how to photograph cars

how to photograph cars


Good Good used condition. Ships promptly. May Include Some writing or highlighting. Satisfaction guaranteed Ships from US. Please allow 1-3 weeks for delivery outside US.

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Shutter Suppliers and Choosing a Good One

Copyright (c) 2010 Nadine Davis

The Beginning:

You have decided to utilize shutters as part of your home renovation, but are not sure what type and style to choose. Researching and choosing the right shutter supplier can make this process much easier. This type of company the right professionals and experience to make your job easier and help you find what you want.

You’ve decided to add a new look to your home and have chosen to utilize shutters. The problem now is how to choose the right shutter supplier. Knowing what to look for in a retailer of this kind of product can make a huge difference not only in what you are able to buy, but also a selection you will have, product quality and customer service to support you in your decision. Without this knowledge, it can be very hard to choose the right company to help you find the perfect shutters for your home.

What to Look For:

When you start the process of choosing a shutter supplier, there are certain key indicators that you want to find in a good one. One of the first signs of a quality company is their amount of selection that you have to choose from. Having a broad variety in both size, style and material gives you more options to meet your specific needs. They should also be willing to refer you to another retailer if they do not carry what you need. It is also important to know their level of experience in this area. This is indicated by how long they have been in business, their ability to answer a wide range of questions and that they can provide the level of customer service that is only found from years of training and doing the job.

A good shutter supplier will also be able to back the products that they sell with a solid promise of satisfaction. If you find that the shutters you have bought are not right for some reason or have a defect, you should be able to have the problem fixed. This may be replacement of the product, getting your money back or another solution to remedy the situation. If you want to see how well the company has done in the past, ask for references from the company before you choose to buy with them.

Other Things You Should Keep in Mind:

A good supplier of shutters will also give good communication with its clients. Updating a consumer on their order or following up on how satisfied they are with their purchase shows a caring attitude. Another part of communication deals with the delivery of the shutters once they have come in. You should be kept aware of when they will be delivered and if any delays are to be expected. Another positive aspect of the company is one that can provide a number of services, including outdoor blinds. Jobs that require custom sizes and installations can be stressful and problematic for the consumer. A good shutter company can help you in measuring windows and making sure that the shutters are built to your specifications. This gives you peace of mind about making your purchase and working with the company.

To find the perfect Shutters Brisbane for your home, Image Blinds is a company you can count on. They can not only help you choose the right shutters, but also offer Outdoor Blinds Brisbane.

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Throwback Thursday – a 2005 Travel Log

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The gardens of the Imperial Palace in Tokyo

It’s Throwback Thursday and wandering through some old files on a remote drive I found these images from a trip to Japan in 2005. Like every throwback post, these images bring back an extensive collection of old memories about my most favorite country to travel to over the years.

I made a half dozen trips to Tokyo in the 80’s for Polaroid, and there’s something hard to explain. The short version is simply, from that very first step off the plane, I always felt like I was finally home. I always wanted to believe that maybe I was a Samurai or at least a Samurai’s stable boy in a previous life. LOL After Polaroid the trips to Japan ended and I wasn’t back again until 2005 in my WPPI/Rangefinder role. 

The trip was sponsored by Asukabook and my good friend Taka; then VP was the host. While it’s a Japanese trait to be great hosts, nobody’s ever done it like Taka did. This was relationship building at its very best, and even though he’s no longer with Asukabook, and I’m no longer with WPPI/Rangefinder the friendship we built is still very much intact.  Email and Skype help make the world a smaller place and we’ve managed to stay in touch.

So, welcome to a mini travel log from eleven years ago. Had I known about Panasonic’s LUMIX cameras back then, my images would have been even better, but considering these were captured with a $ 200 FujiFilm point and shoot, they captured everything I needed for memory-makers. Also, nothing has been retouched – these are right out of the camera.

One of my most favorite things to do on every trip was wander into any local market. I love the presentation quality of fruit – often packaged in a gift box like an expensive bottle of champagne. And, they should be! Those cantaloupes below at 6000 yen come out to just under $ 60 each at today’s exchange rate. Back then they were a bargain at just over $ 50!

Japan is all about color, especially in the markets. I had a lot of fun setting this little camera into close-up mode. Even clusters of scallions and radishes become interesting.
Sooner or later bar games become universal and Taka took on my challenge one night coaster flipping. Sadly, or not so sadly, it’s a lost art, probably replaced by beer pong.
Japan is also about contrast.  What struck me was the scale of the high-rise office buildings versus the traditional teahouse on the pond in the image above. Remember, I’m shooting with limited capabilities with an inexpensive point and shoot. Still, it’s a classic shot of Tokyo and the relationship between new technology and thousands of years of history.
It was always top shelf in everything Asukabook hosted. The hotel we were at had a small garden courtyard with a short walking trail, waterfalls and ponds loaded with Koi. The path actually led behind the waterfall on the far right allowing you to stand behind the water.  
Japan is also about contrasts in perspective. For example, the elevator in the Asukabook home office is the smallest I’ve ever been in. I was close to feeling like the Hulk. In contrast, Taka and I are dwarfed by the height of this old castle.  
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An iris in the gardens of the Imperial Palace

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I’ll wrap up today’s post with one last experience, and it’s one that most people notice on trips outside the US, but it seems to happen more in Japan. Things often don’t translate.

If I had known enough Japanese, I would have asked the guy wearing this t-shirt what Dog’s Mania was. It just made no sense, and yet you can decipher he’s probably a dog lover, but that’s about it. Whatever the artist was trying to say when designing the shirt it just didn’t translate.

However, those mistakes in language go both ways. After my first trip to Japan working for Polaroid in the 80’s I loved the country so much, I went and took Japanese lessons. On my next trip to Tokyo in what I thought was perfect Japanese, I asked the cab driver to take me to the Hilton Hotel.

Well, he took me to the Tokyo Prince Hotel and I didn’t know enough Japanese to explain it wasn’t the right one. I let the doorman take my bags, and it took me all the way to the front desk to find somebody who knew enough English to help me get back on track to the right destination.

As Americans we seem to think if we talk louder and slower, we’ll be understood. NOT!

That wraps up this Throwback Thursday, but have some fun and follow my lead. Take the time to dig out some images from old trips or vacations and just watch the way the memories fall into place. And, that’s the true power of photography and something we so often take for granted.


SkipCohenUniversity – SCU Blog

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You Know How to Focus Your Camera – How About Your Life?

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© Marek

Focus on the things you can change and let go of the things you can’t.
Anon
Over the last few years I’ve grown to love Sunday mornings mostly because there’s nothing on the list I have to do, including talk about business. I’ve got great music playing in the background; Molly the Wonder Dog at my feet and I had one of those perfect night’s sleep – the kind when you wake up with a solid boost of energy.

Thanks to encouragement from so many of you, Sundays are almost always off track from business and marketing. When I found the quote above one morning last week, I scribbled it on my whiteboard to save until Sunday. It might be one of the hardest lessons in life to learn.

I know it’s taboo to get overly personal in a blog post, but it makes such a great point. Here’s the thirty-second version of my story. I’ve spent most of my life being a “right fighter”. Yes, it’s a Dr. Phil expression, and I admit to having watched a few shows and read a few of his books. Well, I come from a whole family of right-fighters – it’s the way I was brought up, and I used never to give up trying to prove I was right.

The challenge with being in the Right-fight Club is, in the process, we wear ourselves out. We become obsessed with issues that have crossed into the “What difference will it make?” zone. We put all our energy into the battle and on any given day we might have several fights going on at the same time. Some are internal with our personal demons and others, external with people we think care about us.

Well, a couple of years ago I realized life was simply too short. I realized I was spending so much time dealing with the daily storms I forgot to “dance in the rain.” I started focusing on things I could change and stopped wasting time and energy on things I couldn’t. 

There’s another expression from Dr. Phil I love – “I’d rather be happy that right!” And that brings me full circle to where I started with the quote above. I’ve given up on those friends and family members who just don’t get it. They’ve brought nothing but pain and chaos into our lives over and over again. They battle it out on the field of righteous indignation passing judgment that just isn’t their right.

And that’s my point on this peaceful beautiful Sunday morning – let go of the negative people in your life. Stop wasting energy on battles that won’t make a difference and focus on things to make your life better. Life is too short to waste a minute on people who have decided it’s their way or the highway.

It’s Sunday of a holiday weekend. Make it a great day with family and friends. Always go for an eleven-second hug with that person closest to you. Most important of all, put your energy into things that truly mean something to you – those things you carry in your heart that put a smile on your face. I’m still work in progress, but the smile I wake up with every morning speaks far louder than those challenges I just can’t change.

Happy July 4th – It’s Independence Day – and time to celebrate your own independence as well!

SkipCohenUniversity – SCU Blog

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Carpenters Portrait Session Birchwood 18×24 Photo On

Carpenters Portrait Session Birchwood 18×24 Photo On


Carpenters Portrait Session” is an art print by Harry Langdon from the Hulton Archive collection. Get photo prints of “Carpenters Portrait Session” in a variety of frames, styles, and materials. Photographer Bio As a young kid Harry would visit his father, silent screen star Harry Langdon Senior, on the sound stages – watching intently as the crew built sets and prepared the cameras. Theatre and movies were in his blood, so his over 40-year (and counting) career as a highly sought-after portrait photographer to the stars comes as no surprise. But it’s his unique ability to keep his work fresh year after year that keeps him among the top commercial and glamour photographers in the world. Hulton Archive One of the world’s largest – and arguably greatest – photographic archives, “The Hulton” captures many of the world’s defining moments and personalities of the last two centuries. The vast and continually growing archive is unrivaled in its wealth imagery, covering of every aspect of mankind from the birth of photography to the present day in vivid detail. From the ordinary to the extraordinary, the unique to the every-day, the archive is a visual account of the human experience to date.

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