Great presentation, as we've come to expect from B&H event space.Love the laughing technique. I've experienced the effectiveness of this in some of my work, but far less intentionally. The best shots seem to always come along with sharing a laugh with your subject. I am going to be a little more intentional with this now that I've seen how great Bobbi Lane is with it. Thanks!
Wonderful! I'd love to take a class from you and soak up even more knowledge. I have a question though: You have many amazing shots. What do you do with them? They'd be amazing in a high-end magazine like National Geographic or the like. They'd be striking in an exposition or gallery. They make awesome examples of the techniques you use... Then what? Assuming I had shots that could compare with those, but no connections/exposure, what might I do with them? Do people buy them to hang them on their walls? Can you monetize them outside of connections to magazines and galleries? I'm in a (very) rural area and have zero connections but what might I do with them (the "not the traditional hang on your wall" pictures) beyond putting them in a folder on my computer to occasionally look back on? Thanks!
More people around Albuquerque!
This was fabulous!!!
Presentation of photo examples. Stories about frames.
Neither methods no recipes. These authors aren't so silly to teach all others for free))
Great presentation, as we've come to expect from B&H event space.Love the laughing technique. I've experienced the effectiveness of this in some of my work, but far less intentionally. The best shots seem to always come along with sharing a laugh with your subject. I am going to be a little more intentional with this now that I've seen how great Bobbi Lane is with it. Thanks!
We are glad you enjoyed it, Kevin!
"Chance favors the prepared mind".
I wrote too soon, you used the same quote. I had forgotten who said it though.
Wonderful! I'd love to take a class from you and soak up even more knowledge. I have a question though: You have many amazing shots. What do you do with them? They'd be amazing in a high-end magazine like National Geographic or the like. They'd be striking in an exposition or gallery. They make awesome examples of the techniques you use... Then what? Assuming I had shots that could compare with those, but no connections/exposure, what might I do with them? Do people buy them to hang them on their walls? Can you monetize them outside of connections to magazines and galleries? I'm in a (very) rural area and have zero connections but what might I do with them (the "not the traditional hang on your wall" pictures) beyond putting them in a folder on my computer to occasionally look back on? Thanks!
Nice presentation, but she never mentioned how vital dual card slots cameras are
Some of these pictures are great. A lot of them, however, are just boring and altogether unpleasant to look at imo
did you watch the video... that is the whole point of it