or a leg or something, but there would also be food in the picture. Most often it wasn’t about the food, and there would be a piece of chocolate cake in the corner. It was more about the other things that were going on.

I ended up shooting food commercially because of Richard Ferretti, who was the creative director at Gourmet magazine in 2005, he contacted me. I had a super ugly, homemade website that I’d made in Word – it was terrible! – but I had a few of my still lifes and some really gritty black and white photographs of chicken feet and pigs’ feet, and he saw those pictures and called me and asked me if I’d like to shoot a feature for Gourmet magazine. I’d never done a job in my whole life! He was looking for a new way of looking at food, and I think he changed the way people look at food in general today. He was the one who got me shooting food! He saw something in my photography, because I wasn’t brainwashed, you know? I wasn’t a food shooter. I realized after shooting that story that I didn’t have to shoot food in a specific way. It doesn’t have to look like Martha Stewart did back in the day, where everything was neat, backlit, with a soft focus. I shot sharp pictures, and I wanted my food to look touched, like a sophisticated snap shot… though it is very planned out. I’m a perfectionist, but it doesn’t look fake. So after that I had more jobs than I could take. And now everybody shoots like that!

Fstoppers: It seems like there are definite trends in food photography. What was it like when you started, and where do you think it is now?
Marcus Nilsson: When I started they would put the plate on the pretty napkin that was ironed and folded, and they would have the utensils sitting perfectly: knife to the right with the fork to the left. Things would often be backlit with very soft focus, and there would be “lifestyle” people with very white teeth and shit like that. And that’s how it used to looked, and then it wasn’t just me, it was a group of people that started doing things differently but it started a whole new trend. Now it’s more relaxed, and they want it to be a bit darker and not so precious.

Fstoppers: Do you always work with a food stylist?
Marcus Nilsson: No, not always.

Fstoppers: What sort of role do they play in the process when they work with you?
Marcus Nilsson: Well, I do a lot of personal assignments when I do the food, and I do a lot of travel assignments and travel all over the world for Bon Appetite, Departures, Martha Stewart, Travel & LeisureGQ sends me places as well, and Details magazine. When I go on those jobs, it’s just me and my assistants, and I do all the food. When I go someplace and a photograph a sandwich or a plate of food in someone’s home, of course whoever cooks the food does the main thing, but we always discuss how to plate it and what to plate it on. And I always put my fingers in it. I always shoot the food untouched, and then I move things around, and take a picture. And then I start eating. I’ll take a bite, and take a picture. And then I’ll take another bite, and another picture. I eat through the plate until I think it’s not worth shooting anymore, usually that’s how it works.

Fstoppers: What is it that you look for in a good photograph?
Marcus Nilsson: The difference between a good photographer and a bad photographer is that the good photographer sees what the other photographer doesn’t see. It’s all about seeing things. If we do a still life with plates, it just have to feel right throughout the image. It has to feel natural, it’s hard to explain.

Fstoppers: How do you describe the look of your photos? Give me three words.
Marcus Nilsson: That’s where I was lacking in art school, I’m not good at talking about my work. (laughs) When you see something, your eye responds and you take a picture and that’s what it is to me. There’s no philosophy, there’s no deeper meaning. My pictures don’t look too staged. I’m looking at a still life of fruit right now… it’s sexy? Maybe there’s a certain mood in them.

Fstoppers: How do you approach lighting?
Marcus Nilsson: I shoot most of my stuff in daylight, and it depends on what I’m looking for in the picture, but usually I prefer northern light. It’s a colder light, a softer light. I think it works great for food. I’m very picky with the light. If I’m shooting daylight and the light’s not right? I won’t shoot. If we’re working on a set up and the light changes, we either have to wait for the light to get good again or move it somewhere else.
Fstoppers: So most of it is natural light?
Marcus Nilsson: It is. I do light stuff as well, sometimes I even use on-camera flash. I had a big project I was working on in Mexico City last year, where I shot everything on-camera flash…

Fstoppers: Really?!
Marcus Nilsson: Yeah, it’s a new style for me. Like I said before, what I did and what I’ve done before… it’s everywhere now. Everyone shoots like this. Everybody’s talking about this, especially art directors when they’re talking about how something should be shot. It took years for my style to get on the page of a magazine and now everybody wants to shoot like that, and I’m bored, kind of. I’m looking for new ways to do it! I’m looking at these pictures – I have a whole series here on my wall – and I would say the composition is exactly my style. I shoot most of my stuff overhead, but instead of having that daylight that I usually shoot, I have on-camera flash and it looks great. So yes, I do other stuff, but most of it is daylight. Daylight is rich and soft, and while it could be very harsh, it’s a whole different animal than lighting with strobes. Sometimes when I shoot advertising, I mimic daylight with strobes, and I can hardly tell the difference myself in the end.

Fstoppers: What do you shoot with?
Marcus Nilsson: When it comes to lenses, I don’t like too many options. When I first started shooting, I think I only had one lens, maybe two. When I first started shooting, I was shooting on a Pentax 67 and a Mamiya RZ67. So I had a normal lens and a slightly wider lens, so like a 105mm and a 90mm or a 75mm or something like that. No long lenses, I never used long lenses. Now I’ve moved on to 4×5. Most of my stuff I shot my first three years as a photographer, I shot on large format film and I only used one lens.

Fstoppers: Do you still shoot film?
Marcus Nilsson: No, not very much. I still have the cameras and I take them out every once in a while. I have two cameras that I shoot with digitally, I have a Phase One camera with a Phase One digital back. It’s called P45 +. With that, I use the 80 lens, which is the normal lens. I shoot basically everything with an 80mm lens on that camera. I have a 5D Mark II as well, and the same thing there. I have a 90mm shift lens, and I have a 50mm. The shift lens I use to pull everything in focus, but I don’t like shooting at deep f-stops. I don’t like going too far down on the lens. I love shooting with the tilt lens, because I can put everything in focus that’s important, which since I shoot overhead is about 80% of the picture. But still it’s a huge difference. The 90mm tilt-shift on the 5D is amazing, but the P45 + is my favorite.

Fstoppers: How much time do you spend editing, and how much post-production work do you do?
Marcus Nilsson: When I first started, I was terrible at editing. It took me forever, I could never decide on pictures. Now I shoot so much, I have more work than I can take and on top of that I also do personal stuff. I’ve gotten really good at editing, it’s something you pick up and get better at as you go. I can edit pretty quick these days! Some projects I take longer than others, like personal projects can take longer than jobs for some reason. Post-production what I do is I shoot tethered or on cards depending on the situation, and most of the time I shoot tethered on Capture 1 6 and we make the files look nice there and then we process them to TIFs and then I work on them in Photoshop. And there’s hardly ever any retouching. If there’s a celebrity, I might make them look younger, take out some wrinkles here and there, but that’s usually on the client’s request. If people have black bags under their eyes, I like that. If they’re wrinkly, I like that. I try to get that rich film look, I have a few tricks in Photoshop but nothing groundbreaking I guess.

Fstoppers: What is your favorite food to eat?
Marcus Nilsson: I get that question a lot. I have different favorites throughout the year. I drink a lot of wine and collect wine, and I drink different wines in different seasons. Right now it’s cold, so I eat more meats, stews, whole birds, and I drink darker, heavier wines. In the summer, I love salads and vegetables. I eat anything and everything, I have a few favorite dishes but there’s nothing I’d want to eat forever. I get bored quickly.

Fstoppers: What is your least favorite food to photograph?
Marcus Nilsson: Hamburgers and sandwiches! I hate sandwiches. (laughs) I just got asked to do a big cookbook on hamburgers and sandwiches, and I turned it down because I was going to have to shoot 40 or 50 recipes, and I have a hard time taking one good photograph of a sandwich. I mean, I’ve done it and I do good hamburgers, but it’s very limiting. If you do a book or project when you have lots of them, it’s hard to get a variation on them. There’s no so many options. People normally like to shoot them at a low angle, and I don’t like to shoot at a low angle. I like to shoot overhead.

Fstoppers: What is the most exotic dish that you’ve ever shot?
Marcus Nilsson: Maybe something in Mexico City. There are markets down there where they sell all kinds of stuff that I really wouldn’t like to eat. They sell these worms that are alive and ants and ant eggs. I’m not grossed out by that, I appreciate it, but you’re also in an environment where the smells overwhelm you every step you take. There are little bunny rabbits with the fur on their head and feet only, and then you take another step and there’s worms crawling around in a bucket. And then there’s a bicycle with some goats’ heads in the basket, and it’s craziness. I find it fascinating and I love it, but it’s an experience.

Fstoppers: What’s the biggest mistake that young photographers make when they first start out shooting cuisine?
Marcus Nilsson: They don’t have their own style. They need to find their own voice. No matter what you shoot, if you copy what’s in the magazines or another photographer, you have to find something unique and special. There are so many photographers out there, why would they need another one that shoots like everyone else?

Fstoppers: What would you say is the secret of your success?
Marcus Nilsson: I know what I like, and I have a personal style in the way I photograph. That’s why Richard Ferretti picked me up, I guess. He saw something in me, he believed in me.

Fstoppers: What’s next for you?
Marcus Nilsson: I’m doing a big advertising campaign for a big American food company and then after that I’m working on a cookbook with Danny Meyer and Michael Romano, you know, the Union Square Hospitality Group. They own Maialino, Gramercy Tavern, a lot of restaurants, and they’re doing a cookbook on the family meal. It will be part portraits, part food. I’ve also been working on a project in Mexico City, as I mentioned earlier, for Swallow magazine, which is a really interesting magazine that’s worth mentioning. We’re having a launch party in New York City and one in Mexico City. There are also plenty of personal projects that I’m working on, and Swallow offers a really fresh perspective on cuisine, which we need.


[http://fstoppers.com/celebrated-food-photog-marcus-nilsson-dishes-on-shooting-on-camera-flash-tilt-shift-lenses-and-why-he-hates-sandwiches]