
Emma Roberts and Freddie Highmore on the Poster for the new movie Homework
This just in, during my month on the set i got some great photographs. And the shot of Emma Roberts and Freddie Highmore along with a NYC scape made it to become the poster (or One Sheet in movie land dialect).
Now we just need national and international distribution for which the film will be showcased in Cannes, France this week.
Love it or hate it, but the iPad is here to stay (and it’s fabulous)…
The website is now also available in a iPad friendly layout, not quite as slick as the standard site but quick and efficient.
In the meantime, my portfolio just made onto my new little friend and looks great
After a couple of great shoots recently i felt compelled to give them their own gallery.
Let me know what you think. I love to see their characters come through.
Wasn’t there something like this not too long ago. Radio survived and that’s a good thing.
Now video is again at it, and the photo world seems to discover a new calling. Only, isn’t there something like a Director of Photography (who are great photographers themselves) on every film set. Nobody is waiting for the still photographers to come and reinvent the wheel. The DP’s are taking the small DSLRS and shoot footage previously unable or only obtainable with very difficult rigging. Maybe that’s the convergence of technologies. And it will be interesting finally and really incorporating editorial photography with video, at least to an extend…
My prediction: Still photography will come out of this even stronger than before. It’s hard to hang a movie or video on the wall, and moving images will enhance and add to the still portfolio in any publication (once we all have an iPad).
People will go back to actually capturing a moment rather than spending days reviewing, developing and editing RAW RED footage… In the end it’s all about the efficient method to get to the final product.
Not so much new content went up, but the internal settings have been tweak quite a bit over the last couple of weeks.
I still have to work on some more fun and facts for the image descriptions….
We lost a giant.
He, of all the photographers in history, influenced me the most.
His attention to detail, the contrast and the simplification of subjects will always be inspiring.
His work was one of the first that really stood out for me as a teenager when I first got into photography and discovered “Passage” and later “Flowers”.
(And I read all the book on photography in our library; twice)
And today I’m still amazed on the broad subject matter he shot so exquisitely and was always excited finding another Penn photograph in Vogue over the years.
There is a very short list of photographers that I’m a true fan and he is on top of even this group.
This is truly one of the saddest days in the Photography world and words will never be enough.
His series “Petit métiers” shot for Vogue in the 50′s is on display at the Getty Center in LA till January 10, 2010