As a young news photographer, having your work published by a large publication is beyond awesome. Last week I was published by The Wall Street Journal. They were doing a piece on the National Soccer Hall of Fame closing and used two of my photos to illustrate the piece.
Not gonna lie, I was pretty excited for this. I allowed myself 10 minutes to freak out and do a couple fist pumps in the car before this happened...
and then I got back to work. But it's moments like this, the feeling of personal and professional achievement that makes this line of work addictive. The highs are really high and the lows can be very low (like crack, but safer).
Monday, July 5, 2010
Combines:
- moving
- kittens
- heat wave
- job interviews
- car woes
- saving
- a (welcome) sunburn
I’m sure if you could look inside my head right now, you would see something that resembled a Robert Rauschenberg painting.
ah, the messy dysfunctional gap between art and life
Tuesday, June 22, 2010
Tuesday, May 25, 2010
Tha Crossroads
(Photo by Painting512 - Flickr)
I'm wrestling with myself all the time
1) Play it safe. If you currently have a job, stay where you are. Sure, things might be really bad but it can only get a little worse before they stop slashing your paycheck. Sure, you're making less now than when you started 2.5 years ago with the company, but who knows, maybe in 5 years, they will give you that 1% raise you were promised all those years ago. At least you weathered the storm with shoes still on your feet. kudos you.
or
2) Be a rebel. Live like you got no tomorrow and go after what you really want (whatever that is). Yes, you're going to be broke and you're going to get cut down more often than not, but you're doing what everyone wishes they could be doing, LIVING. It will be terrible when you are in the thick of the shit storm, but you will learn to be resilient and emerge as a more interesting person. You will know how to consume less energy, eat better on less, and maybe even a how to play a game of gin rummy (while drinking bathtub gin!)
Life is all about the yin and the yang; the good and the bad. (and yeah, I kinda recently started watching LOST, whatever) But regardless of magic islands, good and bad does exist.
For instance, when I was 18 I dropped out of community college and was living out of my car. At night while I was falling asleep in the back seat of my '95 dodge neon, I closed my eyes and pictured myself working at a newspaper, being a photographer, and sharing stories and historic moments through images with thousands of people daily. That was my dream.
Almost 3 years later, with an Associated Press award, a New York State Newspapers Publishers award and a more polished portfolio; I'm ready for my next challenge. New York...?
Lets do this thing
Friday, May 21, 2010
Au Revoir Thooo
French things:
My girlfriend and I flew AirFrance (which is the BEST airline I've ever flown with, can you say party plane?) to visit our friend Holly who is studying abroad for the year. Her little baby sized apartment (no really.. it was the size of a handy cap bathroom stall, if that) housed all 5 of us where there was no room for shyness. On any given morning, someone would be bathing in the basin tub while others were preparing a fresh breakfast and nursing a their hangovers. We explored the city of Paris on foot and did a lot of site seeing, went to a Persian gay dance club (which had their cira '92 MTV party to go vol. 2 CD on repeat) and got a taste of local living thanks to Holly. We went to the markets, haggled for fresh vegetables and ate a lot of smelly delicious cheeses. Naturally, I documented this in more than 2,000 photographs from start to finish. I couldn't actually post all of them, so I made a movie instead.
Here it is... enjoy!
Paris, France trip 2010 from brit worgan on Vimeo.
Friday, March 26, 2010
Friday, March 19, 2010
Wedding Season Ahoy!
[Photo by Brit Worgan]
This year, I'm going to make a push to do more weddings. After a lousy breakup I decided to take a hiatus from shooting weddings. But now I'm back in business and more prepared than ever; I'm real excited to get back in the game.
There is a lot of pressure on a wedding photographer to make magic happen in a split second. And the post processing work can be an enormous work load. The photographer is locked in their studio for a solid several days/weeks/months, only to emerge for cigarette breaks and coffee refills.
But It's not all bad, in fact... it's sort of addicting.
When I first meet with a client I give them a price list which is anywhere from $1,500-$5,000 depending on what kind of package they are looking for. I show them my portfolio and explain to them my style of shooting. As a photojournalist, my style is documentary. I don't take wedding photos that are cheesy and forced. Sure, we will do the traditional posed pictures and whatever else the bride and groom want, but with a professional and creative spin you can really set yourself apart from other wedding photographers.
Having worked as a second shooter for Vanity Fair and Vogue wedding photographers, I learned the difference between a good photograph vs. a breathtaking photograph.
But of course, that doesn't mean you are always what the client is looking for. Some people appreciate traditional and safe photography. They are not interested in magazine style wedding photos and cannot work it within their budget. There is never anything wrong with that. It's better to meet with someone who knows what they want vs. someone who isn't sure and can't pay their bill.
There are many different types of wedding photographers out there, and they come in all different shapes and prices. Like with anything else, you get what you pay for. But remember, this isn't just a business transaction, it's two people so madly in love with one another they are crazy enough to the the knot. Give em' something to write home about !
[Photo by Brit Worgan]
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