Julie Walton Shaver Photography Blog

Monday, February 11, 2008

Watch Oprah Today!


    When The Oprah Show needs a jaw-dropping focal point for a room-remodel, they call the same company I use for printing photographs on canvas.


    At least, that’s the rumor I heard. The segment, Nate Builds a Dream House, will be on today, so be sure to watch!


    The canvases shown here are not on Oprah though. These are in my clients’ home. Special thanks to Tracey and Mike for letting me come over to photograph their wall displays! The montage above is made up of six 12×12 canvas wraps. These have natural canvas edges, a design choice we made partly because the original images didn’t have a lot of room for cropping on the top and bottom.


    This one looks stunning in black and white. Sixty inches wide by 33 inches tall, it has the image wrapped all the way around the edges. These gorgeous canvasses are considered the Norman Rockwell of home decor these days. It’s great because not only do you get beautiful art for your home, you also get treasured heirlooms that can be passed down for generations. I LOVE canvas wraps! Can’t wait to see the one on Oprah today!

    Thanks again, Tracey and Mike, for letting me photograph your beautiful home!
posted by Julie Walton Shaver at 7:45 am  

Saturday, February 2, 2008

Mamarazzi at Work: More Basketball


    I don’t know a whole lot about basketball. Somebody help me. Is that kid in blue fouling my kid? (Mine’s the one in the green shorts.) On the other hand, blue boy did a great job blocking the blocker so that our yellow team could get a good shot! Woo HOO!!!! GO TEAM!


    Gregory jumps and shoots! YAY! Despite his height, Gregory is probably the youngest member of the team and is just learning to jump and dribble and shoot. He is still somewhat confused by the aggression of basketball, having been told a million times over the last 7 years not to bump into people or get in anybody’s face.


    THIS kid has it down though! He runs fast, shoots, scores, blocks and has a great time hanging with his dad, the coach. And he’s two full years older than Gregory.


    Balancing the ball on the head promotes coordination. Fellow mamarazzis TAKE NOTE! When photographing your child’s basketball game, be sure to get the shot of your child looking intently at the coach! (Even if he is balancing a ball on his head at the time.)


    Mamarazzis (and dads with cameras too), also be sure to capture the little brother on the sidelines. Helps if the team is in the background!


    It also helps to have a big LCD screen on the back of the camera so as to entertain little brother. We mamarazzis have a name for the practice of letting people see the image on the back of the camera — it’s called “chimping.” Used in a sentence: I took the little brother’s picture, then I let him chimp. Kids LOVE to chimp!!


    And Gregory LOVES basketball! (Loves it when I put bball posts on my blog too. These pictures are from last week’s game. Can’t wait for today’s game!) Yay Gregory! I love you! And I LOVE to watch your games! Thank you, coaches, for giving of your time and talent so that my child can play and learn! THANK YOU THANK YOU THANK YOU!!!

posted by Julie Walton Shaver at 7:27 am  

Saturday, January 12, 2008

Mamarazzi at Work: The Basketball Game


    I finally made it to one of Gregory’s basketball games. Go Nuggets! (This is a spot-metered shot. I love it!)

    ISO 2000 1/800s at f/8. 80-200 mm lens. Focal length: 200 mm


    So I’ll just post some pictures, along with the camera settings. I’m loving my new Nikon D3!

    ISO 2500 1/500s at f/2.8. 80-200 mm lens. Focal length: 200 mm


    SCORE! (The other team scored, and we all cheered!)

    ISO 6400 1/1000s at f/4.5. 80-200 mm lens. Focal length: 80 mm


    Caption contest alert! (The first caption to make me laugh wins a $10 iTunes gift card via e-mail!)

    ISO 6400 1/1000s at f/4.5. 80-200 mm lens. Focal length: 80 mm


    A little brother at the sidelines, with light from an overhead window and sunlight shining on a wall pad behind him. Cool, huh?

    ISO 4000 1/1000s at f/2.8. 80-200 mm lens. Focal length: 80 mm


    That’s his big brother.

    ISO 2000 1/800s at f/4.5. 135 mm lens


    Gather UP!

    ISO 2000 1/800s at f/2.2. 135 mm lens


    The players are always given a good look at who they’re guarding.

    ISO 2000 1/400s at f/2.2. 135 mm lens


    Break time.

    ISO 4000 1/1250s at f/2. 135 mm lens


    She sits next to me in choir!

    ISO 6400 1/1000s at f/4.5. 80-200 mm lens. Focal length: 200 mm


    Gregory gets a pep talk from the coach. That big window at the ceiling acts like the sort of huge softbox they use to light scenes on Grey’s Anatomy. (Yes, I’m addicted.)

    ISO 3600 1/800s at f/4. 80-200 mm lens. Focal length: 80 mm


    Nice form!

    ISO 2000 1/800s at f/4. 135 mm lens.


    Looks like fun, doesn’t it?

    ISO 4000 1/1250s at f/2. 135 mm lens


    Spot meter exposes correctly for my focal point, but blows out the background. I don’t care. I still like the shot. It makes it easy to see who I’m focusing on.

    ISO 2000 1/800s at f/3.5. 135 mm lens


    Shoot! Shoot!

    ISO 4000 1/1250s at f/2. 135 mm lens


    Rebound! Rebound!

    ISO 5600 1/1000s at f/2.8. 80-200 mm lens. Focal length: 80 mm


    Defense! Defense! (Wait a minute. Where’s the ball?)

    ISO 4000 1/1250s at f/2. 135 mm lens


    Look at that! Gregory’s actually paying attention! He LOVES basketball!

    ISO 2000 1/800s at f/2.8. 135 mm lens


    Nuggets SCORE!

    ISO 6400 1/1000s at f/4.5. 80-200 mm lens. Focal length: 80 mm


    Good game. Good game. Good game. Good game.

    ISO 4000 1/1250s at f/2. 135 mm lens


    (Good game.)

    ISO 4000 1/1250s at f/2. 135 mm lens


    What was that famous line from Happy Days after Richie’s basketball game?

    ISO 2500 1/800s at f/10. 135 mm lens (Whoa! I totally should have opened up the aperture when I went outside. This is why we practice with new cameras!)

    That’s it for today’s testing. I loved the game, Gregory! It’s fun to watch you play!

posted by Julie Walton Shaver at 11:45 pm  

Tuesday, October 30, 2007

Tips for Great Halloween Photographs

Halloween-tombstone

For the best Halloween photographs, here are some easy do-it-yourself ideas.

PHOTO TIP #1 — First, you need an almost-13-year-old boy willing to do all the decorating on a budget. I gave Bradley $40 and one rule: “No burning down the house.”

He pocketed most of the money, and spent a good part of Sunday digging things out of the basement making his own decorations. In case you can’t read the tombstone he made out of plywood and Sharpies, it reads:

R.I.P

Rosalind Rigby

She left shamefully.

But she did save
a bunch of money
by switching
to Geico.

:D

(That kid cracks me up.)


Halloween-linden

He hung white flowy ghosts from the linden tree. He got those from the basement, originally made out of white kitchen trash bags by me the year he turned 7. (For those of you who don’t know, Bradley will turn 13 this year — my little monster, Halloween baby born in Room 13 — is now, as of tomorrow, officially a teenage werewolf.) Those flood-resistant trash-bag ghosts have lasted quite a while, don’t you think?

Halloween spider

Children throughout the neighborhood anxiously await the annual appearance of Elvira along the railing above our garage. Here’s where Bradley spent his money: $2.99 on a string of purple lights.

PHOTO TIP #2 — This is a cool picture partly because of the COMPOSITION of it. Graphically speaking, it has lots of angles and varying textures, as well as interesting contrast and shallow depth-of-field. I waited all day to get this picture, waiting for the light to give me a bit of an eery darkness and a glow to the trees. Tree fans, note the background of the shot. The tall yellow one is the black cherry tree behind our shed. It’ll be bare soon. Once the leaves start changing on that tree, they don’t hang on very long. The shorter green one is one of the Bradford pears next to the backyard swing. That one will still have leaves in December. Ugh. I hate raking when it’s 30 degrees out.

Halloween happy ghost

This happy ghost has been in our family longer than Gregory has!

Halloween-dancing-ghosts

The “dancing ghosts” have haunted our yard (and basement) for nearly a decade.

Linden halloween

This scrapbook photo from 1999 shows the ghosts the first year they magically appeared underneath the linden tree. This year, Bradley banished them to what he called the “family friendly” side yard and underneath the Aristocrat pear.

Happy, dancing ghosts live in the “family friendly” area, he says, making room for his sinister, oozing graves and bleeding storm troopers that haunt the main yard. (There’s almost always a Star Wars reference in Bradley posts, ever noticed that? Wait a minute: aren’t storm troopers robots or something? Blood? I’m SO Star-Wars-challenged.)

PHOTO TIP #3 — It’s supposed to be a nice day here this Halloween. Take pictures in the early morning, when the sun is throwing long dark shadows and casting a deep orange glow, or in the late afternoon. When taking photographs of groups of children, make sure they stand really close together. Make monster faces and snorting noises. (Remember, it’s about the MOMENT. We like natural smiles, not cheese smiles.) Take a look at the background of the picture. Shoot for something pretty, like a clump of colorful mums, or some glowing jack-o-lanterns. Turn the flash OFF, and move the children so that the sun is not directly in their eyes, ideally so that it’s shining on roughly two-thirds of their faces. If half of one cheek is in shadow, your picture will have interesting contrasts. Think of the great artists and how they use light in painting. Click here for an example and a discussion of “Rembrandt Light.”

Ever watch Grey’s Anatomy? Rembrandt light ALL OVER THE PLACE! (I love that show.)

If your point-and-shoot camera has a “portrait” setting, set it on that. If it has any zoom factor at all, stand as far away as you can and zoom all the way in. This just might give your picture that nice shallow depth-of-field that my clients LOVE in my pictures.

Or, as an alternative, you can find me in my neighborhood. I’ll be in my mamarazzi costume (mom with a big camera) following all the neighborhood children and enjoying every minute of the family fun of trick-or-treating in my sweet New Jersey town.

Oh, and if you stop by my house, don’t be afraid of Elvira. She’s perfectly happy in her perch. And that storm trooper by the door? He’ll be your candy man. Probably a good idea to leave something in the bowl. Something milk chocolate. For Elvira.

;)

Till next time,

Peace,
jules

posted by Julie Walton Shaver at 7:43 am  
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