Miami Photographer | Kate Benson | PDN’s 30 is out

Last year I wrote a post when PDN released their 30 awards. This year it’s even cooler. This is the first time the separated the awards into categories, which, I find, pretty cool. Maybe it’s because somewhere in me I think, more categories = more winners. But really it’s not like that from what I’ve seen. Many photographers won awards in multiple categories and this image, is by far, one of my favorites. From Nadav Kander, who won in Magazine/Editorial, Advertising, and Photo Books this won in Advertising.

Also very cool is Natan Dvir‘s personal project “Coming Soon”.

lso, super beautiful book by Caleb Cain Marcus, “A Portrait of Ice”.

There are so many this year it was a bit hard to get through. I would be interested to know of other readers favorites too. Enjoy!

Miami Photographer | Kate Benson Photography | Reflecting

You have to admit, it’s a bit amazing. Beautiful images are everywhere. Flickr, Pinterest, Tumblr, websites dedicated to collecting beautiful images. Recently I heard it mentioned that this has really changed the industry of wedding photography. Brides-to-be collect and fall in love with images of how they want their day to be and be remembered. This becomes an expectation that is passed onto the photographer, pushing them to be better and better. The same is for commercial, business to business photographers. But often, we aren’t being pushed by a client but by ourselves. One of my most loved friends (you know who you are) works for Adidas as an art buyer put it well, “we want to see how creative and exciting the work you do on your own is so our art directors can tell you exactly what to do” (okay, that may not have been the exact quote but it went something like that). This is what my portfolio lacks. I’ve been going through my blog to do some much needed key wording and in full honestly, cringed more than once at what images I posted. In my blog, I post quickly, I think “I liked that shot from today” and write up a little post and publish it. In my portfolio I sit and stare at my images for weeks/months/years and if I still love them after all that time, let is become part of my work that represents me. So naturally, the quality of images on my website blow away those on my blog. As they should. That is what the website is for. It is our portfolio. But the blog still has my name on it and thus, it still important.
So my goal has been (for a couple of years  now) and continues to be, what do I want to shoot for me? Staring for hours and hours at an outstanding image doesn’t mean it is what I want to create. But it does mean that I recognize greatness in a shot (thank you RISD for that). Oh the amazing photo editor I could be (but for the right publication, I couldn’t go through editing pictures of horrific events to find the one that was just the right amount of shock without too much goriness to represent the publication). Once again, those editing skills I can thank RISD for. As I wrote about earlier this week, Mike Brodie really inspired me. But a huge part of starting a project is letting yourself off the hook. It is complete illusion to believe every image you create will sell and will represent you. I have to work really hard to let go of the voice in my head asking “how is this going to market? how is this going to represent me?” and start listening to that other voice, the one that is quieter and yet always there that identifies what I find beautiful. Then, just have a camera with me and shoot. I think by shooting more, constantly, perhaps, I’ll fall into what I love. Around me are amazing people who create beauty everywhere. They create beautiful food, invite me to beautiful places, are just plain beautiful inside and out, and perhaps by not shooting these moments I’m doing them and myself a disservice.

So that is the goal, let’s see if I can stumble upon that thing that I must shoot. Stand bye for hopefully some new images to come!

Kate Benson Photography Miami | Travel Photography | Wallpaper Wednesday

This was taken with my new fancy phone the HTC One. I’ll be honest, it is a really fun camera on that phone. I don’t expect to make the clearest prints in history from a cell phone but the best camera in the world is the one you have on you right? I did drop the photo into Photoshop and just cleaned up some of the noise and background (and added the watermark) but the color editing and everything else was in phone. What I really like about this phone is the camera comes with the ability to view live adjustments on the screen before shooting. So you can experiment with different contrast and color while looking at the image, when you like it, take the shot. Additionally there are other features available for editing after as well. Straighten, being my favorite (amazing how much your off just a tiny bit when you snap a photo with your phone).
Amazing how new toys always become the favorite toys. Of course, this is no substitute for the Canon, but it really is fun!

 

Kate Benson Photography Miami | Inspiring Photographers | Mike Brodie

Yesterday I saw his work for the first time and it took me back. As a photographer who finds herself almost desperately searching for her focus project coming across Mike Brodie startled me. I’m a little heartbroken upon hearing he put down his camera after completing the project though (we will have to wait to see if that lasts). Each image so clearly has a story. A story Brodie tells intimately and bravely. As I browse the images, I keep thinking, “For real? This is here, in the United States? Now? Really?” because the images pull up familiarity, but nothing we’ve seen in a long time. Some kind of current Americans, By Robert Frank (great NPR bit on that here). For a photographer, finding that personal subject, the one that makes you want to hop on a freight train for 4 years and wander around the country documenting an underground group of runaways, is a rare thing. We love and admire images like these and think “if I had only been there back then, I would have shot that”. Yet here Brodie shows us that it still exists. Then things get crazier, parents of children who have runaway have been able to see their kids in the shots and know they are alive. The levels of this project just keep getting deeper and deeper. So today, hats off to Mike Brodie. I’m not surprised he put down the camera, how could another project come close to this one? And when a project is over, it’s over. You know it. At least, despite him stepping away from making new work, we have these outstanding images to reflect on. A few of my favorites are here in the post but visit Mike Brodie’s website for them all or check out his book, “A Period of Juvenile Prosperity”, if you can get your hands on a copy.

Kate Benson Photography Miami | Photo Sphere Viewing, via Google

This was too good not to share! The timing is perfect, my HTC ONE arrives tomorrow, just in time for a weekend full of tinkering with this! Via:  for The Next Web

 

https://thenextweb.com/google/2013/05/03/google-launches-photo-sphere-viewing-widget-for-embedding-images-in-any-website-not-just-google-and-maps/

 

Now, go have fun my fellow photo nerds. Enjoy your weekend. xoxox Kate

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