9.09.2016

Back to the theater with an eye for fun.

Choreography rehearsal at Zach Theatre.

One of my favorite theaters is producing the musical, Priscilla Queen of the Desert. Usually my involvement in their marketing is to create signature images for each show, before the season begins, which become part of the season brochure, and then, the other half of my involvement is to photograph the dress rehearsals of each production, which normally happen the night before the first performance for the run of the show. Lately though I've wanted to get more involved in creating additional content in the weeks before the show openings in order to help build fun "back" stories to help get the shows on peoples' radar earlier.

I got in touch with the P.R. people at the theater and offered up my time to shoot some behind the scenes documentation leading up to the dress rehearsal. They thought it was a good idea and we put it into action this week, on Tues. evening.

The production is three weeks away from the dress rehearsal and Tues. evening's rehearsal concentrated on choreography. I showed up after a long day of dealing with the details of other projects. We were on the rehearsal stage instead of the main stage.

I knew that we couldn't interrupt the rehearsal in order to direct people for photographs, and I also knew that adding lighting to the rehearsal experience would be a huge distraction. Time is a precious commodity in the theater and I didn't want to slow down any part of the rehearsal process.

I brought two cameras along with me and a little collection of lenses that I thought would be most useful. The cameras were the Sony A7rii and the a6300. The lenses included the Rokinon 135mm (f2.0) and 85mm (f1.4)  Cine lenses as well as the 30 mm Sigma f1.4 (for the cropped frame camera) and the 24-70mm Zeiss lens for the full frame camera. I used everything in the bag.

The lighting in the space is anything but optimal; banks of fluorescents way up at the ceiling level about 30 feet up. There was no lower light source to toss fill light back into the actors' faces. I made liberal use of the higher ISOs in both cameras, sometimes using auto ISO and setting the top limit to ISO 6400.

My goal was to show the choreographer leading the group through some of the key musical numbers. I shifted from the 24-70mm (for wide and normal shots) to the 85mm and 135mm to isolate key performers and to take advantage of the very narrow depth of field I got from shooting wide open, and near wide open. The a6300 and the 30mm lens were used for wide, establishing shots. I wanted to show the size of the cast and to show the rehearsal environment.

Focusing the long primes was easier than I anticipated. The focus peaking in the A7rii was very effective and I guess there is some muscle memory hidden deep down that was partially awakened by the process of manually focusing on moving subjects in so-so light; something I had been able to routinely do back in the days when there was no real alternative. The shimmering, yellow edge indicators of the focus peaking were a great guide and, after a few minutes of tentative double checking with focus magnification, I became confident enough with the focus peaking to just go for it. The important thing I tried to remember was to change the focal length of the manual lens setting in the image stabilization menu as I switched between the 85 and the 135mms.

I got a lot of great images of small groups, individuals and the whole ensemble with every image containing moving subjects. During my two hour visit I was able to shoot about 500 frames. I narrowed these down to about 350 to share with the marketing team. You never know which way an organization will go on image selection so I always err on providing extra coverage.

The mood in the rehearsal studio was pretty jovial. I had worked alongside many of the actors a number of times before. The musical director and I go back a couple of decades. The director and I have worked on dozens of shows together. Each person seemed very assured that I would only shoot them in the best postures and expressions; or at least if I did catch something less than flattering it would be excised in editing and never see the light of day. This isn't photojournalism after all.

At one point I felt like I'd gotten a good range of images and I checked in the with the P.R. person who was kind enough to attend along with me. I showed her some images on the screen and asked for her opinion. She was happy with the stills but asked if I might also be able to shoot some video (some of the dance numbers were wonderfully visual...). Yes! Of course I can. I knew that one of the in-house production people is a really great video editor and I jumped on the opportunity to create fun moving images and then leave someone else to do all the heavy lifting of actually editing something nice together.

I put the A7Rii in full frame, 1080p mode, set the camera to 30 fps (the editor's preferred setting), shutter speed at 1/60th and made sure the rest of my video settings were appropriate. The 24-70mm was the perfect choice for videos that would capture wide shots and then tighten in to single person shots. I also knew that it was more than sharp enough to be used wide open for 1080p video.

I back-tracked and started shooting the video counterparts to many of the still images I'd been capturing. There is one scene that starts with two actors and builds to the full cast. It lasts about one minute and forty five seconds which really pushed me to work on my handholding technique while depending on the image stabilization from the camera. Since I hadn't expected to shoot video I didn't bring a tripod along with me....( bad boy scout...).

Much as I liked the still images I ended up loving the video clips I shot. There's is so much energy in the show and it's not always easy to capture that in single, still frames. Video seems to be the perfect adjunct to the stills we used to shoot exclusively. It felt great to be able to hand the client twice the coverage.

I delivered the video clips this afternoon and I can hardly wait to see what our editor does with the files. A lot of it will make for tasty b-roll but some of the footage of the whole musical number will make for great, short videos on places like Facebook and YouTube.

Of course, I have an ulterior motive in offering my services in this capacity; I would love to start training corporate clients to think of video not only as perfect, three minute presentations with a year long lifespan and high production quality, but also as weekly or monthly content refreshment for websites and other marketing outlets. Looking behind the scenes and catching more spontaneous interviews and insightful moments that make a company and their product or service more topical and relevant for consumers. What better way to practice and create example footage for those potential new revenue sources than to immortalize my theater client's inspired interpretation of Priscilla, Queen of the Desert???


9.06.2016

I critiqued Sony and now I have to praise them. It's all black and white...


I stand corrected. The engineers at Sony have given me exactly what I want in order to make perfect out-of-camera, black and white jpegs. I can control the tone curves in the highlights and shadows, as well as controlling the panchromatic color response of the system. Just like using the filter presets in other brands of cameras but with a much more profound level of control and customization. Too bad their marketing people seem hellbent on keeping this advanced level of performance a closely guarded secret....

Backing up for a moment. I had recently written bemoaning the idea that Sony lagged behind other brands (and especially Fuji and Olympus) when it comes to providing a great experience when shooting black and white in camera. Almost all cameras now have a monochrome or black and white setting among their creative settings. Fuji seems to lead in this feature set by having not only color filter emulations but also presets for some of their most popular black and white films. When I dive into the Creative Style menu of the Sony cameras I find only the basic setting and controls for only sharpening and contrast. It's a very limiting feature set and the results are

A blog note and a warning. Please read.

I looked at the site stats yesterday and am a bit alarmed. I've sent some notification to Blogger (Google) but pretty much all of a sudden I'm seeing traffic numbers that are a bit crazy. We went from 5,000 to 7,000 page views per day to10,000+ yesterday and already 18,000+ today. They are all originating from a site listed as http://www.google.co.uk/url?sa=t&source=web&cd=1

I have tried following the link only to get a redirect warning notice from Google. Note that the address uses "google.co" instead of "google.com".

I don't understand it but I am always wary of web anomalies. As I wrote above, I have sent screen shots and samples to Google/Blogger and am waiting to hear back.

While I like the idea  of having a legion of followers I really only want to write stuff for legitimate human beings. If you are an internet genius and you have some ideas about this please toss me an e-mail or leave your pearls of wisdom in the comments.

If this persists I may shut down the blog for a few days while brighter minds get to the bottom of all this.

Help?  Kirk

Someone mentioned a "redirect virus" although Blogger is not hosted on my computer. Just something to be aware of and cautious about.


Added note: Smarter minds (thanks Chuq) have pointed me to some FAQs about this issue. It seems to affect only the internal stats, conveys no viruses to readers and is a known issue at Google. I will leave this up for a few days just to let everyone know. Thanks for the quick responses from my professional audience!

9.05.2016

My boss gave me the day off for Labor Day so I've just been hanging around playing with a cheapie battery grip on the A7ii.


What the heck was I thinking this morning? We swimmers had the special treat of getting a scheduled master's workout on Labor Day. Gold Medal Olympic butterflies, Tommy Hannan,  showed up to coach us and the lanes were packed with enthusiastic swimmers. For some reason that I have no recollection of really buying into the swimmers in my lane, all younger than me by at least a decade, decided that I needed to lead the I.M. sets. For some insane reason, surely having to do with excess ego and minimal common sense, I decided to got for it and lead this train of swimmers through that part of the set. The I.M.s seemed to go on forever. (For the non-swimmers out in VSL land the I.M. means "individual medley" and consists of equally dividing the distance required by all four of the competitive strokes. For example; if we were doing sets of 200's we'd do two lengths of butterfly, two lengths of backstroke, two of breast stroke and two of freestyle). We pounded through three or four rotations of I.M. sets, followed it up with some four 125 yard repeats, followed by six 100 yard repeats, followed by ten 50 yard repeats (sprinting each of the 50's all out). I successfully kept the younger, stronger piranhas I swim with at bay for the mixed stroke salad but by the time I got home at 10:15 this morning I was shot. I ate like a pig and settled in on the couch for a little nap. Four or five thousand yards of fast, hard swimming sucks the calories right out of a person. I've been grazing since I got up from that nap.....

But that rarely stops me from grabbing a camera in my free time and heading out for a walk. My camera of choice for casual walks these days? It would have to be the Sony A7ii, but with a twist.
Last time I took the A7ii out I didn't take a spare battery and only made cursory check of the battery already in the camera. The gauge told me 65% remaining and I presumed that would work for my short jaunt. But then I got side-tracked. I found more stuff that needed exploring. I found new people to talk to and by the time I was heading home, in the final stretch of my walk, I saw a great image, pulled the camera to my face and had the battery crap out entirely. This made me less than happy. 

My fault, of course, for not practicing safe battery protocols. Four hours of

9.04.2016

An interesting epiphany received while photographing a radiologist.


It was a typical, unusual Sunday afternoon around here. Most of the day was spent doing "Sunday" things like cleaning up, shopping for the week ahead, berating my wine merchant for sending me an indifferent Tempranillo, etc. The one variation from our usual weekend trajectory was the last minute scheduling of a studio portrait for a radiologist, newly arrived at one of the practices I serve. He had a packed schedule during the week ahead and Sunday afternoon was the only pause in his schedule. I am nothing if not flexible, when it comes to scheduling, so, of course I accommodated him.

The doctor showed up in jeans and a pair of worn cowboy boots but, per the dress code of the practice, he had a suit coat, tie and formal shirt on for his session. It was steamy hot outside so I offered him a seat, turned the air conditioning down to "sub-arctic" and got him a bottle of water. We started to chat and ended up still animatedly engaged an hour and a half later. I finally had to call for an end to our wide-ranging but fun conversation so we could get down to the business of taking his photograph.

When we finished out photographic project he mentioned how similar our businesses were, at the heart of the enterprise. I was surprised and asked him to