New Director of the AIPP Australian Institute of Professional Photography

A few days ago I received the exciting news that I have been made a director of the Australian Institute of Professional Photography (AIPP) . I have been a member of the AIPP (Master of Photography with two gold bars and 4 silver service bars) for almost a decade now and am both thrilled and honoured to have been asked to join the board of Directors. These are challenging times for the institute I am looking forward to working with the board to secure the future of the AIPP going forward. The position was formally announced via video below. If you don’t want to watch the entire message for April / May just skip forward to 12:15 for the announcement.

High Speed Motordrive for Capturing the Wildlife Decisive Moment

In the past I have frequently discussed the importance of the decisive moment in wildlife photography on my workshops. Quite honestly, the decisive moment is the key to the holy grail in wildlife image making. Great light is wonderful, great subject and great composition are mandatory; but add the decisive moment with superb gesture and you will have an emotional winner every time.

I have heard it said by some fairly well known photographers over past years that ‘they don’t need motor drive’; and that they are capable of predicting and capturing the exact perfect moment with a single shot. Utter nonsense and nothing could be further from reality.

For a variety of reasons a high speed motor drive is an essential tool in wildlife photography (and not just for fast moving subjects such as birds). At 1/500th of a second for example, shooting ten or more frames a second (up to 20 frames per second on the Canon 1DX  MK3 with mechanical or electronic shutter) there is an opportunity to pick out the perfect frame in an animals movements. The paw lifted and at just the right angle, the micro second the ‘attitude’ and ‘gesture’ are perfect in combination with the perfect head angle and a serendipitous gust of wind. These are moments it is impossible to capture with single capture (unless it is a fluke). Sure, you can get lucky from time to time – but more often than not you will miss the exact perfect moment where as the photographer by your side shooting high speed will have the freedom to pick and choose from his or her frames.

In this example below (one of a burst of approximately 35 frames, taken over a period of about two seconds) we have the perfect decisive moment of gesture, attitude, light, subject and composition. A frame either side of this one capture lacks the raw emotion found in the image below. Sure, the frames either side are still good images, but they lack that magical feeling that so perfectly brings this image to life.

The downside to shooting high speed is of course it is very easy to end up with thousands of images to later edit. However, it is always better to have the image ‘in the can’ as it were and have to spend a little time sorting and editing than it would have been to miss it altogether….During my editing process I am picking out the frames that grab me on an emotional level and processing just these few images. I do keep the remainder of the RAW files as I occasionally refer back to them when I need a certain type of photograph. The photograph below was taken with the Canon EOS 1DX MK3 with a Canon 70-200mm f2.8L IS MK3 at 70mm. I used a very shallow depth of field in order to soften the surrounding snow and place greater emphasis on the fox.

New Studio and New Mac Pro Tower of Power

Things have been a little quiet on my blog over the last week or so as I have been very busy with renovations and painting during the COVID lock down (It seemed the ideal time to make the most of the forced time at home). My days have mostly been spent at the ugly end of a paintbrush as I have moved from room to room splashing a new lease of life around the walls and ceiling. Painting has to be the exact antithesis of what I would rather be doing and if it were not for this current COVID crisis I would be in Svalbard right now sharing a wonderful experience with a group of passionate photographers.  Ce la’ Vie.

As well as painting the place I also recently moved my studio and office (down sized a bit) and added a new Mac Pro computer for my video and image editing workflow. I will probably do a video in the coming weeks on why I decided to pony up the substantial cash for the new Mac Pro and what my mind set and reasoning were for this not inexpensive purchase decision. In the end, I opted for the spec. below; which I felt offered really good bang for buck performance. I do have some updates in my mind down the road, such as the addition of an After Burner card for editing Prores and more internal SSD storage. – more to come on that later.

Soft Proofing in Adobe Photoshop Creative Cloud 2020

A few days ago I published a video for Moab and Legion Paper on how I soft proof, size and sharpen my photographs for final print. Soft proofing is one of the least understood aspects of fine art printing but is actually extremely easy to master once you know and understand the steps. In this short video I go step by step on the process I use in Adobe Photoshop to adjust my photographs so that I know exactly the result I am going to achieve before I actually commit ink to paper and make a print.

Frozen in Time Exhibition Delayed Until Further Notice

With the current lock-down and social isolation measures in place around the world as a result of the COVID-19 crisis I have had to make the unfortunate and difficult decision to delay my upcoming Frozen in Time exhibition that was scheduled to open in Melbourne this June. The exhibition was originally planned to open June 4th and run a full month in Melbourne at the Sun Room Gallery at Sun studios in South Melbourne before it travelled to NSW and then onto the United States.

At this stage I am planning to delay the exhibition until 2021 and will announce new dates as soon as they are confirmed (hopefully in the next couple of months). The exhibition will still include approximately three dozen of my photographs from both the Arctic and Antarctic captured over a period of ten years. The exhibition will be held in South Melbourne as previously planned and unreleased limited edition prints will be available – More details to come soon…