Archive for December, 2009
Dangerous access ramp at Kingussie Co-op
Tue Dec 29th - 4:43pm
Anyone who shops at the Co-op in Kingussie knows that the tiled ramp at the entrance is an accident waiting to happen due to how slippery it gets.
Last week, as Winter set in, a member of staff expressed their concerns to me about the store's policy to leave the ramp untreated — a policy that has allegedly been introduced in the misguided belief that this would absolve the company of responsibility for anyone slipping on the ramp.
As a public safety issue, this was a great story, so I spent an afternoon on the phone to various people at the council, environmental health officers, and the Co-op press office, as well as hanging around outside the store interviewing customers.
Read my article on the Press & Journal web site and a slightly longer version on the Strathspey Herald web site.
Amazingly, the Co-op still insists that their policy is correct, and they will do nothing to treat the access ramp. Last night, going in to the store to pick up a copy of the paper, it was like trying to walk on an ice rink.
The annual “kids in snow” photos
Tue Dec 29th - 4:04pm
When snow arrives, every news photographer will at some point find themselves taking photos of kids doing something snow-related, usually playing on sledges or throwing snowballs. Technically these photos are fairly easy to do, but the challenge is finding the kids!
It may help you if I explain my approach, but first, a few photos. The first one was the front page photo for last week's Christmas edition of the Strathy.


When I lived in Ross-shire I had a few parents on call who could lend me their kids for photos like these. But, being new to the Cairngorms, I needed to go out and find them "in the wild", so to speak. My first tactic was simply to drive around the village and find the first parent with a child, and ask them if they were available for a photo shoot, and could they bring along a few friends. I got very lucky as the first mother I asked told me about a group of kids that she knew were playing on sledges on a big hill at the other side of the village, so I headed over there.
There were three kids at the hill, but unfortunately no parents or other adults in sight. I left my camera in the car and went over to the nearest couple of kids, staying a good distance away from them, and called over to get their attention. I explained that I wanted to take photos of them for a newspaper but I needed to get permission from their parents, and one of them gave me his mum's phone number. When I called her, she said she didn't want me to take photos of her son without her being there, but then she said his dad would come along. Perfect. Whenever you're taking photos of kids it is a good idea to have another adult present.
Tip: When you call a child's parent to ask for permission to take photos of him/her, the first thing you should say is something like "don't worry, there's nothing wrong". You don't want them thinking it's the police or a teacher calling to say that their child has been hurt.
I quickly got permission to take photos of the other kids, and another one arrived with her mother so that was four, plenty for the pictures I had in mind. During the shoot another two arrived, which was more than I wanted, but I didn't want to exclude them so I contacted their parents too and, in the end, the big shot of all six kids worked really well, I thought.
So… is permission a big deal?
In a word, yes. Absolutely definitely positively always get permission from the parents of any child that you photograph outside of a school environment.
Yes it can be time-consuming, and yes it can mean that sometimes you can't do the shoot, but the reason it's so important is for the safety of the child.
As professional photographers, we know that we aren't taking the photos for any dodgy reason. But if kids get used to us taking photos of them without their parents knowing then we're making it easier for the local weirdo to take photos of them without permission too.
If every professional photographer makes it clear to children that people should never take photos of them without permission from their parents, then we aren't just protecting ourselves, we're protecting the children too. So do it!
Photoshop CS4 slow in Windows 7
Tue Dec 29th - 2:34pm
If you're upgraded to Windows 7 and you're finding that Photoshop CS4 runs very slow, even with small images, and especially when zooming in and panning around, then here are some tips that may help speed things up again.
Firstly, if you haven't already done so, download the v11.0.1 update from Adobe and install it. That fixes the problem immediately for some people.
If it doesn't fix it for you then go to the Edit menu, select Preferences, and select the Performance sub-menu:
In the window that opens up you'll see a panel called GPU Settings. Make sure that "Enable" is ticked and then click on Advanced:
When the Advanced options appear, un-tick everything:
Click OK, then OK again, then close Photoshop and re-open it. That should have fixed the problem. If it hasn't then there's one more thing you can try. Go back to the Performance options and un-tick OpenGL Drawing:

Click OK and re-start Photoshop. Hopefully that'll be you sorted. Post a comment to let me know if these solutions did or didn't work for you.
HexWar’s Field of Glory computer game in Press & Journal, Daily Mail and PC Format magazine
Mon Dec 28th - 5:47pm
Long before I got in to photography I used to write for magazines and web sites, mostly about the computer games business. I've been getting back in to writing this year, firstly with my music reviews for the Press & Journal, but nowadays more towards the news side of things.
After writing nothing about computer games in around 10 years, over the last month I've covered the same story for three publications — the Press & Journal, the Daily Mail, and the computer magazine PC Format — doing photographs and words tailored to each publication's style and readership.
The story was about HexWar, a small games company in Fortrose, north of Inverness, that is punching above its weight with Field of Glory, a large-scale project that has only been possible due to the industrious help of the developers' friends, family members, and local school children.
This was the photo used in the Press & Journal:

You can read the P&J article here. All I know about the Daily Mail article is that it was going in the paper sometime over Christmas, but I never saw it so I don't know if it has been in yet. And the PC Format article, which is longer and more in-depth, will be in next month's issue. I'll post more about that once the magazine is out.
Here are another few photos that I did for the various publications:



The pictures with the dark backgrounds and the spotlight effect were done with an off-camera flash held slightly up and to the side of the camera, pointed straight at the subjects to minimise spill. Fast shutter speed to get rid of the ambient light.
Hello to all Strathy readers!
Tue Dec 22nd - 5:42pm
Welcome to everyone who saw the link to my web site in this week's issue of the Strathspey and Badenoch Herald. If you'd like to have a look around the site you'll find lots of local photos (such as the Kingussie High School seniors portraits and the Kingussie Christmas concert) and there are many more to come as I update often. But right now you're here to see the other photos of Mercedes the polar bear at the Highland Wildlife Park, so let's get straight down to business…
Ruthven Barracks and Kingussie snow panorama
Tue Dec 22nd - 3:31pm
Last week I posted a panorama of Ruthven Barracks and Kingussie. Today we have another one, this time from a different angle and with lots of snow. This one weighs in at just shy of 50 megapixels, which is over 14,000 pixels wide. Click this small version to see a 2000-pixel wide version, which is still very small compared to the full-size version but you can see a fair amount of detail.
Mercedes the polar bear in deep snow
Sun Dec 20th - 1:18pm
Mercedes the polar bear at the Highland Wildlife Park in Kincraig experiences deep snow for the first time since leaving Canada 26 years ago. Before moving to the Highland Wildlife Park in October 2009 she stayed in Edinburgh Zoo.
I've been waiting a few weeks to do these pictures, checking the weather forecast every day, up early every morning to see if it had snowed during the night. Last night my girlfriend Katie and I were back up in Ross-shire for a Christmas party, and we had the option to stay up there overnight, but it was obvious that the Mercedes pics would happen today so at 12:30am we headed back down to Kingussie, a journey that took 3.5 hours due to icy roads.
Fortunately the morning's weather didn't disappoint, so after 4 hours' sleep it was off to the Wildlife Park. Mercedes didn't disappoint either…


This robin landed near Mercedes and wandered around for a few seconds before hopping up on to her paw. She wasn't having any of that and lashed out…

That's one big bear bum…



And here's the big girl having a good old roll in the white chilly stuff. One of the other shots from this sequence was used to illustrate a weather item on the BBC News web site. It was the BBC that originally asked for snowy pics of Mercedes, although lots of newspapers have since got interested in them too.
Kingussie High School seniors portraits
Sat Dec 19th - 6:16pm
Lots of fun on Thursday night, doing the seniors portraits at the Kingussie High School Christmas dance. This was quite different from when I used to do the portraits at Tain Royal Academy, where most of the students were photographed individually, with a few couples and some groups at the end. The students at Kingussie mostly wanted to be photographed in groups doing dramatic, silly and funny poses, so that's what we did and I think I can safely say that everyone enjoyed themselves! Here's a tiny selection of photos:
Tips on filling the frame
Fri Dec 18th - 10:25pm
Getting back to the original purpose of this site, which was to offer my humble advice and tips on ways to improve your news photography, I wanted to share an experience from today's shoot featuring two people from local businesses who pay for all the presents at a community Christmas party for around 50 kids.
Obviously I want to produce good results at every job, but it was especially important to come up with the goods from this shoot because I had personally asked the Press & Journal to cover the story. In all honestly it's probably a bit of a small story for the P&J but I thought it was important that these businesses get some acknowledgement for their support of this party, which they fund every year without making any effort to get publicity out of it.
I arranged to do the shoot at the village hall where the party will be held, because there's a Christmas tree there, which could make a good background. And the party organiser agreed to come along with all the wrapped presents. But even though I knew about the shoot a couple of days in advance, and I had a 2-hour drive to get there, it wasn't until I was pulling in to the car park that I finally had a set-up idea that I thought might work. This was the result:
There are three lights doing the work in that shot: Canon 580EX behind the people as a rim light, and two Bowens 1000DX studio lights at the front, one on each side.
Pretty good shot, I'd say, but I wanted to produce at least two different set-ups. After a bit of experimentation I came up with another composition that I thought might work. Here's a test shot:
Not very good, eh?
So here's the tip for today. It's an obvious one, but it's easy to forget when you're in the middle of a shoot and you've got half a dozen other things to concentrate on, so I think it's worth mentioning.
By shooting from above and wide angle, which I didn't want to change, I had left a huge gap in the bottom-right of the frame. Now as soon as you see a gap like that on your camera's review screen, the inclination is to re-think the set-up. And that's what my instinct told me to do on this occasion. But I was starting to feel a bit embarrassed about how much I was struggling to produce a good shot, and thankfully the idea popped in to my head that if I gave the lady one of the presents to hold, that would (1) fill that empty corner of the frame, and (2) help to emphasise the number of presents paid for by the donations.
With presents hastily pushed in to the hands of both people, and a few more presents stacked on the pile at the back to build it up a bit, I immediately liked the way the composition was looking. I kept fine-tuning a bit, adjusting the way the lady was holding the presents, and soon produced a shot that looked well-structured but not too posed or over-worked.
The point? Like I said, it's obvious, but it's important to remember. You'll often find compositions that are 75% good, but have one corner of the frame looking a bit empty. When that happens, before you re-think the whole composition, see if there's anything you can use to fill that quarter frame. You might even find that you improve the picture's relevance by having it tell the story better.
Here are a few more examples…
Using a combination of off-angle shooting, perspective compression and frame-filling to make an awards photo more eye-catching than usual:
Using a human to fill an empty corner! If you're photographing one person, but there's a relative or friend nearby who is connected to the story, then grab some frames with them too, like this shot of a young cart racer with his father:

It's easy to fill three corners of the frame with the people you're photographing, which conveniently leaves one corner to be filled with any books, certificates, trophies, sports equipment, drawings, etc, that are relevant to the story. These two girls had their poetry published in a compilation book:

You can also make the 'prop' corner of the frame more prominent to create a more dramatic and eye-catching image, that will naturallly make the viewer stop flicking through the paper and start reading the story. (I see that as the job of an editorial photographer — not just to illustrate the story, but to help sell the reporter's words by making the story look as interesting as possible.) These children had reached the semi-finals of a spelling competition, so we used a dictionary, opened at the word 'surveillance', which one of the boys had said was the hardest word he had been asked to spell in the competition:
Bill Mitchell, ex-professional golfer, with new Kia
Thu Dec 17th - 11:57am
On Tuesday I did some photos for a nice quirky story in the Motors North supplement that goes out with a lot of the Scottish Provincial papers.
Bill Mitchell from Grantown-on-Spey was a professional golfer and appeared in the advertising campaign for VW Golf cars. Bill is retired now, and he has just got a brand new Kia Cee'd based on advice from Motors North editor David Morgan.
We did the photos at Grantown-on-Spey golf course. I did try to get permission to put the car on the first green, but the ground was so wet that they weren't even allowing golfers on the course that day!
View this week's Motors North here and the article is on page three.
The weather was perfect for this. After heavy rain all morning, literally 5 minutes before the shoot the rain stopped and the sun came out. This allowed me to use the sun for side/back-lighting and a wireless-triggered flash on a light stand for main lighting. As soon as we'd finished, the rain came back.
Photo that was used:

Couple of alternative frames:




