Feb 05 2010

Why Do Lawyers Make the Best Photographers?

Category: Business & Marketing, Photographers, ViewpointEthan G. Salwen @ 3:05 pm

AfterCapture_Blog_100205_1_FrielNo, my post title is not a joke, even if it sounds like one. And no, I am not going to suggest that lawyers actually make the best photographs. However, having had a wonderful phone interview this morning with Bernard Friel, a very accomplished nature photographer and an extremely successful lawyer, I do want to share something that Friel brought to light.

“Lawyers tend to be a pretty sociable group,” Friel told me at the end of our hour-plus conversation, in which he shared more than a dozen names of photographers and influential people he has met in his journey as a photographer. Friel, who is 80, laughed often during our talk, and spoke of his many friends with fondness and respect.

“I had never been to a photography association meeting,” Friel told me of his unlikely participation in the first annual meeting of the North American Nature Photographers Association (NANPA). “I didn’t want to talk about pictures; I wanted to make them.”

However, being a social creature, the fist night of the conference Friel introduced himself to the “elderly man” sitting at the same dinner table. “Hello,” the man responded with outstretched hand. “I’m Roger Tory Peterson.” Friel had made another friend. And yes, this friend is the Peterson of “Peterson Field Guides” fame. Continue reading “Why Do Lawyers Make the Best Photographers?”

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Nov 23 2009

The Nature of Photography Contest Judging

Category: Creative Process, The Industry, ViewpointEthan G. Salwen @ 2:31 pm

ACOF_091123_1_expressions_cov_sIn October I was asked, for the second time, to write the introduction to Expressions, the printed showpiece featuring more than 200 stunning nature images for an annual contest run by the North American Nature Photographers Association (NANPA). Jam-packed with work from both amateur and pro photographers, and Expressions is inspirational and educational to look at, and contestants report that the contest is enjoyable and motivational to participate in.

Although I don’t photograph nature — at least, other than subjects involving homo sapiens — for the past couple years I’ve been writing for NANPA’s new Currents magazine, and the assignments have given me a profoundly deeper respect for nature photographers. I’ve spoken at length with acclaimed nature photographers like George Lepp, Joel Sartore, and Arthur Morris — all down-to-earth and as generous with their time and knowledge as they are successful. While covering topics on conservation, bird photography and travel photography, I’ve learned Continue reading “The Nature of Photography Contest Judging”

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Apr 14 2009

A True Bird’s Eye View

Category: Creative Process, Multimedia & VideoEthan G. Salwen @ 6:45 am

Head to commercial photographer Chase Jarvis’s 4/9/09 blog entry to get a REAL birds eye view – that is, a film recorded by a micro camera strapped to a high-flying, fast-diving raptor. Jarvis’s post highlights the work of José Luis Ortiz.

One thing I really appreciate about Chase is that he is always upbeat, curious and pumped up by other artists, even as he takes on his own projects at a frantic rate. As he says, he himself has been working with POV photography for years in many interesting ways. But he admits that José Luis Ortiz has taken the art to a whole new level: WAY up in the air.

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Oct 07 2008

How Jim Zipp Captured a Great Grey Owl

Category: Creative Process, PhotographersEthan G. Salwen @ 9:03 am

ACMF_081001_A_Zipp_OwlWhat does it take to make a great bird image? Apparently it has a lot more to do with a hard-core dedication to the specialty and a true understanding of the wilds than it does with photographic technique. Renowned bird photographer Jim Zipp helped me understand this when I interviewed him for an article on the topic for Currents, the magazine of the North American Nature Photographers Association (NANPA).

Based in Hamden, Connecticut, Zipp’s body of avian imagery is mind-blowing. Check out a sample of his photographs on his website and also visit his Fat Robin Wild Bird and Nature Shop. You’ll see that Zipp’s love of birding and his dedication to conservation could not go deeper. Continue reading “How Jim Zipp Captured a Great Grey Owl”

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