Photography

Take a look at the winners of the Sony World Photography Awards 2023

Take a look at the winners of the Sony World Photography Awards 2023

The Sony World Photography Awards 2023 has just announced its overall winners at a special gala ceremony in London. 

The Photographer of the Year title was awarded to Edgar Martins (Portugal) for his moving series, ‘Our War’, paying homage to his friend, photojournalist Anton Hammerl, who was killed during the Libyan Civil War in 2011. 

With over 200 prints and digital displays from winning and shortlisted photographers, the Sony World Photography Awards exhibition opens at Somerset House, London from today (14 April) until 1 May 2023, showcasing incredible talent from all around the world. 

But if you can’t make it to the exhibit, don’t worry, we’ve got you covered with a photo gallery of the major winners and the incredible stories behind their images. 

Get ready to be transported to a world of beauty and wonder, from breathtaking aerial shots of frozen Polish lakes to adorable black bear cubs in North Carolina.

Photographer of the Year: Edgar Martins (Portugal)

The Photographer of the Year title has been awarded to the acclaimed photographer Edgar Martins (Portugal) for his series ‘Our War’.

‘Our War’ is an original and nuanced tribute to the photographer’s late friend the photojournalist Anton Hammerl, who was abducted and killed on 5 April 2011 by government militia, during the Libyan Civil War.

Frustrated by unsuccessful attempts to ascertain the whereabouts of his friend’s last mortal remains, Martins took matters into his own hands and travelled to Libya. He was brought in covertly by a petrol smuggler and was immediately faced with enormous challenges working in such a volatile environment.

Realising that he would not be able to carry out a thorough and independent investigation, Martins instead chose to reflect on the question: ‘How does one tell a story when there is no witness, no testimony, no evidence, no subject?’

Creative winner: Lee-Ann Olwage (South Africa)

Architecture and Design winner: Fan Li (China Mainland)

Documentary Projects winner: Hugh Kinsella Cunningham (United Kingdom)

The photo project by Hugh Kinsella Cunningham highlights the role of women in promoting peace in the Democratic Republic of Congo, which has been marred by conflict and violence for almost two decades.

It features portraits and in-depth stories of female activists who work to create dialogue between armed actors and communities, track human rights violations, and plead with rebel leaders to stop attacks. 

Environment winner: Marisol Mendez (Bolivia) & Federico Kaplan (Argentina)

Miruku is a photo project that explores the water shortage experienced by the Wayuus, an indigenous population from La Guajira, Colombia’s coastal desert. 

The project, commissioned by 1854/British Journal of Photography and WaterAid, examines how climate change and human negligence have contributed to the problem. 

Landscape winner: Kacper Kowalski (Poland)

Portfolio winner: James Deavin (United Kingdom)

Sport winner: Al Bello (United States) ]

The photograph series by Al Bello captures Kelsie Whitmore, the first female professional baseball player to play in an all-male pro league. 

She plays outfield and pitches for the Staten Island Ferryhawks in the Atlantic League of professional baseball. 

These photos are a testament to Kelsie’s trailblazing efforts in breaking down barriers and paving the way for future generations of female baseball players. 

Still life winner: Kechun Zhang (China Mainland)

Wildlife and nature winner: Corey Arnold (United States)

An Entry-Level Light for Anyone Starting Out: A Review of the Nanlite

An Entry-Level Light for Anyone Starting Out: A Review of the Nanlite

If you are a beginner photographer, filmmaker, or content creator in the process of learning about and investing on lighting, quality should be alongside affordability and ease of use. The Nanlite FS-60B might be something worth considering.

Continuous lighting has been getting more and more popular in recent years mainly because of the fact that LED lights are becoming more cost-effective, more portable, and for most photographers and videographers, the result becomes instantaneous. Continuous lighting offers a great way for beginning photographers to get a good and clear grasp of how the light changes and how it affects the photograph depending on intensity, distance, quality, and how they blend with any existing ambient light.

An entry-level-friendly option, whether in cameras, support gear, or lighting, would always be one that is relatively more affordable but also not necessarily the cheapest among all options. A good budget option would be able to give good quality light, consistent output and colors, but would often fall short on some ergonomic or efficiency features. This way, it can be a good starting point that would give the user the full experience of using the tool and any upgrade would, later on, be about making it easier to use one way or another. What an entry-level option should not be is something that would compromise quality and be counterproductive for the user.

The Nanlite FS-60B

The Nanlite FS line of lighting fixtures is generally bigger than the Forza line however the FS-60B has little difference from the Forza counterparts when compared to the difference in sizes of the higher power models. The FS-60B is 5.2 x 3.4 inches (13.2 x 8.6 cm) with a length of 9.7 inches (24.6 cm). This is longer (more rectangular) than the Forza 60 primarily because the power input cable goes straight onto the fixture which is kept as one piece instead of having a separate power adapter. While it isn’t the most portable option, it still is one that can be carried inside a bag and carried with multiple lights and accessories.

The Nanlite FS fixtures pack a CSP (Chip Scale Package) module compared to the COB (Chip on board) chip found on the Forza versions. COBs are known to have a higher light intensity which means that the FS lights will be less in terms of output, but CSP modules can also offer softer and more pleasant light quality and less propensity for hotspots in terms of output. Nonetheless, this module has a rating of 96 on the color rendering index (CRI) and 97 on the Television lighting consistency index (TLCI). The FS 60B has a mini Bowens mount in front for modifiers and has no ports for umbrella attachments however, included in the box is a Bowens mount adapter with its own umbrella attachment. The package also includes a thin tubular reflector attachment that offers a way to soften and shape the light to a fair extent compared to using it as a bare light source.

Controls and User Interface

The FS-60B basically has three main modes and three controls made up of a mode switcher button and two knobs. On the main CCT mode, the knob on the left controls the power or dim while the knob on the right controls the color temperature. By pressing the mode button you can then switch to the effects mode where the knob on the left switches between the different effects modes, such as CCT (color temperature) loop, INT (brightness) loop, pulse, flash, TV, storm, explosion, and paparazzi effects. The knob on the right allows you to switch between different parameters of the effects such as the rate of the pulses of flashes of light, the time intervals, and the range of brightness and/or color temperatures that it would change and loop within. The third mode is simply a channel selector mode for connecting with radio frequency controllers and synchronizing with other lighting fixtures.

All of that said, the most significant convenience factor of the FS-60B is the Bluetooth connection to the Nanlink smartphone app. Through the app you can set and group together multiple lighting fixtures and control them individually or simultaneously depending on their individual capabilities. This app is compatible with most of the Forza and FS bi-color fixtures and the newer Pavotube lights.

Through the app, you can access and remotely select all the available modes of each fixture and set the parameters applicable to each selected mode without having to touch the physical buttons and knobs. This is especially convenient for when the lights are placed on tall stands or when used inside modifiers that require the entire fixture to be placed inside like a reflective umbrella or softbox. This becomes extremely convenient when shooting videos with specific effect modes and would save to operator so much time by being able to change the modes and the parameters remotely and by group. The app also allows for certain presets that can be created early on, saved, and easily accessed by tapping the preset on the app for more efficiently replicating lighting setups that have been done previously.

Application

The Nanlite FS-60B is a highly convenient first light for anyone who is just starting out and learning how to use artificial light as well as for someone who uses multiple lighting fixtures in more advanced setups.

For a beginning photographer, whether for shooting portraits, products, food, or even interior spaces, the instant result that can be seen while setting up the light can make it easier to visualize and adjust than strobes. Of course, studio strobes often have much more power than a 60-watt continuous light but for the majority of situations that don’t require high-speed shooting or intense power output, especially if shooting single subjects, this light can be more than enough.

At the same time, independent video content creators and YouTubers, especially those who shoot in small controlled spaces or even home studio setups, can benefit from the full range of output while enjoying the convenient user experience whether from the rear panel or through the app. The FS-60B when used properly and with the right modifier can be perfect for talking head videos in sets with existing ambient light or with the use of reflectors or fills. Of course, there can be so much more applications when multiple lighting fixtures and modifiers are available depending on the capability of the user to work with more complex lighting setups.

What I Liked:

  • Affordable, good color neutrality
  • Relatively portable
  • Convenient controls and remote options

What Can Be Improved:

  • Umbrella attachment on the adapter instead of on the fixture
  • No included carrying case; uses styrofoam packaging

Carleen Murdoch’s photography on exhibit at Christ the Redeemer in April, with reception Sunday

Carleen Murdoch’s photography on exhibit at Christ the Redeemer in April, with reception Sunday

Editor’s note: This press release was provided by Parish of Christ the Redeemer. The Pelham Examiner publishes press releases in the form received as a service to the community

APRIL 2023 HOAG HALL ART, Parish of Christ the Redeemer: CARLEEN MURDOCH, ARTIST

A reception will be held SUNDAY, APRIL 16, from 11:30-1:00 PM.

Carleen’s Scandinavian heritage along with growing up in the garden valley of Oregon gave her a rich backdrop for creativity. Teaching school in the high Cascade Mountains and then within the deep design culture of Misawa and Tokyo, Japan added to the breadth and inspiration for a life of creative expression. Carleen has traveled to eighty countries on seven continents which has enriched and emboldened her life in many ways!

This month’s show features Carleen’s work which is a representational relating to nature and world cultures preserved throughout her lifetime passion for photography.

Carleen resides in City Island, New York.

Art is available to be viewed/bought Sundays from 8 am till noon or by appointment. Twenty percent of the proceeds of the sale of the art work will be donated to the Parish of Christ the Redeemer.  If you or someone you know would like to display/purchase art work in Hoag Hall, please contact Patrice Fitzpatrick at [email protected] or 914-393-1885.

Photographer tells story of getting up close and personal with a python

Photographer tells story of getting up close and personal with a python

Reptiles have populated this planet for millions of years and yet they still have a certain mystique about them. The green tree python stands out with its luscious green colour and offers much more than just a significant first impression. With such a strong subject, the photographer must act strategically to achieve a balanced end result.

Joshua Sommerfeldt’s portfolio includes many exotic species but he is particularly fond of photographing snakes. “They are one of the most misunderstood animals,” he says. “I want to show people that snakes are actually amazing and don’t deserve their negative reputation. Negative interactions with humans are rare and most would rather flee than fight.” he adds.

“I captured this animal in a low-light area so using a tripod or flash wasn’t an option. Fortunately, the Canon EOS RP (opens in new tab) copes well with high ISO. I was able to increase the ISO and the stabilization of the Sigma 150mm F2.8 EX DG OS HSM APO Macro lens allowed me to shoot handheld,” he says. The exposure was 1/13sec at f/8, with an ISO of 2500.

Joshua shot with a small aperture to create a greater depth of field (opens in new tab). The image doesn’t feel cluttered and instead focuses on specific details to draw in the viewer’s eye. Perspective is also crucial and the macro lens allows a closer viewpoint that creates exciting insights. 

When post-processing, it is important to highlight certain features but not overload the photo. To achieve a harmonious and interesting interaction, Joshua used Capture One (opens in new tab) to enhance the colors and contrast, then he removed distracting background elements in Photoshop to maintain the focus on the snake. 

Portrait
Joshua ‘Lowbass’ Sommerfeldt

As a nature and animal photographer, Joshua ‘Lowbass’ Sommerfeldt has always been fascinated by the world of invertebrates and reptiles. He captures the often-overlooked creatures, showcasing their beauty and uniqueness. Joshua is the founder of The Web Creative Community, an online platform dedicated to educating and supporting creatives in their endeavors. Through this community, he has helped countless individuals connect with one another, share their knowledge, and grow their skills in the creative industry. With a passion for both photography and community building, Joshua is a true advocate for the power of art and collaboration. 


How a Photographer Shot an Entire Wedding on Film

How a Photographer Shot an Entire Wedding on Film

Wedding photography is one of the most challenging genres out there, and given the pressure and lack of second chances, most photographers opt for high-end digital equipment to ensure the best chances of getting the shots they need. Given today’s client expectations, can you still shoot a wedding on film? This neat video features a photographer taking you through his entire film photography kit for a wedding. 

Coming to you from Benj Haisch, this interesting video discusses using film equipment for photographing weddings. Of course, wedding photographers shot on film for decades, so it is certainly possible to do so, but it is worth noting that in the digital age, client expectations have also changed, and as such, it is arguable that shooting on film today is a more difficult proposition. You certainly need to be strong in both your technique and creative vision, as you have fewer frames to work with and you can shoot as quickly. Nonetheless, a 6×7 negative is behemoth compared to even the largest digital sensors and is quite a sight to behold, so if you can pull it off, there is definitely an allure to doing so. Check out the video above for the full rundown from Haisch.

Tribute to photojournalist wins the Photographer of the Year title in Sony World Photography Awards

Tribute to photojournalist wins the Photographer of the Year title in Sony World Photography Awards

Edgar Martins (Portugal) has won the Photographer of the Year title in the Sony World Photography awards for his project honouring his friend and photojournalist Anton Hammerl who was abducted and killed on 5 April 2011 by government militia, during the Libyan Civil War.

Martins’ work, ‘Our War’, was selected as the winning project from the 10 category winners of the Professional competition. His images, and those of the other category winners, alongside some of the second- and third-placed photographers can be seen at Sony World Photography Awards exhibition at Somerset House in London from the 14th of April to the 1st of May 2023.

The exhibition also features works by the recipient of this year’s Outstanding Contribution to Photography award, the esteemed Japanese photographer Rinko Kawauchi.

As well as the Photographer of the Year title, Edgar Martins wins a $25,000 (USD) cash prize and a selection of Sony imaging gear. He is also granted a solo presentation of his work as part of next year’s Sony World Photography Awards exhibition.

© Edgar Martins, Portugal, Photographer of the Year, Professional competition, Portraiture, Sony World Photography Awards 2023© Edgar Martins, Portugal, Photographer of the Year, Professional competition, Portraiture, Sony World Photography Awards 2023
© Edgar Martins, Portugal, Photographer of the Year, Professional competition, Portraiture, Sony World Photography Awards 2023

Professional Category Winners

All the category winners receive Sony’s digital imaging kit, this year’s winners are:

Architecture and Design
Winner: Fan Li (China Mainland) for his series Cement Factory

Finalists: 2nd place Servaas Van Belle (Belgium); 3rd place Andres Gallardo Albajar (Spain)

© Fan Li, China Mainland, Winner, Professional competition, Architecture & Design, Sony World Photography Awards 2023© Fan Li, China Mainland, Winner, Professional competition, Architecture & Design, Sony World Photography Awards 2023
© Fan Li, China Mainland, Winner, Professional competition, Architecture & Design, Sony World Photography Awards 2023

Creative

Winner: Lee-Ann Olwage (South Africa) for her series The Right to Play

Finalists: 2nd place Noemi Comi (Italy); 3rd place Edoardo Delille & Giulia Piermartiri (Italy)

© Lee-Ann Olwage, South Africa, Winner, Professional competition, Creative, Sony World Photography Awards 2023© Lee-Ann Olwage, South Africa, Winner, Professional competition, Creative, Sony World Photography Awards 2023
© Lee-Ann Olwage, South Africa, Winner, Professional competition, Creative, Sony World Photography Awards 2023

Documentary Projects

Winner: Hugh Kinsella Cunningham (United Kingdom) for his series The Women’s Peace Movement in Congo

Finalists: 2nd place Mohammed Salem (State of Palestine); 3rd place Tariq Zaidi (United Kingdom)

© Hugh Kinsella Cunningham, UK, Finalist, Pro competition, Documentary, Sony World Photography Awards 2023© Hugh Kinsella Cunningham, UK, Finalist, Pro competition, Documentary, Sony World Photography Awards 2023
© Hugh Kinsella Cunningham, UK, Finalist, Pro competition, Documentary, Sony World Photography Awards 2023

Environment

Winner: Marisol Mendez (Bolivia) & Federico Kaplan (Argentina) for their series Miruku

Finalists: 2nd place Jonas Kakó (Germany); 3rd place Axel Javier Sulzbacher (Germany)

© Marisol Mendez, Bolivia and Federico Kaplan, Argentina, Winner, Professional competition, Environment, Sony World Photography Awards 2023© Marisol Mendez, Bolivia and Federico Kaplan, Argentina, Winner, Professional competition, Environment, Sony World Photography Awards 2023
© Marisol Mendez, Bolivia and Federico Kaplan, Argentina, Winner, Professional competition, Environment, Sony World Photography Awards 2023

Landscape

Winner: Kacper Kowalski (Poland) for his series Event Horizon

Finalists: 2nd place Bruno Zanzottera (Italy); 3rd place Fabio Bucciarelli (Italy)

© Kacper Kowalski, Poland, Winner, Professional competition, Landscape, Sony World Photography Awards 2023© Kacper Kowalski, Poland, Winner, Professional competition, Landscape, Sony World Photography Awards 2023
© Kacper Kowalski, Poland, Winner, Professional competition, Landscape, Sony World Photography Awards 2023

Portfolio

Winner: James Deavin (United Kingdom) for his submission Portfolio

Finalists: 2nd place Marylise Vigneau (France); 3rd place Marjolein Martinot (Netherlands)

© James Deavin, United Kingdom, Winner, Professional competition, Portfolio, Sony World Photography Awards 2023© James Deavin, United Kingdom, Winner, Professional competition, Portfolio, Sony World Photography Awards 2023
© James Deavin, United Kingdom, Winner, Professional competition, Portfolio, Sony World Photography Awards 2023

Portraiture

Winner: Edgar Martins (Portugal) for his series Our War

Finalists: 2nd place Ebrahim Noroozi (Islamic Republic of Iran); 3rd place Jean-Claude Moschetti (France)

© Edgar Martins, Portugal, Photographer of the Year, Professional competition, Portraiture, Sony World Photography Awards 2023© Edgar Martins, Portugal, Photographer of the Year, Professional competition, Portraiture, Sony World Photography Awards 2023
© Edgar Martins, Portugal, Photographer of the Year, Professional competition, Portraiture, Sony World Photography Awards 2023

Sport

Winner: Al Bello (United States) for his series Female Pro Baseball Player Succeeds in All Male Pro League

Finalists: 2nd place Andrea Fantini (Italy); 3rd place Nicola Zolin (Italy)

© Al Bello, United States, Winner, Professional competition, Sport, Sony World Photography Awards 2023© Al Bello, United States, Winner, Professional competition, Sport, Sony World Photography Awards 2023
© Al Bello, United States, Winner, Professional competition, Sport, Sony World Photography Awards 2023

Still Life
Winner: Kechun Zhang (China Mainland) for his series The Sky Garden

Finalists: 2nd place Carloman Macidiano Céspedes Riojas (Peru); 3rd place Jagoda Malanin (Poland)

© Kechun Zhang, China Mainland, Winner, Professional competition, Still Life, Sony World Photography Awards 2023© Kechun Zhang, China Mainland, Winner, Professional competition, Still Life, Sony World Photography Awards 2023
© Kechun Zhang, China Mainland, Winner, Professional competition, Still Life, Sony World Photography Awards 2023

Wildlife and Nature

Winner: Corey Arnold (United States) for his series Cities Gone Wild

Finalists: 2nd place Adalbert Mojrzisch (Germany); 3rd place Sriram Mural (India)

© Corey Arnold, United States, Winner, Professional competition, Wildlife & Nature, Sony World Photography Awards 2023© Corey Arnold, United States, Winner, Professional competition, Wildlife & Nature, Sony World Photography Awards 2023
© Corey Arnold, United States, Winner, Professional competition, Wildlife & Nature, Sony World Photography Awards 2023

Open Photographer of the Year

This competition celebrates the power of a single image and it was won by Dinorah Graue Obscura (Mexico) who receives a $5,000 (USD) cash prize and Sony digital imaging equipment.

© Dinorah Graue Obscura, Mexico, Winner, Open Competition, Natural World & Wildlife, Sony World Photography Awards 2023© Dinorah Graue Obscura, Mexico, Winner, Open Competition, Natural World & Wildlife, Sony World Photography Awards 2023
© Dinorah Graue Obscura, Mexico, Winner, Open Competition, Natural World & Wildlife, Sony World Photography Awards 2023

Student Photographer of the Year

Students were invited to submit 5 to 10 images on the theme ‘In a Changing World’, highlighting positive stories of development and progress from across the world. The competition was won by Long Jing (China Mainland) of Yunnan Arts University. Along with the title, Student Photographer of the Year, Long Jing won his university €30,000’s worth of Sony digital imaging equipment.

© Long Jing, China Mainland, Shortlist, Student competition, Sony World Photography Awards 2023© Long Jing, China Mainland, Shortlist, Student competition, Sony World Photography Awards 2023
© Long Jing, China Mainland, Shortlist, Student competition, Sony World Photography Awards 2023

Youth Photographer of the Year

The theme for this year’s Youth competition was ‘Your Everyday’. It was won by Hai Wang (China Mainland, 17 years-old) whose work was selected from a shortlist of 7 by photographers under the age of 19.

© Hai Wang, China Mainland, Shortlist, Youth competition, Sony World Photography Awards 2023© Hai Wang, China Mainland, Shortlist, Youth competition, Sony World Photography Awards 2023
© Hai Wang, China Mainland, Shortlist, Youth competition, Sony World Photography Awards 2023

Sustainability Prize

Alessandro Cinque (Italy) has been announced as the first winner of the Sustainability Prize. He receives a $5,000 cash prize and a presentation of his project as part of the Sony World Photography Awards exhibition in London.

This new prize was developed in collaboration with the United Nations Foundation and Sony Pictures’ Picture to recognise the stories, people and organisations whose actions highlight one of the United Nations’ environmental Sustainable Development Goals.

Cinque won the prize for his series ‘Atrapanieblas’ (Fog Nets) which documents an innovative solution helping to tackle chronic water shortages in Lima, Peru.

© Alessandro Cinque, Italy, Shortlist, Professional competition, Documentary Projects, Sony World Photography Awards 2023© Alessandro Cinque, Italy, Shortlist, Professional competition, Documentary Projects, Sony World Photography Awards 2023
© Alessandro Cinque, Italy, Shortlist, Professional competition, Documentary Projects, Sony World Photography Awards 2023

Outstanding Contribution to Photography

This year’s Outstanding Contribution to Photography award was bestowed on Rinko Kawauchi who is regarded to be one of the most important Japanese photographers working today.

© Rinko Kawauchi, Untitled, from the series Illuminance”, 2009© Rinko Kawauchi, Untitled, from the series Illuminance”, 2009
© Rinko Kawauchi, Untitled, from the series Illuminance”, 2009

How Carl Fischer Helped Define the Esquire Look

How Carl Fischer Helped Define the Esquire Look

People in the magazine business, people in the worlds of graphic art and design, people who were alive in the ’60s—like to talk about the famous Esquire look of the era. (Okay, sometimes too much, in our opinion, but we’ll take the attention.) Many of Esquire’s covers from that time have become iconic—reproduced, recognized, still discussed. And when we talk about the most famous of those covers—Muhammad Ali, Sonny Liston, Andy Warhol—we’re talking about the work of photographer Carl Fischer, who died this week at his home in New York at the age of 98. Fischer was part of a wave of groundbreaking photographers that included Diane Arbus, Richard Avedon, Robert Frank, and Bruce Davidson, whose work began appearing in popular magazines in the mid-’50s. Esquire was an oversized
magazine until 1971—it measured 10” by 13”—so the visceral impact of full-page photographs or two-page spreads was powerful.

carl

Members of the last remaining firing squad in the country, Utah, 1966.

Carl Fischer//Esquire

But here’s something people don’t talk about as much, or enough: These photographers were assigned not just covers but journalistic essays. Fischer may be best-known for his covers (he shot 44 for Esquire from 1963-’80), but the photo essays he contributed to the magazine—on white segregationists; bootcamp at Parris Island; the last remaining firing squad in the country, in Utah—were not merely a companion to the reporting of John Sack, Tom Wolfe, and Gay Talese that appeared in the same pages, but very often its equal. Photojournalism at its most evocative and personal.

parris island boot camp

Drill sergeant in boot camp, Parris Island, South Carolina, 1965.

Carl Fischer//Esquire

Fischer began his career as an art director taking pictures on the side. But his hobby soon turned into a vocation. I had the good fortune of visiting Fischer at his studio in 2016. It was a neatly organized space and as we sat and discussed his career for a few hours. Fischer, still dapper, wore black slacks and a dress shirt, and spoke in an unhurried, friendly manner, his New York accent barely noticeable. He wasn’t without an ego but Fischer was more self-effacing that I expected; he seemed to genuinely enjoy the collaborative nature of his work more than needing to take credit for it himself. It was a pleasure spending that short time with him. We’ve reprinted the interview below. I hope you enjoy it.—Alex Belth

Carl Fischer’s Ten Most Iconic Esquire Covers

ali as st sebastian esquire cover may 1968

Esquire: Did you study painting at Cooper Union?

Carl Fischer: We had painting classes but I was more interested in graphic design. When I graduated I was an art director for a half a dozen years. All of our careers were accidental. I got a Fulbright Scholarship and I went to England. I went there to do book design, typography, which I always liked and I did that for a while. Then I got bored with it and they had a dark room that was not being used. They didn’t have a photography instructor, so I got some books from the library and I learned how to develop film and I took pictures and I liked it, it was fun. When I came back, I was an art director again but I would do freelance pictures for agencies on the side.

outtake from cover shoot december 1966

Actress Claudia Cardinale from cover photo shoot, December, 1966.

Carl Fischer

ESQ: What kind of camera did you use?

CF: I used a rolleicord, I couldn’t afford a rolleiflex. When I got out of school, magazines were mostly illustrated, drawn pictures. Photography came in little by little in the ’50s but photography was not an art. It wasn’t sold in galleries, people didn’t collect photography.

Photography was a craft. It wasn’t art, it was just photography.

ESQ: Even guys like Alfred Stieglitz? Wasn’t he recognized at that point?

CF: Only in a very small group of like five people. I have an Irving Penn color print. His work now sells for $50-60,000 a print. I worked at Look Magazine for a short while and I picked it up out of the garbage can. They had used it for something at the magazine and then when they were through with it they threw it away. Photography was a craft. It wasn’t art, it was just photography. Irving Penn’s stuff was not art. There were no photography galleries. In my lifetime, it changed from being a newspaper with a speed graphics camera and a flash bulb into what it’s become, completely different. Now everyone’s a photographer. Which is fine. A lot of people find that they like art and it’s not intimidating.

ESQ: As you said there was a change in magazine advertising from strictly illustration to photography, as an art director, were you starting to work with photographers?

mitch

Actor Robert Mitchum, 1964.

Carl Fischer//Esquire

CF: Yes. I still wanted to see what photographers did. As an art director, I hired different photographers every time I had an assignment. I never worked with the same photographer twice. I wanted to see how they worked, Avedon and others, and often I was disappointed.

ESQ: Disappointed in their work? Or that you didn’t get as much out of them as you expected to?

CF: Both. Disappointed in their work and disappointed in what I got. I rejected an Avedon photograph that he did for me. I hated it. Then he did another one that was even worse. I had an adventure one weekend where I shot the ad myself because we had no more money. I got free models to help me out and a stylist and I shot the picture on the weekend and it ran. We didn’t tell the client that it was not Avedon anymore because they had paid for him. It was an adequate picture, it wasn’t sensational but I said, “Oh, there’s no magic in this.” Like people who have iPhones now, there’s no magic in it. You can take a good picture with anything, as Apple is very wisely doing by running artful photographs as ads, to show how good you can take a photograph with iPhone, which goes back to the fact that people took great photographs with box cameras.

teen time magazine spread

“Teen-Time” spread in Esquire, July, 1965.

Carl Fischer

ESQ: Did you find that you were just taking more and more photographs for yourself? Were you taking a camera around with you?

CF: I never became a fine artist photographer. I did some pictures for myself, yes, but I was so busy. I would work nights and weekends doing photography freelance until it got so busy that I just quit my job as an art director and opened a studio with a friend of mine.

ESQ: What was it like leaving art direction and working as a full-time photographer?

CF: I loved art direction, I loved design. I figured I was never going to make a living in photography so I’m going to have to go back to art directing eventually but I never had to. I got very busy doing photography. I hired a lot of people. We had a very big studio and so I never got back to doing designing which I was sad about because I like typography, I like designing. I like that but you can’t do everything.

ESQ: You first started appearing in Esquire in the Fifties but then really caught on as a regular in the Sixties.

ss

Judge Leander Perez, Sr, 1963.

Carl Fischer//Esquire

CF: I remember going around the south photographing segregationist leaders. Harold Hayes said, “Don’t use your wise-guy wide-angle lens. We want to be fair to these people, even though we hate their guts. We want to appear to be fair.” So I didn’t use my goddamn wide angle lens, I took straight portraits of them. Why closeups? Maybe that was my idea, I don’t know why. They had interesting faces. They were such nasty people that when I got back, I had shot it on a small camera and I enlarged it on 8 x 10 film on my studio enlarger, and I made it very contrasting so that the pores would stick out.

“I think everybody who is successful young has a fear they aren’t going to be able to sustain it.”

ESQ: You worked with several art directors at Esquire but your most recognized work are from Esquire covers and George Lois was in charge of them. Would you just take the photograph for him? Would he conceptualize the picture?

CF: He conceptualized most of them. He was very good at that. Not all of them though, although he took credit for all of them, which led to our falling out. Lois to me was the Donald Trump of art directors. We had a terrible blow up and I never worked with him after that. It had to do with him taking credit for things that he had nothing to do with, including covers. His name was on all the covers. Now when he publishes the covers, he airbrushes my name out. That was our relationship, like Gilbert and Sullivan, we just didn’t get along.

original image featured on the july 1968 cover of esquire

Original image featured on the July, 1968 cover of Esquire.

Carl Fischer

ESQ: But do you get a sense that there are some people who are successful because success is so important to them that the sort of material success, the ego-driven successes ?

CF: I had a theory once—I’m not sure it’s correct—that early success is poisonous. Paul Rand, an art director that I worked with, was successful because he was around during World War II when nobody else was around. He was able to become a big success right away. Who else? George Lois was a success young. I think everybody who is successful young has a fear they aren’t going to be able to sustain it. I think that goes with everybody—presidents, everybody. You can’t be at the top of the mountain without realizing that it’s a steep drop.

ESQ: And sometimes the work that you become famous for is out of your control.

ali

Carl Fischer working in his studio with Muhammad Ali, 1968.

Carl Fischer//Esquire

CF: The other side of the coin is when something you’ve done is very well-liked and you’re famous for it — I sell more pictures of Muhammad Ali as Saint Sebastian than anything else and that doesn’t make me happy because it’s an adequate photograph, certainly, but I’ve done better.

ESQ But it’s about something bigger than you.

CF: Yes.

ESQ: Which I can imagine is almost a detached kind of feeling. It would be one thing if it was a personal favorite photograph of yours that you adored for its aesthetic merits.

CF: But it’s not.

cass elliot

Outtake from 1973 Esquire photo shoot with Mama Cass Elliot.

Carl Fischer

ESQ: At the same point, at least you’re stuck with something that’s given you lots of wonderful things in your life.

CF: Yeah, it’s fine. You can’t be unhappy that you made a movie like The Graduate that was so great but then you couldn’t do it again. It’s frustrating: What did I do? What happened? Why can’t I do it again?

toots shor

Saloon owner Toots Shor in the rubbles of the old Yankee Stadium, October 1973.

Carl Fischer

AB: Do you have fond memories of your magazine work?

CF: I did a lot of work for Redbook at the time where they would send me the manuscript and say: “Do something.” That was really great, I’d read the manuscript and I could do anything, sometimes it was very good. Sometimes it wasn’t very good, but it was a great opportunity to do something. I find that I don’t do well when I see a blank white canvas. I don’t know where to begin. But if you’ve got an assignment—do something with this terrible story—you figure out something. It’s kind of like a puzzle. Art, in many ways, is like a puzzle. How do you solve this thing? There’s no magical ways for it, there’s no rules for it.

alternative picture of roy cohn for esquire cover 1968

Outtake from Roy Cohn Esquire cover, 1968.

Carl Fischer

AB: In your industry, those decisions are made because you have your next assignment.

CF: Deadlines solves a lot of problems. I always loved the fact that there were assignments and a deadline where you had to finish it. A fine artist doesn’t know when it’s over. Limitations are great.

cher photographed in new york 1974 for an esquire cover

Cher photographed in New York for an Esquire cover, 1974.

Carl Fischer

[This conversation has been condensed and edited for clarity.]


A stranger hired me as her assistant so I could quit my day job and turn my photography side hustle into a full time business. Here’s how I did it.

A stranger hired me as her assistant so I could quit my day job and turn my photography side hustle into a full time business. Here’s how I did it.
Tiana Duarte-Kargbo is a full-time photographer

Tiana Duarte-Kargbo is a full-time photographer

Keren Treviño




  • Tiana Duarte-Kargbo took her photography side hustle full time after a stranger offered her a job.
  • She built her business by taking freelance jobs and creating editorial projects to show her skills.
  • The photographer shares her advice for creatives hoping to turn their side hustles into businesses.

This is an as-told-to story based on an interview with Tiana Duarte-Kargbo, who runs her own photography business, Tiana Michele Photo.

Duarte-Kargbo picked up photography as a creative outlet in May 2020 and, the following month, moved from Memphis, Tennessee, to New York City to pursue the side hustle professionally. To make ends meet, she worked day jobs, including one in a salon.

In November 2021, a salon customer asked to see her photography and was moved by her talent, Duarte-Kargbo said. The client, who owns a photo agency, offered her a job as an assistant, which gave Duarte-Kargbo the salary she needed to support herself and the flexibility to get the photography business off the ground.

Between December 2021 and January 2023, she booked five figures in revenue, documents viewed by Insider show. Here’s how Duarte-Kargbo leveraged an opportunity to build her business and her advice for other creatives trying to do the same.

The following has been edited for length and clarity.

Lean in to opportunities

Duarte-Kargbo moved to New York for more opportunities

A photo from Tiana Michele Photo.

Tiana Michele Photo



I always thought photography was fun but never took it too seriously. I was a dancer, but when COVID-19 hit, dance jobs became nonexistent and I was suffering from some serious injuries. So I took time off, and that’s when I picked up my camera again.

For the first two years of living in New York, I worked as a barista, in retail, and as a receptionist. I shot photos on the weekends and during my time off.

When I was working at the front desk of a salon, a client found out I was a photographer and asked to see my work. I showed her my Instagram account, and she told me I “shouldn’t be here,” that I should be out there doing photography instead. But I explained to her that I couldn’t afford to quit my job. 

She said she was going to help me out, and later that day, she offered me an assistant position working for her. She said it would be low maintenance and give me time to do my own thing.

For whatever reason, I believed her. In November 2021, I quit and worked for her for the next month and a half. In the meantime, I got my website redone and put out as much content as possible because I didn’t have time to do any of that before. Working for her gave me the time and space I needed to get on my feet.

After that month and a half, I was landing enough freelance gigs to leave the assistant role.

Build a portfolio with what you have

Behind the scenes of a Duarte-Kargbo shoot.

Behind the scenes of a Duarte-Kargbo shoot.

Courtesy of Tiana Duarte-Kargbo



Even before I met the stranger, I had created a portfolio with whatever work I could. I did a lot of stuff for free, like photo shoots with people I’d randomly message on Instagram.

Duarte-Kargbo shoots some small weddings and elopements.

Duarte-Kargbo shoots some small weddings and elopements.

Tiana Michele Photo



I also launched a mini project called the color of dance in summer 2020. I worked with a handful of dancers of color whom I photographed and then interviewed about their experiences in the dance world, because the industry is pretty racist.

By the end of the project, more people had heard about my work and reached out to work with me. It was a good way to build my collection of work.

Then, when I quit my salon job, I earned money through freelance jobs, like photographing a national dance convention and social-media content for a marketing company. Those jobs paid the bills until I was ready to take Tiana Michele Photo full time. 

Be intentional with the jobs you take

It’s mentally exhausting to constantly look for jobs, weigh whether you’re on the right path, and decide what your work is worth. But my biggest piece of advice to other creatives is not to settle for work you don’t want.

For example, wedding photography can be profitable, but the more I shot weddings and posted those photos, the more inquiries I got for wedding-type events. Ultimately, that’s not the work I want to get.

I’ve intentionally posted more of my editorial work to show prospective clients that’s my style and ideal gig.

Now I get a lot of inquiries from clients who are in the social-media field, either small-business owners who need content or creators who need content for themselves. And I get a lot of clients who want to just have fun photo shoots for themselves. 

I love these clients because it gives me the freedom to play and experiment. Finding my voice and getting my name out there are how I’ll get my dream gigs.

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Photographer asks elderly Sikh man to pose for pics at his shop. His reaction is making the Internet cry happy tears

Photographer asks elderly Sikh man to pose for pics at his shop. His reaction is making the Internet cry happy tears

By Shubhi Mishra: If you are looking for something that will absolutely tug at your heartstrings, stop your search as we have the perfect video for you. So, a photographer asked an elderly Sikh man to pose for some pictures at his grocery shop. A clip of the same has gone viral online and it is too sweet for words.

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The now-viral video was shared on Instagram by a photographer named Sutej Pannu. The clip started with Pannu walking up to an elderly Sikh man who was sitting at his grocery shop. He asked him to give 10 candies and two packets of chips. Later, Pannu asked if he could photograph him at his shop.

The man obliged and posed for the photographs as directed. Pannu also printed one of the photographs instantly and gave it to the man. “That is very kind of you. Thank you so much, wish you a long life,” the elderly man said.

The man’s gratitude will make you cry happy tears, for sure!

Sutej also wrote a heartfelt caption about self-awareness and spiritual awakening while sharing the video.

“One of the most powerful aspects of spiritual awakening is the heightened sense of self-awareness that comes with it. Through self-reflection and introspection, individuals become more attuned to their thoughts, emotions, and behaviours,” read an excerpt from the caption.

Watch the viral video here:

The video has amassed over a million views since being shared online. Instagram users were quite overwhelmed after watching the clip.

“Why do I always cry with every video of yours? You so capture the hearts of the fantastic people of Punjab,” a user wrote.

Another user commented, “The way he said ‘Meri?’ as though it was shocking to him that someone would show an interest in him. It seemed like he had tears in his eyes by the end of it and not only was he grateful for the photo but also for the short amount of time spent interacting.”

See the comments here:

Even Sonam Bajwa reacted to the clip and was quite emotional.

Take a look:

We are not crying, you are!