by David Norbut | Jun 10, 2013 | Stories
Nokia Lumia Tricks and Tips with David Norbut
I’ve always been one for trying new things, especially with my photography. I remember building a pinhole camera as a young art student and going out on the roof, setting the thing on the ledge facing the city scape, opening the shutter, waiting, then leaning in view of the pinhole to see if my image would show up as well. In the darkroom I remember seeing the image appear, and thinking it looked like another world. I was hooked. I wanted to create scenes, other worlds with my photographs.
Fast forward to today, I’m writing about my experience with the Nokia Lumia 920. Over the years, I’ve shot with everything you can think of.. pinhole cameras, polaroids, 35mm, medium format, large format, digital everything, phones, whatever was around. So I didnt think of this new device as anything but a new camera. I sat around for a couple of hours shooting with every app I could find and ended up with, hands down, one app, Pro Shot. I set it on Black and White, left everything else on auto except the flash and adjusted the exposure compensation down one notch to -1.
I charged up the phone, covered the entire back of the bright yellow phone with black Gaffers tape, cranked up a Lungfish record on the earbuds and hit the city.
The best way for me to shoot is to keep it dedicated and simple, one camera, one app and create from the world around me.
I am not a technical person and I am certainly not a technical photog, so I can only tell you what I know works. This phone, using Pro Shot shooting in Black & White works. There is a shutter lag, I adapted after a few shots. We can talk all day long about ifs, ands, or buts, other phones, other cameras, other contenders, I don’t care. I’m a photographer, all I want to do is walk around and take photographs all day every day. The Nokia Lumia 920 gives me that, I got used to it and started doing what I want to do, capture and create. My technical advice is limited to what worked for me.
My Prep:
- Open ProShot
- Set to Black and White via IMG
- Drop off the Exposure Compensation, this allows you to keep nice shadows you can brighten in post processing if needed
- Leave everything else on Auto
- Tap the screen as the shutter
- Compose the scene on the screen
My Post:
I will put my images through Fotar if I want to add contrast or brighten things up.
My advice for strong images, let the image do all the work, Minimal editing works for me.
Finally, save your images to Skydrive. Its an excellent app that saves your images at full resolution and you can share your images to all other devices or other editing apps easily and flawlessly.
Bottom Line, learn the device, and you’ll enjoy using it.
Dedicate yourself to the camera you are carrying and go see the world.
by David Norbut | Feb 20, 2013 | Stories
Elif and David Shoot the Streets of Baltimore by David/ Elif
David’s Testimony
I remember when I first realized there were some amazingly talented photographers out there in the mobile community. When I was invited to join Juxt, my first task was to interview another mobile photographer in the community. I knew before BP even asked, that I would find a way to interview Elif (@fisheyedreams).
To me all of her work is nothing short of magic.
A combination of her eye and her dedication to Hipstamatic is a perfect match.
Before I knew it, I was on a Skype call all the way to Istanbul from my home in Delaware.
Having the first of many conversations with my new friend. During the interview I was pleasantly surprised on how friendly and down to earth Elif is. I think there was a mutual respect and comradery right off the bat and I knew we would become friends.
6 months later the stars aligned and my wife and I were driving south to Baltimore to meet Elif.
Our only plans: street shooting and a beer or two.
We met in the Inner Harbor in the great city of Baltimore, Maryland.
We found each other right away and set off to wander the city, little did we know that we were walking straight into an Otokan convention, the streets were flooded with all sorts of characters in costume, gladly posing for one another as their friends were snapping away at each other . A street photographers dream! Certainly a fine day for portraits. I looked forward to walking side by side with one of my favorite photographers, I would be getting a first hand look at how she shoots. I thought we would end up shooting a lot of the same things, but as we walked, it seemed we were aware of what the other was looking for and not getting in each others way. Although we walked together it was in waves, each would disappear and reappear every few moments eager to share what we captured.
It came up several times how wild it was that we were here on this day from opposite ends of the globe shooting together, shooting street portraits, shooting Hipstamatic. How amazing that we connected all because of Instagram, all because of Juxt, all because of the Mobile Photography community. And If that was not enough of a mind blowing circumstance, we were in the middle of the Inner Harbor overrun by crazy characters. Here are some of the portraits we caught on our adventures through the Inner Harbor last summer.
Elif’s Testimony
Instagram for me is a place to present my work and follow some incredible photographers. Its definitely a social platform. You get instant feedback and you can follow up on people. When I met David on Instagram I loved his trucker portrait series. We talked about it and we followed each other. He lives in Delaware I live in Istanbul. We would joke about having a beer together but it was a long way off.
In the summer when I decided to visit my cousin in Baltimore that joke for drinking a beer together suddenly became quite possible. After crossing the big blue ocean he was most willing to drive to Baltimore with his wife Charise. I know a lot of us do meet people through Instagram but the wild part of our meeting was the photos we got to take together.
As soon as we met we were very comfortable with each other. We started to walk around the Baltimore harbor.
While we were catching up on a lot of stuff I couldn’t help notice a big bear walking by. Then a woman that just jumped out of a Japanese animation film sitting with a samurai at a coffee shop. Suddenly I turned to David and said there is something going on around here.
As we got closer to the Baltimore Convention Center the characters that we see are beyond anything I have seen. There was the yearly convention for the Otakon event.
All these people were dressed in some game or animation character that were very open to be photographed. Well I know we can come across such things in New York City but didn’t expected it in Baltimore let alone the day I meet my dear IG friend for the first time.
So it was kind of magic. Not only because we get to meet from overseas but to take photos together of the wild and wonderful people of Otakon.
Photo by David
Photo by Elif
Photo by David
Photo by Elif
Photo by David
Photo by Elif
Photo by David
Photo by Elif
Photo by David
Photo by Elif
Portrait of Elif by David
Portrait of David by Elif
Portrait of David and Elif by David’s wife Charise
by David Norbut | Jan 7, 2013 | Featured Articles
Andre Clemente: Music, Hipstamatic and the Streets by David Norbut
David’s Introduction
I think Andre and I are kindred spirits. When I connected with him for this interview I felt we were already good buds, just catching up. His work is a great inspiration for me. He is patient persistent and as far as I am concerned, Andre has a clear vision on how he chooses to portray the world in his photographs. A master of Hipstamatic, a unique street photographer and a Bruce Springsteen fan to boot. What else could I ask for in an interviewee?
D: David A: Andre
A: I downloaded Hipstamatic and Instagram on the same day (laughs)… I even remember it was November 11th. I remember the first shot I took with Hipstamatic, it was of a chair and the framing was all messed up, and I was like “what the fuck is this man?!” (laughs)… It was cool but it wasn’t what I wanted, turns out it wasn’t on precision shooting mode. I downloaded Hipstamatic first, then I was looking for other apps with filters, and I came across Instagram. I thought, what the hell is this? Why do I have to sign up? I just want fucking filters man! (laughs)… I signed up anyway and I used it once, I posted one photo and I didn’t go back to it. I just continued to shoot with my Hipstamatic.
Fast forward 6 months later, I’m going back on Instagram here and there and I discover the folks at @Hipstaroll. That’s when I realized it is more than just these filters, that there is this community going on and there are cool, like-minded people to meet.
D: Give us, the readers, a run down of a day-in-the-life for Andre Clemente out street shooting.
A: Back when I lived in the Bay Area and I knew I was going to the city, I would always go as early as possible to try and get some of that “golden light.” Before leaving I make sure I have Mophie power stations, two of them. I usually bring an iPod as well because half the time I like to listen to music while I’m shooting. Sometimes it gets me into a mood but sometimes I want to listen to the ambient sounds of the city. It just depends on how I’m feeling. When I go out I usually have a place in mind but once I’m there I just walk aimlessly. As far as what I look for… I look for characters, cool backgrounds and light. Those are the main things I look for. I don’t really have a specific routine, I just walk and shoot what I see. When I see a character walking down the street, sometimes I ask for a portrait, sometimes I don’t. I am pretty shy. I don’t feel super comfortable asking permission. It usually depends on small talk, if they are very receptive and friendly I will ask for a portrait. I wish I was at that stage where I just didn’t give a shit and I would ask anyone, but I’m just not there.
D: Talk to me about Hipstamatic. Any combos you prefer?
A: JohnS and any black and white film is good for me. The one I have been using a lot nowadays is Lucifer VI and AO DLX. I like to decide before I go out shooting for the day. Once I decide I like to stick with it, I don’t want to be messing with Hipstamatic once I’ve decided. I don’t want to second guess myself, so I make a decision and I stick with it.
D: What do you hate about Hipstamatic?
A: The battery drain issue, the speed of the camera, the shutter. The lack of speed has improved my timing though.. instead of shoot shoot shoot, I now try not to waste shots. I tend to shoot more sniper style than machine gun style due to using Hipstamatic and its limitations.
D: Any advice for budding Hipstamatic street shooters?
A: Yes- Don’t get frustrated with it. Perservere. There is a combination out there for you, the hard part is figuring it out but once you’re past that stage it becomes a really fun experience. Once you’ve got it, it’s going to be so worth it. It makes you think about what you want, and in a way makes you a better photographer. You are stuck with this border, so you want to mind your composition and you want to keep the image straight, you want to make sure everything is alright before you take the shot, because thats what you get. You can crop it if you want, you can try to fix it, but that’s not what it is supposed to be, if you ask me.
D: Do you ever shoot with any other apps or cameras?
A: (laughs) I keep telling myself to try something else, but every time I go out there I just end up using Hipsta. I have used Procamera on a rare occasion when I wanted a faster camera, but that’s about it. I think I have one Instagram post that’s not Hipsta. I also bought a Holga, which can have excellent results, but it’s way too expensive. I think for 12 shots it cost me $23 to buy the film, get it developed, and put it on a CD. I got an SLR and I tried C-41 B&W film just to offset the crazy cost. I used it at a wedding with some Ilford and Kodak film and I was pretty happy with the results. But the one time I tried to take a street shot with a big lens, the person got pissed! (laughs) The first shot!!! Maybe 1 in 500 shots with my iPhone does someone get pissed, but I take the first shot with my SLR and thats it!! I guess it’s the big lens; it’s too intimidating.
D: Lets talk about music… I know we have talked in the past about our mutual love for Bruce Springsteen. What else are you listening to?
A: Well, I had a phase where I listened to a lot of Jazz while out shooting, it just took me to another time ya know? Some of the less popular Coltrane albums, Coltrane, Coltrane from 1962, Ole’ Coltrane also from 1962… I guess it also depends what is out. I don’t think I have a certain genre for shooting… a lot of Modest Mouse, Bruce Springsteen… workingman’s music, talking about the everyday man, which is what I may be subconsciously looking for while I’m shooting. Modest Mouse has an album called Building Nothing Out of Something, it’s a collection of B sides, and if thats their B side stuff… Shit man! There is another group from Brooklyn called Woods… I have been listening to that a lot lately. WIlco is one of my all-time favorites, the album Summer Teeth in particular… I’ve been listening to that a lot lately.
This one was taken in the heart of the tenderloin where I do a lot of my street shooting. Homelessness, crime, drugs, prostitution and just overall filth make this one of SF’s roughest neighborhoods. I noticed this junkie sitting on this chair just being extremely expressive, and I couldn’t really tell if he was feeling good or miserable… just really vocal but incoherent, twitching, bobbing his head. Whichever way, it was a pretty sad sight. He had a companion whom I think was also high on something but definitely more lucid than he was. She was overseeing used / stolen merchandise laid out on the street for sale. I pretended to be interested in book, I wish I could remember what it was, picked it up, flipped through the pages and asked how much. All this time, I had my phone by my hip snapping with the John S and AOBW combination. Shooting from the hip obviously has its disadvantages – if you think shooting streets yields alot of duds because of uncontrollable variables, then you can imagine how much more blurred, crooked or chopped body parts you get from this technique. After enough practice though, you can kind of approximate the frame of your shot from where you stand and also how much you need to tilt the phone up (especially if the subject is standing). While I started using the hipshot in seedy areas like this out of necessity (regular shooting has gotten be in some nasty situations), it has become part of my shooting style because of the rawness, the irregular framing and natural expression that are harder to achieve otherwise.
This is a portrait of a well-known San Franciscan Gabriel Angelo, a 13 year old trumpeter who performs in the street to help finance his education at the SF Conservatory. Strangely, I never encountered Gabriel prior to this day. I was walking on Grant heading into Chinatown with my earphones on, not too loud in case someone yells at me, and I could hear the trumpet from a distance. I followed the sound and could see him performing up ahead. He’s such a showman, struts around the block, so much enthusiasm, energy and movement. I got excited and was ready for some action shots. As I finally reached, he ended his performance. Not wanting to come up empty handed, I asked for a portrait. I’m usually hesitant to ask for portraits but with street performers, it’s easy. They know it’s part of the game, some will demand a buck for a photo. Gabriel didn’t really talk much, he just started to pose. He was in front of a busy street, cars passing by. I didn’t like the scene. Behind us was a Starbucks (of course) and that wouldn’t do either. So I asked if he could walk around the corner and pose in front of a white wall. This was one of his first poses, radiating old soul, and I knew I had the shot.
I took this shot on while on the up escalator on the 16th and Mission Bar station. On my way up I saw an interesting frame of someone’s head / upper body walking downstairs, the diagonal lines and the textures of the wall.I didn’t have my phone ready so I went back downstairs and took the escalator back up to try and capture what I saw in my head. It’s a busy station so on the second go, I thought I had an ok shot already but not satisfied I went back down for a third time. Then, as the street gods would have it, a marching mime drum band were walking down the stairs as I was going up. I could hear them coming down but from my angle I couldn’t tell they were dressed in mime. Then there it was, as I hit my spot on the escalator, she was in my frame. As they say in baseball, you make your own luck or you make your own breaks. I was lucky, for sure, but if I didn’t persevere and kept going at it, that wouldn’t have happened. Funnily enough, they were on their way to an Occupy May Day rally and I happened to make my way there later that day and have a few more shots of her playing the drum.
This one was taken at the end of the Stockton tunnel, which I frequently pass when I’m going to and from Chinatown. This lady was just standing there bathing in this gorgeous light. I guess on one end, you had a beam of direct sunlight and on the other reflective light from one of the buildings. I asked her if I could take her portrait and at the same time I was already taking her portrait. This way, in case she says no, I’d at least get one shot. She just nodded but I don’t think she understood me and after a couple of shots in she must have realized what was going on and waved her hand around and had an embarrassed look on her face. Thankfully, it was enough to capture the deep expression on her face in the beautiful light.
I took this one somewhere in the Tenderloin at the offices of the San Francisco Drug Users Union. They’re a pretty radical group whose goals are to decriminalize drugs and drug use; to create a safe environment where people can use & enjoy drugs as well as receive services. I guess that’s not that radical for San Francisco. Anyway, I don’t remember too much of the moment when I took this shot but looking at my drive, everything is still in numerical order so I didn’t delete anything. All I took was two shots – one of the sign and gate just to get my frame right, and then one of the Rasta dude. That means I didn’t have to wait long for the street gods to strike again. I mean, dreads, a rasta hat, the face, and him clutching his hands like that by his stomach. I guess it’s safe to say that he’s on something?
Again, on this one, it was a matter of me finding an interesting background and waiting for the scene to develop. This one particularly caught my eye because of the bridge and how representative that is for San Francisco. On this instance, I actually took several takes and again like the mime shot, patience paid off. I had two solid ones already but the positioning on the characters were just a tad off. On tight shots like this and with Hipstas slow speed, you only get one chance so timing is really important.
by David Norbut | Dec 17, 2012 | Stories
“The act of doing art is a wonderful freedom – to choose a path that no one can interfere with is a glorious and painful journey!” – Stan Smokler
I graduated from Delaware College of Art and Design in 2003. Although I majored in Photography, my first year was filled with a variety of different courses and mediums. I was immersed in charcoal, paint, hours of model studies and still lifes, emulating famous artists, more hours of slide shows, countless nights memorizing the dates and names of some of the great masterpieces of our time and on and on and on…
During those years I was constantly creating. Constantly inspired and learning new things everyday. Then when I finished school: nothing. It all stopped. I played guitar in a band and got wasted… for years.
Fast forward to today; I’m married, I’ve cleaned up my act and over the last several years I’ve gotten myself back to the point of constantly taking photographs, of creating and remembering. Remembering the artists and teachers that inspired me and pushed me and molded my work to what you see today.
Several months ago I was invited to speak to a class at the University of Delaware about mobile photography and display some of my current and past work. During the opening as I talked with guests, I was surprised and humbly pleased to see a familiar face from my art school days, Stan Smokler. Stan is an accomplished sculptor hailing from the Bronx, NY. He lives and breathes art. He welds and forms found objects from past lives into smart, flowing, vibrant new life. He’s a master of form and design, yet his work is still obviously from the heart and the gut. Stan was my teacher for one short period of 3D Design. In the short time spent in his class, I learned about art from a man who was living it. Stories, advice and his “realness” intrigued me and stuck with me over the years.
So on this night, here we are, face to face again. I’m greeted with a hug and a mutual excitement. As we stand in a room of my photographs, his compliments and positivity were more than I could have ever asked for. It was a sweet reunion, leaving me feeling that I was on the right track. Stan invited me to his studio, so we set a date to further catch up and for me to take his portrait.
It’s a Sunday morning and I’m driving through a thick fog into the outskirts of civilization. As I come down the last stretch of road, I can see an old barn and silo standing alone in the fog and I know I have arrived. The studio is a sprawling property of old farm structures along a rolling creek, an ideal setting for the large-scale sculptures he builds and welds.
Stan greets me and gives me the grand tour. Scattered across the grounds are old tractor parts, farm equipment, even old cables from the Brooklyn Bridge, all neatly stacked and organized in their respected waiting areas, waiting to be given new life. It is an awe inspiring place and I didn’t want to leave.
We talked a lot about art. About creativity, being honest with yourself and the world around you and creating from within. About really thinking about what you are doing and whether the art speaks to you, the artist.
Even in taking his portraits we looked through a book of famous artist portraits together, to get motivation, to create. As I started shooting we were commenting on capturing the smoke from his cigar and how beautiful it looked. He told me about an artist friend of his, Frank Stella, who photographed smoke rings to use the photos as an inspiration to build new sculptures.
Every moment was creative and inspiring and this morning really stuck with me and made me think.
It’s so easy to get lost in the modern era of facebook and instagram, of likes and comments and self promotion and worrying what others think. I really had to take a look at what I was doing. As I thought of my beginnings as an artist, I had to go back to that creative state. I had to remember why I do what I do. I have a need to create and it transcends all social media.
Ironically, I will share this blog on all the social media outlets… but may I never forget why I am an artist.
So whether we are covered in paint and linseed oil, developer, fixer, metal shavings, wood chips or mastering the Hipstamatic app on our iPhones, we must remember why and ask ourselves does the art we make speak to us as artists. If you answer yes then nothing else really matters.
I wanted to provide a list of non-photographer artists that are some of my favorites and some music selections that are my major inspirations as of late.
I hope that it may speak to you and help you create art.
Egon Scheile
Odd Nerdrum
Salvador Dali
Jean-Michel Basquiat
Frida Khalo
Ralph Steadman
Tom Waits – all recordings
Three Mile Pilot – Another Desert, Another Sea
The Rachel’s -The Sea and The Bells and Handwriting
Visit Stan Smokler’s Site!
by David Norbut | Nov 19, 2012 | Featured Articles
In the Land of Montezuma by David Norbut
As a photographer, I am constantly attempting to balance the inner struggle between shooting with my iPhone camera (often times the Hipstamatic app) and my DSLR, a full frame Nikon D700 with my go to 50mm lens.
A couple of weeks ago, I traveled west to Arizona. This was to be a 9 day vacation with my wife and her folks. This would prove to give a full understanding, right now at least, of where I stand on using my iPhone or my big camera in my personal work and travels. I set out knowing already the direction I was attempting to go in. I knew I wanted to shoot Hipstamatic, but I am also aware of its limitations. The greatest and sometimes worst aspect of Hipstamatic is its unpredictability. However, if you use it enough you can start to harness your outcome and take some stunning photos. Another thing I wanted to try to capture was a series shot simultaneously in both color and black and white, something I haven’t done before. I had some experiments ahead, as my color experience with Hipstamatic is quite limited. I have only shot with one or two color combos over the last year and a half. Lastly, I was armed with my Nikon, knowing I would use it simultaneously but reserve most of its use for the best subjects, scenes and situations.
Over the next week or so, I would be carefully monitoring my shooting in an attempt to understand why I do what I do. Because, as a classically educated photography graduate, I have some inner struggles on abandoning my humble beginnings. I am trying to balance this modern era of mobile photography with my origins in traditional photography. While I feel that the legitimacy of shooting photography from our phones is being questioned less and less, there are still some improvements to be made. Therefore, the more we pay attention to what works and when, the better equipped we can be with whatever camera we are carrying.
We arrive at the airport in Phoenix with friends and a rental van waiting, and I’m thrilled to be back in a place so close to my heart. Within 20 minutes we are on the road to Sedona. For those of you who haven’t been there, it’s a town nestled in an otherworldly landscape of giant, red sandstone formations in the northern Verde Valley region of Arizona, US.
This would be my fourth visit. My first trip here years ago, was a beautiful experience. I had never seen the West. On this first trip I proposed to my wife right in the heart of Sedona. Surrounded by family and friends, we celebrated in this wonderful place, and it set the tempo for the rest of our trip and all of our future trips. For me Arizona is full of wonder, the great wide open, relics of the past scattered along a ruggedly stunning landscape. Being from the East coast, everything out West is new, different and wild. This place brings out the intense wanderlust thriving inside me.
After dealing with airports and traveling for most of the day, I’m distracted by the beauty of this place, recalling memories, ready for a meal and thirsty for a beer… not necessarily thinking about what combos I wanted to try out on my Hipstamatic.
Several days of experimenting later, and I’ve yet to find a color combination. The black and white side of the series isn’t a problem; I’m very comfortable shooting the Hipstamatic combo of JohnS and Blackkeys Supergrain, a very heavy contrast combo. If used correctly, I feel it works wonders in portraits and street scenes. It’s the color side of things where I was at a complete stand still.
I had been working with several combinations in Hipstamatic and even tried shooting with Procamera and adding vintage filters in Snapseed to try and capture the colors and moods I was engulfed in. While continually getting mixed results, it hit me. On the third morning, after already visiting Jerome and Sedona, I woke up at our main base in Marana, a small desert town located slightly west of Tucson. I’m up at the crack of dawn, wandering out at sunrise. The sky in Arizona has its own shade of blue, especially in the morning. This particular morning, I was reminded of a photo I’d seen.
Fellow Juxter and incredibly talented mobile photographer (and expert on all things Hipstamatic… see @punkrawkpurl and @hipstaroll), Tammy George posted a photo of a barbwire fence with some fabric stuck in it, under a warm blue sky. I remembered that image and wanted the look of that sky and the way the sunlight had been captured just right. But all I could remember was the the Hipstamatic film she used. I opened Hipstamatic went for the Cano Cafenol film and paired it with the Tejas lens, snapped a shot of an agave in the morning sun, and boom! It was exactly what I wanted, sans the black grungy frame that comes with that film, but I could always crop that out later. I thought to myself with excitement, “I’ve finally found my colors out here!”
I was now set. I would take the portraits and street scenes in black and white, and shoot the details and more organic desert scenery in my new found color combo. And hope that they would look good together as a cohesive Southwestern Series.
One thing about being in this vast expanse of desert country is that there are a lot less portrait opportunities walking around. But the folks I did come across were truly one of a kind individuals. My approach and skill had to be on point. When I did come across a character, one I wanted a willing portrait of, I was friendly and I told them the truth about myself. I explained my love for this place and that I’m working on a series to try and capture the true essence, the land and its people. As the subject becomes comfortable, I shoot nonchalantly during our conversation to try and catch the natural moments and avoid my portraits turning out like mugshots. I shoot twice, usually 2 frames per camera.
This is where the inner struggle I mentioned comes in to play. It’s not a matter of what I prefer to shoot with. The iPhone, to me, is just another tool of the trade. The struggle comes when trying to decide to use one over the other. If it’s the right situation I can just shoot with both, but that’s not always the case. Some interesting examples proved certain things already on my mind.
Anyone who takes photos both on Hipstamatic and on a manual set DSLR knows that the Hipsta app is automatic, it’s focus is set and there’s no aperture or shutter speed to mess with. In spur of the moment situations, you open the app and instantly take the photo. There’s no time wasted setting the camera for the photo, and once you learn your lens/film combos, you have a basic idea of what you’re going to get.
Using a manual setting on a big camera, especially when your on the move, it’s a constant game of adjusting aperture, shutter speed and focus to attain the best image. And while I do enjoy that part of it and it has become second nature, it has on occasion tripped me up… and that can blow an opportunity.
The next stop on the trip was Bisbee, an old copper mining town only a few miles from the Mexican Border on the eastern side of Arizona. This place is built into the side of a mountain, and it has an interesting and haunted history. In the first bar we sat down at we are already hearing tales of murder and all other sorts of local drama. The bartender told us about a coworker who had just died the day before, and then went on to tell us of the deaths of several previous boyfriends, some of them murdered and some accidental. Never the less, we got the feeling there is a lot of death in this town. The spooky vibe was already upon us in a real current kind of way.
We spent the night in an old trailer park full of old, renovated Airstreams and other similar models over half a century old. Tons of cool history here and a lot of subject matter for my color side of the series.
The next morning we got breakfast right up the road from where we were staying. The road we parked on was straight from another era, with old cars and trucks lining the street. There was even an old Greyhound bus, that now read “Strayhound.” Old signs and boarded up buildings, the textures and colors were like a dream. With the exception of a motorcycle garage, a gym and our breakfast stop, everything looked abandoned. This place was a complete mystery to me. If I had to guess, I would say all these relics parked up and down the road probably belonged to the same folks that owned the motorcycle garage, Arizona Thunder. I spent a good 20 minutes documenting everything I possibly could before getting back on the road. I could have spent the day here. I came across another example of Hipstamatic vs. Nikon here. I took two identical shots and I felt that in this situation the look that the Hipstamatic app lent to the image triumphed over the DSLR version. What I started to realize is that Hipstamatic is my ideal, film-like post processing, without having to post process… for shooting and sharing on the fly. My only fear is that my work may decline if I’m always in this fast paced shooting and sharing mode. With this realization, I decide I just need to pay attention and perhaps slow down a bit so that I can focus on the quality of the photo regardless of the device I’m shooting with.
A new day, another new desert town. I walked through the historic town of Tombstone, AZ, surrounded by locals and tourists alike who were donning cowboy hats and other traditional western garb. All down both sides of the street there were boardwalks with awnings overhead creating areas of shade and heavy sun… and shooting with the Hipstamatic combo of JohnS lens and Blackkeys Supergrain film you have very heavy contrast to begin with.
It’s all in the light. If you are taking a portrait with this app, using this combo, it is imperative that you pay attention to where the light falls.
Evenly lit shade is ideal. When in direct sun, the face or the subject you want to be the focus of the image must be in the light, otherwise you risk dark portraits that cannot be brightened in post processing. The large amount of subjects in cowboy hats made this quite interesting to say the least. The hats made strong shadows on the eyes and it was easy to blow the shot. Most of my successful portraits in this series and all of my Hipstamtic work were taken in evenly lit environments.
Choosing where you shoot your image is one way, I have learned, to control your outcome in using this beautiful combination of JohnS and Blackkeys Supergrain. After spending a few hours here I felt comfortable that I had a decent group of portraits, and I finally started to feel this series was coming to an end. Now we’d head back to Marana and relax for the last few days of our trip… visit some brewpubs, ride a gator through the cotton fields at night, watch the horses on the neighboring farm, enjoy the quiet, still of the desert, and fill up on as much Mexican food as possible… until we return.
All in all, I had several experiences where one camera worked better than the other. What it comes down to is preference of your final image and the sharing capabilities. In some cases I prefer the DSLR and sometimes the magic of Hipstamatic overcomes. On one hand, it’s all photography. On the other, because of accessibility, my iPhone photography has reached a much, much broader audience.
My Trucker Series started with DSLR, but I started shooting it in Hipsta and posting it on IG and that basically launched everything. It got me interviewed at Juxt, which led to me becoming a contributing member, which has led to more exposure and more gallery openings and so on and so forth.
Mobile Photography has reignited my love for street photography and helped me form creative alliances and friendships with other artists, from New York City to Instanbul to my own backyard. In the end, why do I still feel that I must keep the two separate, even though I’m starting to understand how to blend both tools in my photographic endeavors? I’m not sure I have an answer yet. I guess time will tell.
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