Queensberry Connects


Posts Tagged ‘Moda Fotografica’

Click here for Part 1.

Who are those people … the ones staring back at you thinking, ‘What does he/she want us to do?’

More importantly, how do they see the unfolding of their day? Is it a fairy tale? Is it some kind of weird reality show? Is it a ‘performance’? Is it the beginning of something amazing? Is it a huge party? Is it something their mother planned?

Is it theirs? That’s the thing. We, as the image makers, also become the storytellers.  We create the vocabulary for describing the unfolding of the day. If we don’t photograph something, will it still be remembered in ten years time? We don’t own the story. We are gathering the information of the day to give back to its owners.

We owe it to the people who have asked us to photograph their wedding to understand something about their vision of the day.

This question alone is not enough. We also need to ask them about themselves and how they express their relationship. We need to listen.

At Moda Fotografica we show genuine interest in the events of the day and do our best to avoid family politicking .

Stranger in the viewfinder by Johannes van Kan
Stranger in the viewfinder. Image by Johannes van Kan

A stranger is a person you don’t know.

Turning the Bride and Groom into your best friends (for a day) takes the strangers out of the photograph.

It stops you from being the enemy (the person hired to shoot them) and changes the dynamic of the photography into something more personal and meaningful.

How you make friends is up to you.

How you keep them is by telling their story in the best way possible.

Best wishes, Johannes

 

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  • The recognition of your peers is something to be proud of. The New Zealand Institute of Professional Photography has run Wedding Album Awards for only two years, but I (we) have won both times.

    Now there’s talk of changing the competition rules. That’s OK, but the word is that some photographers feel I shouldn’t be allowed to enter next year …

    For what it’s worth, as I see them, here are the secrets of my success: Flow, Rhythm, Storytelling, Pace and Creative Expression. If you think about these words again they not only relate to album design, but are also about music. Music is the other secret ingredient!

    Both years I used Photojunction to prepare the designs. The software gives me the freedom to design a contemporary book within realistic parameters. I used Queensberry Duo albums so I could combine the freedom of a digital magazine style page with the classic beauty of a matted page presentation.

    I listen to music when I put together an album …. not just any old music … sometimes its Johnny Cash because it has to be … and sometimes it’s somebody like Emiliano Torrini because she has a sense of fun in her music… or sometimes its Gomez.

    How does music affect the design? It’s about something called ‘Flow’. Flow is when you get into a creative space that lets you ignore formulas, and design by your feelings. The music is good to exclude other influences that interfere with the creative process. The best is when it clears your head, inspires you, and engages you with your visual environment.

    After Flow there is Rhythm. Rhythm creates a life for the album. It’s true! The rhythm of the album is the delivery of the story in a manner that keeps the viewer’s attention by balancing the presentation of the images with the layout and page density.

    Rhythm is really the poetry of the storytelling.

    As the wedding photographer I must also be the story teller. That’s what makes an album such a wonderful way to bring the parts of a wedding together.

    I feel strongly about the poetry and rhythm of an album. I try to pace the presentation of images to allow for the natural flow of the story being told. The story must be as strong as the photographs.

    I like to vary the pace. Sometimes the viewers can stroll through quiet pages with few images. Sometimes there will be busy pages, with many images, where they will need to stop and browse, but these will always be near quieter spaces.   There is a flow that feels right.  What I am trying to say is that the album should read well and not be cluttered.

    Then there is Creative Expression. This should start with the making of the images, because in truth creativity is not the use of random spot colours or some filter applied after the fact.

    Both my competition albums were for brides who were reluctant about photography. I think this helped me because in each case I was encouraged to look at the entire wedding as a story. The entries represented only a part of the full albums supplied to the clients but told enough of the story to give a sense of skill, creativity, style, design, and emotion.

    Wedding album award 2008

    Wedding album award 2008 (click the image to see more layouts)

    Finally, wedding albums should always be independent designs that reflect the subject matter, as well as the personal style of the Photographer. Not the Photographer’s style as seen through the images of somebody else’s wedding.

    So there it is … I do want to give my best but I always strive to be better. I haven’t decided whether to enter next time …. maybe I will.

    Best wishes, Johannes

    PS I said ‘we’ won because the rest of ‘me’ is Moda Fotografica, our wonderful studios just out of Christchurch in Lyttelton. And it is through our combined effort that our studio strives for excellence.

     

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  • jvk_smallFor a country with the population of the San Francisco Bay Area, New Zealand has a lot of great photographers, and we’re proud that many of them are Queensberry clients.

    We’re delighted to say that one of the best has agreed to write for us. Johannes van Kan of Moda Fotografica has been a friend since 1993, when Heather and I first met him at NZIPP’s annual conference and awards judging.

    Since then Johannes has qualified as a Fellow of the New Zealand Institute of Professional Photographers and was New Zealand Wedding Photographer of the Year in 2004 and 2005, and winner of the New Zealand Wedding Album of the Year Award in 2007 and 2008.

    Johannes describes himself as a Queensberry partisan, and the feeling is mutual. We regularly use his images in our display albums, for good reason: they always attract admiring attention, and that’s always great for sales!

    Johannes describes himself as a “photographer, poet and coffee tester”. He’s also a fan of good music and an exceptional album designer and Photoshop artist. We look forward to him sharing his secrets, skills and insights with us.

    Cheers, Ian

    PS Johannes isn’t the only winner in the family. He runs Moda Fotografica with his wife Jo Grams, originally from Queensland Australia, who is also an NZIPP Fellow and won Wedding Photographer of the Year in 2006.

     

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  • dsc_0038

    Here’s a wedding from the ends of the earth, where your albums come from. Louise and Tom were married before 250 guests at the First Church, Dunedin New Zealand, on 24th February 2007.

    The dress was made by Louise Anderson of Christchurch (no relation!) with fabric brought back by the bride from a shopping trip in Italy. With that exception the groom was an equal opportunity wedding planner.

    The wedding was photographed by New Zealand’s 2006 Wedding Photographer of the Year Jo Grams, of Moda Fotografica. It was an “exhausting” 12 hour shoot, with just one photographer, and ended at 11.30pm.

    Jo says she “loved photographing the wedding”. The couple chose a “generous” 15×12 black leather digital-paged album which was printed and bound at Queensberry. “I loved it so much I got one for the studio display.”

    The couple are expecting their first child at the end of June.

    dsc_0033

    Click here to view Louise and Tom’s album.

    Click here for Jo’s and her husband Johanne’s profile.

     

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