Sep 17 2010

A Wonderful Stop-Motion Life from the PEN

Category: In-Camera Techniques, Multimedia & VideoEthan G. Salwen @ 12:14 pm

Here’s a wonderful stop-motion piece that will put a smile on your face and inspire you, even if you have no interest in the Olympus PEN camera.

Pretty sweet, right?

I mean, obviously this was really tricky to produce (apparently the final was shot all in-camera, no postproduction) but it doesn’t feel tricky. It feels fresh and cute and honest and. . .simple. I love it when process does not call attention to product.

And I thought my in-camera stop motion piece was good. Ha! Still, if you like this kind of animation from photographic prints, remember that it doesn’t have to be so complicated to be so sweet. Take a lesson from the stop-motion wedding engagement piece by Sarah Yates.

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Jun 03 2010

Underwater Storytelling from Tony Wu

Category: Creative Process, Multimedia & Video, PhotographersEthan G. Salwen @ 2:04 pm

AfterCapture Blog_100603_Underwater Storytelling_1When I talked with underwater photographer Tony Wu late last night (early this morning for the Japan-based Wu), he agreed with Ian Shive that making quality multimedia — from stills, video or both — is all about the story. To illustrate his point, Wu directed me to his fantastic blog covering underwater photography and therein to “A Very Hungry Frogfish,” one of his first experiments in multimedia storytelling

If you haven’t yet put together a multimedia piece, or are in need of inspiration, I strongly recommend you watch this wonderful Frogfish-staring piece by Wu. “It’s a good illustration of nothing mattering more than the story,” Wu told me, which is the exact sentiment Shive had shared (not to mention everyone else I have interviewed on the topic).

“Yeah, the audio sucks and the video processing is no good,” Wu shared in his slow, calm, thoughtful manner of speaking. “But the end result achieves what I wanted, which was to make people laugh, and to get people to emotionally relate to a fish.”

I definitely laughed. I definitely was not distracted or put off by the low-tech nature of the piece. For “Frogfish” Wu only used a handful of stills (patiently captured over more than an hour and a half), Wu’s voice-over narration and endearingly simple “special effects.”

“Frogfish” has a simplicity the resonates like the experience of the best children’s books, which (as my sister-in-law, who is a children’s librarian will tell you) are some of the greatest books out there.

“There’s no way I could have conveyed this story with one picture, or words alone,” Wu said. “People really get it.”

Not Being Overwhelmed by Overwhelming Technology

Continue reading “Underwater Storytelling from Tony Wu”

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May 06 2010

Excellent Interactive Guides Explore Gulf Coast Oil Spill

Category: Technology Insights, ViewpointEthan G. Salwen @ 8:53 am

Excellent Interactive Guides Explore Gulf Coast Oil Spill

On January 14 I mentioned my frustration with “A Closer Look at the Destruction in Haiti,” an interactive Web feature produced by “The New York Times.” On January 20 I highlighted “In Haiti, a Struggle Barely Begun,” (also by the “Times”), praising the power of classic photojournalism.

My two posts together might come off as a Luddite, suggesting that old fashioned reporting is better than newer-tech reporting. This is certainly not the case. Just think abut Vietnam. While we might best  remember a handful of iconic still photographic images from the Vietnam War, it was the daily TV news coverage that most effectively brought the war into the homes of Americans.

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Today 10,000 Words features a great sample of interactive, online media done right. “7 interactive guides to the Gulf Coast oil spill” show that simple, well-conceived multimedia reporting can be far more effective than still images alone, and that they can help put still images (both news and stock) to best use.

Samples include reporting by USA Today, The New York Times, MSNBC, CNN, and the Times-Picayune. All of these are basically the same — showing the progress of the spill over time, using Flash driven graphics.

Continue reading “Excellent Interactive Guides Explore Gulf Coast Oil Spill”

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May 05 2010

Seeing Beyond the Still

Category: Multimedia & Video, The IndustryEthan G. Salwen @ 12:56 pm

The most recent issue of the “The Digital Journalist” (May 2010), which focuses on video, opens with this video by Vince Laforet.

On the vimeo.com page where the movie is hosted, Laforet explains that part of his motivation in creating “Chapter 1: The Cabbie” was to show off “the many strengths of this new breed of HD DSLR cameras, such as the Canon 7D, which we shot this film with.”

There is no doubt that Laforet has succeeded. The production quality of “Cabbie” is simply outstanding, and it will provide inspiration for any photographer exploring the possibilities of video. Laforet explains that “The camera’s low light capabilities and light weight allow you to do things you’d never think to try with traditional cameras.” Continue reading “Seeing Beyond the Still”

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Jul 06 2009

Leaning Forward into Storytelling

Category: Books, Multimedia & VideoEthan G. Salwen @ 10:37 am

The Lean Forward MomentPhotographers are storytellers. Storytelling is about creating change. Visual storytelling requires creating visual change in a way that advances a story. (This I just picked up from Norman Hollyn, but we’ll get to him in a second.) Let me go on. . .

In moviemaking, something called a “logline” is used to describe a scene in a way that allows the moviemaker to focus on how to best tell the story of that scene in relation to the overall movie (which, it turns out, can also be defined by a logline).
Continue reading “Leaning Forward into Storytelling”

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Jun 05 2009

Amazing Video Journalism at Kobré

Category: Creative Process, Multimedia & Video, Online ResourcesEthan G. Salwen @ 12:39 pm

ACMF_NG_077Kobré Guide proclaims to present “The Web’s Best Multimedia and Video Journalism.” Well, I’m a believer. Kobré Guide is seriously stuffed with incredible content, well organized, drawing you in to see more, more, more. The site is an amazing single-stop resource for inspiration for all manner of image maker.

This week’s featured video is an abridged form of “Freedom’s Ride” by Thomas Kelly and Gail Mooney. Tom and Gail have been working with film since before digital, but their impressive careers Continue reading “Amazing Video Journalism at Kobré”

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Mar 30 2009

Photographers Can Go Script Frenzy, Too!

Category: Creative Process, Online ResourcesEthan G. Salwen @ 5:52 am

ACMF_NG_033Following are some inspirational ideas for photographers who have a “nagging feeling that there’s a script inside you that may never get out.” That’s right, April is the month of Script Frenzy!, an annual event with no fees (and no pressure of awards) geared to help people get those nagging scripts out of their systems — whether feature movies, stage plays, short films, TV commercials or even graphic novels.

The point of Script Frenzy! is to help creative people engage in Continue reading “Photographers Can Go Script Frenzy, Too!”

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Mar 11 2009

Inspiring Little Book on a Strange, Cold World

Category: Books, Creative Process, PhotographersEthan G. Salwen @ 5:30 am

ACMF_NG_028Photographed brilliantly by Layne Kennedy and featuring wonderful essays by Greg Breining, “A Hard-Water World: Ice Fishing and Why We Do It” is a great book in its own right, and a fabulous example of how images and words in book form – when handled with such intelligence – can still illuminate a topic like no other media.

Frankly, when I split open “A Hard-Water World” I wasn’t really expecting that much. For one thing, too many topical photography books disappoint. And for another, ice fishing isn’t Continue reading “Inspiring Little Book on a Strange, Cold World”

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Jan 13 2009

Digital Story Tellers Converge at ZoneZero

Category: Creative Process, Online ResourcesEthan G. Salwen @ 10:58 am

ACMF_NG_006Are you familiar with ZoneZero? More than ten years old, this site was launched by the forward-thinking, community-minded documentary photographer Pedro Meyer? The site’s tagline of “from analog to digital” is enticing, but doesn’t convey how rewarding how rewarding ZoneZero can be.

ZoneZero has a decidedly editorial/digital focus, but with forums and a magazine and content pouring in from quality writers and photographers around the world, ZoneZero will likely be of great interest to photographers from any specialty. After all, we’re all telling stories in digital in one manner of speaking or another.

How about an article on miniaturization by the New York Times’ David Pouge? Maybe an engaging memoriam celebrating the life of Cornell Capa? Or perhaps you are more interested in fascinating, image-filled articles from the magazine. After all, you can read about Japanese Continue reading “Digital Story Tellers Converge at ZoneZero”

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