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Cake day: October 21st, 2023

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  • When you first start out you work hard to make a single portfolio. But pretty quickly you start to realize you need multiple portfolios often to show different types of work. If you are dealing with clients that want super fast turn around you should not show them a portfolio of things that took you a week to plan, a full day to shoot, and a day of post. You should be able to have a portfolio for them that shows the kind of work they’d expect… your best shots of that but stuff that you could turn around quick if that’s the client’s needs, and have a separate portfolio for the larger stuff for clients who are looking for that.

    If I was hiring a wedding photographer I’d also ask to see their portfolio but also ask if they have an example from one wedding, so you see more of the whole picture.

    But also regardless of how much you try you will get clients who have different expectations and you will have to deal with those at some point in your career.


  • I was wondering how much to charge for photography

    People don’t pay for “photography.” People pay for product photography, people pay for portraits, people pay for digital restoration of an old photo, people pay for retouching of beauty shots, people play for photography of a baseball game. Each market might be different.

    I currently shoot on a canon t5 with manual settings

    Forgetting your age entirely. This is a tell-tale statement that usually reads to me that why you are making an effort to learn, you have very limited experience as you’re putting emphasis on the wrong priorities.

    I’d negotiate with each client on the needs. Maybe you made some money that can help you buy a new filter or put some money towards a new lens. But at the same time you may find some jobs that give you more experience to learn or opportunities to expand your portfolio may be worth taking a job that pays less.

    Charging by the hour may be problematic at your point as you’re still learning. The first time you do a job you haven’t done before you might spend 5-10 hours retouching cause you’re spending time figuring stuff out. By the 10th time you’ve done it, you might be down to 1-2 hours. So if you do charge by the hour, try not to charge for time spend figuring things out. For this reason, charging for number of final deliverable files might be simpler. I don’t know if you want to spend a ton of time calculating hours worked initially (later you may move to that). And again, you can negotiate with each client and set a rate for each as needed.


  • A museum wouldn’t face mount an unmounted photo, but it won’t stop them from acquiring a photo that was face mounted by the photographer. Contemporary photographer may have their prints mounted in DiBond. Which will keep them flat and have a nice look. Causes a few headaches with handling and storage, but museums deal with it if that is what the photographer wanted.

    I just strongly advise make sure the framer is using actual brand named DiBond. If seen knock offs delaminate which creates a whole new set of nightmares.


  • I would like my monitor to accurately reflect the print I’ll see on paper.

    There is a lot that needs to go into that, so we’ll come back to that.

    The ICC profile for a specific paper, on your specific model of printer, with the specific inks designed for your printer (not 3rd party ink as that will change the colors), and with the specific settings that come along with the ICC profile will make it so that when your printer says “This area is THIS specific color of teal and that area is THAT specific orange” the printer will do it’s best to make that happen to THIS teal and THAT orange are produced on the paper. (there’s a bit with gamuts, color adaptation, and rendering intents… but for now stick with perceptual or relative color metric and they’ll be close without having added headaches to avoid that absolute calorimetric brings)

    Now you want to calibrate your monitor so that when your file say THIS teal and THAT orange the monitor produces it. But the monitor doesn’t make a reflective color, it produces emissive light. So you have to calibrate TO some values… you have to specify a white point (eg: color temperature) and a brightness. But if you view the monitor in a room under a different white point and different brightness of lights, your print won’t match.

    If you hold a white piece of paper in room with tungsten yellow lights, your eyes adapt to the yellow lights and you recognize the paper is actually white. But a monitor might be calibrated to make a MUCH brighter and MUCH more blue white. If the white on your monitor is very bright and very blue compared to the light in your room, there is no way a print will match the monitor.

    If you really go down the rabbit hole of printing, people who are super serious will have a print viewing booth next to their monitor with calibrated lights that the monitor is calibrated to. Short of that people will black out all the windows and fill the room with D50 or D65 light and then calibrate to that.

    ICC printer profiles will help make your prints be more consistent between papers and if someone else printed somewhere else using ICCs they’d match better. And you can calibrate your monitor, but you need to view the print under the same lighting that you calibrated the monitor to in order for a print to match the monitor… and that takes a bit more work.


  • I don’t use a gray card because I shoot raw so I believe I won’t need it (correct me if I am wrong)

    YOU’RE WRONG! Ok you shoot RAW… how will you know what is neutral? THAT’S WHAT THE GRAY CARD IS FOR! You shoot a gray card in one of your shots under the same lighting as everything else, then IN RAW you set the white balance on the gray card. If the “gray spot” you choose in the photo is a hint yellow then your photo will be a hint blue, if it’s a hint green your photo will be a hint purple. You use a gray card cause you know it’s gray. You also can use the gray card to help set your exposure.

    When processing you can also try to set RAW to Natural/Faithful as opposed to standard or vivid which will try to keep the processor from over saturating colors.




  • Make sure your pelican fits the carry on sizes. Make sure you’re not flying on any E-145 or CRJ-200/700 or similar tiny planes because many of them cannot even fit a normal roller bag in overhead in which case you may need to “valet check” which is only slightly better than “gate check”… they still take your bags and put them in the cargo hold, but instead of having to pick them up at baggage claim, you’ll pick them up at the end of the jetway when you get off the plane. (and sometimes they’ll just gate check). A standard roller bag or pelican 1510 will fit into the overhead of a E-175 and maybe a CRJ-900 but space is limited so get on the plane as early as you can, if you’re not in premium boarding, be a jerk and camp at the line until the millisecond they call your boarding group. But keep in mind that I’ve seen situations where they’ve just said “we’re making everyone gate check cause we’re tight on time to board” so you may end up being forced to check regardless (you can try to play oblivious and get the tag and try to bring your bag onto the plane and it may still work but you can get shut down).

    Keep in mind you’re allowed one overhead and one under seat… so if you can break up the equipment that way and check your cloths (which worst case you can buy at your destination if that gets lost).

    Look into if you can rent some equipment on location. It might not be bad to investigate what your options are for renting at your destination, just incase something does happen in travel.

    If you have an iPhone get some AirTags to put in the case. If you’re android, check out Tile trackers.



  • I’m sorry but either learn how to deal with these situations or get out of the game. Complaining after the fact on the internet is not going to help you.

    It sounds like the person who hired you told you not to use flash. You will get people who don’t want it cause it’s distracting, and you’ll have to know to address it in contract or work around situations like that. If it was cause they thought they knew more about photography than you, you need to find better ways to communicate with the client.

    If it wasn’t the client, you need to find ways to deal with whatever the situation is that you want to be vague about, cause no one here can read your mind or help you if they don’t know what the situation is.


  • You format a card blank and realize it: There is a good chance to recover it with recovery software.

    You formatted the card and took some shots: There is some chance you can recover some photos but if another photo was written at the same location of where a file was that you want to recover (you really cannot tell where a photo was from most information that is normally presented to you, so the best way to do is try to recover and see what you get but it’s a roll of the dice, many cards will try not to write in the same location all the time to even out the use of the card so you may have some luck, but you won’t know until you try).

    If you formatted the card and then shot until you filled the card with new photos: you’re most likely hosed.



  • Keep in mind Central Park is about 50 blocks north to south. If you’re in the middle on the west side there’s the American History Museum, the Dakota (where John Lenon was killed but also interesting architecture) in the park is strawberry fields and the bow bridge.

    If you’re on the east side there’s the Metropolitan museum which is worth seeing.

    If you’re on the south end you’ve close to Times Square, MoMA, and Rockefeller Center (should have the ice skating ring up) and there’s a lot of interesting store fronts on 5th avenue there. There’s also Grand Central Terminal and the New York Public Library, which have great architecture.

    At the south end of Manhattan: there’s Chinatown wander around but find Doyles St. There’s Pier 17 which has a great view of the Brooklyn Bridge. There’s the 9/11 memorial. There’s Battery Park. If you want a photo of the NYC skyline, you need to get outside the city. Easiest way to do this is take the Staten Island Ferry out and back, or go to the Statue of Liberty if it’s your thing. You’ll get better views of the skyline from the water or from NJ.

    But the reality is people and interesting things are everywhere. Sometimes a boring scene comes to life the way the sun reflects off a high-rise building and highlights something. Sometimes there’s just an interesting mix of people. Take the touristy shots everyone else takes, but sometimes you get an opportunity in a boring place to see something that no one else has seen or been able to photograph because it’s only happened just now in front of you.



  • Unless the subject is a perfectly flat plane and moving perpendicular to you, you’re not going to get it all perfect. You have to focus on one point on the subject not the subject as a whole. For a car I say pick either the center of a one specific hub cap, or a side view mirror (at least to start with) and practice getting that sharp. If you go for something towards the center, it might make the front and back out just a little as opposed to picking the very front and making the back be more visibly blurred.

    Be sure to follow through. Start panning before pressing the shutter and keep panning after the shot

    Try to get the car when it’s most perpendicular to you and not coming at you at an odd angle (again at least to start) as it will make it easier.

    But again, don’t try to pan to match the whole car, that’s a recipe for disaster. Focus on one point on the car. And follow through. And practice a lot.


  • Get very far away with a very long lens. It’s controlling perspective… the closer you are to something the larger it appears. If you are very close to something and the background is very far away that something will appear much larger than the background. If you get very far away so that the object is closer to the background that it is to you (relatively), they will appear to be closer in scale. But when you get far away you need a longer focal length lens to zoom in. This work on any scale from small objects to the moon (though with the moon you have to get a good mile or so away with an insanely large lens)


  • There’s a book called Light: Science & Magic that covers a range of topics.

    A few things that wouldn’t hurt to have around:

    • camera with manual settings
    • a way to trigger the camera without pressing it (timer release setting on the camera, a cable release, or tethering it to a computer/tablet/phone)
    • A tripod to keep the camera still in low light.
    • Some pieces of white and black foam board to make little reflectors and flags with. Or maybe something like these LightRight Reflectors
    • Some simple spring a-clamps that can be bought from a hardware store for a dollar or so a piece (use them as legs to hold up pieces of foam board)
    • Some tracing paper or wax paper to use as a diffuser
    • a roll of paper to act as a seamless backdrop (can start with a bedsheet if you want to be cheap)
    • some basic clamp lights and light bulbs if you don’t have photography lights
    • optional: a flashlight to play with light painting (maybe some black tape if you want to make a little tube on the end to narrow down the beam)

    In this video they very quickly show how you can tape seamless paper to a wall instead of relying on having a more elaborate stand setup. Tape it to the wall and then drape it over a table to have a small table top setup: The Ultimate Guide to Seamless Paper Backdrop Photography | Tips and Tricks for Beginners and Pros - YouTube

    This video looks like it shows some ideas with light painting (light painting has grown to have two meanings… the one i was taught decades ago: painting the object that is sitting infront of the camera with light from different angles, and the other (which I’ve always called light drawing): using a flashlight to make an illustration by pointing the light at the camera): Light Painting Magic - Complete from start to finish including editing. - YouTube you don’t need to do something that large, playing with a small object on a table in a dark room is fine.



  • As you move farther away (approaching infinitely far away) the perspective approaches one of being perfectly flat. But for that to work you need to have a VERY long telephoto lens and shoot from a very long distance away.

    If you try to stitch a panorama, you need to be parallel to a flat surface. if the object is not flat or not perfectly parallel to you (it’s closer on one side and recedes in the other) you’re going to have issues with perspective. Closer things will be magnified more, farther things will be magnified less.

    There are two solutions. The first you cannot do… and that is a telecentric lens. A telecentric only looks at parallel rays so the magnification in the image is the same regardless of how far the subject is and will create images with no perspective. The problem is for this to work the front element of the lens has to be larger than whatever you’re photographing. So it’s useful on machine vision cameras checking screws coming off an assembly line but not a giant truck.

    The other thing you should look at is photogrammetry where you take many photos and build a 3D model. Once you make that model, you can create an orthomosasic or orthorectified view that corrects eliminates any perspective, but you need 3D data first to be able to do that.

    Try to make sure you’re shooting straight on to the side of the object and not at a slight angle if you’re going to stitch a panorama, that will help. If that isn’t good enough, look at photogrammetry.


  • Photogrammetry is the main way to do moving around a space. There is active research into NeRFs (neural radiance fields) and Gaussian splatting and they’re getting better.

    However you’re not looking at that and those NeRFs and Gaussians do not work with animation or changes in subject.

    There have been morphing programs/apps for a while, but the better you line up the shot and make the lighting consistent, the better the results. I’d set up a camera stand, lights, and some kind of brace to make sure the perspective is the same.