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Saturday, October 1, 2011

The Best Gift you will receive today!


What do you want to do with your life?  What is your big dream?  What is your passion?

Listen to a secret.  What you accomplish in your life will depend on what you do today.  You must live each day reaching for your dream, living your passion. The best gift you will receive today is today.

“Twenty years from now you will be more disappointed by the things that you didn't do than by the ones you did do. So throw off the bowlines. Sail away from the safe harbor. Catch the trade winds in your sails. Explore. Dream. Discover.”
*  Mark Twain

One day you will wake up and discover that opportunities are past – forever gone. Take hold of the day today and live.  Start your dream. Commit to your ambition.  Reach for the stars!

As you grow older, you'll find the only things you regret are the things you didn't do.  ~Zachary Scott



Don’t waste the gift of today.

Thursday, September 29, 2011

How to find better poses in your next photograph.

Better Poses in Photography

In art class I learned the rules of line.

·          A vertical line makes the viewer feel solid, firmness.



·         A Horizontal line gives the feeling of rest, stillness, stagnant














·         A diagonal line feels like action and activity; the steeper the diagonal, the faster and stronger the activity.














·         S curves in Greek and Roman art demonstrate and show the female figure



So, in your next photograph, watch the lines and use them to say what you want to say.  And when in doubt, action trumps inaction.

What are your thoughts?  I would love to hear your comments

Wednesday, September 28, 2011

Four ways to loose 10 Lbs. in your next photograph!

4 ways to lose 10 lbs in your next photograph

Here are 4 ways to lose 10 pounds for your next photograph.

1.   1.    Wear something dark. In a photograph dark cloths tend to look smaller and light clothes tend to look larger.  So, wear something dark.

2.   2.   Hide part of your body.  You can position yourself behind a desk, chair, or another person to reduce some of your size.  What is not seen in the photograph is not seen to be there.

3.     3.Turn your body from stand straight to the camera to turning to a 45 degree angle.  This 45 degree angle usually looks smaller than profile or straight on images.

4.   4.  Short or Rembrandt lighting. If you are facing to camera left, the main light should be placed also to the left of the camera with a fill light to the right.  This will make your face look lighter away from the camera and darker towards the camera which will help your face seem like it is smaller than it is.

5.  5.   If you are standing, place one foot in front of the other and place your weight on your rear leg. This will make you look slimmer.



Lots of luck, and look beautiful

Saturday, September 10, 2011

Are they listening to You?

 Are They Listening to You?

My wife and I were talking about a mutual friend and she made the statement that “He thinks he has something to say.” We were talking about his seeming frustration when it seemed others were not listening.
Are people listening to you? Most of us have something to say.  Are they listening?

My Rhetoric Professor in college graded on two major categories.  One was “do you have something to say?” or content.  The other was “Did you say it well?” or delivery.  Here are key elements of those two categories.

 Do you have something to say?

·         This is audience dependent. Are they interested? Is it below them? Here is where feedback is critical.

·         You must have valuable content and convincing arguments.  Titles (Pastor, Doctor, Professor) don’t work (at least in the U.S.) like they did years ago. Your audience must be persuaded by something other than “because I say so.”


Do you say it well?
·         This goes beyond good grammar. Do you say it with passion, with concern for the other person? Do you listen to their questions and comments and allow them to modify your thoughts, or do you just argue to win an argument?

·         Most people don’t read today.  Video would be better. (I should practice what I preach.)

·         Short is better than long.  Many have a short attention span.

Keep listening and getting feedback. Adjust your message and delivery based on your feedback.  Listen before your speak. Relationships and trust-building are valuable, and actions often trump thoughts. 

Monday, September 5, 2011

First three steps for a career in modeling.


First three steps in becoming a Professional Model
I have worked with models for decades. They often ask me how to get from being unknown to a paid model position.
Many have wanted the attention, the fashionable cloths, the glamour of being a model.  Here are the first three steps to take.
    1.    Make a declaration.  Let people know your interest in modeling. Sign up at such internet sites as Model Mayhem (modelmayhem.com), or One Model Place (onemodelplace.com). Take any images you have of yourself and get listed (it’s free).  Answer all who write you. Check out the work of the photographers and book sittings with the ones you trust. (Tip: if they do not allow you to bring an escort, you may want to think twice about working with them.) Be professional. If you say you will be there, be there on time and ready to work 
2.   Practice. Get a full length mirror, some fashion magazines and practice getting into the poses from the magazines. As you practice, watch for details like hand and feet placement, where they eyes are looking and the expression on the face.  The poses may feel very uncomfortable at first. You may feel foolish posing in the mirror, but we all feel foolish learning new things, but with practice you will feel more comfortable with the poses.  The quicker you can look like a model to the camera, the quicker your rise to fame will be.  
                                                                              
    
Im  3. Improve your portfolio and images.  The better your photographs look, the more calls you will get and the quicker you will be paid to model.  Great images may be costly. I would recommend a makeup artist (MUA) and the best photographer you can find and afford.  Try to get as many different looks as you want. Some photographers may trade for photographs, but often the better ones will want payment.


When you are on a photo-shoot, always act professional (even when the camera is not pointed at you) and demand professionalism of everyone else there.
If you find these ideas helpful, please follow this blog. Leave any comments and questions you might have, and I will answer. New information will be posted in a few days.
Thanks. Allen


Dba Artistallen.com

Thursday, September 1, 2011

How to take better photographs, improve the background.


I had a photo - shoot this week of a beautiful young model, but there was a challenge with the background.  We were in buildings with broken glass, doors and lots of holes in the roof.  Because the eye tends to go to the brightest place in the image, you as a photographer want the brightest place to be the face of the subject. But if they are in a building like I had it is hard to position the subject so that there is not a bright spot behind them competing for attention.

Sometimes I did well

Sometimes I did not do well. And you can see from the images below how the brighter places compete for attention.

But we both had fun and we did get some beautiful images, which is what really counts!





Monday, August 22, 2011

I Passed the written test! Now for the images!

I got back from a trip to Manassas, VA to find that I have passed the written section of the Certified Professional Photographer exam.  Yea!!

Now I have to submit 20 images for the full certification.  Anybody want to be photographed?  The next 18 people who contact me to be photographed, I will not charge the sitting fee if you mention this blog.

More work to do.


And lots more marketing.

Sunday, August 21, 2011

Memories in Photographs



I was sitting yesterday with my oldest son, Marshall and my laptop was open and went to the screensaver function.  Marshall started making comments about the family photos on my screensaver, about how his brothers have changed and remembering the family times when they were younger. Now they are all grown and gone, and I sit looking at my beautiful wife (as she works on her laptop).

I am, first of all, thankful for the family that I have been blessed with and our years together.  I am also thankful for the memories and the photographs that bring those memories to the forefront of our minds.  But I thought of something else.  I once told someone that I would not be doing them any favor if I let them put their photograph on their computer - which would someday crash and end up in a pile of garbage.  So, my thought for the day is: save your photos on your computer and enjoy them today, but back them up on a DVD or some other external memory because your computer will not last forever.

The older the memory, the sweeter they are to remember.  Save the images of your memory.

Friday, August 12, 2011

A few of my favorite images from the Leadership Summit.




I wanted to share with you a few of my favorite images from the Leadership Summit that I am photographing.  I must admit that I love these images more because of my affection and friendship with the people in the photographs, but the lighting is good also.

News, determination and hope

I am sorry that I have not blogged in a while.  I was photographing a Leadership Conference yesterday and today and am encouraged to make some changes in my life.  And maybe a blog is part of the changes that need to be made.

One of the speakers was Seth Goden who talks about the changes in our culture and how it effects everything in our lives.  If you are interested in his ideas and blogs, see sethsblog.com or google "Seth Godon".

One of the other speakers that impressed me was Leonard Schlessinger and his call for action when everything is uncertain.  Can today's world, with the economy and all the changes be called anything but uncertain?  A book that you could look up is Action Trumps Everything.  I am looking forward to reading the book.

I guess if there is anything we need now, in today's world and in my world, it is probably leadership.  I feel a paucity of leadership on many levels - from the Federal Government (that is acting more like two war-lord groups fighting over turf) down to the organizations that I work with on a daily basis.  Maybe it is time for all of us, as Seth would assert, to arise and take our place as leaders in the world.

So, challenge me if you don't see a new blog for a while - or if you don't hear about other blogs being tested. Maybe a blog on how to take better photographs. Maybe a blog on being a ditch digger (I'll let you wonder about that one for a while.)

Saturday, June 18, 2011

Lessons learned from a hard week

 It has been bit of a rough couple of days in the Old Photography business. But I guess that education is always expensive, either at school or in the world.  It has created some “interesting dynamics” around the house, but we will work through it. Persistence has value, but only when times get rough.  We really do learn more from our failures than from our successes – if we are paying attention. Some of the mistakes I have made in business will not be made again – at least not by me.  What I have learned:
·         Deal with the primary person. In a wedding deal with the bride, or at least make sure the bride is in all the dealings, so everyone is playing on the perverble same sheet of music.
·         Written contracts save money, time, tears and a lot of issues.  If it isn’t in writing, it is open for debate and miss-communication.
·         Sometimes if God is not the judge, there will be no justice.  So we sometimes have to treat others as though they are His children, and let Him handle the justice stuff.
·         See the second lesson
I did have the pleasure of photographing my grand-daughter this morning.  She is so beautiful that one could not blame me for taking too many photographs and photographing her as long as she would let me.  At a little over two months, her energy left before mine did.
Now, do you want to see the most beautiful baby?





Sunday, June 12, 2011

International Portraits

Yesterday I spent a couple of hours in an apartment complex in Clarkston, GA that has international new arrivals in the USA.  Some of these people had absolutely wonderful faces. Many of the kids had no idea how to smile, and most were very serious.  We had an interesting set up, I took the photographs while Stacian and John printed them and handed them out on the spot.  I wonder if this was the first time many of these people had been photographed by a professional.  I kept wondering about their stories and what they have lived through, but they did not speak good English – and there were way too many countries represented for me to dream of speaking all of their languages. Once again, I realized how much joy I received just taking photographs.

In the evening, Nancy and I went to see the play “Screwtape Letters” by C.S. Lewis.  There were lots of interesting things to think and consider. It made me want to read the book again and find what I had forgotten.  One of the jewels was how holy it is just to enjoy simple, natural pleasures like taking a walk in nature or reading a good book.  I feel the need to have more of these pleasures in my life.




Saturday, June 11, 2011

Dependable

Computers are such wonderful instruments – when they work right. And they firmly believe in going down at the worst possible moment.
Saturday I have scheduled to photograph an outreach to an immigrant community and to photograph them, print the photographs so they would have their portraits before they leave.  I procured the paper, ink, and all I needed. Then, of course, Friday night the computer that was to be involved decided to throw a tantrum. Fortunately my computer-wizard son, Josh was here to help with the diagnosis and repair. So after six hours of work on the computer and less hours of sleep than that, I think it is ready and able to do the job.
Everybody goes through that.  I wonder how often I let people down when they are counting on me? I am certainly not as versatile as a computer, but I hope I am more dependable. I would rather have something less powerful, but more dependable.
Lord, help me “to be a friend that a friend would like to have”.


Wednesday, June 8, 2011

Slow down and love each other

Seeing beauty requires one to stop and look with anticipation.  We dash through our lives  to get one more thing done, to accomplish one more thing.  Stop. Look with anticipation and enjoy the beauty that God has put around all of us. Take a deep breath and relish in the today that is given you.
You know all of that. We all do. I just forget sometimes – and I thought maybe you did also.
I get a blog every day that is sometimes wonderful, and sometimes just full of wonder.  I thought I would share it with you today to see what you thought of it.
Seth Godin’s Blog May 27,2011
Caring
No organization cares about you. Organizations aren't capable of this.
Your bank, certainly, doesn't care. Neither does your HMO or even your car dealer. It's amazing to me that people are surprised to discover this fact.
People, on the other hand, are perfectly capable of caring. It's part of being a human. It's only when organizational demands and regulations get in the way that the caring fades.
If you want to build a caring organization, you need to fill it with caring people and then get out of their way. When your organization punishes people for caring, don't be surprised when people stop caring.
When you free your employees to act like people (as opposed to cogs in a profit-maximizing efficient machine) then the caring can't help but happen.


Tuesday, May 31, 2011

What is Fine Art Photography?


Some of the professional photographers on the internet were discussing what the difference is between “Fine Art” photography and just a good photograph.  I started to say that fine art photography was what I did and just a good photograph is what they do. But I was afraid they would not see the twinkle in my eye or the laugh in my voice.

But what is the difference?  My reply is that it is a matter of time.  A fine art photograph will be remembered and enjoyed 50 years from now.  Simply a good photograph will be enjoyed now, but will draw a yawn in 50 years.  The former makes a comment about the human condition, about beauty, about God, and about family relationships. The latter is about the latest technique, gadget and trendy thing.  One speaks to the heart, while the other is glitter and glitz.

I hope that I am creating fine art photography. I want to create a   portrait that will speak to the great-grandson or great-granddaughter, but also will say something to those they share it with.  Will they see the strength, the tenderness or the love? I will let you know in another 50 years or so.
Allen

“Tell me, what is it you plan to do with your one wild and precious life?”
- Mary Oliver

Monday, May 30, 2011

My Apologies

My apologies to Paul, Karen Sculley and family for mis-spelling their names on the photogrpahs.  You guys are so sweet to overlook my awful mistakes.
ArtistAllen Blog
May 20, 2011

I was working on photographing an East African wedding (that is to say, a wedding in Atlanta whose participants were almost all from an East African country) when I thought I should start a blog.  I am not so egotistical to think that many would wait breathlessly every day to hear what I have to say, but more as a venue for some of my – more interesting photographs.  And if I wax laconic about some beauty or rant about some injustice that I see, well, you will have to forgive me, and read or not read as you so wish. Although I expect to be able to learn from my ramblings and photographic essays, this is more for those of you who might find some interest or humor. So, tell me what you enjoy via comment and I will include more (or less) as you desire.

I wanted to tell you about a trip to Florida and an excursion to Animal Kingdom, but that will come later (hopefully).  For now, I want to share with you a couple of family photographs of some dear friends of mine.

May 30th 2011 - Memorial Day

For those in the US, I hope you had a safe Memorial Day.  Can one say a happy Memorial Day?  Can you call a holiday that remembers those who died for our freedom “happy”?  Many of us, from my generation, can remember the “empty chairs and empty tables” where we and our friends celebrated life – and then they gave their lives for their country.

For the weekend, I had the pleasure of photographing at a wedding.  My task was to create portraits of the guests, which will be sent to them.  The wedding was outside, but I was very glad that I took my studio lights because I shot well after sunset.  I used three lights; a main, a fill and a hair-light. My only problem was I should have had two hair lights for the larger number families.

In celebration of families, I would like to submit another set of family photographs.  They are a wonderful family with delightful kids.  The session lasted about 30 min. and resulted in awesome photographs – and I made sure the mother got copies of all of her photographs as well as her enlargements, without breaking the bank.