Powered By Blogger

Thursday 24 January 2013

Blog up on blocks

Sorry for the lack of blog action recently. I do have things to say but am working on shifting from Blogger to another provider which will help with my website Google ratings.

I'll be back! In the meantime please visit me at Facebook

Michael Powell Photographer

Wednesday 17 October 2012

Now then, now then, Dr Smudge

Nobody can have missed the endless stream of Jimmy Savile stories over the last weeks. The Times Picture Desk called me this week about some pictures I took of Savile in 1990 and the memories came flooding back. I was sent to Stoke Mandeville to do "A day in the life" of Savile to back-pedal over a story we were pursuing regarding the Kegworth plane crash which I can't go into here. Anyway it was my "pleasure" to shoot Savile all over the hospital. Looking through the negatives I found in the loft this week I snapped him receiving giant cheques and holding court generally with consultants, nurses, patients, staff and families. He was a broadsheet snapper's nightmare as every time a camera was raised so would be his thumbs and cigar. I was called Dr. Smudge all day from the Fleet Street nick-name "Smudger". Actually, Dr Smudge is quite a good name for a band! Better than our own Zimmer Band.

©copyright Michael Powell

Eventually I got what I wanted when I heard of a patient who had broken his neck celebrating atop the Berlin Wall but keeping the Savile thumbs down was farcical. Shooting on a 200mm lens wide open down a long corridor I had to keep walking back to him to try "keep it natural", something completely alien to him. I had to actually physically pose him before getting the shot The Times used. Here it is.

Wednesday 30 May 2012

I'm on Facebook

Well it took me years but Michael Powell Photography can now be found on Facebook here:
http://www.facebook.com/michaelpowellphotographer
Please visit me, like me and spread the word. I'm also there with a personal account. The difference? Work related stuff will appear on the Michael Powell Photographer site and is intended primarily for clients. If you wish to be rude to me you need to go to the other one (which I'm not listing here).

Other News

I've had surgery on my shoulder which has knocked me out of circulation for a little while and is why the bog has not been updated recently. More to come.....

Wednesday 11 April 2012

Jim Marshall

Not photography related this except for this dodgy snap of yours truly in action with The Zimmer Band. I just had to mention the passing of Jim Marshall, inventor of the rock guitarist's weapon of choice the Marshall amplifier. For this, the first of my occasional music and Zimmer related blogs I thought I would add my own tribute to the great man. The sound of a Gibson Les Paul (Thin Lizzy), Flying V (Schenker), SG (Angus), Fender Strat (Hendrix) and PRS (Powell?) through a cranked-up Marshall valve amp is as distinctive to the rock fan as a glass of Meursault to Oenophiles (back to food) and I can't imagine gigging without one. Good skills Jim. Job done!




Gibson Les Paul (check), Marshall Amp (check), guitarist pout (check), dodgy shirt (check), pint of Guinness at back of stage (check). Hellooooooo Saxilby!

Have Your Cake

I am very pleased to announce the success of our wonderful cupcake greetings cards at moonpig.com. The cakes were created by my sister Jane Blackman of Jane's Cupcakes and initially shot for her website where, incidentally, you can order for delivery by mail. Sue Richmond at Kenyon Communications came up with the recipe greetings card idea and behold they are selling like.......cupcakes. So far over 2000 have been sold. Each card includes a recipe too! 

Click here to view the range.







Monday 12 March 2012

More retouching for The Times


Click image to enlarge


This was fun. No, really it was! Marc Aspland, Sports Photographer extraordinaire for The Times shot four Tae Kwon Do experts for a feature on London Olympics hopefuls. The idea was to bring each high-kicking athlete into a single image. Marc set up a dark cloth background in a gym and used a single Elinchrom light to the left of camera with a softbox and shot all four separately showing their skills. You can see the light in the original image below. The biggest challenge was making the floor look realistic which meant lots of use of the lasso tool and cloning stamp in Photoshop. When the positioning felt correct I copied a shadow from one of the shots and duplicated it for the others then spent some time bringing detail into the tracksuits and shadows. Another small flash to the right would have made it a lot easier for me Marc! The final image was used across two pages in The Times. Good work Mike (and Marc). To see more of Mr Aspland's brilliant work go to marcaspland.com


Monday 16 January 2012

Food Photographer of the Year and tuition


I have the pleasure of being asked to be on the judging panel for the forthcoming  Pink Lady Food Photographer of the Year 2012. Entries close on 31st January so enter now. There are many categories including three sections for under 18's so get your children involved too. I can't wait for next year's competition as I will be eligible to enter and shall encourage my children to have a go too. No need to worry about nepotism or foul play, they are unlikely to listen to any advice I offer on  photography. Which brings me to...........tuition.

I have been offering one to one photographic tuition for about a year after a rewarding spell running an after school photography course at Caistor Yarborough School. It has made me ponder my own early photographic development and I now conclude that there is a crucial part of the learning process missing with digital cameras. Anybody who has shot film will remember the joy of the shots that "came out" either by fluke or judgement and the despair of the one that didn't make it. Whilst having little nostalgia for horrible chemicals, just 36 frames and dust on negatives that you couldn't quite shift, film had the useful but sometimes cruel ability to teach harsh lessons. That great shot that failed to materialise on the emulsion because of poor exposure, the weird missing bit because the shutter didn't sync with the flash, the unrescuable over-exposed shot in bright sunlight etc. Film meant enthusiasts had to understand exposure and boy did you learn quickly when your hopes were dashed by a completely transparent negative. And you only used a camera not loaded with film once. Ever.

I have had a number of aspiring photographers in the studio with little knowledge on shutters, apertures and ASA. That's fine for those happy to never stray from Auto but these people are holding their photography back. So there you have it, the phenomenal technology at work enabling you to make mistakes at no (financial) cost with digital can actually curb your photographic development unless you get that camera off its Auto setting and show it who is boss. Oh well, at least it put an end to those annoying stickers the lab put on rubbish holiday snaps.