Paul Lender

About Left of Center Photography

Left of Center Photography is simple, relaxed, fun photography that captures clients being themselves. The studio comes to you so that your photos are in the places that are part of your memories.

Tag: ‘personal’



Slow Down and Look Around

Saturday, December 3rd, 2011

Wedding season is over here at LoC and the month of December has been about wrapping up the deliverables from my fall weddings and taking Christmas portraits, cleaning up my office, and thinking about what I want to achieve next year. It’s time to slow down and look around at where I was, where I’ve made it to (thanks to you loyal clients) and where I want to go.

On the Way to the Cascades

This is a picture of my son on Thanksgiving weekend. He took a hike with me, my wife and my father-in-law back into the middle of nowhere at Ohiopyle in PA to see a bunch of rocks and water called “The Cascades”. I took one camera. An big, clunky, 4×5. That meant I also hauled a tripod and a pack full of film holders. Oh, and a light meter. This was about 1/4 of the way to our destination when I stopped to take a shot of the landscape back up into the woods. That shot is on Porta 400 color film that will be sent off to the lab on Monday for processing, but he decided he wanted his picture there as well. He doesn’t ask often so I made sure to take one. He wanted it.

Shooting on film makes me slow down. Shooting with a 4×5 on a tripod with a ground glass focusing screen that composes upside down makes me slow down even more. Composing, metering, setting the film holder…it’s slow. Add in the time sitting in the dark loading the carriers, and 30 minutes in my bathroom…errr..darkroom…hunched over trays developing the negatives and it can be painfully slow. It makes you value each frame. It’s make you take a deep breath.

And it makes me better and what I do for my clients.

Digital frames are throw aways. Take a million. Doesn’t cost you a thing once you buy the card. Film makes you count your pennies. How bad do I want this shot? 35mm gives you 24 chances, 120mm gives you 15, 4×5 gives you one.

Think about that next time your shooting for a client. How bad do I want this shot? Your client wants that shot a lot. Make it the best you can give them. Think about it before snapping the shutter. Is the background right, is the subject right, is the light right, will I have to fix this later? Is it what the client wants?

Slow down…look around…

Personal Pictures in Review

Monday, December 13th, 2010

These pictures aren’t people.  They are pictures I take for me.  The things I’m shooting when I’m not with a client and I’m not chasing my own kids around with a camera.  I have to say, LoC was a lot busier this year than I had expected (Thank You Clients!) so I didn’t shoot on my time as much as I have in the past.  Still,  I did get out and I think I got some great shots.  A lot of these are framed and warming up the walls of my house.

There will be a year on review for client shots coming soon, but there is still one more client I have to work with this year!

Cold Calling

Alley

Magnolia

Progressive Field

Blue Sky Umbrella

AM Cleveland

Beauty

Cucumber Falls I

Fall Contrast

Feeding Creativity

Saturday, May 15th, 2010

Hungry

It’s been a while since I just went out and shot for fun – just picked up my camera and did whatever I wanted with it.   Today I did just that.  I got off my @ss and shot (GOYA).

The first picture in this post is one of two robin’s nests that are in the yard this year.  These guys are the youngsters.  The other nest if full of ugly babies that already have their feathers coming in and barely fit in the nest anymore.

Lace Curtain

This next shot is the light at the top of the steps leading up to my bedroom.  It’s being filtered by a lace curtain and a venetian blind.  It happens every night that isn’t cloudy at just about 7:30PM.  Anybody want to come and stand in here and have their picture taken?  I think a portrait would work really nice.

Dry Veins

Play Ball

 

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