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  • Through The Lockdown Glass

    As a portrait photographer, my business has pretty much stalled. As has my social life. 

    Being locked down due to COVID-19 is taking a toll on all of us in pretty much every way imaginable. I miss work. I miss my friends. I miss being alone because I choose to be alone. I miss being stuck in my house with my family because I choose to be stuck in my house with my family. I think I even miss traffic. 

    This whole crazy situation has really made me appreciate how important routine casual interactions are. On the flip side, I’ve also realized how foreign isolation feels — especially from those you’re used to seeing often.

    I love random encounters with random people. It doesn’t matter whether it’s a simple smile from a passerby or sympathizing with the dude behind me at the grocery store who’s pissed off because someone’s slow at self checkout. Being around people keeps me going. It fuels me. And now, it seems even making eye contact is off limits. 

    So, back to my friends. What were they all doing? How were they all handling this order to shelter in place? We had some group Zoom “happy hours,” which was honestly something I really looked forward to, but I wanted to see them in person. 

    I decided I would visit them while engaging in proper social distancing. I started driving by their houses and texted them to come to their windows or doors when I showed up. Some got fair warning, others not so much.

    When they appeared, I popped out of my car door (or sunroof) and snapped a few shots. 

    There wasn’t much conversation but just seeing familiar faces in person and shooting their portraits seems enough to keep me sane for just a little bit longer.

    Check out this project in the media

    https://www.huffpost.com/entry/photo-project-coronavirus_n_5e9f3800c5b63c5b587592a1

    https://www.diyphotography.net/photographer-creates-goofy-and-emotional-portraits-of-his-friends-in-quarantine/

  • Portraits of Anna

    Anna, a brilliant mathematician and alluring model came in for some portraits earlier this month. We shot in three locations within my studio’s building, a balcony, stairwell and hallway. I kept it simple with a single light/ beauty dish supported on a large rolling boom stand.

  • Sculpting Biceps and Light

    The time, dedication and discipline it must take to transform yourself into this bulging mass of muscles is nothing short of impressive. I like noodles and cake way too much to ever stand a chance at achieving such a goal. Fitness shoots are fun though because you really get to play with light and shadow in an incredibly interesting way. William here is a champion when it come to sculpting biceps but I train and sculpt light. 

  • Ecuador | 10 Places | 20 People

    With such a beautifully diverse landscape, wandering through this small South America country was an incredibly unique and demanding experience. Ecuador may only be the size of Colorado but what it lacks in size it certainly makes up for in character. 

    Traveling 14 miles from Quito, the worlds second highest capital in terms of elevation to a nearby hot springs “resort” nestled deep in the woods took hours. And once there, traversing the hilly terrain at an altitude of 12,000+ feet was no easy task. But soaking in volcanic runoff, eating trout caught moments before being prepared and sleeping next to a humming waterfall eased all hardships faced. Heading down the mountain to the coast provided a challenge that could break any seasoned adventurer. Just imagine spending 10 hours overnight on a crowded bus where only women were allowed to use the bathroom and that’s only after they convinced the driver that no solid waste would be expelled. On top of that, every so often disco lights and blaring music would fill the cabin as well as the noise of a restless passenger who would yell “Pelicula. Pelicula” whenever he woke from a nap. This is how some prison camps are portrayed in your favorite Hollywood blockbusters.

    When the bus finally reached sea-level, we hopped off into the pre-dawn darkness that is 5 a.m. It was pouring, and after some sleepy negotiation we jumped into electric tricycles that could barely handle the muddy streets of Puerto Lopez. We eventually made it to the apartment we were staying in with the gracious help of our Italian ex-pat host Giuseppe. It took him only moments after arriving to offer to sell the place to us for $150,000. Oh did I mention, that in addition to the four adults (including myself) traveling, we were also carting along a 2 year old and nine month old?

    This is just a glimpse into the two weeks I spent in Ecuador this past winter with my wife, daughter, our two friends, and their son. Please check back soon for a full trip report.

  • Interview with Portrait Professional

    Check out my interview with Portrait Professional.  And check out the Japanese version of the email they sent out.
    Part 1
    Part 2

    Just as we’ve found that there are many routes into a career in photography, and it’s not necessary to formally study photography; there are many people who do decide to take a photography degree, and there are many careers open to those who wish to make photography their career. Philadelphia based photographer Jared Gruenwald is one of those who chose to specialize in photography.
    He told us how he landed some aspirational jobs shooting professional tennis, and what it’s like to be a working photographer in the fifth largest city in the US.
    With the City of Brotherly Love as a beautiful, and vibrant backdrop, Jared finds the time to explore it and shoot some wonderful street photography too.
    Jared has been a long term user of PortraitPro, and we love his work, so we were very happy that he agreed to tell us his story so far.
    dancer

    Christina Gesualdi

    PortraitPro: Did you study photography at university?
    Jared Gruenwald: I did. I have a degree in journalism with a specific concentration in photography for the mass media from Temple University in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
    PortraitPro: How did you get started in the world of editorial and documentary photography?
    Jared Gruenwald: My high school had a wonderful photography department complete with an arsenal of Pentax K1000’s, an unlimited film and paper supply, and access to a darkroom whenever I had free time. This freedom allowed me to fully invest all my creative efforts into my photographic endeavors. I started shooting anyone and everyone as well as everything around me and began to develop a style that lent well to documentary work. I enrolled at Temple University with the initial intention of studying biology, zoology, or some other ology but realized pretty early on it wasn’t for me. This may have had something to do with discovering Temple’s darkroom and photojournalism major. Without a whole lot of hesitation I switched over and haven’t looked back.
    Of course as I was completing my major degree requirements the newspaper world was disintegrating and everyone around me was telling me to bail, as I wouldn’t have a future in the industry. But as luck would have it I landed a full time staff position shooting for a paper in Philly a few months after graduating. That just goes to show, follow your heart, passions, dreams and goals and blow off those who try to squash all that.
    PortraitPro: What is the most interesting thing you can tell us about your work?
    Jared Gruenwald: No one else can do exactly what I do. Just as I can’t do exactly what anyone else does. That’s what I love and find most interesting about any creative field; Varied interpretations.
    PortraitPro: What inspires you to do what you do?
    Jared Gruenwald: Oh, the standard cliché that my surroundings inspire me. But that’s as honest an answer as I can give. I live in the same world as everyone else but I also live in my own little world and I feel my inspiration comes from the melding of the two and the photos I create represent that. I don’t really know what others see when they look upon the same scene as me just as they don’t know what I see. I want to show them what I see then we can discuss, compare and contrast. That conversation is what inspires me.
    PortraitPro: You seem to have a variety of photography related jobs. Are these concurrent? Could you tell us about the demands of working for multiple outlets concurrently? Does it get hard to balance deadlines for a variety of employers?
    Jared Gruenwald: I’ve never really been one to limit what I do creatively. I like to keep challenging myself. If I only shoot tennis I’ll be the best at shooting tennis but when it comes to portraiture or street work I may be inadequate. Obviously one could argue “well why not master one field instead of simply being competent in many?” Well I’ve met dozens of veteran photographers who did just that and after decades working in only one field often express regret.
    It can be demanding working numerous concurrent jobs, but you simply keep to a schedule and mark everything down on a calendar and it all works out. It can be quite stressful though when you have a day that begins at 7 and ends at 7 and you have four or five different jobs within that span.
    Working for a newspaper early on in my career really prepared me for this though as there would be days when I’d have 5 assignments and there was no excuse for missing any of them. I’m lucky enough to have a fairly flexible schedule so it’s not terribly difficult to make it all work. I also take on a variety of non-photo related jobs like teaching terrarium classes because sometimes it helps to take a step back and try something completely different.
    Serena Williams

    Serena Williams – US Open 2011 Women’s singles Final

    PortraitPro: How did you get in to the pro tennis circuit?
    Jared Gruenwald: I was living in Brooklyn at the time. It was late August 2009 and the city was sweltering. I was dead broke, couldn’t find much work as the recession was in full swing and as everyone knows you can’t throw a rock in any direction without hitting a pro photographer in NYC. The whole small fish BIG pond thing was a serious reality.
    I was at the end of a long day scouring the Internet for jobs. Photo jobs, cleaning jobs, cooking jobs, any job… and I see an ad on craigslist asking for a photographer with sports experience that owns pro equipment and speaks French. Well I met two of the three requirements (which do you feel I fell short on?) and decided to respond. I wrote a pretty lengthy cover letter, included my resume and a link to my website.
    Jo-Wilfried Tsonga

    Jo-Wilfried Tsonga in action at the 2012 Wimbledon Tennis Tournament

    Not too long after I received a phone call from a stranger inquiring about a craigslist ad I responded to. The voice on the other end asked me a variety of questions about my background shooting sports and after a while I interrupted and asked “Wait, is this a job to photograph the US Open?” (the tennis one not golf. I actually worked as a gopher for the Star Ledger [a New Jersey] newspaper, sports photo team during the Golf US Open a few years prior).
    The voice on the other end confirmed my assumptions and after chatting a bit more I was hired. After our three weeks together shooting the 2009 US Open Tennis Tournament came to an end, the man who hired me nonchalantly asked: “So do you have a passport?” and thus I ended up as a mainstay on the pro tennis tour for the next three years. And what an amazing three years it was.
    Maria Sharapova

    Maria Sharapova – French Open (Roland Garros) – Women’s singles final 2012

    Read more here soon, but meanwhile check out Jared’s Website and Facebook page, and why not try out PortraitPro yourself.
     

    Interview with a Pro –Jared Gruenwald– Part 2

    Here’s the second half of our interview with Philadelphia based photographer Jared Gruenwald.
    Living and working in the often photographed, historical city of Philadelphia provides Jared with some great opportunities for work, and he agreed to share some more of his story with us this week.
    kelly drive floodPortraitPro: Philadelphia is a beautiful and vibrant city in which to live; does the city inspire your street art work?
    Jared Gruenwald: Philadelphia is such an incredibly underrated, forgotten yet vibrant city, full of so much life that it can inspire anyone. I love living here. I truly feel it’s a city where you can make your dreams a reality. It sounds corny and clichéd but I’m doing it right now and so are handfuls of other creative, ambitious people I meet everyday.
    One aspect that I feel really lends itself to street photography is the landscape and geography. Philadelphia’s smaller physical stature creates neighborhoods and communities that are insular yet remain close to the cutting edge. Witnessing this disparity is kind of mind blowing and beautiful and makes it hard to put the camera down.
    PortraitPro: Is Philadelphia a good location to be based in which to get new work?
    Jared Gruenwald: Well this is complicated. While New York is a city full of small fish in a big pond, Philadelphia is full of big fish in a small pond. There are so many talented photographers here but not as many jobs. You have to be willing to travel. Mobility I think is key here. The other side of it though is cost of living expenses are much cheaper here than New York, which is only 90 miles away so you can work in NYC and commute which can prove to be quite fruitful.
    lynchburg garagePortraitPro: Do you consider yourself to be successful? If so what do you think is the reason for your success?
    Jared Gruenwald: Sure. I’m not rolling in money nor am I a household name but I’m still carving out my niche and continue to develop and improve as a photographer. To me this defines success. As long as I’m not stagnant and continue to grow creatively then I feel successful.
    PortraitPro: How do you market yourself? What strategies work best for you in obtaining paid work?
    Jared Gruenwald: The Internet is an unforgiving void. Obviously I maintain a current website and blog and I use digital marketing tools but I honestly feel I get most of my paid work through first person encounters. It’s much easier to write a potential client or employee off when you don’t actually have the opportunity to meet them in person. A valuable tool I find is setting up personal meetings. Nothing beats being able to shake someone’s hand, look into someone’s eyes, hear someone’s voice, feel their passion. You don’t get that digitally.
    PortraitPro: How much of your time is spent in photo editing?
    Jared Gruenwald: It depends upon my subject matter. I probably spend most of my time editing portraits. When I’m producing a portrait I’m trying to control every aspect of the shot and take more a creative license with the editing process. I’ll often edit more than one version of each photo, which can be very time consuming. When I’m working on a documentary project my editing becomes much less technical.
    PortraitPro: How useful do you find PortraitPro in your work?
    Jared Gruenwald: With my background in documentary/sports/street work I never put too much stock in all the crazy Photoshop skills some photographers incorporate into their work. It’s incredible but not really my style. I generally stick with the standard ethical journalistic editing methods when it comes to Photoshop which dictate not using any tools you wouldn’t find standing in front of an enlarger in a darkroom. That being said, some commercial portrait photography jobs I get require a bit more. PortraitProfessional has proven to be an invaluable tool in helping me realize the perfect final image. It’s such a great tool and is an incredibly helpful addition to any portrait photographer’s workflow.
    PortraitPro: How do you balance doing work that pays with doing work that inspires and excites you?
    Jared Gruenwald: Well as long as it’s photography and I’m not serving up fast food, I’m inspired and excited. Just because the work may not be as large scale as Wimbledon or as interesting as people living off the grid in a small tent city down by a river that doesn’t mean the clients expectations are any lesser. I treat every job, whether it’s self-assigned or I was hired the same. I’m just happy and thankful that I get to do what I love.
    PortraitPro: Where can we see more of your work?
    Jared Gruenwald: You can see more of my work on my website and on my blog I was recently also in a gallery show in Philadelphia. The Gallery is called Destination Frankford.
    Check out Jared’s Facebook, and LinkedIn profiles, or follow him on Instagram.
    Follow PortraitPro here: FacebookTwitterPinterestGoogle+.
     
     

    素晴らしい作品を撮るグルエンワルド氏は長年のPortraitPro ユーザーです

        ホーム 機能 エディション レビュー ギャラリー
    2012年ウィンブルドンテニス大会でのジョー=ウィルフリード・ツォンガ – 写真 ジェアード・グルエンワルド

    今すぐ体験                           今すぐ購入 

    ジェアード・グルエンワルド氏は人物、場所、スポーツを専門とする編集・ドキュメンタリーカメラマンです。2009年にUSオープンテニス大会での写真を撮る仕事を依頼されて依頼、グルエンワルド氏はプロテニスの写真を撮り続けています。
    グルエンワルド氏は長年のPortraitPro ユーザーですので、今回のインタビューを引き受けて頂いたことにとても感謝しています。 
    Portrait Pro: 編集・ドキュメンタリー写真を始めたきっかけは何ですか?
    グルエンワルド氏: 私の通った高校では写真学科があり、Pentax K1000やフィルム、紙、暗室などすべて自由に使えるという素晴らしい特典がありました。
    そのおかげで自分の写真に対する意欲と創造性を養うことができました。
    その後テンプル大学に進み、生物学、動物学などを専攻しようと思いましたが、早い時点でそれは自分のやりたいことではないと気づきました。
    同じ大学で写真学科があり暗室があるということを知ったことがきっかけでした。それから迷うことなく写真を専攻し、後悔することはありませんでした。
     泥のバイク  – 写真 ジェアード・グルエンワルド
    PPro: プロテニスの写真を撮り始めたきっかけを教えてください。
    グルエンワルド氏: 2009年の8月のことですが、自分はニューヨークのブルックリンに住んでおり、カメラマンのたんと存在するニューヨークでの仕事探しに苦労をしていました。 
    仕事をネット検索し続けた一日の終わりに、フランス語を話せてスポーツの撮影経験があり、自分の機材を持っているプロカメラマンを募集している広告が目にとまりました。 募集要項のうち2つは当てはまっていたので応募をしてみることにしました。その後知らない人から電話でスポーツ写真撮影に関することなど色々と質問をされ、「もしかしてこの仕事はUSオープンテニスの撮影ですか?」と聞いてしまいました。するとまさにその仕事で、電話でそれから少し喋っただけで仕事を依頼されてしまいました。
    USオープンテニスの撮影で3週間一緒に仕事をした相手はそのうちに、私がパスポートを持っているかと聞いてきました。それからの3年はプロテニス大会での写真撮影をするため世界中を回って仕事をしました。とても素晴らしい3年間でした。
    マリア・シャラポワ – フレンチオープン(ローランドガロ) – 2012年女子シングルス決勝 – 写真 ジェアード・グルエンワルド
    PPro: フィラデルフィアは美しく活気のある場所ですが、街での写真撮影にもインスピレーションを受けますか?
    グルエンワルド氏: フィラデルフィアはあまり評判はありませんがとても活気のある所です。 フィラデルフィアが大好きです。
    風景と地理が街での写真をさらに良いものにします。フィラデルフィアの小さな規模のコミュニティは最先端にいつも近づいています。フィラデルフィアのこういった風景を見るとついシャッターを押してしまいます。
    Lynchburg Garage – 写真 ジェアード・グルエンワルド
    PPro: 写真編集にはどれくらいの時間を費やしますか?
    グルエンワルド氏: 撮った被写体によって違いますが、多分たくさんの時間をポートレート写真編集に費やしています。ポートレート写真を作成しているときは、すべての部分にコントロールをして写真編集を創造的に仕上げます。写真はなるだけたくさん同じ写真を撮るようにします。ドキュメンタリーの仕事のときは技術的なことは出てきません。 
     シングルスのポートレート – 写真 ジェアード・グルエンワルド
    PPro: ご自分の仕事でどうPortraitProをお使いですか? 
    グルエンワルド氏: ドキュメンタリー・スポーツ・街の風景の経験から、カメラマンの良く使うPhotoshopでの効果の使いすぎなどには気をつけています。暗室で登場しないツールが出てくるような」Photoshopを使わず、通常のジャーナリズム的な編集方法を選びます。ですが、広告などの写真ではもっと念入りな編集が必要とされます。 
    PortraitProは自分にとって完璧な写真とは何かを教えてくれた、価値のあるツールです。ポートレート写真を撮るカメラマンの作業にはかかせない機能のついたすばらしいツールだと言えます。
    PPro: ご自分は成功したカメラマンだと思いますか?
    グルエンワルド氏: 自分は地位名声には興味はありませんが、カメラマンとして常に腕を磨いて才能を伸ばしていこうと思っています。これが本当の成功だと言えるでしょう。常に前に進みさらに創造に努力をしていくことで自分が成功していると感じることができます。 
    グルエンワルド氏のさらなる作品は、グルエンワルド氏のホームページまたはFacebookよりご覧頂けます。
    PortraitProのすべてのソフトに利用可能の割引クーポ HN0931 で15%オフでの購入ができることもお忘れなく。
    PortraitProのホームページより今月中にソフトをご購入されると500米ドルが抽選で当たる2月の賞金懸賞に自動参加となります。
    今すぐ体験                           今すぐ購入 
    PortraitProよりのお知らせでした
    このEメールアドレスは自動配信用ですので返信はできません。もしもPortraitProに関してのご質問がある場合は、 support@portraitpro.jp までEメールにてお問い合わせください。

     

  • PASNAP Billboards

    Yesterday I photographed four nurses currently employed at Crozer-Chester Medical Center for the Pennsylvania Association of Staff Nurses and Allied Professionals (PASNAP).  The photos are being featured on a billboard ad running along I-95 in Chester, Pennsylvania which  will advertise the dispute they’re having with hospital management over pension payments.
    Obviously I had to take a drive down to exit 6 to see the billboards when the ad was up and running. Not so much fun pulled over on the exit ramp at night with cars whizzing by at 75 mph but worth the trip for these killer shots.  Below that check out the mock-ups.

    pasnap_billboard_2 pasnap_billboard_1

    pasnap_billboard_5 pasnap_billboard_3 P