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10 Questions: Zalmy Berkowitz

Zalmy Berkowitz's artistic vision describes rhythm and movement amongst the chaos of life’s candid moments. His film work makes you fall in love with analog all over again.

10 Questions: Bob Sala

Meet Bob Sala. You might have come across his work - cinematic 60s-70s ambient stills that remind you of your mother’s childhood (or for some, your own). His (portrait) images go beyond making a fashion statement on a particular era; they tell a story of society and culture.

10 Questions: Vittore Buzzi

Milan based photojournalist Vittore Buzzi's photography is fuelled by the search to understand and accept reality - which translates into an exceptional eye for capturing moments and stories.

 
 
 

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ARTIST OF THE MONTH
Artist of the Month - Kate Whyte

Amy-Leigh

Before and After: Victor Hamke

There is a fine line between reality and fantasy. Here Victor Hamke shows us how he achieves his surreal and conceptual work and how he turns his creative vision into something intriguingly beautiful. This post is a long one, but worth it so stick with us. 

© Victor Hamke

© Victor Hamke

Tell us a bit about yourself: 

Hi guys, my name is Victor and I was born in 1987 in Western Germany. Nowadays I'm located in the Eastern part – a city called Leipzig. My day job just recently became wedding photography despite the fact that the artworks you are going to see here are far apart from what one would expect from a wedding photographer. I like the diversity, I like calm, romantic, surreal, dark, moody pictures. That interest in deep feeling is the foundation of my whole body of work. It is of great importance to me that pictures aren't hollow but sensitive – they shall speak to your heart.

What inspires you: 

I get heavily inspired by moods which tend to come from different directions. I love to listen to music while editing and maybe sometimes it has an impact on the outcome – I'm not entirely sure with that though :-). I love to listen to Opeth, Ryuichi Sakamoto or Olafur Arnalds. Well, of course anyone who works with visuals is in some way or another influenced by the visuals that we consume day by day. As this readership will be interested in photographers that they maybe not know of, I would say that Stephan Vanfleteren, Samm Blake and Hengki Koentjoro are some of my favorites. I always like to look at their pictures – each one for different reasons. I have a strong interest in immersive media, Cyberpunk (Neuromancer <3), Romanticism and lots of other stuff. 

Do you have a vision in mind before going out and shooting or does the vision come to you in post production? Tell us about how your workflow works and how the vision comes to life in your work:  

Depends. Sometimes I have that really concrete image in my head which I strive for in the making. Many times I will find myself deriving from that imagination while doing the processing. As the concept arts are not commissioned works but personal I have no real frame on what I'm supposed to do, what's allowed, etc. So I go with the flow... something like that. I always try to catch the viewer. Sometimes by an interesting subject, sometimes by narrative gaps or spectacular effect. But as I'm very quickly bored by most images I see I try to do something a little bit different – in the end I try to entertain and touch both me and everybody that follows me.

Photojournalistic wedding photography doesn't really require planning as things just happen. I LOVE that genre. Some time ago I felt far away from doing weddings but I've found my passion for the subject – not really speaking of religious feelings but it is a pleasure to capture intense, loving moments between two persons. Really something I don't want to miss in the future.

 - You can see more of Victor Hamke's wedding photography in our daily updates and maybe a future feature!

The Making-Of

©&nbsp;Victor Hamke

© Victor Hamke

I spotted this tree stub in the woods and immediately thought that it would make for a great rock or mountain – I didn't have the final picture in mind but just try to keep my eyes open for usable objects for my composings. You have to think out of the box, especially when creating surreal or conceptional work. I travelled long before I got every part of that picture. The pieces were photographed in several citis of Germany and in Lisbon, Portugal.

©&nbsp;Victor Hamke - Step 1

© Victor Hamke - Step 1

I imagined that the picture would lead to an 'epic' setting – a mountain breaking the clouds. I soon came to the conclusion that I'd like to lead the concept into a fairytale-theme. Something like that. A little darker than what you would expect from a fairytale, but with that implicit romantic feeling. If you are melting together things that seem unlikely to fit, you have to try to be a good oberserver. Think what makes the manipulation obvious and work against it. Scale, angle of light, character of light, shadows, details, perspective distortion. All those attributes should fit together in the end.

©&nbsp;Victor Hamke - Step 2

© Victor Hamke - Step 2

I wanted to not just create some random place but a world of its own and drag the viewer in. In the process I wasn't too sure if the mountain would be a place of isolation or just a peaceful place and after finishing the work and by now I'm still undecided. I added two buildings which I photographed in Lisbon - beautiful. I try to make my pieces connect with each other. That may happen in various ways – cast a shadow on each other, blend their textures into each other, etc. If done correctly that produces a more coherent composing. The devil is in the detail, so I try to never be lazy when doing subtle, slight, unobstrusive tweaks. They all add up in the end to make a picture homogenic and enjoyable. A little lighter here, a little darker there. Soften one edge, sharpen another. Look for matching image characteristics. The 'bridge' consists of steps on a little basin. I doubled them to extend their reach. You could also create such things digitally and occasionally I do, but I try to avoid that if possible – everything you do in camera adds to the realism of the final picture. Also I added clouds. Lots of them. I wanted to set everything into a foggy, windy atmosphere. A dry tree with a few crows should extend the impression of that rough, natural landscape.

©&nbsp;Victor Hamke - Step 3

© Victor Hamke - Step 3

I often times like a very pronounced vignette which I also applied for this one. A vignette is something that really separates the perception of the image from what people see with their own eyes in real life. So it differenciates itself from the real world. The second reason is more obvious: you create a spotlight on the center. As the bridge reaches from the viewer's position to the isle in the far, everything works together to create motion in the direction of the mountain. As a nice side effect the clouds didn't look so turbulent anymore. Colours were muted and I made them a little colder. If an image works in color – great! For artworks I always prefer black and white though, if both versions are on par from an aesthetic point of view.

©&nbsp;Victor Hamke - Step 4&nbsp;

© Victor Hamke - Step 4 

What was missing? My story needed a protagonist. My other body of work focusses more on classic people photography so maybe that's the reason that (I think) each of my pictures has one or more protagonists. That way you have someone in that foreign world that you can relate to and the immersive character of the artwork grows. I also added the two pillars, to ground the bridge and to make the physics you see more tangible. I enlarged her dress to give it a more dynamic look – sometimes I even overdo that stuff ;)

©&nbsp;Victor Hamke - The final piece&nbsp;

© Victor Hamke - The final piece 

Et voilá. That's where the journey ends... or begins. I did a heavy bw-conversion. I use all different tools that Photoshop offers me to do those. The bleached blacks we know from some our beloved VSCO sets do a very good job, but sometimes I also like to use crushed blacks. For this one I settled right in the middle. If I use VSCO presets to convert parts or whole images into bw it is almost always the beautiful T-Max 3200.

The Gear:

I only work with Fujifilm gear, so I work with a few X-T1 bodies and the Fujinon 23mm 1.4, 35mm 1.4, 56mm 1.2 and 90mm 2.0. For everything except a few wedding situations I completely rely on natural light, which I love and adore. Everything else is optional. Tripod... sometimes. Reflector... maybe. But all you really need is a good body and the right focal lengths to do what you want to. :)

More before and afters: 

1.

©&nbsp;Victor Hamke - After

© Victor Hamke - After

©&nbsp;Victor Hamke - Before&nbsp;

© Victor Hamke - Before 

2.

©&nbsp;Victor Hamke - 2 - After

© Victor Hamke - 2 - After

©Victor Hamke - 2 - Before

©Victor Hamke - 2 - Before

3.

©&nbsp;Victor Hamke - 3 - After

© Victor Hamke - 3 - After

©&nbsp;Victor Hamke - 3 - Before

© Victor Hamke - 3 - Before

Before and After: Kala Rath

Kala Rath Photography

Kala Rath Photography

Kala frequently pulls on the maternal/paternal heartstrings of many with her work. All of her images get positive responses and even though her work is very niche, the scope of variation in how she captures is very broad yet very stylised. I couldn't pick just one image to feature, so here's a few! 

A little about Kala and her work:

I am a Northwest Arkansas based motherhood photographer specializing in maternity, newborn and breastfeeding photography. I love my images to express raw emotion and connections while maintaining minimal processing. I want people to feel what I see when I capture photographs. When I am not working, I can likely be found spending time with my husband and our husky, Lizzy, cruising in my Challenger. :)

I haven't always had "this" look or style. In fact, it was just last year that I did a major overhaul and did a full rebrand. I used to be very technical with my work, lighting and posing. I did studio newborns and posed them in shapes known as "taco" and "froggy" etc. I had a major change of heart at the end of 2013 and realized that it was those pure emotions I captured of mom and dad with their newborn in between setups that made my heart happy. I love to see the way a mother looks into her new babies face while she is sleeping. I love watching dad staring at his wife who has just become a mother in the most tender expression you have ever seen him look. I love being in their home where they are building memories. But I am not going to lie, It was honestly the most terrifying thing I have ever done - to throw away a business I had spent three years building to change everything when I had no idea if it would even work. All I knew is where my heart was. My current work may not be as technically "perfect" or as "good" measured by standards of the type of work I was doing before, but my work is exactly where I want it to be now. It is a reflection of me and my heart. I photograph with my heart first and my eyes second.

I shoot with a 5d MKIII. While shooting indoors, I likely have my 24-70 or 50mm on and while outside it is usually always my 135 and occasionally  the 24-70. As far as my processing....very very minimal. I will generally make minor adjustments in Bridge while adjusting the exposure, shadow and/or highlight sliders and my go to film is Fuji160, Kodak BW400 Contrast + Fade (and remove grain) and Agfa Vista 100+ or +cool. I try to keep consistency with my processing, but I have a tendency to both shoot and process with my emotions. I just use what suits my mood first. I will give it a couple days and see how I am feeling and sometimes I end up re-doing everything all together. I just see where my mood takes my work overall. 

Baby In Crib

5D MK III, 24-70/2.8 - shot at 24, 1/100, 3.5, ISO 800.

Baby In Crib - Agfa Vista 100++ - Kala Rath Photography

Baby In Crib - Agfa Vista 100++ - Kala Rath Photography

Baby In Crib -&nbsp;SOOC - Kala Rath Photography

Baby In Crib - SOOC - Kala Rath Photography

Breastfeeding Mom

5d MKIII, 24-70/2.8 at 57mm and 3.5, 1/60, ISO 40.

Kodak BW400CN - I brought the exposure down to -.70 and shadows -37 then removed grain. 

Breastfeeding Mom - SOOC - Kala Rath Photography

Breastfeeding Mom - SOOC - Kala Rath Photography

Breastfeeding Mom - BW400CN - Kala Rath Photography

Breastfeeding Mom - BW400CN - Kala Rath Photography

Laying down nursing

5D Mk III, 24-70/2.8 shot at 46mm and 3.5, ISO 400, 1/100.

Applied Fuji 160, brought highlights completely down and that's it :)

Laying down nursing - SOOC - Kala Rath Photography

Laying down nursing - SOOC - Kala Rath Photography

Laying down nursing - Fuji 160 - Kala Rath Photography

Laying down nursing - Fuji 160 - Kala Rath Photography

Mom holding baby in peach orchard.

5D MK III, 135/2.0 at 2.0, 1/6400, ISO 200.

Mom holding baby in peach orchard - SOOC - Kala Rath Photography

Mom holding baby in peach orchard - SOOC - Kala Rath Photography

Adjusted highlights and applied Agfa Vista 100+.

Mom holding baby in peach orchard - Agfa Vista 100+ - Kala Rath Photography

Mom holding baby in peach orchard - Agfa Vista 100+ - Kala Rath Photography

Website: www.kalarathphotography

Blog: www.kalarath.com

Facebook: www.facebook.com/kalarathphotography

Instagram www.instagram.com/kalarathphotography

Before and After: Abigail Steed

Abigail lives on Isle of Wight (UK) with her two daughters and two dogs and is a wedding and portrait photographer.

Here's what Abigail says about making this image: 

I kind of already had this image in my head so knew what I was tryng to achieve beforehand which always makes life easier! We got so lucky with the seagull (we were throwing out bread!) but unfortunately my daughter got completely distracted by it flying so close so i just composited it in to this frame instead.

The lighting was pretty harsh being in midday sun so I had to sort out the shadows on her face and tone down the highlights slightly. Then I just tidied up the horizon and straightened things up in PS before bringing it into Lightroom.

I added VSCO Agfa Vista 400+cool then went into ASE to add a very light texture then brought it back into lightroom for a little sharpening and some contrast and toning. And that was pretty much it!

Agfa Vista 400 Cool - Abigail Steed Photography

Agfa Vista 400 Cool - Abigail Steed Photography

SOOC - Abigail Steed Photography

SOOC - Abigail Steed Photography

Check out Abigails website at www.abigailsteedphotography.com and her Facebook page is www.facebook.com/abigailsteedphotography
You can also find her on Twitter at https://twitter.com/elvisandriga .