The Purpose Hotel – An Update from Jeremy Cowart

A few weeks ago I shared a very important blog post about a very special project, The Purpose Hotel. In fact, in all my years of being in the photographic industry, I’ve never heard about a more important campaign that has the potential to make so many of us proud to have been involved.

While this technically is Jeremy Cowart’s dream, the reality is we all have an opportunity to participate, both in a direct contribution and in helping to spread the word. It’s an incredible idea and if you haven’t seen the original video, just click on the play button below.

In the mean time Jeremy is only 25% of the way there, but with 2500 contributors so far there’s lots of room for growth. He just needs us all to spread the word and encourage more people to be involved. Click on the banner above to connect to the Kickstarter page and help Jeremy turn this dream into a reality.  If you think about it, this is a global project that truly defines the meaning of “giving back”.

Last week Jeremy shared the update below. Nobody can say it the way he does. Please help spread the word and then on opening day we can all meet in Nashville at the Purpose Hotel and cheer!

So many exciting things brewing around The Purpose Hotel Kickstarter campaign.

Thank YOU, our first backers, for helping us get closer to our goal. But are y’all ready for some honest talk?
$ 2 million is ambitious. We had a HUGE first day and 2nd day. It’s been slow since. Still steady but slower. MANY of you might be saying “they’ll never hit their goal  And honestly, I’ve thought the same thing a few times.

But …. something insane is happening. There is this swelling happening behind the scenes… a *true* movement, a building of believers in this dream. So many media outlets are discovering it. Major influencers are discovering it. The hotel industry is discovering. Word is getting out. And all I can do is humbly ask for you to do is push HARD for the next 40 days. Email, social media, lunch conversations, etc….

Soon I’m going to do a live webinar where I paint the FULL vision of the hotel. Our video only scratches the surface. I want to share so much more with you.

I can’t wait for you to fully understand and see what all we’re trying to do. But we have to fight and work hard for it.
So again, as humbly as I can ask… please don’t give up on us. We need more than one tweet, more than one push. Go as hard as you can. Then one beautiful day in the near future, we’re going to throw the biggest celebration party ever at The Purpose Hotel.

Stay tuned for details about the webinar!

-jeremy

SkipCohenUniversity – SCU Blog

Posted in Photograpy How To | Tagged , , , , , | Leave a comment

Ernest Hemingway Canvas Gallery Wrap 20×25 Photo On

Ernest Hemingway Canvas Gallery Wrap 20×25 Photo On


Ernest Hemingway” is an art print by Alfred Eisenstaedt from The Life Picture Collection. Get photo prints of “Ernest Hemingway” in a variety of frames, styles, and materials. Photographer Bio Alfred Eisenstaedt (1898-1995), or Eisie to those who knew him, received his first camera as a gift from his uncle at 14, a few years after moving to Berlin from Poland with his family. At 17, he was drafted to the German army. His interest in photography blossomed while recovering from a shrapnel wound. He became a regular at museums, studying light and composition. By 31, he was a full-time photographer. In 1933 he was sent to Italy where he shot the first meeting between Hitler and Mussolini. Two years later, when Hitler came to power, Eisie immigrated to America. Soon after arriving in New York, he was hired along with three other photographers-Margaret Bourke-White, Thomas McAvoy and Peter Stackpole-by Time Inc. founder Henry Luce for a secret start-up venture known as “Project X.” Six months later, Life magazine premiered on November 23, 1936. The first issue sold for 10 cents and featured five pages of Eisie’s pictures. His most famous photo was the kiss in Times Square on V-J day, about which he said, “I was running along the street grabbing any and every girl in sight. Whether she was a grandmother, stout, thin, old, didn’t make any difference. None of the pictures that were possible pleased me. Then, suddenly in a flash I saw something white being grabbed. I turned and clicked the moment the sailor kissed the nurse.” Over his career, Eisie shot a total of nearly 100 covers for Life magazine and some 10,000 prints. The Life Picture Collection From one of the most iconic magazines ever to hit the shelves comes The Life Collection – an archive of some of the most recognizable imagery of the 20th Century. Documenting events in politics, culture, celebrity, the arts and the American experience, these compelling and provocative photographs include the works of some of the greatest photographers capturing some of the greatest moments in history.

Price: $
Sold by Photos.com by Getty Images

Posted in Family Photography | Tagged , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Carhop Picking Up Tray From Driver Of Au Paper Framed Print 1 5/8″ Natural Espresso Wood Grain 22×26 Photo On

Carhop Picking Up Tray From Driver Of Au Paper Framed Print 1 5/8″ Natural Espresso Wood Grain 22×26 Photo On


Carhop picking up tray from driver of au” is an art print by Alfred Eisenstaedt from The Life Picture Collection. Get photo prints of “Carhop picking up tray from driver of au” in a variety of frames, styles, and materials. Photographer Bio Alfred Eisenstaedt (1898-1995), or Eisie to those who knew him, received his first camera as a gift from his uncle at 14, a few years after moving to Berlin from Poland with his family. At 17, he was drafted to the German army. His interest in photography blossomed while recovering from a shrapnel wound. He became a regular at museums, studying light and composition. By 31, he was a full-time photographer. In 1933 he was sent to Italy where he shot the first meeting between Hitler and Mussolini. Two years later, when Hitler came to power, Eisie immigrated to America. Soon after arriving in New York, he was hired along with three other photographers-Margaret Bourke-White, Thomas McAvoy and Peter Stackpole-by Time Inc. founder Henry Luce for a secret start-up venture known as “Project X.” Six months later, Life magazine premiered on November 23, 1936. The first issue sold for 10 cents and featured five pages of Eisie’s pictures. His most famous photo was the kiss in Times Square on V-J day, about which he said, “I was running along the street grabbing any and every girl in sight. Whether she was a grandmother, stout, thin, old, didn’t make any difference. None of the pictures that were possible pleased me. Then, suddenly in a flash I saw something white being grabbed. I turned and clicked the moment the sailor kissed the nurse.” Over his career, Eisie shot a total of nearly 100 covers for Life magazine and some 10,000 prints. The Life Picture Collection From one of the most iconic magazines ever to hit the shelves comes The Life Collection – an archive of some of the most recognizable imagery of the 20th Century. Documenting events in politics, culture, celebrity, the arts and the American experience, these compelling and provocative photographs include the works of some of the greatest photographers capturing some of the greatest moments in history.

Price: $
Sold by Photos.com by Getty Images

Posted in Camera Photography | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

And a Few More Flowers

I know flower posts have been submitted here before and I surely have nothing original to offer but they do make a versatile subject, allowing an appreciation of colour, texture, form and placement. These were all taken inside the Walled Garden at the stunning Wimpole Estate in Cambridgeshire just before my Eastern/Central/Somewhere In Europe trip. The vivid specimens are a fitting testament to the diligence and vision of the team of gardeners there who braved the heat to maintain the beautiful flowerbeds.

1

The images can also be a tribute (at least in my humble opinion) to the macro lens I used to shoot them, the Olympus 60mm f/2.8. A dinky little number which, unlike most hefty macro lenses, is small enough to fit into my coffee mug (the sunglasses are meant to give scale to the mug – after all it could be any size really, couldn’t it?).

1a

Yes, a full frame sensor will give a shallower depth of field than the micro four thirds sensor (far from a necessity for macro work) of my E-M5 but the bokeh on this thing is pretty good and I imagine it would double up as a decent portrait lens for this format too. Most macro lenses that I have historically used with my old DSLRs have also been slow to focus, but this little guy is reasonably quick and sharp and thus I have always included it in my light travel kit as a mini-telephoto lens. Not to oversell it but it’s great to walk around (especially in hot weather) with a lens and camera so light I can barely feel them.

3

Right, enough about gear (sorry!) and back to the flowers. I don’t have a green thumb but I love beautiful gardens and can certainly appreciate the effort that goes into them. Flowers are always an enjoyable photographic challenge that offers almost unlimited compositional potential.

4

One can focus solely on details, turning tiny petals or stamens into an entire landscape upon which the eye can travel.

18

20

Or it may simply be the way they stand in the light, the sunlight glowing gently through their translucent petals.

9

8

Maybe it’s their texture and the patterns that define their individuality, reminding us that we in the animal kingdom are not so unique in exhibiting so much variety.

12

2

Your composition may consider how a flower fits against the background of its brethren or surroundings; it does not always have to be isolated.

5

21

Of course flowers do not have to be shot from side on or above. Try shooting them from underneath (it helps if you have a flip-out touchscreen – I rarely use a viewfinder anymore), or turn the camera so that your frame lines up with the direction of the flower.

19

14

One of the bonuses of flowers is that they attract all kinds of beautiful creatures amongst their midst.

6

13

Ultimately, it may simply be about making a straightforward portrait of a flower.

10

7

17

These were all processed in Lightroom, again to my personal taste and style, mainly contrast and some selective dodging and burning. And as much as I love vivid colour I actually had to de-saturate many of these from their original appearance. Shot handheld using the touchscreen to focus where I wanted, mainly between f/2.8 and f/4 in aperture priority at ISO 200 with the camera choosing the shutter speed.

15

Well, that’s me. Now it’s your turn to go out and shoot some flowers and show me how it’s really done. Best of luck!

The post And a Few More Flowers appeared first on Photography Life.

Photography Life

Posted in Photograpy How To | Tagged , | Leave a comment

From The Window Seat

To be honest, it’s not a deal breaker for me. I’m perfectly happy wherever I sit on a plane, as long as it’s not in the cargo hold (although I imagine the luggage could be quite comfy to lie on). I don’t specifically request a window seat. More often than not I’m fast asleep before the plane takes off until after it lands. That usually helps me be rested enough to go out shooting as soon as I’ve checked in to my accommodation.

1

Usually asleep and snoring!

But every once in a while I’ll glance out of the window and marvel at the planet below me. It’s not the same view as from space but it does put our one little Earth into a humbling perspective, when mountains and cities become small points of rock and light and bring home just how small our world can seem.

2

Now, if I’m awake on a plane I’ll probably been reading. I’ll have a book or a magazine in my lap…. as opposed to a camera. I’m not holding or keeping my gear on or around my seat, not even a light mirrorless kit. The person sitting next to me is invariably freaked out by the shifty-looking brown man sitting next to them; the last thing I want to do is agitate them any more by littering the area with strange pieces of equipment.

3

So all of these pictures were taken discreetly with either my phone or a small compact camera and their quality obviously reflects this. If that means you stop reading now then be my guest. Of course have your DSLR or main camera with you if you can to get these window seat shots. I’m not taking them to make billboards out of them and discretion was more important to me than pixel-level sharpness. 

4

Sofia, Bulgaria.

Taking photos from the window seat is not always as easy as it may seem. A lot depends on the light, the cleanliness of the window or the fact that there’s a gigantic wing taking up your view! Hopefully you’ll be lucky enough not to have any obstructions.

5

Bridge Of The Americas (joining Central with South America), Panama.

Getting a sharp shot at night is a challenge for any small camera sensor. Obviously a slow shutter speed won’t help, primarily because there isn’t much to rest the camera on, and even if you could the plane is in motion anyway. So you have to rely on a high ISO to get a fast enough shutter speed. And with high ISOs on small sensors you might as well smear Vaseline on the window. I’m not saying it’s impossible to get the shot and you will argue that’s exactly why you need a hefty, cumbersome DSLR in your lap, but generally it’s tricky. On my phone I’ll use the ‘Night Shot’ mode if it has one, or crank up the ISO on the compact (which fortunately shoots RAW) and then clean it up in post. Obviously don’t use flash or you’ll get nice bright light reflected back at you.

6

If the window isn’t especially clean (they clearly forgot that you’d be in that seat with your camera) then opening up to a wider aperture and focusing on something into the distance should render any specks invisible from your shot. A wide aperture might sacrifice absolute detail across the entire frame but how much do you mind at 35,000 feet? The lens on the compact camera I used was capable of F/2.8 across its zoom range. That also helped to keep the ISO low by letting in more light. I have also had mixed results with a polarising filter to cut down reflections, with it occasionaly making things worse with a colour cast. I can only surmise that it depends on the glass itself.

7

Panama City

And what to photograph? Well, above the clouds one might be disappointed that nothing can be seen below them, but why not make the clouds the subject? After all they form an endless variety of shapes and textures. With a limited colour spectrum up there there’s every reason to accentuate their form by rendering in black and white.

8

9

When the land does appear the clouds may actually help provide some sense of scale in their relationship with it.

10

Obviously much depends on the altitude of the aircraft. A higher altitude makes it easier to capture mountains and geographical features, whereas a lower altitude brings human structures and buildings into view.

11

12

Anywhere in between might present some grand vistas of entire towns or coastal outlines.

13

14

If the sun is on the opposite side of the plane then lots of interesting shadows might break up the land below.

15

And if you happen to be up there around sunset, who can resist the view at the horizon?

16

Of course a window seat doesn’t just have to be in an aeroplane. These were shots I made from a helicopter and using my mirrorless gear. So if you have the chance to get up there to specifically take aerial shots then go for it. It’s not really my thing but I’m glad I did it. 

17

Anyway, as always this won’t teach you anything new. But as always it is only my objective on this site to encourage people to shoot more and procrastinate less. At the risk of repeating myself (I would call it being consistent) taking your own actual photos is far more exciting than reading about or viewing someone else’s on a screen and I simply want you all to have as much enjoyment and excitement as I do. While Nasim is busy working hard to complete educational videos for you I hope you will forgive this filler content. He and his team will be back soon with more worthy posts. In the meantime I hope that my continued encouragement is acceptable to you. I’m sorry if it isn’t. 

Best Wishes,

Sharif.

The post From The Window Seat appeared first on Photography Life.

Photography Life

Posted in Photograpy How To | Tagged , , | Leave a comment