Tuesday, April 23, 2013

A Spring Senior Session

 
It was a beautiful day in downtown Lynchburg, and we were able to get some great shots with a fine young man, Bradley!  Enjoy!
 









Tuesday, October 23, 2012

Awesome Fall Family Shoot

Had a great time this weekend taking pictures of this great family right here in downtown Lynchburg.  It's always a lot of fun to do shoots like this when the family is really having fun and giving great suggestions.
 

 












 

Friday, October 19, 2012

I love fall!

I just thought I'd share a few photos from today.





Sunday, September 30, 2012

Another Senior Session with our Senior!

Here are some more pics with my senior Bradley.  Be sure to contact me for all your photo session needs and we will get it scheduled.












Monday, September 10, 2012

Senior Session for my own Senior!

 
These are a few shots from the first of many senior sessions with my very own senior.  My son is obviously a drummer, and a very good one at that. 
 
We got a few good shots on Friday night and hope to get many more.  Thanks to a friend for the use of his place for the beautiful backdrop.
 




Friday, November 11, 2011

Amazing Lynchburg Sunset






These were shot from the Liberty Mountain Snowflex Center last night. What an amazing night.

Wednesday, June 15, 2011

I guess I'm a old school digital photographer.

Photography is done many ways by many different people and it's all about preference. My preference is apparently as old school as my love for photography. Yea, it's a digital world, but I still use my film background as my foundation.

When I switched to a digital SLR about 7 years ago, I brought my film photographer's mentality with me. Having shot with a film SLR for a long time, my goal was always to make sure I knew my camera well enough to set it up right and capture a realistic image. I think of my camera as an extension of my eye. It's a way to tell people a story of what I saw in a way words can't come close to describing.

I look at the post side of photography just like I looked at a darkroom or sending my film to a processor. I expected to come out with only as good of an image as I had taken the time and knowledge to set up. Yea, some times it was trial and error, but that was prime-time learning. I was so proud, in classes or on my own, to come out with an image that was just as I had envisioned it when I took it. I brought that with me as I transitioned from film into digital, and I still shoot and edit that way today. My post work involves only very simple editing in very simple programs. Most of my work is on simple contrast. I may turn an image black and white or soften focus at times, but that is about it. I just really find it important to do as little editing as possible. When I'm done, I still have the same basic photo I exported from my camera card. The only way to do this is to really know my camera and practice a lot.

What makes that an old school point of view?

Well, now that DSLRs are as cheap as a ham sandwich, everyone has one. The majority of these folks just get the camera, put it in auto, and call them self a photographer. They don't even read the manual for the camera much less take a class. It takes training and tons of experience to really be good at photography. Many of these people just use their SLR as a point-and-shoot camera, missing out on a ton of their new camera's ability.

Then many of these new photographers love to use programs like photoshop and others to work on their photos. They will typically use lots of adjustments and effects on their photos and make them look totally different that they did in the camera. Now, if they do it for a neat effect, that's one thing, but many of these folks do it to correct a problem with the look of the shot from the camera. Again, it's all preference, but I see my camera as a simple extension of what I see with my eye.

In my opinion, folks who don't take the time to learn their DSLR inside and out would be better served to buy a high megapixel point and shoot for $300 or $400.