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British Rob's Blog

Welcome! Otherwise known as Rob Brown, I'm a Boston wedding photographer and recent transplant from England.

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I just posted my favourites wedding photos of 2009 and thought it was worth a nod to explain what it takes to keep improving the quality of your images year upon year. How does one keep upping the ante?

If you are looking for a few tips on how to give your photography a kick in the pants in 2010 here it is:

- Take more photos. Even if you go out with a compact. Get the creative side of your brain engaged and shoot every day. I carry a small camera with me every day. It doesn't match the quality of my Canon gear, but liken it to the difference in quality of 35mm vs medium format film: perfectly adequate. Small enough for portability, but powerful enough to make 'keepers' that even I am happy with:
GF1 with OM 50 1.8

- Don't take yourself too seriously: listen to your peers, be honest with them about their work and ask them to be honest with you about yours. I'm lucky enough to be part of a great community here in Boston and a handful of us head to a monthly critique night at Mike and Kate's.

 
- Get on Flickr! No it isn't Facebook without a wall and annoying widgets. Flickr's been around for yonks (well at least since woolly mammoths were wondering the internet). It is a great way to stay connected to your photographer peers and explore billions of images for inspiration. Sure there's a lot of rubbish, but there's an incredible amount of amazing work that will stimulate the brain, especially on these cold days. I'm there (http://flickr.com/brownphotographic)

- Lastly, invest! No I'm not talking about chewing up all of your $ on the next big lens. Every year or so, invest in yourself, peel yourself away from flickr, twitter and facebook and enrol in a workshop. Ask your peers for good options. I've been on a couple recently:

Photo Biz Bootcamp run by Liana Lehman. Great 2-3 day (by day I mean long hours, but fun) course to get yourself on track, establish goals and make sure you are running a business solid enough to support yourself and your family.

Roots Workshop - a visual storytelling workshop run by Emilie Sommer and taught by an insanely talented group of working photojournalists. I continually wax lyrical about this workshop and for good reason. See my full report here.  The quality of my imagery has gone up tenfold, I've keyed my brain in to visual storytelling and I cannot contemplate not have invested in this one. They sold out for 2010 in just a day, so for a chance to get on the list for 2011 you'd better pay attention to the blog www.rootsworkshop.net . A 5D2 or D700 may be high on your list, but if you're looking to improve your storytelling rather than getting lower noise, drop the money on this workshop and have an incredible time doing it.

 




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Comments
Rob Brown:

Oh that would be cool!

Wish I was attending the whole thing again!

(01.07.10)
emilie inc.:

Aww, thanks Rob! So nice of you to include yet another glowing recommendation of your time at Roots! Hope you're planning on attending the lobster bake this July?!

(01.07.10)