Skylum is launching the “All-in-One Photography Bundle” today

Skylum is launching the “All-in-One Photography Bundle” today

Introducing the All-in-one Photography Bundle, your ticket to mastering the art of landscape editing and unleashing your creative potential. This bundle includes expert courses from 5 renowned photographers, a powerful photo editor Luminar Neo, and a selection of creative content. Elevate your skills, enhance your images, and be inspired by the best in the field.

The bundle includes photography courses that can help you take your skills to the next level. It also includes creative assets that will unleash your imagination with one-click results. For new users, you will also find a license for Luminar Neo.

This is a great chance to get Luminar Neo with a bundle of 11 courses from five great photographers worth $3,460 for only $129!

Get it now!

These prices are good from June 16 through June 26, 2023. Don’t miss out!

What you’ll get:

New users will get the bundle of courses plus a Luminar Neo Pro annual subscription for $129 (Luminar Neo renews at $99 after the first year). That’s a 96% discount.

New users get your bundle here.

Existing Luminar Neo users will get the bundle of courses for $99. A 97% discount.

Existing users get your bundle here.

The bundle includes educational courses in English, Luminar Neo, and Presets&Skies. Check out the included courses:

Educational courses

Learn from the masters of landscape photography with our expert courses. Dive into fundamental principles and advanced techniques, discovering how to enhance colors, optimize contrast, and create captivating compositions. Gain the knowledge to transform ordinary shots into extraordinary works of art.

Serge Ramelli

Zero to pro course. Serge’s ultimate bundle of 6 tutorials covers everything you need to know about photography, including basics, composition, retouching, publishing, making an impact on social media, and turning your photography passion into a profitable business.

Max Rive

Photoshop Afternoon Light Editing Tutorial. Learn how to turn mediocre afternoon light into beautiful and soft-looking light with this tutorial. Max Rive will demonstrate his unique light effects and other editing techniques in this in-depth tutorial video.

Photoshop Landscape Editing Tutorial. Learn to create the best color, contrast, light and sharpness in your landscape image. All landscape editing techniques in this Photoshop editing and post-processing tutorial are easy to learn without requiring advanced knowledge of Photoshop.

Landscape Post Processing Course. Create the ultimate color in your landscape photos thanks to all the latest color editing techniques and tricks of this course. Master white balance, split-toning, color calibration, selective color, color balance, color painting, adding color haze and more.

Photoshop Contrast Tutorial. Boost your Photoshop editing skills and create the best possible contrast in your landscapes. Learn to enhance haze between mountain layers, add special vignetting, great shadow details, bright but well-exposed highlights and incredible color saturation.

Marco Grassi

Instagram – Smells Viral. Learn from start to finish Marco’s full editing workflow before posting an image to Instagram, including the importance of cropping, resizing and adjusting your images, how to find the best crop, how to get more engagement, and how to edit your work specifically for Instagram.

Zelda Start to Finish. Turn an unusable file into a great image with this in-depth tutorial, including how to paint light from the side, how to fix areas that are blown out, how to dodge with color, how to recreate the polarizer effect in the sky, how to alter the perspective of an image and more.

Daydream Start to Finish. Learn how Marco edits an image, starting in Lightroom and ending in Photoshop. Master different post-processing techniques and how to add depth to your pictures and enhance them.

Pledge Start to Finish. Learn how to change the mood of your image and turn a flat file, shot during the harsh daylight, into a dramatic and unique scene with this in-depth tutorial. After this tutorial, you’ll know how to get a more dramatic look, how to desaturate the blues, and more.

Matt Suess

Sky replacement master class. Discover Matt’s secrets to creating realistic sky replacements, understand the top eight mistakes photographers make when replacing skies, and learn the best techniques for realistic results. Discover amazing bonuses included in the course, like 400 high-resolution skies that you can use today!

David Johnston

Landscape Photography University 201 — Ignite Your Composition. With this course, you’ll get a proven system for quickly improving your photography composition, saving time through learning these techniques, and reaching your goals as a photographer.

Get your bundle now!

Luminar Neo photo editor

1-year Pro Plan subscription of the award-winning and easy-to-use AI-powered photo editor.

Creative assets for Luminar Neo

  • 120 creative assets including Presets, Skies, LUTs, Overlays for Luminar Neo with a total value of $222:
  • Film Studio Portrait Presets by Team Skylum
  • Wildlife Adventure Presets by Team Skylum
  • Picture-Perfect Landscapes Presets by Team Skylum
  • Overcast Seascapes Presets by Team Skylum
  • Insta Life LUTs by Team Skylum
  • Precious Child LUTs by Team Skylum
  • Fitness LUTs by Team Skylum
  • Tender Blushing Skies by Team Skylum
  • Pacific Coastline Skies by The Remote Unknown
  • Prism Light Overlays by Team Skylum

With the All-in-one Photography Bundle, you have everything you need to elevate your skills, refine your editing techniques, and unleash your creativity. Capture the beauty of nature like never before and create stunning landscapes that leave a lasting impression. Get ready to embark on an unforgettable photography journey with this comprehensive bundle.

New users will get the bundle of courses plus a Luminar Neo Pro annual subscription for $129 (Luminar Neo renews at $99 after the first year). That’s a 96% discount.

New users get your bundle here.

Existing Luminar Neo users will get the bundle of courses for $99. A 97% discount.

Existing users get your bundle here.

Halumin H18 Soft Light Review: Product Photography Lighting Made Easy

Halumin H18 Soft Light Review: Product Photography Lighting Made Easy

Halumin H18

Product photography is often considered one of the most complicated and challenging genres. Besides having the right lenses and props to decorate the shot, you’ll need a variety of light shaping options to create the best looking photos. This is where the $399 Halumin H18 Soft Light brings something interesting to the table.

Obviously to create great looking product and food images takes a lot of practice and a deep understanding of how light will behave when pointed at different reflective surfaces. To help lower the impact of that learning curve, Halumin hopes its ring light-esque modifier will make it faster and easier to create high quality images for photographers at any level, and at an affordable price.

According to the company, the H18 modifier was designed to transform small product, food, and beverage photography (and video lighting) via an easy to control, versatile, and portable system.

At a glance the H18 doesn’t seem that special, but a close inspection changes that. Where you would normally find light pushing forwards out of the ring to light subjects in front of the modifier, the H18 instead has it’s diffusion pointed inwards in a patent pending “open cylindrical” design.

Image courtesy of Halumin Photo
Image courtesy of Halumin Photo

The modifier itself starts at $399 and has accessories and bundles that can bring the price up to $848 depending on how expansive you want to go. The question is, just how useful and user-friendly is it, and more importantly, is it worth the money?

Halumin H18: Design and Build Quality

The H18 modifier is pretty well built. The system itself ships in a small duffle bag and folds up much the same as a standard reflector would to save space and travel easier. It’s made with a very rugged and durable polyester ripstop laminate, nylon, and even tempered steel with tough rubber tabs on key stress points of the device to reduce wear and tear along the edges.

The thicker fabric is supposed to enhance the durability of the modifier and minimize any chance of light leakage, ensuring the only place light should come out from is the intended inner circle which is enhanced by the use of an inner lining of reflective silver.

While that is true where it counts, my unit did exhibit a little bit of leakage along the inner seam where the diffusion panel is connected. It is quite minimal and you can only see it if you are actually looking for it. In real-world usage this is completely unnoticeable to the eye and had basically zero effect on the actual images captured, but I’d be remiss if I didn’t mention it.

When opened and assembled, the H18 modifier has an interior “Staging Area” of 18 inches and measures 36x 36 x 8 inches in total, basically allowing for a shoot space of about four by four feet if you’re in a pinch for space. When collapsed and in it’s travel bag, the H18 measures just about 15 x 15 x 8 inches (if you don’t make use of the speed-light pouches) making it very easy to store and travel with when compared to many other light modifiers. The bag includes two pouches to carry speed-lights (or other small sized accessories) that can fit most speed-lights on the market, including the larger Profoto A, Westcott FJ80, and Godox “round” style heads.

The outer ring of the modifier has several fixed points that help the system maintain its shape. These “ribs” are secured using velcro and positioned alone the heavy rubber points along the outer edge of the ring. Then there are the two slots on opposing sides (we’ll say they are at the three o’clock and six o’clock positions for the purposes of this review) where you can mount the lighting system of choice using the included speed-light adapters, or optional studio light mounts. These ship by default with a Bowens mount, but additional adapters can be purchased to connect to nearly any other lighting system including Profoto which I used for this review.

The speedlight setup uses a system of snap-ties and velcro with a “rib” to connect to either side of the modifier, whereas the studio light uses larger metal and plastic clamp-based designed that connect over the thick rubber outer lining of the modifier. Even though its quite a simple setup, it can feel pretty confusing at first, so I’d recommend taking the time to watch a setup guide just so you don’t waste time.

Inside of the ring where the diffusion is, you may notice two thick rings of a heavy-duty velcro like material. These are built to act as a sort of “barn-door” to give you more control over how much light you want to spread on your subjects. This includes the use of some included “blackout materials” which we’ll dive into in the section below on using the modifier.

Finally, the Halumin H18 modifier has optional $269 accessory legs which lock onto the support ribs of the modifier and can articulate in nearly any direction to help support the H18 and its attached lights in a variety of positions. You can use these to help balance the modifier when being used on an angle or even as a “stand” to hold the modifier upright.

The collapsable leg(s) can extend out to 30 inches (13 inches collapsed) giving users a flexible range of lengths and angles to position them. At first these feel rather clunky, but after a bit of practice it started to feel second nature for helping balance tricky angles and setups.

Halumin H18: How Do You Use It?

If you don’t read the instructions (or watch the handy series of YouTube videos) the first setup can be a little confusing, but even then it didn’t take me long to figure out.

Once you figure out the intricacies of the H18, setting it up using either speed-lights, LED’s, or strobes shouldn’t take you any more than a few minutes. Depending on the complexity of your lights attached and if you need stand support, it might take you a bit longer to reposition the lights the way you want than to set it up or tear it down.

When you first take the modifier out, you need to connect a few rigid “ribs” along the outer lining to keep the system expanded for use. These are positioned along four corners of the modifier with openings at the three o’clock and six o’clock positions to mount the light of choice for your shoot. If you use the speed-light option, the H18 has a built-in reflective cover to fold over the speed-light to ensure there’s no light leaked when in use.

If you use the strobe/LED mount option, the base of the mount covers the entire opening, ensuring the light goes exactly where it’s needed and nothing is spilled out of the sides.

As I mentioned, the inner ring of the H18 has a set of 360-degree velcro “barn doors” that when turned inward keep the light contained in a really narrow area with a hard drop off. The idea here is that you can isolate the light in a tight space and only light your subject and not spill out onto the background. If you flip one of the rings outwards, it lets light come out at a wider angle. This lets you get a little more light on the product and/or the background.

Additionally, you can also flip part of the ring on both sides open to allow light to be stronger in one side of the ring so you can manipulate the light with having to change the settings of each flash as often.

Since they are Velcro you can control the light even more by taking the included blackout strips and use them totally block the light from select areas. According to the company, “This is for situations like, if you have a reflection on part of your subject that you want to eliminate or some of your subject is too close to the edge of the ring and you want to block that light so it’s not hot in that spot.”

The design itself is meant to be able to reduce the number of lights and modifiers needed to achieve a soft all-encompassing light setup which would typically need four or more lights to achieve a similar look, so while it still feels a bit big, it really does cut down on the space and quantity of lights needed to get a very smooth looking product shot. This was especially useful for me, being rather new to that side of the photography world.

Halumin H18: Performance and Results

I tested the Halumin H18 in a few different setups from the small dining area of my home to some lay-flat and table setups in the studio to see just how good it was, and maybe it was the beginner product photographer in me speaking, but I was pretty impressed with it. Yes it’s kind of weird to look at, but it actually works really well, especially if you want to create that dramatic product shot.

For the first few tests, I used a C-stand arm with a Manfrotto/Lastolite micro-arm and mini-clamp combination to hold a bunch of different items and almost straight out of camera they were ready to release.

To clean things up a little better and reduce my editing time, I simply draped a black t-shirt over the reflective c-stand arm and was left with just photoshopping out the actual “clamp” for the final shots. Other than adjusting my exposure, it was pretty easy to get a great shot right out of camera. Granted, the images could have been made much more attractive had I added additional lights or colored gels for the background but I wanted to focus on using the Halumin H18 on its own to show what it is actually capable of.

Halumin H18: Awkward At First, But Incredibly Useful

In each of the the vertical floating setup, lay-flat, and the corner/table setup, the $399 Halumin H18 Light Modifier was the only light used, and each shot was used with the modifier positioned at a few different angles with the inner “barn doors” held in a variety of positions to make subtle changes to the lighting. But in each and every case, it was clear that the H18 Softlight handled the reflections on shiny objects exceptionally well, making it an ideal tool for those serious about food, beverage, and product photography.

Being new to that world myself, It was kind of exciting to be able to capture images this way with such ease, especially since the modifier on its own seemed to make the products shot with it just pop out of the background. It was pretty quickly clear that spending more time finding the right angles or adding additional accent lights could make the products shot with this modifier absolutely jump off of the screen. The only downside would be if you had to photograph larger products, then this modifier would effectively be useless for you.

For many new to the product world, the cost of entry may be a bit of a deterrent given that the modifier starts at $399 for the base system and goes up to as much as $848 for a bundle with the accessory legs and adapter mounts for studio lighting (more if you need to buy adapters for a light other than Bowens)

But, given that good product photography lighting, sets, accessories and props are expensive, adding a high qualify modifier like the H18 just makes sense as it can significantly cut down the amount of gear and lighting required to get “the shot” as well as save you a ton of time both on set and in post production.

Are There Alternatives?

One alternative that is kind of close in the end result would be the much more affordable $139 V-Flat World Light Cone bundle by Karl Taylor which would require additional setups but can deliver somewhat similar ending images.

Outside of that though, there really isn’t any other close alternative which makes the Halumin H18 modifier unique. Yes, there are tons of other ring-lights out there, but they are all front-facing designs, not “inwards” as the H18 acts. Meaning, you can get other similar shaped light modifiers, but they would require a significant amount of additional customization to even begin to get close to replicating the setup, which would defeat the entire purpose, and likely make the cost and or space required to use much more significant.

Should You Buy It?

Yes, if you’re serious about food, beverage, and product photography.

This Weird Rifle-Shaped Photography Cage Looks Like a Very Bad Idea

This Weird Rifle-Shaped Photography Cage Looks Like a Very Bad Idea

The StockCam is an unusual camera cage for photography enthusiasts who need multiple mounting points for various accessories, as well as stability and better camera handling. It’s also shaped like an assault rifle…

If you’re a photographer who’s also into guns, you’ll probably love the design of the StockCam. It combines the functionality and convenience of a high-quality camera cage, with the aesthetics of a modern assault rifle. It even features a trigger to activate the shutter or lock the cage to ensure that the shutter doesn’t accidentally get pressed. You actually use it by pressing the stock against your shoulder and looking into the camera display as you would in a gun scope, and then press the trigger to shoot, as in take a picture. But can you imagine using one of these things around police?

The first time I stumbled upon a video of the StockCam on an obscure Japanese website, I was convinced it was some sort of a joke, as the idea of disguising a camera cage as a realistic assault rifle seemed, well, dangerous. But then I studied the product a bit, and it looked a bit too well-thought-out to be a spoof. It does offer plenty of functionality, with multiple mounts for things like microphones, lights, and spare camera lenses, and the trigger is designed to work like an actual camera shutter, with light presses used for focusing, and hard presses for taking shots.

The thing is that whoever designed the StockCam wanted it to look like a real gun. They could have simply made it bright yellow or orange, but instead, they went for the gun black which only enhances its similarity to a real firearm. Even the guy in the promotional photos and videos is wearing a military-type vest – albeit one with the Rockstar logo on it – so the military look is intentional.

If you’re going to use something like the StockCam to take photos of birds in the wilderness, maybe you’ll be fine, but if you bust something like this out in a US  city, you’re asking for trouble. This thing looks way too realistic not to be confused with an assault rifle, and do you really want to get shot? And I don’t mean photographed.

 

For more information on the StockCam, check out the official website. They actually have a 50% early bird discount, if you’re considering getting one.

Graton Rancheria to fund, support Native American filmmakers

Graton Rancheria to fund, support Native American filmmakers

Artists and prospective filmmakers with Native California ancestry will gain new opportunities and mentorships. That’s thanks to a multi-million dollar endowment set up by the Federated Indians of Graton Rancheria, here in Sonoma County.

The Sundance Institute, best known for its affiliated film festival, announced the $4 million endowment Wednesday.

Greg Sarris is tribal chairman of the Federated Indians of Graton Rancheria. He told KRCB Thursday the endowment will expand Sundance’s 29-year-old indigenous program.

It is open to members of California tribes whether they are officially recognized by the federal government or not. 

“We see a lot of American Indians who are starting to get in film and television, but it’s always plains Indians, which I’m very happy about, but, historically, California Indian people have been overlooked, in politics, in film, in all of that, and I have a chip on my shoulder, and I want to support al of my people,” Sarris said.

Sarris made the remarks at a groundbreaking ceremony for an expansion of the Graton Casino and Resort.

Sarris himself participated in the Sundance Institute’s Screenwriters Lab in 1992.

The endowment will sponsor $25,000 fellowships for emerging and midcareer Indigenous artists with projects in development or production and include creative support.

Applications are open until August 28. The first round of fellowships and scholarships are expected to be distributed next year.

Billings chamber to sell ‘signature’ Sharp painting at auction

Billings chamber to sell ‘signature’ Sharp painting at auction

Indigenous people of the West have long fascinated outsiders, an intrigue stoked by the works of such artists as Charles M. Russell, Frederic Remington and Joseph Henry Sharp. These artists came from the East to roam the Great Plains and document the traditional lives of Native people as they were being forced onto reservations. The illustrious and often romanticized worlds they created became part of Montana’s expanding folklore.

One such work, “The Young Chief,” a 20×30” oil painting by Sharp that portrays an intimate exchange among an Apsáalooke (Crow) family, will be available at auction on July 15 in Reno, Nevada, during the Coeur d’Alene Art Auction. The painting, one of Sharp’s first open-air camp scenes, depicts the family preparing for a sweat lodge ceremony as the warm hue of morning hits the prairie. Grazing horses dot the horizon and tepees rise in the background, merging with a pink-tinted sky.

“The Young Chief” is valued between $300,000 and $500,000, according to the auction catalog.

That the painting is for sale is not unique — the art market is rich with paintings that have drastically appreciated as originals become scarce and “western” continues as a fashionable lifestyle trend.

What is unique is the story behind the painting, created by Sharp in 1905 and gifted to the Billings Chamber of Commerce in 1915 by Charles Bair, a close friend of the artist’s and a well-known businessman of the region.

Some area art experts worry that selling the painting is a mistake in a long line of Montana’s historic artwork being parceled off to the highest bidder. The chamber’s current leadership maintains the painting is rarely seen by the public and should be sold so the proceeds can be used for other purposes.

“The painting is a magnificent work of art, and we are hopeful that it will be purchased by an organization or individual who will be able to fully enjoy and appreciate the piece,” Billings Chamber of Commerce President John Brewer told Montana Free Press.

Brewer, when asked, did not disclose any other works the chamber intends to sell, but Warren Rollins’ “Indian Portrait,” a 38×28” oil painting valued between $15,000 to $25,000, will also be auctioned in July. According to the Coeur d’Alene Art Auction, billed as the nation’s largest auction of western art, the painting also is owned by the Billings Chamber of Commerce.

Gordon McConnell, assistant director of the Yellowstone Art Center in Billings (now the Yellowstone Art Museum) from 1982 to 1998, disagrees with the sale of Sharp’s work.

“My initial reaction is that [the decision to sell the painting] is disconnected from any social or cultural responsibility,” McConnell said. He recalls “The Young Chief” being exhibited during the 1998 inaugural exhibition of the Yellowstone Art Museum, which included a major addition to the former art center that was housed in the old Yellowstone County Jail.

At the time, the museum received a large gift from Virginia Snook, a Billings resident whose family collected art and entertained many artists and writers, including Russell, Sharp, Ernest Hemingway, Will James and Isabelle Johnson. Though the YAM was a contemporary art museum, “We saw it as a responsibility to accept Virginia Snook’s generous gift to preserve that for the people of Montana,” McConnell said. “We were trying to fill out the narrative of art history in Montana.”

The painting has been on extended loan to the museum since 1967, stored as a courtesy to the chamber, according to Laura Krapacher, YAM’s registrar.

Historian Thomas Minckler saw “The Young Chief” in the early 1980s and recalls being in awe.

“It was a signature Joseph Henry Sharp painting of a Crow encampment, very typical, though a very important piece of that period,” said Minckler, who is a Montana scholar and author of “Montana: A Paper Trail” and “In Poetic Silence: The Floral Paintings of Joseph Henry Sharp.”

In November 2022, Minckler was asked by Brewer to assess the value of the painting. Minckler did not conduct a formal appraisal, but estimated it could easily sell for $300,000, and up to as much as $800,000.

In an emailed response to MTFP, Brewer said the chamber board in December 2022 unanimously voted to contract with the Coeur d’Alene Art Auction and based its decision “purely on the merits of the sale,” noting that “the Chamber is on solid financial footing with healthy reserves.”

In May 2023, the Billings Chamber Foundation was created and will be operated for educational and charitable purposes, Brewer explained. “The corporation shall support the educational programs of the Billings Chamber of Commerce, as well as community placemaking initiatives.”

When asked, Brewer would not specifically say whether the proceeds of the sale will be used for the foundation. But in an email obtained by MTFP, Brewer told Minckler the proceeds will be gifted to the chamber foundation.

lone.jpg

Courtesy Billings Public Library
C.M. Russell’s “Lone Warrior” is part of the collection of the Billings Public Library.

Brewer told MTFP that the board is considering holding the principal similar to an endowment, “which will allow the asset to provide value to the community for many years to come.” Some initiatives that Brewer foresees the chamber supporting include diversity, equity and inclusion efforts, workforce development and increasing tourism.

The sale hasn’t been publicized in Billings, but the art was displayed at the C.M. Russell Auction in Great Falls in August 2022 and in several national art publications to generate interest, Brewer said.

SHARP AMONG THE CROWS

Both Sharp and Russell came west in search of something mystical and ruggedly romantic, their brushes conjuring grand scenes: part folklore, part observation of Indigenous people who lived in connection with the land for thousands of years.

Born in Ohio in 1859, Sharp began painting at age 14. He attended the McMicken School of Design in Cincinnati and then studied in Antwerp, Munich and Paris among the modernists and the impressionists. He brought their sweeping brush strokes and casual style back with him to America. His subjects ranged from florals to landscapes to portraits, but he is perhaps best known for his portrayal of Native Americans at the turn of the century. He painted with a familiarity gained from living on the Crow Reservation and frequenting the Blackfeet Reservation in the early 1900s. His impressionistic and intimate scenes of Native life and the tribes of the region were rich with detail and the nuances of everyday life.

“He was such a versatile painter,” Minckler said. “He was known for firelight scenes when the sun is just starting to set, illuminating the inside of the tepees. He painted figural scenes in the Southwest, and his Crow and Blackfoot camps are just masterfully painted.”

Sharp’s paintings contrasted with the works of his contemporaries, who often painted the clashing of Native people with western pioneers.

“Frederic Remington and, to a lesser degree, Charles Russell, especially in his early work, tended to portray the Indian as a malevolent force,” Peter Hassrick wrote in “The Charles M. Bair Family Collection,” published by the Yellowstone Art Museum in 2004. “They were pictured … as resisters of civilization, to be feared and revered for their bellicose traditions.”

When Sharp arrived at Crow Agency in 1902, he met Charles Bair, who leased land on the reservation to run sheep and cattle. Bair became Sharp’s largest customer in Montana, as described by Carolyn Reynolds Riebeth in her book “J.H. Sharp Among the Crow Indians 1902–1910.” Riebeth noted that Bair “would buy paintings for gifts and for himself. A fine one in the [Billings Chamber of Commerce] is long ago a gift from Bair.”

Riebeth was the daughter of Indian Agent Samuel Guilford Reynolds, and the family arrived the same year as Sharp to reside on the Crow Reservation. Bair, Sharp and Reynolds became close friends. Bair even gave Sharp a covered sheep wagon with a stove to use during his outings to paint in the winter, as Sharp was drawn to the winter landscapes of the plains.

“Bair was the patron, Sharp the creative force, and Reynolds the facilitator,” according to Hassrick.

In 1915, Bair gifted “The Young Chief” to the Billings Commercial Club (later renamed the Billings Chamber of Commerce) as a “thank you” for promoting a showing of Sharp’s works, according to Brewer.

Minckler recalled speaking to Alberta Bair, the daughter of Charles Bair, in the early 1980s about the painting. They were members of the “Yellowstone Corral of the Westerners,” a chapter of the international history group that gathered periodically at the Northern Hotel downtown. “She said her father was a great friend of Billings,” Minckler said. “At the time he gifted the painting, it was perhaps worth $400 or $500. That was a lot of money back in 1904. He wasn’t just gifting for fun.”

Elizabeth Guheen, executive director of the Charles M. Bair Family Museum in Martinsdale, did not return inquiries for comment for this story.

“The Young Chief” demonstrated a shift in Sharp’s subject matter, according to author Hassrick. “Such paintings came to be considered something of a corrective in the pictorial interpretation of the American Indian … Sharp, having lived peaceably for so long among the Pueblo in Taos and the Crow in Montana, explored another more accommodating dimension of Native life.”

Though Sharp shied away from painting scenes of conflict, he did paint the battlefield from Custer’s last stand. From the back window of his studio at Crow Agency, Riebeth wrote, he could see Custer Hill.

“Custer Battlefield,” a thickly layered, 24×36” oil painting depicting the Little Big Horn Valley blanked in snow with the battlefield in the distance, is owned by the Billings Public Library. It is one ofsix paintings by Sharp, dating back to the early 1900s, owned by the Billings library. Sharp donated the painting to the library in 1944 in memory of Reynolds. The painting was described as one of his few remaining Crow Reservation paintings in a letter from Riebeth, acting on Sharp’s behalf, to offer the artwork to what was then the Parmly Billings Library.

As city assets, the paintings belong to the people of Billings, local historian Joseph Lanning told MTFP. The collection also includes a watercolor by Russell, six hand-tinted prints by photographer L.A. Huffman, and Luther “Yellowstone” Kelly’s 1870s oiled-silk map.

Lanning, who oversees the library’s archives, described the library in the early 1900s as the place residents went for cultural exposure, which is why such artworks hung on its walls. Sharp, who held painting demonstrations at the library during his “old days,” Riebeth wrote, believed the library was “a logical place for a memorial to my father, and who I know was Mr. Sharp’s best friend in Montana and one of his best anywhere.”

Lanning utilizes the library’s collection of art for educational programming and to represent the myriad cultures in the region.

“It’s very important that I don’t use this art to just look back,” he said. “I want to know how I can use this art collection going forward, not just teaching new generations about it, but seeing them through a new lens and getting new voices and interpretations of them.”

Due to their value, the paintings are not hung at the library permanently, but rather stored in the Yellowstone Art Museum’s vault, Lanning said.

A LEGACY OF LOSSSelling Sharp’s work is part of a larger story of loss that dates back at least to the 1950s, when Montanans lost one of the greatest collections of C.M. Russell’s works to Amon G. Carter, a wealthy Texan who used the art as the foundation of the Amon Carter Museum of American Art in Fort Worth, Texas.

Russell, who was born in 1864 in St. Louis, came to Montana at age 16 and never left, becoming internationally known as the “original cowboy artist.” After his death in 1926, his widow, Nancy Russell, sought to ensure her husband’s legacy in Montana and donated to the city of Great Falls his studio and its contents, which would become part of the C.M. Russell Museum.

Russell’s works were coveted during his lifetime and even more so after his death. A robust collection of paintings made their way to Billings in the 1940s after the death of one of Russell’s longtime friends, Malcom Mackay. His son, Bill, in the book “Montana’s Charlie Russell: Art in the Collection of the Montana Historical Society,” remembered his father’s love of Montana to be “deep and abiding. Living in Montana was a particular way of life, and it was easy to see why the paintings of Charles M. Russell immediately caught dad’s fancy.”

The Mackay collection expanded to the point where the family built a “Russell Room” in their New Jersey home to display the collection of paintings, drawings and bronze sculptures, according to Montana Historical Society archives. After Malcom passed away in 1932, his wife, Helen, approached the Northern Hotel in Billings about displaying the collection. The hotel was being rebuilt after a devastating fire and boasted of its state-of-the-art (and fireproof) new facility. When it opened in July 1942, Russell’s paintings were on display in the lobby and became a tourist attraction for the next decade.

The leaders of the Montana Historical Society in Helena also wanted to share Russell’s legacy. Director K. Ross Toole pushed to expand the society and establish art galleries and a museum, and in 1952 he formalized the acquisition of the Mackay Collection of Russell paintings and bronzes, spurred by the loss that same year of another great collection of Russell’s works obtained by Sid Willis, owner of the Mint saloon, which operated in downtown Great Falls through the 1960s. Having served him drinks and befriended the artist over the years, Willis collected a great deal of Russell’s work.

Willis sold his collection of nearly 100 original oil paintings, watercolors, pen and ink drawings, illustrated letters and clay models in 1945 to the Mint Corporation, an organization established by Maurice and Gretchen Egan of Billings and George and June Sterling of Great Falls, according to the publication “The Mint Collection and the Saloon Entrepreneurs” by Paul T. Devore. A clause in the sale required that if the collection were to be resold, it would first be offered to Montanans, and in 1948, it was. The Charles M. Russell Memorial Committee was formed to raise the $125,000 asking price, and when it failed to raise even half that amount, the collection was purchased by Amon Carter.

After the loss of the Willis collection, Helen Mackay decided it was time to offer the family’s collection to the state, and asked for $50,000 — a fraction of its worth. Toole went about fundraising, promoting the collection as the last chance to keep a large body of Russell’s work intact and in the state.

“We simply could never explain its loss to our children. We could never rationalize our apathy and selfishness,” Toole wrote in a society brochure to promote the purchase. “Are we awake enough to save this last and finest collection?” The effort succeeded, and the collection now makes up the Montana Historical Society’s Charles M. Russell room.

The Pressures of Social Media on Photographers

The Pressures of Social Media on Photographers

For years, photographers old and new would enjoy sharing their favorite work across social media sites such as Instagram. Sharing your images was fun and would create conversation, engagement, and perhaps sales. Nowadays, the situation has changed.

I, like many others, have enjoyed sharing my photography on social media. Instagram has usually been my go-to, and for a long time, engagement was great. I would receive many new followers, comments, and likes. The feeling was amazing, as I felt my name was getting out there and I was receiving lots of inquiries and photography jobs. As time has gone by and the algorithms have changed, my engagement has dropped massively, the jobs from social media have declined and I was left wondering: what’s the point?

Instead of worthwhile comments providing me with valuable critique of my images and inquiries, now, I receive comments such as “cool tones bro” or countless comments from bots saying “DM me to be featured on such and such.” The number of accounts my images reach has fallen drastically, direct messages are now mostly spam, and the likes are almost nonexistent. These issues are not just experienced by myself, but many others that I talk to.

Platforms such as Instagram have changed so much that their preference is now for products such as Reels where scantily clad women try to attract you to their Onlyfans or useless financial advice from non experts about how you can make a million dollars in a year by investing $1 a month!

Social media has become so dangerous that it could destroy your self-esteem. For the vast majority of photographers out there trying to make a name for themselves using social media, the chances of being discovered are highly unlikely, even if your work is original and amazing. You can post the most amazing photo and perhaps only receive 20 likes, and this can leave you feeling invalidated, questioning your own ability, or worrying about where your next photography work is going to come from. 

Some photographers rely so much on social media engagement to find work. They want to run workshops and sell presets for Lightroom, prints, and other products. If the algorithm no longer supports them, they can lose so much in the long run and will have to find other ways to market themselves and diversify their options.

There is the option to promote your images, but is this really worthwhile now? Unless you can afford a large budget, for most, I would say this is best avoided. 

Did you become a photographer just to become famous? I don’t think so. You became a photographer because you enjoy art, you enjoy being out in nature or working with different people, trying to create something beautiful. What you create is for you and your clients, and anything else is on top is a bonus.

For those looking for more photography work via it, it might be time to look at additional ways of marketing yourself outside of social media, and I wish everyone the very best of luck, as it’s tough out there.

Photography is for the birds

Photography is for the birds

Photography is for the birds

Southern Utah is an amazing place to watch and photograph many majestic species of birds // Photos by John Byron Turner

BY JOHN BYRON TURNER — This past winter lasted so long that my wife and I were experiencing serious cabin fever here in Parowan. So, rather than becoming permanent couch potatoes, we set out to photograph some of the birds of prey that we have seen along the rural roads throughout the Iron County farmlands.

Jennifer has always been an avid bird watcher and I have been involved in many areas of photography most of my life. We are both retired now, so we headed down the farm roads once or twice a week when we weren’t getting blasted by yet another snowstorm.

On our first couple of trips, we wanted to find the bald eagles we had read about in this newspaper, and we found quite a few. Along the way we also saw lots of hawks…mostly red tails, and recently we spotted a very well-camouflaged pair of owls who had just built a nest. Once spring got closer we began seeing several hawk nests, so we now have eight or ten sites which we regularly monitor and are seeing the birds attending to their eggs.

  

Now that the snowy farm fields have turned to lush green crops, we have watched the owl hatch two owlets that started out as little fuzz balls resembling Ewoks from Star Wars, but we have watched them turn into fierce, curious little owls. We have seen them start to advance to a stage known as branching, where they test life out of the nest for the first time, and start to try out their wings, under the close supervision of their parents.

In photographing these beautiful birds, we learned pretty quickly that none of these birds are anxious to pose for a camera, and that a lot of patience is necessary when shooting bird photos. The hawks were especially anxious for us to leave their territory and would hover over our heads menacingly. You can only get so close before they get spooked, and we don’t want to disturb their habitat, so a telephoto lens is a must.

Also, while it can be easier to spot and photograph birds during winter, when the trees are bare, now that summer has arrived it is becoming increasingly more difficult to find them. So please be watchful and careful.

7 Unorthodox Ways of Finding Photography Subjects

7 Unorthodox Ways of Finding Photography Subjects
© Bieke Depoorter

Over the course of four years, the photographer Bieke Depoorter made eight visits to the United States, hitchhiking and spending each evening in the home of a different stranger. After sundown, she’d approach someone on the street who looked trustworthy and ask if she could crash with them for the night. 

Depoorter photographed those who said “yes” during those brief one-night stays, knowing that, in almost all cases, she’d likely never see them again. In 2014, those trips culminated in the photography book I Am About to Call it a Day, a series of tender, intense, and mysterious portraits of people encountered purely by chance.

This is an article about artists who took risks while finding photography subjects and made singularly compelling images in the process. One turned to Tinder, while another contacted all her exes. A taxi driver asked his passengers for permission to photograph them, and a student messaged people on the Couchsurfing app.  

While studying in France, Mel McVeigh faced the challenge of finding photography subjects in an unfamiliar place. It was her teacher, Claudine Doury, who suggested she start on Tinder. McVeigh edited her existing dating profile to include the question: Can I take your portrait? 

If the men she matched with brought it up, they’d discuss meeting (for a date and a portrait). Looking back, McVeigh remembers a sense of “giddiness” and anticipation—for both the photograph itself and the possibility of falling in love. In the end, the artist did not fall in love, but she came away with several friendships. 

© Mike Harvey

After university, the photographer Mike Harvey took a job in Wales as a taxi driver to earn some extra income. During his four years driving people, he was intrigued by these brief but intimate meetings, finding passengers would often open up about their lives. 

With these encounters in mind, he kept a DSLR in his glove box and asked people if he could take their portraits at the end of their rides. As a “thank you” to those who said “yes,” he’d waive their fares. He asked 130 people; all but about nine agreed. 

© Laura Beth Reese

For Laura Beth Reese, photography was, in some ways, a secondary motive, coupled with her desire to reconnect or find a sense of resolution after a breakup. Of the exes she contacted, only about half said “yes” to being photographed; she met them at their homes for the sessions. 

In the portraits, the exes are partially unclothed but not fully nude—the artist believed that might be “too much to ask.” Some weren’t comfortable being photographed but wanted to photograph Reese instead—a proposal to which she agreed.  

© Mirja Maria Thiel

When Mirja Maria Thiel set out to document intimacy among senior couples in their 70s and 80s, she went about finding photography subjects in a few ways. She met her first couple through a sculptor who taught nude painting to students ages 60-plus. At one point, she contacted a sex therapist—a perfect approach, given the subject. 

Thiel also ran ads in supermarkets (look for bulletin boards too) and took out an ad in a popular local newspaper. As it happens, photographers have been using newspapers and newsletters to find subjects for decades: while traveling the country and working with LGBTQ+ couples in the 1980s, Sage Sohier ran ads in local gay newsletters. 

© Natcha Wongchanglaw

When Natcha Wongchanglaw moved to New York to study photography, she didn’t get the chance to meet many people in her new city. But an assignment from a class in editorial photography encouraged her to think outside the box. Using the Couchsurfing app, a network created to connect travelers with local hosts, she started contacting hosts who lived in New York. 

It took her a few weeks to get a “yes,” but soon after, she was traveling to Harlem to meet her first sitter. Wongchanglaw usually spent a few hours with each host and shared a meal, but in some cases, she stayed the night as a “couchsurfer” herself.

© Sophie Green

The photographer Sophie Green was looking for subjects with a very specific requirement: people who were also named “Sophie Green.” She took a few avenues in her search: she looked up voter records and searched Wikipedia. She also ran searches on Facebook and Twitter. 

You can use Facebook to find people who share a common interest (check out groups); find events in your area; or filter by name, location, or keyword. Try sending messages explaining your intentions, and see who responds. 

© Bieke Depoorter

Before Bieke Depoorter stayed with strangers in the United States, she took a similar approach while traveling along the Trans Siberian Railway. During that journey, she carried a handwritten note, which helped her navigate the language barrier: “I am looking for a place to spend the night. Do you know people who would have a bed, or a couch? I don’t need anything in particular, and I have a sleeping bag.

By making herself almost painfully vulnerable—without the kindness of strangers, she’d have no place to sleep—Depoorter invited the people she photographed to express their own vulnerabilities. Sometimes, it’s easier to let your guard down with strangers, and her photographs speak to that paradox: had she got to know them a little bit better—or stayed just one night longer—perhaps the images would not have felt so achingly intimate. 

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