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how-take-night-photos-dont-suck-steady-focused

008 - How to Take Night Photos That Don't Suck

November 25, 2016 by simeon hendrix

Night time photography can yield some incredible and unusual scenes. Whether it's shooting the stars in the celestial heavens or capturing the light trails from cars as they whiz by. Night photography is fun and it's easy to get awesome results, we just need to examine a few key pointers.

The great news is, if you have a camera that allows for customizing the settings - adjusting the exposure triangle - shutter speed / aperture and ISO (reference Ep 004 - Demystifying the Exposure Triangle) ... then you can jump in TONIGHT and start telling awesome night stories.

(11:16) - Be sure to tune in to a mini-interview / adventure I did with acclaimed photographers Nathan Ralston and Ben Jacobi! - These guys rock!

Here's a few tips to keep in mind when approaching night photography:

  • Use a tripod.

  • Bring a flashlight, headlamp or iPhone to maneuver around in the dark.

  • Wear boots or closed toe shoes - especially if you're heading into remote areas.

  • Light trails are created by long shutter speeds.

  • If your images are too grainy or too noisy - reduce your ISO.

  • Get the largest possible focus area (while maintaining correct exposure) by stopping down (increasing the f-stop number) the aperture. The smaller the aperture, the less light comes in, which gives a larger f-stop or focus area (ex: f/22 is larger focus area, less light than f/5 which has less focus area and more light than f/22)

  • If shooting stars, set shutter speed below 30 seconds, start at 15. If over 30 seconds, you may begin to capture light trails from the stars (created by the rotation of the earth). If this is something you want, great - just keep in mind why it's happening.

  • Weather matters - check it before you head out to photo the night sky.

  • Light pollution is real - if you are in the city or any other area with lots of lights, these lights will reduce your view of the stars. Sometimes, it's not even possible to see starts in big cities. You may need to travel to a remote area to capture stars.

  • Stellarium App - track where exactly the stars are at any given time.

  • Experiment! Just like with every other type of photography, videography and filmmaking - your personal taste matters! Once you understand the basic building blocks - experiment! Break the rules! Find out what you love and why!

“Just because we are shooting at night, that doesn’t mean we are ‘limited’ to only shooting the stars. The entire spectrum of the world is available to us (just as it is during the day) even though the sun is down. Our opportunities are only limited by our imagination.”
Night time light trails - Las Vegas Traffic on the Strip., I used an aperture of f/22 a shutter speed of 6 seconds and an ISO of 200.

Night time light trails - Las Vegas Traffic on the Strip., I used an aperture of f/22 a shutter speed of 6 seconds and an ISO of 200.

Night time light trails - Las Vegas Traffic on the Strip., I used an aperture of f/22 a shutter speed of 6 seconds and an ISO of 200.

Night time light trails - Las Vegas Traffic on the Strip., I used an aperture of f/22 a shutter speed of 6 seconds and an ISO of 200.

CAR LIGHT TRAILS - HOW TO DO IT

(03:46) This past fall, while I was in Las Vegas, I experimented with long exposure / long shutter car light trail photography.  I shot from a bridge down to the busy traffic below. This is a perfect opportunity to capture the whizzing of lights.

To capture light trails this look, the main setting we want to adjust is shutter speed. Remember, the shutter speed controls motion. So much movement that in fact, the moving tail lights of the cars blend together to become one.

For the above photos, I used an aperture of f/22 a shutter speed of 6 seconds and an ISO of 200.

long-exposure-how-to-photography-night-light-trails

(04:58) This is something else fun to do at night, a night time time lapse. I shot the time lapse below on the Las Vegas strip with my GH4. It was created by snapping a series of the above photos and rendering them into a video. That's all a time lapse is - a series of photos laid side by side by side and rendered out as a video.

Below, is another time lapse. This was shot with my iPhone 6 using time lapse mode, all auto settings. So this shows, you can have fun and capture awesome shots at night, even with your iPhone! I didn't do anything else other than keep the camera relatively still.

This just goes to show, yet again, the best camera is the camera you have. Experiment and jump in head first with whatever camera you have TODAY. Once you reach the limits of a camera and you know exactly WHY you've reached the limit, then and only then is it time to think and seek out another camera.

Shooting the Stars at Night - How to Do It

Shooting the stars at night - you can do it! It's all about the settings! Remember what we've learned about exposure and follow the settings. Remember:

  • If shooting stars, set shutter speed below 30 seconds, start at 15. If over 30 seconds, you may begin to capture light trails from the stars (created by the rotation of the earth). If this is something you want, great - just keep in mind why it's happening.

  • Get the largest possible focus area (while maintaining correct exposure) by stopping down (increasing the f-stop number) the aperture. The smaller the aperture, the less light comes in, which gives a larger f-stop or focus area (ex: f/22 is larger focus area, less light than f/5 which has less focus area and more light than f/22)

(06:15) Here's some behind the scenes photos that I shot while working on set of the movie 'Where The Shadows Fall'. This is a great example of varied subjects we are capable of shooting at night. 

Star night photography. North Texas, around 2am on a February evening. Shot an aperture of F/5, a shutter speed of 25 seconds and ISO of 100.

Star night photography. North Texas, around 2am on a February evening. Shot an aperture of F/5, a shutter speed of 25 seconds and ISO of 100.

behind-scenes-night-photography-how-to-settings
photographing-fire-night-low-light-how-to-steady-focused
long-exposure-night-photography-how-to-best-settings

(07:02) Below are night portraits that I took while on set, shooting behind the scenes photos of the movie 'Where The Shadows Fall'. This reinforces the statement above, just because it's night, we don't have to just shoot the stars.

low-light-night-portraits-best-settings
interesting-night-portraits-settings-how-low-light-steady-focused

(11:16) Listen is as we journey to an abandoned historical church in North Texas! I talk with two phenomenal photographers who are passionate about their craft - Mr. Ben Jacobi and Nathan Ralston.

milky-way-stars-night-photo-ben-jacobi
infrared-photography-nathan-ralston

(14:20) Final Thoughts - Feeding Our Brain

I'm a big fan of listening to audiobooks and podcasts that encourage growth, self examination, positivity and pursuing our natural divine calling. Every episode I'll share with you a piece that's impacted me during the week

“What differentiates truly great performers and organizations from mediocre ones is an ability to effectively execute on what they know. There is a gap for most of us between what we know we should do, and what we are actually willing to do. This knowing-doing gap is what keeps most people and most companies from accomplishing what they are capable of.”
— The 12 Week Year
EP 5 Podcast.00_15_13_01.Still033.jpg

The 12 Week Year
5 Stars - Must Consume!
This book has hit me so deep. So profoundly. I'll stay here on this book for several weeks, rereading and implementing tactics prescribed. Identify a large stretch goal. Then break down 12 weeks, as if each week were a month in a new 12 week year. Ensure that this 12 week goal aligns with our larger ultimate goal in life.

I felt like the opening paragraphs from the preface were written, by me. I identify greatly with the words and am excited to implement the tactics.

Thanks guys, that's it's for this episode! Please, subscribe to the email list and if you like it, share to someone you think would gain value from it! 

November 25, 2016 /simeon hendrix
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clay-cook-photography-interview-steady-focused

007 - Be Unique and Strive to Level Up Each Year - Interview Clay Cook Photography

November 17, 2016 by simeon hendrix

Help me welcome to the show fashion, advertising and editorial photographer, Mr. Clay Cook. Over a short period of time, Clay has shaped creative projects with brands such as: Livestrong, NFL, Dillard's, Toyota, Red Bull and Vince Camuto. In addition, Mr. Cook has brought to life, worldwide assignments for publications such as USA Today, ESPN, Modern Salon and Inc. Magazine. Clay has over 55k likes on Facebook, 31k followers on Instagram, 10k+ subscribers on YouTube and 2.3k followers on Twitter.

“The most effective way to do it, is to do it.”
— Amelia Earhart
by Clay Cook Photography

by Clay Cook Photography

“Having Clay Cook on the show to share knowledge from his vantage point is tremendous. Grab your notebook, get comfortable, open your ears... this episode is chock full of value and real world inspiration.”

Key takeaways:

  • (01:58 ) How Clay and I met many many years ago doing Myspace redesigns?!

  • (06:30 ) Get out of the house - Don't hide behind the camera and hide at your house

  • (07:45) Get out and network. It can be the difference between making hundreds to thousands to tens of thousands of dollars on a shoot.

  • (08:30) Be unique. Be creative. Everyone has a camera. Everyone is shooting. You have to be really good, be an expert. There's a lot of noise out there. Do something creative. Do something that stands you apart from the rest.

  • (9:30) Hiking to top of Mt. Kilimanjaro

  • (11:45) Shoot. Shoot a lot. The more you shoot, the more you'll fail. The more you fail, the more you learn. Success is built on foundation of failure. I didn't make any money until I failed, a lot. So the key is really, just to shoot. That's how you will build a niche and find out what you don't want to shoot. Then you'll find what you DO like to shoot and find what is unique to you.

by Clay Cook Photography

by Clay Cook Photography

  • (13:33) You are your own worst enemy. The only thing that's stopping you is yourself. "The most effective way to do it, is to do it." Amelia Earhart. It's about the hard work and the hustle. It's not about the lighting or the equipment (even though those have a massive roll), anyone can be a success if they have a strong work ethic. It starts with shooting.

  • (14:45) Excuses can be detrimental to the progress of anything. Get out there and hustle.

  • (15:30) Growth comes from change - the struggle is the catalyst for change.

by Clay Cook Photography

by Clay Cook Photography

by Clay Cook Photography

by Clay Cook Photography

  • (15:45 ) Heroes - Annie Leibovitz - Norman Jean Roy - Miller Mobley - Kristian Schuller - Patrick Demarchelier

  • (17:30) Where would we be if we were having this conversation in Louisville? Favorite place to eat?

  • (19:45) Strive to level up each year.

  • (20: 35) Learn from conversations. Learn from talented people. Easy to consume knowledge by conversations.

by Clay Cook Photography

by Clay Cook Photography

For more information on Clay Cook:
Email - info@claycookphotography.com
Web - ClayCookPhotography.com
Facebook - facebook.com/ClayCookPhoto
Instagram - instagram.com/ClayCookPhoto
Twitter - twitter.com/ClayCookPhoto
YouTube - youtube.com/ClayCookPhoto
Snap Chat - Clay Cook Photo

Final Thoughts - Feeding Our Brain
I'm a big fan of listening to audiobooks and podcasts that encourage growth, self examination, positivity and pursing our natural divine calling. Every episode I'll share with you a piece that's impacted me during the week

start-with-why.jpg

Start With Why
5 STARS = Must consume

---
What do I believe in? What is my passion, what is my ultimate, ultimate goal? What is my 'Why'. Does what I believe in shine through everything I do? Do my actions align with my beliefs? Does my 'Why' align with every action I take in my life? Does this action reinforce my vision? Do my results support my vision?

What makes Apple a cult company? What inspires people to tattoo their bodies with the Harley Davidson logo? Where did Wal-mart go wrong? How can a leader teach his cause and rally believers who passionately want to help?

November 17, 2016 /simeon hendrix
1
dont-let-roadblocks-stand-way-your-calling

006 - Don't Let Roadblocks Stand in the Way of Your Calling

November 10, 2016 by simeon hendrix

We are all artists. We have something placed on our heart to create, produce, go after. Don't sell yourself short and say "I can't do this, I don't have the right equipment or live in the right city." It's doesn't take a $1,000+ camera to become a photographer, filmmaker or documentarian. Creativity WILL overcome financial roadblocks. It's not about what equipment you have. It's not about where you live. Get to work.

“Creativity will overcome financial roadblocks. Don’t let “I don’t have the right equipment” stop you! Don’t let “I don’t live in the right city” stop you. There are stories to tell all around us.”

The basic fundamentals are the same no matter what equipment you have. Pulling the best out of your subject, framing, lighting, etc.. It's much more important to create than to wait. As we evolve our equipment will naturally evolve as well. Our talent and skill set will evolve. Our portfolio will evolve. But we can't get to tomorrow if we don't create today.

I started making documentaries in the early 2000's in my rock 'n' roll days. I wanted to shoot interviews of the band, fans and also make music videos. I started shooting on a Sony Cybershot. I didn't know anything about HD vs SD. I didn't know anything about frame resolution and I for sure didn't know anything about exposure. But I wanted to tell a story and document a special moment in time. I'm light years more advanced technically today then back then, but the basics are all still the same.

“Don’t let roadblocks stand in the way of your calling. You are special. You have a unique voice, vision, talent, perspective... Let it shine. Get out of your own way and let that which is greater than you flow through.”

Final Thoughts - Feeding Our Brain
I'm a big fan of listening to audio books and podcasts that encourage growth, self examination, positivity and pursuing our natural divine calling. Every episode I'll share with you a piece that's impacted me during the week.

This week, it's been all about financial books. If we want to be our own boss and live a life that we design, then being in control of our money is paramount. If not, we are slaves to money. I strongly recommend digesting both of these books.

richdad.jpg

I Will Teach You To Be Rich.
Key take away - the best return on our money, is paying off our debt. If we're paying 14% - 25%+ to cards, the best return we can make on our money to NOT finance charges every single month!

Rich Dad Poor Dad. - 
Key take away - Make your money work for you, instead of you working for your money. Powerful book.

November 10, 2016 /simeon hendrix
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