Graham Binns | Photographer | +44 (0)7725 525916

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April 6, 2011 by graham

Vision would be nice, part 2

This will make a whole lot more sense if you’ve already read part 1.

On Saturday morning Tony and I met outside X2Studios, waiting to be let in and begin another day of shooting, this time in controlled conditions. There were, of course, a few things to throw us off our stride right from the off. First there was a mix-up about the time we were supposed to be starting. We thought we’d booked for nine o’clock, but Tim, the studio owner, thought we were starting at eleven. Luckily Tim was perfectly happy to come round earlier than he’d expected and let us in. Next, we needed to set up the studio itself, since we’d had to be moved to X2′s newer studio after an accidental mixup with bookings. The new studio space is great – it’s an ex-office / work room as far as I can tell, and there’s tonnes of space in it – but we needed to set up a background and carry lights across from one studio to the other before we started. By the time we’d set up our first model for the day, Grace Harvey, was more than ready to go. Our second model had, sadly, cancelled altogether, so we decided to shoot for half a day instead of a full day and then spend the afternoon post-processing.

Once again, I found myself drawing a blank for inspiration. Grace is fairly new to modelling and it was only ten o’clock in the morning, so I didn’t want to push either her or me too hard too fast. Where to start? Start with what you know. I threw up a 28″ Apollo softbox (which, incidentally, doesn’t fit anything larger than a GM 400 particularly well) and got a few nice simple portraits.

Model: Grace Harvey

Whilst Tony shot with Grace for a while I wracked my brain for something interesting. Amongst the modifiers we’d brought over from Studio 1 was a Bowens Sunfire reflector, which is basically a big white beauty dish with an optional extra reflector and diffuser that sits on the outside of it. It gives a soft-ish light that still has a fairly hard fall-off. I had Grace sit down (though her dress didn’t make life particularly easy) and got some nice frames of that, too.

Model: Grace Harvey

Tony shot again and once again I went back to banging an umbrella reflector against my forehead in the hope something would be knocked loose and cause a neuron to fire in a creative way. I realised that I hated the seamless backdrop that we were using – a sort of parcel-wrap brown affair – and that that wasn’t helping me any. Channelling my inner Zack Arias, I set up a couple of lights to blow it to white. Combined with an outfit change, things started to click a little more for me.

Model: Grace Harvey

After a couple of frames on white I found that could even make the backdrop work in its normal brown colour, this time by switching my white balance to tungsten and using a full-cut CTO gel on an SB-900 to light Grace, all of which leant slightly more interesting tones to the shadows.

Model: Grace Harvey

Due to the earlier studio booking mix-up we had to move back to X2′s Studio 1 at 1pm-ish, which gave us only an hour to shoot a couple of looks. Tony shot with Grace first in our new studio, flying a gridded softbox over her head and getting some frames of which I’m genuinely jealous (there are quite a few of those in his take-home from the weekend, in fact). I’d spotted a simply massive beauty dish with a grid on it and tried to work out how to use it. At first I thought to just swap it out for the softbox that Tony had boomed out over the front of the set, but the boom was sagging horribly under the added weight, so I had to think again.

Start with what you know, right? I put the light off at camera right, simply setting it down at arm’s length from my shooting position, putting it about 30˚ off centre. Even with the grid, it was big enough to give Grace’s face a broad light. After trying a few shots with some motion in them, I realised that the one thing I really wanted to capture before we wrapped was Grace’s ability to appear vulnerable and delicate (of which she is neither, so far as I can tell). A few frames stolen whilst Tony was setting up an Orbis ringflash for his last shots of the day, and I got the kind of shot I’d been looking for all morning. One where I connected with my subject through the viewfinder and felt like it was more than just a few pixels on the screen.

Model: Grace Harvey

And so, at 2pm, we wrapped. Happy, more-or-less fulfilled and once again, exhausted. It had been a busy couple of days, and after a sit-down post-processing session with Tony in the Sun Hotel in Lancaster I was ready to crawl into bed and sleep. But I also knew that if I’d had to, I would have been able to get up and shoot again.

What did I really learn in those two days, aside from a few things about how modifiers look and what kind of seamless backgrounds I don’t ever want to own? That I can be a professional about this. As the apparently ever quotable Zack Arias once said:

Someone asked: “What’s the difference between a professional and an amateur?” You can just keep it going. You figure it out. You figure it out on the fly.

That’s what I did. I figured it out on the fly. My well of inspiration was getting low and yet I still managed to produce frames that I genuinely like and enjoy showing to people. Are they my finest work? No. I know I can do better. But the fact that I didn’t walk away when I spent the entire weekend feeling, on and off, like a hack? That’s not nothing.

Posted in Blog, Photography · Tagged flailing, lack of vision, photo shoots, professionalism, tony whitmore, tony whitmore's weekend of fun 2011-03, vision · 2 Replies ·

Archive

April 4, 2011 by graham

Vision would be nice, part 1

This is part 1 of a two-part series. Part 2 will appear online in a couple of days.

It’s been a funny few weeks at Binns Towers; madly busy with barely a moment to breathe, or so it’s seemed to those of us caught in the tide of everything going on. It seems to be slowing down a bit now, and we’re just over a week away from our California road trip (more on that later in the week), but I still feel vaguely breathless, as though I’m running to catch up with my life. And in all the turmoil it seems like my camera hasn’t been out of its bag for nearly a month, and I still haven’t blogged the studio / beauty / find a makeup artist and shout “Go!” shoot that I did in February. More things to add to the to-do list. Hurrah for doing things out of order.

Over the weekend before last, in a flurry of we’ve-been-talking-about-this-for-ages-so-let’s-do-it-before-we-forget-again action, I spent a couple of days shooting with my good friend and fellow Ubuntero Tony Whitmore. We booked four models for two days’ worth of shooting – one on location and one in the studio – and ventured forth with nothing other than two cars full of gear, a desire to do some photography and an intent to come back with some cool images…

… and I flailed around like a beached salmon.

There’s nothing more frustrating, creatively speaking, than having all the right pieces of the puzzle – great model, great light, great locations – and somehow not being able to glue it together in your head. At first, I thought I was just rusty. After all, I’d not picked up my camera for a proper shoot for a few weeks, and as always when I’ve had a bit of a lay-off it felt like I was having to learn ISOs, aperture and shutter speeds all over again.

Brick and Graffiti

With Nikki, our first model for the weekend, we went to the run-down but colourful warehouse district of Lancaster (to call it a district is to give it an overabundance of praise, in fact. It’s not big enough to be a district; it’s more of an area). Normally I’d say it was a photographer’s paradise: lots of graffiti, exposed brick and plaster, rusty old staircases and in the case of the Sugarhouse – an old sugar (clue’s in the name, there) warehouse that’s been converted into a club – some brick walls that have been painted a very fetching shade of blue. Nikki even jumped up on top of some wheelie bins (dumpsters to our American friends), because she apparently has no fear.

And still I got nothing. Every lens I tried, every aperture, every lighting set up felt dead to me. It all seemed bland and ordinary, despite the great location and the energetic and engaging subject. I just wanted to fade into the background, but realising that that wasn’t really an option when we were less than half an hour into our weekend I just kept shooting. We moved on from the bins a little bit and finally something clicked for me. One light, shoot through umbrella, brick wall, pretty model. More than a bit clichéd, but at least it was something.

Model: Nikki Hesford

After some natural light shooting in the little alleyway next to the brick wall we moved on again and tried a corner next to the Sugarhouse where corrugated aluminium walls are covered with graffiti. “How many children,” remarked Nikki as we were setting up a light, “do you think have been conceived here?” Lovely. I was feeling a bit more confident now, so I had no hesitation in asking Tony to hoist up a light in a reflective umbrella and fly it out over Nikki’s head.

Model: Nikki Hesford

(Incidentally, just before sending this and the other images to Nikki, I discovered several inventive but somewhat inaccurate anatomical diagrams on the wall behind her; took a little while to remove them, but such are the perils of shooting against graffiti).

One more location – which didn’t pay off due to the sun being at its zenith – and it was time to bid Nikki adieu and dash for some lunch. Our afternoon was to be spent in Williamson Park, a multi-acre park-cum-woodland site to the East of the town centre, with Cassie Jade being our subject.

Trees and Sunshine

I’d been lucky with the location, in a way, because I’d spent 45 minutes scouting it a few days earlier (in an endless drizzle, I might add; I don’t hesitate to sacrifice my comfort for art) and I knew which bits of it I wanted to hit first. But I still didn’t know exactly what I wanted to capture. That spark of inspiration, that sniff of vision that makes for great images completely eluded me, so whilst Tony shot Cassie in some naturally-lit poses I went and set up a light and an umbrella and hoped that and idea would come to me.

It did, but it wasn’t remotely like what I ended up producing. I wanted to create a feeling of otherworldliness, with Cassie backlit by the little beams of sunlight that sneaked through the branches into the bottom of the little dell we were shooting in, but I couldn’t seem to bring it to fruition (I rather get the suspicion that I could realise the image I had in my head if I spent an hour or so lighting the dell myself instead of using one light and hoping that the sun played ball. I also suspect I’d need some smoke to make the whole thing work properly). Instead, whilst working around my subject and trying different angles, my 50mm f/1.8 did what it always does when facing into the light and flared horribly. In this case, one photographer’s horrible was my beautiful, and I got something with which I was happy.

Model: Cassie Jade

As always in this game, when inspiration’s not with you, you just keep going. Make it work, make it happen. You can’t give up or cry off or walk away because if you do you’re wasting money – yours, the client’s, whosever – and you’re telling the world that you are not a professional, no matter what they may be paying you.

We moved on to some rock formations, where Tony and Cassie did their damnedest to get the right shot despite the massively bright sun and the ugly man-made intrusions (I know that it’s Health and Safety conscious to put up a picket fence and thus protect people from doing stupid things like falling off a ten-foot high rock, but it’s artistically irritating) and I alternated between assisting – in this case using a reflector to turn the sun, which Tony was using to back-light Cassie, into a key light – and mooching around trying to find something in my brain that went with the glorious day and lovely scenery. A log, moss-covered in the middle of some ivy but lit beautifully by the sun’s rays, provided the inspiration. Some discussion about pose and outfit with Cassie and a quick wardrobe change, and I shot like my life depended on it. Every angle I could think of, I tried, and I knew as I shot that I was getting the frames I wanted. There was a certain amount of spray-and-pray, but less so than earlier; all I needed to do was follow the light and the idea and find the right frame.

Model: Cassie Jade

One more location – which was beautiful but which didn’t work out, at least for me, and we were done for the day, annoyingly just as the light was turning golden. Knackered, but reasonably happy, we headed for dinner, and I hoped that I’d manage to pull myself out of the creative mire.

In part 2: Fun and frolics, seamless and empty brains in the studio.

Posted in Blog, Photography · Tagged flailing, lack of vision, photo shoots, professionalism, tony whitmore, tony whitmore's weekend of fun 2011-03, vision · 1 Reply ·

Archive

February 10, 2011 by graham

Amie Dodgson with a camera

(This post originally appeared on my internet brain-dump and visual notebook).

amiebooemp:

Amie Dodgson Photography

Amie Dodgson, who’s an extremely talented photographer, not to mention a phenomenal model*, has a new website for showcasing her photography. Go take a look.

*I came across Amie’s ModelMayhem portfolio when I first joined that site two years or so ago. She was immediately on the list of “models I want to work with.” Unfortunately, she also seemed to end up on the list of “models that the little voice will tell me I’m not worthy of working with”, which is a crying shame. I’m trying to get rid of that list this year.

Posted in Blog · Tagged amie dodgson, from tumblr, reblogged, tumblr · Leave a Reply ·

Archive

January 29, 2011 by graham

0 people like this

Quite terrifyingly (in some ways), I now have a photography-dedicated Facebook page. Why? Well, as I said recently, my personal Facebook page is for people I actually know. This one is for, well, everyone else.

I don’t expect masses of popularity, but feel free to like me if you want to.

Right, ego trip over. On with the weekend.

Posted in Blog · Tagged ego trip, facebook, oh my god what have I done · 2 Replies ·

Archive

January 22, 2011 by graham

Where I am on the Internet – January 2011 edition

Dallas by night, January 2011

Haven’t been around for a while. Again. You might have noticed. I really must make more of an effort to actually finish the blog entries I start rather than just forgetting about them, which I’m wont to do.

Anyway, a quick summary of where you can find me on the web these days, since I don’t have a single unified presence (it’s getting harder and harder to do that, I find).

  • I blog at grahambinns.com/blog – i.e. this one you’re reading now. Semi-regularly updated, must try better on the evidence above.
  • I post random things I’ve found, as well as my own work, on my Tumblr blog, tumblr.grahambinns.com.
  • I occasionally, though less frequently these days, post my work to my Flickr stream.
  • I spout meaningless drivel and artistic angst as @grahambinns on Twitter.

I’m told by people In The Know that I should set up a Facebook page, too, but I haven’t yet got around to that. My personal Facebook profile is reserved (mostly) for people I know in real life.

I’m travelling home from Dallas today, so there won’t be much activity until the jetlag’s passed. After that, though, I’ll do my best to get back to a regular blogging schedule, if I can.

Posted in Blog · Tagged where i am on the internet · Leave a Reply ·

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December 31, 2010 by graham

That was the 2010 that was

Once again our pale blue dot has managed to meander around the sun without crashing or imploding or vanishing in a puff of improbability. All of which traditionally means that we’re supposed to be taking stock, making resolutions and then absorbing a large amount of alcohol, but since we’re having a quiet night in round our way I’ll settle for only doing part of the meme.

2010 was a cool year. I’ve done a lot of things this year that I’ve never done, and I hope that next year I can carry on the trend. To that end, I’ve got some wishes for next year. I’ll not call them resolutions, but they go firmly in the things-I’d-like-to-do category.

So, things I’d like to do in 2011:

  • Shoot video: I’m intrigued by the opportunities presented by the modern crop of Hybrid DSLRs and I’d very much like to get my hands on one and try making a short film of some sort.
  • Shoot art nudes: I’ve not yet shot any nudes. Whilst I’m not ever going to be a glamour photographer (it doesn’t interest me) I’d like to try my hand at artistic nudes, just to see if it’s something that I enjoy doing.
  • Shoot more concept-driven work: Thus far my personal work has been of a slightly hodgepodge, get-it-as-you-can nature; it’s been a case of finding a creative team to work with and then just going and shooting and hoping that what comes out is something cool. Whilst that’s worked out quite well for the most part, I want to start doing more conceptual work, partly because it’s more fun and partly because it will mean I have to push myself that much harder to make it work.
  • Work on some personal projects: I’ve already got a couple of personal photographic projects lined up for 2011, of which I’ll blog more anon. The point is, though, that projects give you an aim for each frame you shoot, rather than just looking to make good image (the “just” in that sentence is ironic).
  • Work with other photographers: Once again, I’ve already got a couple of things in the pipeline here. I want to work with other photographers for fun and profit, whether than means second-shooting for them at weddings or acting as assistant on shoots, I’d like to see how other people do it. I can but learn.

Anyway, that’s about it for me. I’ll leave you with a short slideshow of my favourite shots from 2010. See you on the flipside.

Slideshow – Best of 2010 from Graham Binns on Vimeo.

Posted in Blog · Tagged 2010, everyone's done this so I might as well, meme, summary · 1 Reply ·

Archive

December 20, 2010 by graham

Anno Uno

Photograph copyright © Century Photographic Ltd.; used with permission

You’ll forgive me a massively soppy post, I’m sure. A year ago today (assuming that the WordPress scheduler does its thing) I married my childhood sweetheart and best friend, Sarah.

It’s hard to believe that it’s been a year; it seems to have flashed past, rather like a YouTube clip being fast forwarded: there are bits of it that seem to stand out – two weeks on the Broads, Florence and the Machine in Blackpool, being on stage with Derren Brown, etc. – but most of it is a blur of stuff happening and I barely recall most of it. I must be getting old. But it’s been easily the best year of my life, and that’s mostly down to my wonderful, amazing wife.

Here’s to the next year, then.

Posted in Blog · Tagged family, personal, sarah, wedding anniversary · Leave a Reply ·

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October 25, 2010 by graham

Nuit Blanche

Nuit Blanche from Spy Films on Vimeo.

This is Nuit Blanche by Arev Manoukian. It’s possibly the most arrestingly beautiful short film I’ve seen in a while, and it’s got me thinking once again about making moving as well as still art.

It also allowed me to avoid having to write an actual blog post, because I can just say “look, look at the pretty film!”

There’s a behind-the-scenes video about the making of Nuit Blanche that’s worth watching, too.

Posted in Blog · Leave a Reply ·

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September 24, 2010 by graham

Where Good Ideas Come From

Where Good Ideas Come From by Steven Johnson on YouTube. Worth thinking about.

Posted in Blog · Tagged ideas · Leave a Reply ·

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September 20, 2010 by graham

Holding notice

Thistle through a blue filter

Your regularly scheduled programming is a bit slow in coming to you the past few days, basically because I don’t seem to have stopped doing, well, anything very much, since the middle of last week.

I put out a casting call on ModelMayhem a couple of weeks back and I’m trying to wade my way through all the responses I’ve had. I’m now at the point of having to tell people I’ll get back to them in a few weeks, which is both gratifying and frustrating.

Regularly scheduled content will reappear tomorrow. For now, I need to take my brain off the hook for a bit. In the meantime, please enjoy the slightly abstract picture of a thistle that I took on my daily walk on Friday.

Posted in Blog · Tagged busy, holding pattern · Leave a Reply ·
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Blogroll (people I look up to)

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  • Joe McNally
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  • Zack Arias

Other sites

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About Graham Binns

Graham BinnsI'm a commercial and editorial portrait photographer from North West England.After spending several years building a career as a software engineer I realised that there was an artist inside me struggling to get out.
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