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Happy New Year, Even Better Decade!

No one has been immune from the past crazy decade of world conflict, poor economy and just tough times in general for the majority of the world–hopefully, as history dictates, the cycle will go up and not further down. Regardless, we’re all survivors and I thank each and everyone one of you that has helped support the gospel of photography.

I honestly think photography, while not a cure, is in fact an outlet to release and feel better for the moment, especially during these tough times.

Heather in a military flight suit.

Heather in a military flight suit.

The new decade and new year will start with the re-release of Photographic Therapy, the Power of Photography to Help Build or Rebuild Self-Esteem, and while it’s expanded from 77 pages to 105, plus a new chapter, images and the expansion of the photographic lighting chapter, it’ll still be free. Totally free, no gimmicks, no obligations, no worries. Those on the email list on http://www.freephotographybooks.com will be notified first! Again, no obligation, just be ready to download the printable PDF file when we announce it and please let all your friends and colleagues know so they too can share in the benefit of my fifth book, being free.

Well time to run and get ready for tonight’s festivities. I hope everyone has a safe and great time this weekend, and please, don’t forget in your prayers the service men and women who allow us to love in the free world. Don’t forget their friends and families, too, as they all, ultimately pay the biggest sacrifice in life. I salute you all! God bless you all too. Happy New Year and an even Better Decade! Rolando

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20-Photo Tips, Working With Women

jenni0054

"A woman is a mystery a man just can't understand"--Billy Currington

A woman is a mystery most men don’t understand, and in the type of photography I do, you have to gain an insight into women before you even think about picking up the camera—and it’s not always easy, because everyone is different.

However, here’s some tips for you “male” photographers that might help, most learned over my 30-years of photography.  These are 20 quick, photography tips when working with women professionally as a photographer, not how to pick them up!

1. Many of you know I like to talk a lot, can’t help it, it’s my passion, but as a photographer, I build rapport with my subject by just being silent, and listening.  I become the bartender, beautician, clergy, psychologist, etc., and just listen.  Remember, pressing the shutter-release button is only five-percent of the equation for a great image.

2.  Smile, open her door, be polite, be a gentleman, don’t say, “Here, put this on!”  Instead, say, “What do you think about this outfit?”  Let her make the decision, don’t make it for her—the exception is in a paid client shoot that requires a female model, usually there is no choice for either party.

3.  Never say, “Make love to the camera baby.”  If she doesn’t slap you, I would. (grin)  Instead, as you shoot, say, “You look beautiful, gorgeous, fabulous, or something in that manner in a nice, gentle tone.  Don’t over do it, keep it infrequent, but say it throughout the shoot more than a few times and be sincere.

4.  It’s about her, not you.  Your goal is to make her smile with your images, rapport, and for a lack of better words, “bedside” manner as an analogy if you were a doctor.  Remember though, you are not her doctor.  You are not there to solve her problems, only listen.

5.  Never say, “tuck your tummy or suck your gut or belly.”  Always say, “Can you please straighten your back?”  If you’re married, you know this already as your wife will some day say, “Honey, do I look fat?”  If you even hesitate to answer while gasping for air, you are wrong, the answer is always, “No baby, you look as beautiful as the day I first met you.”

6.  If she mentions that other photographers or photographs of the past make her look fat, say, “It was probably the photographer’s fault because they didn’t turn one hip away from the camera in the pose and a camera lens perspective will naturally add weight, especially if the hips are photographed straight on.”

7.  Never say, we can fix your wrinkles or “crow’s feet” in Photoshop.  Instead, say (if she asks about wrinkles around her eyes), “That’s just the good-life and I’ll take care of it for you naturally, don’t worry about a thing.”  Taking care of it in Photoshop is nothing a model really wants to hear, because in essence, you’re acknowledging she’s got faults.  And for the record, photo editors and art directors don’t want to hear that either.

8.  Never refer to augmented breasts as “fake” even if she calls them that.  Breasts are all real, augmented breasts are just enhanced.  The skin and breast tissue, augmented or not, are real.

9.  Explain to your subject you’re there to capture her inner beauty too, not just the outer beauty that anyone can capture with a disposable camera.  You’re there because you’re a professional at capturing that inner beauty.

10.  Compliment, compliment.  Compliment her eyes, her hair, her legs, her physique, her voice, her ladyness, her talent.  Compliment anything you can along the way.  Give your subject confidence, do not destroy it and she’ll send you more customers by word of mouth.

11.  Never offer to be a model manager and manage her career, real professionals in the modeling and photography industry despise model managers and respect licensed model agents or bookers.  You are a photographer, stick with what you know best not what you think you know—you’ll only annoy us professionals as I avoid “model managed” subjects like the plague as do most agencies and credentialed photographers.

A perfect smile comes from a relaxed model, when the corners of the eyes are in harmony with the corners of the lips.

A perfect smile comes from a relaxed model, when the corners of the eyes are in harmony with the corners of the lips.

12.  Use a make-up artist when all possible and let your make-up artist pre-grease the skids for your first shoot with your subject.  A good MUA knows how to comfort and build confidence in your subject before you ever start.  A good MUA supports you and collects a check, a great MUA is loyal, understands your work, and knows she’ll be well-compensated for her talents, but not just with money, but with future work and references.  Loyalty comes with loyalty, just like respect.

13.  If you’re not sure you might offend your subject, ask another female first.  Walk up to a mirror, then ask yourself what you plan on asking of your subject.  If it sounds weird or strange to you, it will be tens times worse to your subject.  Be considerate in all you ask your subject and never force her to do anything she doesn’t want to do.  Remember, it’s all about the face, not what she’s wearing or not wearing.  No face, and the rest doesn’t matter, you might as well cut your shoot off.

14.  A models portfolio should only contain one or two of your images and one or two of other photographers, no different than your hand-carried portfolio should be a book diverse of talent from various models.  This can differ on specialized on-line portfolios, like my Moab Light portfolio on my .com pro site by Livebooks.com.

15.  If all seems not to be working right, reschedule the shoot and go back to item #1 on this list and start over from scratch—the past is the past.

16.  Build rapport with your subject. Rapport starts with the first email, phone call, etc., and never stops, even after the shoot.  Like credit it takes time to build and one incident to destroy it.  Rapport never starts when you pick up the camera, it just continues from the beginning and never ends.

17.  It’s about quality, not quantity, do not “spray and pray,” make each shot count and only show your subject the best images in the end.  Never burn a CD and give her everything you shot.  The real difference between a professional photographer and an amateur isn’t money, it’s the fact that a professional photographer understands what makes a image good or great and never shows their bad images—we all take them.  It’s called “burning film” to get to where we need with our subject.

18.  Never tell your subject your problems.  They are their because they want to feel like the queen for the day, not your psychologist, bartender, beautician, etc., they are your subject, it’s their day, not yours.

19.  Make sure your equipment is ready to go the day before, camera batteries charged, lights ready to go.  Don’t look like a clumsy fool during your shoot, otherwise your subject will not have confidence in you or your results.

20. Joke with your subject casually, not obnoxiously.  Joking, especially mild humor relaxes the facial muscles.  If you can’t do that, provide some chocolate, better yet, dark chocolate, it’s best, but have both.  Forget white chocolate.  The idea is a relaxed face and make sure the clothing you select or ask her about is something she’s comfortable with, otherwise you’ll wind up with “tight face” images which is wasted time for you both.

Well that’s straight off the top of my head as I write this blog entry in five minutes or less.   Please don’t forget our military members, their families and friends this holiday season while you open gifts or sit by that warm fireplace.  Without them, you wouldn’t have that luxury or the luxury of photographing a beautiful subject.  God Bless, thanks, Rolando.

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The 10th Muse

I often love shadows to add mood to an image...

I often love shadows to add mood to an image...

Every photographer, and creative for that matter, needs a muse, someone that inspires their artistic talent, unfortunately I’ve had many over my 30-year career as a photographer, though I lost the most important, the 10th muse.  Like most modern muses, they come and go in this business as everyone will eventually live their lives and then the good-byes come to reality and it’s time to find a new muse.  Though as sad as this might sound, it’s just a fact for most artists, and not a bad thing, as the word muse comes from Ancient Greek which started with three then went to nine muses.

People move on, even our muses.  Sometimes it’s a heartbreaker, ultimately, it’s usually better for both parties, though the key to knowing you had a great muse, is that all memories, inspirational and personal, are cherished for a million years—if you feel that way about your muse, it was ideal, not wasted inspiration.

From an upcoming book, "One Light, One Chair."

From an upcoming book, "One Light, One Chair."

An ideal muse to me is someone that allows a “marriage of the minds” to create something together, not just someone that feeds my artistic passion to photograph someone else.  I prefer a muse that lights up my camera lens when we feel the creative passion together, anything else that inspires me tends to come from mentors.  I always associate songs to my muse too, as music multiplies the inspiration when photographing my muse; Think of it as an MTV music video you might like—the music and the videography together invoke your emotions.

Just like great photographs that invoke your emotions and propel your mind into a new dimension, a muse should propel your creative juices forward with creative passion, much like being in love with your significant other, if there is no passion, you truly are living a false relationship. As a photographer, my ultimate muse is the “tenth muse.”

Nothing like natural light creating mood in the image, feel the passion?

Nothing like natural light creating mood in the image, feel the passion?

Plato named Sappho, an Ancient Greek born on the island of Lesbos, as the tenth muse.  While this compliment was for a poetic muse, photography is poetry to me, so I’ll close by saying, I miss my tenth muse.   Have to run, have a safe and happy holiday season and don’t forget our men and women in the military along with their families and friends—God Bless, Rolando.

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Amazing Friends! Playboy Photographer and Casino Owner

Note: More behind scenes photos on my Facebook page!

Playboy's #1 Photog, Arny Freytag and I with Elite Model Jenni and KT

Playboy's #1 Photog, Arny Freytag and I with Elite Model Jenni and KT

As I return back from Las Vegas from a two-day semi-private instruction workshop and our three-day “Glamour, Beauty & the Nude” weekend workshop the thought of friendships come to mind—especially since I had several friends associated with this event, Arny Freytag, Gavin Maloof, Igor and Lucy Rivillis, Holley Dorrough, Jeff Whitted, Stephanie Dawn, the group of photographer attendees and my team of talented models.

Arny Freytag, Playboy’s top photographer, provided amazing instruction as a guest to our semi-private instruction first few days.  Gavin Maloof provided us with VIP treatment at his Palms casino and even had us over his house one evening so we could watch the NBA team he owns, the Sacramento Kings on his gigantic television in his theatre room.  Igor & Lucy Rivillis joined us for any support we needed as usual, and of course, I couldn’t have pulled this workshop off without my second in command, my make-up artist, Stephanie Dawn from Atlanta.  My models, what can I say, without them our lenses are left lifeless.  My hat’s off to all eight of the them and especially the attendees for all their efforts—everyone pitched in to make this Las Vegas workshop a cherished memory.

Palms Casino and Sacramento Kings owner Gavin Maloof at his house with (L to R) Stephanie Dawn, Playboy photographer Arny Freytag, Playboy Playmate Holley Dorrough, myself, Elite model Jenni and KT

Palms Casino and Sacramento Kings owner Gavin Maloof at his house with (L to R) Stephanie Dawn, Playboy photographer Arny Freytag, Playboy Playmate Holley Dorrough, Elite model Jenni and KT

Over the years I’ve had the pleasure of meeting many people, with those encounters comes new friends, though not all friendships last, which often makes me wonder how people generally define friendship.  When I was much younger our parents would make us watch 60-minutes and in one famous interview, the late Malcom Forbes described the meaning of success as when you could truly identify one real friend for each finger on each hand—Forbes claimed he was still working on his first hand.

Elite model Jenni poses while shooting at the Sky Villa Penthouse, Palms Casino during my workshop.

Elite model Jenni poses at the Sky Villa Penthouse, Palms Casino during my workshop.


I’m sure a lot of people who thought they were his friend that day, questioned with a gut check, their own definition of friendship.  Mine is simple, I follow Forbes formula when it comes to gauging my success, but I break down my friendships into two categories, business and personal, though sometimes the two will mix.  Then I further breakdown those friendships into the subcategories of political and realistic as I know many friendships exist for political correctness in today’s society.

So a politically correct business friendship is just that, they will only be around while it’s for the benefit of business and politically correct—Martha Stewart is a great example of learning who her business and personal friends were during her legal crisis.  I saw it in the U.S. Army when Command Sgt. Major Freddy Manning was the senior enlisted soldier who only answered to the United States Southern Command (USSOUTHCOM) Commander-in-Chief, Gen. George Joulwan.  We were all a team and everyone loved the SOUTHCOM sergeant major, everyone was his friend, from four-star generals on down, from every branch of the military.  While his uniform and position commanded respect, Sgt. Major Manning respected his troops and they respected him and his retirement ceremony was that of a general’s.

Eleya poses in the hot tub of the Sky Villa penthouse suite at the Palms Casino.

Eleya poses in the hot tub of the Sky Villa penthouse suite at the Palms Casino.

A few years after his retirement, I visited Sgt. Major Manning down in Georgia as we had done the Latin American Drug War together while I was stationed in USSOUTHCOM, and prior to that, we had been stationed together at V Corps in Frankfurt where he was the V Corps Command Sergeant Major.  We had more than a politically correct friendship, we both put in four years working personally for Gen. Joulwan at V Corps then USSOUTHCOM.   We traveled extensively together and on trips, you tend to bond.

While a few people stayed in contact with Sgt. Major Manning, he felt somewhat abandoned because after he quit being Gen. Joulwan’s right-hand man, the Christmas cards stopped flowing in and he was an example of having many “friends” that were only politically correct friends.

While our Vegas workshop was awesome, it had a few glitches, though my friend Gavin Maloof came through as a true friend to help us out and this says a lot about his character as he has no reason to be a “politically correct” friend with me—what can a photographer of my caliber bring him?  Nothing, the man has everything from owning a top Las Vegas casino, an NBA basketball team and even the ARCO arena they play in.  But Gavin Maloof was there to make sure we had what we needed.  Now that’s a friend and I salute you my friend.

Playboy's number one photographer Arny Freytag, Elite model Jenni and myself at the Palms casino on the day we arrived.

Playboy's number one photographer Arny Freytag, Elite model Jenni and myself at the Palms casino on the day we arrived.

I salute all my friends, especially those that helped out so much this past week to ensure Las Vegas was a success—you know who you are and what part you played!  Arny Freytag, I can’t say more than enough and I’ll see you soon in Jan. then in February as a VIP guest at my Los Angeles workshop.  And for those that want to know, yes, we’re back in Las Vegas (info here).

Thanks, and as I close, I ask everyone to not forget our military members, their families and friends, especially over the upcoming Christmas holidays, God Bless!  Rolando Gomez

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Lenses and Form

Form is dimensional, shapes are flat and in this image, we see form created by many shapes, color, shadows and textures.

Form is dimensional, shapes are flat and in this image, we see form created by many shapes, color, shadows and textures.

Often I’m asked from photographers at my workshops, “Which lens do I use?”  The answer is simple, “The right lens for the right image.”  Like all lenses in your photography gearbox, lenses are just another tool we use to create what we see, feel and capture, in a fraction of a second and I always choose the lens that I feel will help me see the subject in the right form.

Form is something many photographers truly fail to understand.  When a photographer captures form in an image, they’ve captured all visible elements in a three-dimensional illusion.  Often form is confused with shape, whereas shape is the physical dimensions of a subject seen in a two-dimensional medium (flat); form unites all the shapes.  When we have form in an image, we’ve got more than a picture, we’ve got a photograph, often powerful, but more often, invoking an emotion to the viewer.

Form utilizes lens perspective, shadows, and light to show dimensions such as height, width, and thickness in your subject and all the elements that make an image.  As an example, photograph a candle straight on with flat lighting and you have a two-dimensional image of a candle, similar to those you see on the front of a Christmas card.  Now add a few candles, switch your shooting angle, move your light so it comes from the side or back to create chiaroscuro in the image, perhaps even set your aperture value low and use a longer lens for background compression and separation from your subject, now you have a photo of candles, but more important, you’ve illustrated form.

While there are many reasons to choose various lenses, such as when I was shooting NBA basketball you have one camera and lens for downrange shots and another for shots under the goal, ultimately the choice of which lens to use is based on your goal to produce form in an image along with your specific shooting style or intended result.  In a nutshell, use the right tool for the right photograph.  Thanks, and God Bless our troops, their families and friends.  Rolando

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To Write About Life, You Have to Experience It First

U.S. Army Pathfinder Training--Slingloading

U.S. Army Pathfinder Training--Slingloading

There is an old saying, “In order to write about life you must experience it first,” and when you’re my age, 47, you’ve got a lot to write about, though sometimes I don’t think people will believe half of what I’ve lived in my photographic career of over 30 years. Regardless, I’m a person who loves to convey messages of life through my photography and my writings, so I decided to give away my fifth photography how-to book away for free—because I want to give back, educate and tell the stories of the power of photography to help build or rebuild self-esteem, more specific, photographic therapy.

 

After all, who would believe that a U.S. Army, soldier, would be posing nude for the camera during an ongoing investigation on soldiers that sexually harassed her? Not to mention she was almost raped by an Army Ranger and the Army was doing its best to throw her out of the service because they didn’t want to deal with her. She took the chance while under this stress to pose nude for my camera and immediately began to feel better about herself.

Just like the story of the young Air Force officer who returned from the Officer Training School only to find her own clothes on the front porch because her newlywed husband chose the bridesmaid, her best friend, instead. Yes, she too used photography to overcome her sense of helplessness, betrayal, and rejection.

While I spent over 17 years combined federal service with the U.S. Army as an active-duty solider and as a U.S. Air Force civilian, not all the stories are military related like that of the young lady who lost 131 pounds thanks to bariatric surgery.

Yes, these stories did happen amongst many others that I was able to witness at times in the form of hearing, seeing, and believing thanks to my camera lens, my subject’s mirror. This process brings out life experiences in a subject who is in the need for photography to help build or rebuild self-esteem. I see it everyday as a photographer, people seek strength in the barrel of a lens, not a gun, but when the photographer fails or doesn’t comprehend the subjects needs, then the photographer’s lens barrel can fast become a gun barrel, especially for someone in a depressed state of mine.

Photographers must be careful in the photographic therapy process and understand they are not there to replace medically qualified professionals. Photography is powerful, hence why I’ve giving away my fifth photography book away for free. There are no gimmicks, no adware, no spyware; it’s a book designed in Adobe InDesign and edited by one of the top photography editors in the world, Alice Miller of Plum Communications. It’s a 3.1-megabyte file in a clean PDF format and like all my books, it’s 8 ½-inches by 11-inches, full color, with over 60 photos and captions.

Plus, it includes 11 chapters, a preface, index, recommended resources, and more make up this almost eighty-page book targeted for photographers but written and designed in a hybrid format so potential photographic therapy subjects can learn and perhaps relate to the stories told. Perhaps potentially even save a life, so please pass it on to your friends and colleagues that you can download a free copy at http://www.freephotographybooks.com or here at this blog. It’s free! You can’t beat that, especially when my other books sell for up to $40 at local bookstores worldwide. And if you feel the book has given you something of value, you can provide a donation toward the costs associated with the distribution of such a large file. Every little bit helps as I’ve returned back from another successful Virgin Islands workshop filled with life’s experiences that I’m sure I’ll write about someday. Thanks, don’t forget the troops and their families, God Bless–Rolando Gomez

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Monte Zucker Had Some Great Advice

Playboy Playmate Holley Dorrough illuminated from the side.  Lighting is the sun during the Golden Hour in the Moab.

Playboy Playmate Holley Dorrough illuminated from the side. Lighting is the sun during the Golden Hour in the Moab.

Earlier this year at a photography event my seminar on “The Art of Lighting for Impact” followed Clay Blackmore’s spectacular lighting demonstration.  Clay, a Canon Explorer of Light, and I were using the same studio, so we assisted each other. While listening to Clay and observing his demonstration, he said something that stuck to me to this day that he learned from our mutual friend, the late Monte Zucker, known in the photo industry as the “Prince of Portraiture.”

Clay reminisced how Monte, who held the Master of Photography and Photographic Craftsman degrees from the Professional Photographers of America (PPA), always taught him that the greatest photos are the ones where the main light comes from the back, or the side, not necessarily the front.  I haven’t stopped thinking about it since, especially since Monte and a few other photographers and I were involved with an old business so I knew Monte well.

Photographers around the world miss Monte who earned the 2002 Photographer of the Year Award from the United Nations.  He was one of the greats and before his death “initiated the Zucker Institute for Photographic Inspiration, a charitable organization dedicated to inspiring at-risk youths through photography.”

Often I think about the conversations with Monte, but the day Clay spoke, I thought about some of my photos and sure enough, my better photos have a strong light from the side or back. I also remembered Monte making a similar statement to me at Photo Plus Expo one year about light from the back or sides and it seems like every time I pick up the camera to photograph someone, I immediately look at the light in a different manner than I did before.

It’s funny how I’d forgotten those words and how Clay’s spreading of the gospel of photography reminded me—obviously the best way to become a photographer is by practicing your craft, but also be hearing things in repetition and over time.  That’s why events like Photo Plus Expo are worth attending, perhaps you’ll see me there this year as I’m a speaker there once again.

Shelby illuminated from sun filtering light through a window in the Virgin Islands.

Shelby illuminated from sun filtering light through a window in the Virgin Islands.

Hence, I’ll repeat it today, if you want to capture some great photos, look at the direction of the light, then ask yourself, “Where is it coming from?”  If you see light coming from a nearby window, reposition your subject if you’re taking a portrait and place them near that light source and try to use that natural, diffused window light as the main light, but have it come from the side.

If you’re outdoors and you place your subject underneath a tree to take advantage of the open shade, turn their back toward the sun and have your subject move back far enough where the sun falls on their hair and shoulders, perhaps providing some nice accent or rim lighting, then fill your subject’s face in with light reflected from a California Sunbounce reflector or perhaps from the light of your on-camera flash or if you’re fortunate enough, from the flash of a portable studio power pack like a Hensel Porty Premium or a Broncolor Mobile A2R.

One of the greatest photography accessories for digital cameras today that I also like to carry, especially when working outdoors (though I use it in the studio too as my eyes aren’t as young as they used to be) is a HoodmanUSA, HoodLoupe 3.0.  While many photographers have loupes leftover from the film days of viewing slides on a light table, these are not the same as the HoodLoupe which doesn’t magnify pixels, as it uses three German glass lenses that give a true 1:1 viewing ratio.  This viewing ratio is important because when you “chimp” (view your images on your LCD screen while shooting), your pixels aren’t magnified. Magnified pixels from cheaper loupes create large dots from your screen’s pixels and it will throw you into a loop as you’ll misjudge your focusing.

And for those that claim to be more purest and don’t chimp but only use their LCD screens to verify their image histograms, these Hoodman loupes provide a glare free environment and come with an adjustable diopter of +/- 3, which comes in handy with eyeglass wearers like myself. When I’m looking for that sidelight outdoors, I usually have that HoodLoupe attached securely around my neck with the comfortable lanyard it comes with and I never worry about it banging around as it’s made of a user friendly rubber.

If you’re not fortunate to find that big mesquite or oak tree, like the kind we have in South Texas, then hopefully you can capture a great sunset shot with the subject’s back toward the sunset and by simply dragging your shutter (slow your shutter-speed down as the flash duration is the actual shutter-speed for your subject and the camera shutter-speed controls the ambient light) and increasing your aperture value (F/Stop) to match or by closing your lens aperture down another half to full stop and compensating with fill-flash to match (think overpowering the sun with flash).  Your sunset should back light your subject, thus your image should be amazingly appealing to any audience if done correctly.

During one of my Virgin Islands, Glamour, Beauty and the Nude photography workshops, I captured this image of Playboy model Ashly with the sun from behind.

During one of my Virgin Islands, Glamour, Beauty and the Nude photography workshops, I captured this image of Playboy model Ashly with the sun from behind.

Well that’s a photo tip for you today on lighting and the use of a proper loupe for previewing your images and histograms.  Hopefully Monte’s method of using side and back lighting will stick in the back of your head like it does to mine since Clay reminded me.  While Monte, also a Canon Explorer of Light, is resting in a better place, his words of photography wisdom are not forgotten.  I wish everyone the best, and don’t forget our service members, their families and friends, without them we’d have no freedoms and we’d certainly miss a lot of light.  Thanks, Rolando

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Phototherapy, Photographic Therapy, Therapeutic Photography–Yes, it’s Real!

For Free Photography Book on Photographic Therapy, Go here: www.freephotographybooks.com

American Idol Star Amy Davis, misses her hubby during a Virgin Islands Workshop

American Idol Star Amy Davis, misses her hubby during a Virgin Islands Workshop

After the article, “Posing naked for a women’s magazine felt brave and shocking,” by Melissa Whitworth came out in the UK’s version of Glamour magazine, the photographic therapy (phototherapy, therapeutic photography) topic has risen in photography forums world-wide. In fact, the very next day, I was called by a journalist and psychologist Clara Soares from the largest, weekly Portuguese newsmagazine Visão (www.visao.pt)  and answered some interview questions (actual story here)

The following day, I noticed the topic on one photography and model forum and as I engaged in the conversation, one female photographer said “…but I think that saying photography is therapy IS psycho-babble.”

Photography as therapy is not psycho-babble. I can tell you stories after stories, like the young woman, a former military police sergeant in the U.S. Army whose ex-husband used to beat her. She is not only intelligent, but beautiful and stands at 5′-10” tall. I photographed her for Playboy and she’s in my first photography book. She also modeled for me in some of my glamour photography workshops after she left the U.S. Army as an active-duty soldier. The process of our photo shoot, as she said, “Made her feel like a woman again.” She’s now remarried, with family and is a Federal law-enforcement agent. She’s obviously not working workshops or posing for Playboy anymore. She served and still serves her country well and patriotically.

I had another subject whose husband left her for the bridesmaid of their wedding. She’d just returned from completing the U.S. Air Force Officer Candidacy School and found her own clothes thrown on the front porch and her husband in bed with her best friend. Obviously it was instant divorce. Prior to her military enlistment she was a Wisconsin beauty pageant queen, in fact, she won the “Miss Photogenic” award and was the third-runner-up for this state beauty pageant. She felt hurt in this relationship to a point where she hated men for some time afterwards. During the phototherapy process, she stated, “This makes me feel beautiful and like a woman again.” She’s now happily remarried to a military pilot and they have kids and she’s honorably discharged out of the military service.

Another subject I was hired to photograph for a bariatric surgeon friend had lost 131 pounds thanks to that type of surgery—at the time she was 31-years of age. She’d come over for the “after” photo the surgeon had paid me to capture, a normal one-hour at the most photography session where the subject is photographed up against a plain, seamless, background paper illustrating how much weight she’d lost. I loved her charismatic qualities and inner- and outer-beauty, so I asked her to let me photograph her in a more “glamour photo,” perhaps on the couch or on the bed—for those wondering, with clothes, no nudity was involved. She mentioned no man had ever given her a second look and just to be in front of the camera, made her feel beautiful and like a woman again.

After the shoot, both her and my 275-pound assistant at the time, a tough guy that looked like he was a member of the Mexican Mafia, cried when I showed her the photos on my Apple Cinema display immediately after the shoot. I did something I rarely do, I burned her a CD of every photo taken and handed it to her, free of charge. She was beautiful with a clean complexion, there was no need for post-production. She gave me a big hug with tears still dripping from her eyes, that hug was my photographic therapy.

Now, to credit the photographer that made the initial statement about photographic therapy as psycho-babble, she also said, “An insecure woman may trust the photographer, but what if she trusts the wrong photographer? Wouldn’t that do more damage than good? “

A photo of "Shelby," a 27-year-old mother of two children.

A photo of "Shelby," a 27-year-old mother of two children.

She is precisely correct, the wrong photographer photographing someone in a depressed state of mind can make that depression worse. Depression kills. Depression comes in many forms from many things including postpartum depression. Just ask Tom Cruise and Brooke Shields about the latter form of depression. The problem is, most of the time we don’t know what’s on a person’s mind, hence building rapport with our subject is of the utmost importance before, during and after the shoot. A photographer, without prying too hard, should know enough about their subject to understand their state of mind, but a photographer should never think they are there to replace a trained, medical professional.  A photographer must learn when to listen and heed what they hear.  A photographer must know when to ask the right questions, how to ask them, where to ask them and why to ask them to help build that rapport between them in addition to understand their subject better and to help the phototherapy process flow with positive images.

If a photographer’s subject suffers from depression and that photographer doesn’t know how to recognize it, no matter how slight the depression may be, it can lead to a bad situation. A photographer should only look at their photography as a “layer” of treatment helping to build or re-build self-esteem but never to replace a physician prescribed drug or as a substitute for a therapy session by a trained, medical professional. Statistically, there are more male photographers than females, and even though some males feel they understand women, they will never know what it’s like to be a woman.

Motherhood is a good example. Unless a photographer has delivered a baby through a bodily canal, I doubt they understand what it’s like to give childbirth. It has nothing to do with changing diapers after the fact, that’s what good Dad’s do to help Mom’s out during postpartum recovery. “New mothers” go through a complete body change after childbirth. Photography is awesome, if done right, to make moms feel more secure about themselves again. Another article I wrote for my blog, Is it a Lens Barrel or a Gun Barrel? addresses that statement. Bravo for the photographer on the forum that brought this up because if a photographer doesn’t know what they’re doing, they can make postpartum depression worse and perhaps even leave a new child motherless for their entire life.

We grow up with "Ken and Barbie," but this photo of my daughter and her husband on their honeymoon illustrates that romance is there, no matter what physical features you don't see.

We grow up with "Ken and Barbie," but this photo of my daughter and her husband on their honeymoon illustrates that romance is there, no matter what physical features you don't see.

Now that leads me to another phototherapy experience. I had a subject, 8-weeks into motherhood. Her figure was gorgeous, though she didn’t think so. It was her first child, her only marriage. She wanted to “rekindle” that romance with her husband of a few years because she felt her body had changed and the fact that she had to give so much attention to her new-born that left no time for her husband. She also wanted this photographic therapy session for a surprise Valentines Day gift, a sweetheart romance gift, all for him. You could see the love for him in her eyes as she asked me to help her create the perfect photographs of her for this romantic moment she was so meticulously planning.  She wanted to show him she was still beautiful.

She hired me to photograph her on the beach in conservative swimwear and some fashion beach clothes. I photographed her for two days, never did she pose nude in any form. Never did I photograph her suggestively in any sorts. Beach clothes and swimwear, the most risqué, if you want to call it that, was a two-piece, full-bottom, bikini. She presented these photos from her phototherapy session to her husband with red-wine, strawberries and chocolates on Valentines Day right after consuming the in-home, candlelight dinner she’d carefully prepared all day—the baby was with the sitter that evening and night purposely so they could have this romantic time without interruption. She’d even disconnected the telephone.

It was a long-overdue romantic, quality-time with her husband, she later told me. All went well until she proudly presented her hubby with these professional photographs. Perhaps it was the wine, perhaps it was the built-up sexual frustration, perhaps it was insensitivity, perhaps it was the fact he was just a jerk. We’ll never know, but ultimately, he accused her of being a “slut” a “whore” a “worthless piece of crap” all because she had posed in photos with a male photographer–they are now divorced. She still cherishes those photos today and actually is thankful that she found out what she really married. She’s a proud parent feeling sexier and secure than before those photos were ever taken.

Moral of that story, no matter how good the photography or photographer is, no matter how much the subject “needs” to go through the phototherapy process and no matter how good it makes the subject feel and how much it can uplift self-esteem, others can still destroy it.

I might add, phototherapy isn’t just for women in their 30’s, like writer Melissa Whitworth, or women in their 40’s or even 50’s, it has a lot to do with women of every age and perhaps society is the reason. The minute we’re born, momma takes us to the grocery store. There we sit, in the grocery cart. As momma puts our baby food on the conveyer belt at the checkout counter we see magazines galore in every direction that we look. Glamour, Cosmopolitan, Sports Illustrated Swimwear, the weekly trashy rags too, all filled with buxom Barbie looking beauties proudly displaying their cleavage.

Young girls grow up with Barbie dolls–never are the dolls over-weight or middle-aged. When is the last time you saw a single parent, Barbie Mom? Society trains young girls way before puberty with the belief that to capture your perfect male playmate, he must be a tall, blonde, blue-eyed “Ken,” and that girls grow up to be a tall, slim, curvy, blonde, bombshell, Barbie.

As men, even our self-esteem is hurt when we realize we are not Ken. We accept who we are and move on. We age gracefully with our salt and pepper beards and hair. Perhaps that’s why many photographers, like myself, feel photographic therapy from the back-end of the camera, knowing we’re making our subjects happy with the results because obviously it’s not with our Ken-less looks.

Nudity is not a requirement of your subject during phototherapy.  It's ultimately your subject's decision if she will or will not pose nude for the camera.

Nudity is not a requirement of your subject during phototherapy. It's ultimately your subject's decision if she will or will not pose nude for the camera.

Society teaches us that the perfect body comes in many forms, from Playmates to Victoria Secret Angels. Our dads unknowingly add to that on football Sunday when the video camera pans across the playing fields broadcasting the sexy, slender, sultry and sensuous cheerleaders with butt cheeks and cleavage hanging out their mini-outfits. Bookstores across the world sell their cleavage abundant calendars, we later put them on our walls or desks to remind us year-round what we’ve been trained to like in qualities of a woman.

We see all kinds of television shows celebrating “T and A” in many forms, the television industry executives know, “Sex sells.” One of the hottest shows around the world was Baywatch and it was often joked about at the office the next day as “Babe Watch.” Our own society has programmed us to accept certain things, hence why the United States is a leader in the volume of breast implants and plastic surgery. I’m even sure the same holds true for tanning salons and Botox treatments. We are guilty, even I, as a photographer whose portfolio includes Playboy Playmate beauties, for creating this perception.

Do I regret it? No. I enjoy making women feel great about themselves because of my camera.  My finished photos and post-production with Adobe Photoshop fills in the gaps to help them look like that Barbie they never will be.  Perhaps that’s why the term “Photoshopped” was coined, because like a darkroom, it allows for corrections of blemishes with the clone and the flattening of stomachs with a little liquify tool.  ”Heck, you want big breasts, no problem, just liquify them right out in Photoshop,” is something I’ve heard photographers tell models at some of my workshops.

I was hired by St. Martin’s Press to photograph a New York Times best-selling romance author, Lisa Kleypas for her first mainstream book, Sugar Daddy.   At the time, Lisa was a 42-year-old mother of two and  explained to me before the shoot that she didn’t want to look “fat” in her photos.  I understood.  Lisa later wrote on her blog, “This is the photo that will go on the back of Sugar Daddy. Lisa-au-casual. It was taken by an incredibly talented photographer, Rolando Gomez, who is great at making women look their best. He finds the right angles and the right lighting, and he makes you feel comfortable and unselfconscious. The photo hasn’t been touched up or photoshopped . . . which leads to the following confession: Before the first picture was even taken, I was looking forward to that photoshopping.”  (read more from Lisa and myself)

New York Times best-selling romance author, Lisa Kleypas in the original photo chosen for her book, Sugar Daddy.

New York Times best-selling romance author, Lisa Kleypas in the original photo chosen for her book, Sugar Daddy.

As proven through her book sales, Lisa understands the female audience well and the market for romance novels is extremely large in the book industry. Romance novels are the fairytales many Barbies experienced, perhaps the foundation for those novels started at the Barbie stage, obviously without the more provocative and sexually discriptive vocabulary.

The Internet model and photography websites are no different. I’ve seen profiles of models that display anger because people criticize how they look in their more poorly done photos, especially when the photographer does no post-production or doesn’t know how to do it properly. Thankfully for them, a seasoned professional photographer knows photogenic beauty when they see it and normally does not judge a model’s talent for lack of the photographer’s talent or photoshopping skills.

I’ve already written about 35,000 words of a 50,000-word book on phototherapy and it wasn’t done overnight. A typical book takes at least a year to write, this one I’ve been working for what seems like 20-years because the experiences come from my 30-plus-years as a professional photographer. This is not a book of photos or photo essays, this is more a book of words, perhaps a follow-on book will be more a photography book, coffee-table oriented. Unlike my previous three photography books (fourth due out soon), this book on phototherapy is a mainstream book for everyone. The more specific target audience is people who believe in the power of photography to help build or re-build self-esteem. Ultimately I hope that a reader will come to realize that a close friend or family member is in need of a little phototherapy in their life and will recommend a well researched-out photographer. Perhaps they will indirectly save a life with this recommendation. Photographers will hopefully learn from this book by simply understanding the phototherapy process and scenarios.  (Literary agents take note, I don’t have one, but need one!)

My only hold back, unlike “How-To” photography books, mainstream books require a good literary agent if you want to land a decent publisher. This type of book not only requires a top publisher, but it deserves it. I also want to add, while Melissa Whitworth’s article in the UK’s version of Glamour magazine was about “nude” phototherapy photography, I firmly believe nudity is not a requirement though the subject should have that as an option. The golden rule in any type of photography, whether it’s coined photographic therapy, phototherapy, therapeutic photography, etc., is that the photographer should never force their subjects to pose in any manner they don’t want. It should be a marriage of the minds between the subject and the professional photographer, a collaboration to create photographs that will ultimately please the subject and enforce her self-esteem in a positive manner.

Well I close now, and if you want to hear my thoughts, here’s an interview I did in Oct. 2006 while attending Photo Plus Expo in New York as a guest speaker–yes, I’m speaking this year again, though a different topic.  Enjoy, and don’t forget our service men and women, their families and friends and all those that help protect our freedoms.  Thanks, Rolando

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Twittle Dee, Twittle Dum

Twittle Dee, Twittle Dum, if you’re not tweeting today, you’ll fall under the latter and probably on your knees—so stand up and tweet, you just might become a twitterati (twitter A-list twit, tweeple or twitter) .

© 2002 Rolando Gomez

© 2002 Rolando Gomez

If you’re not twittering, you’re probably missing out on up-to-the-second headlines and some interesting micro-blogs from some famous tweeples. Heck, even the world’s journalists have a central depository for their real-time tweets, the Muck Rack.

Event Twitter.com, which sometimes acts like the power company in a third-world country with frequent outages, is realizing they have exploded beyond their original expectations and now needs to start making money—everyone else is using them to make money, from barefoot executives to

Here are some helpful Tweet info:

DM or DT means you’re tweeting directly with someone and it doesn’t appear in your public twitter stream.

Twitter stream is your all your tweets when you view your profile and the when you go to the “home” button while logged in, it’s the stream of tweets from the tweeples you’re following.

Tweeples, well they are the extraordinary and ordinary people that use twitter—just register for an account and you now belong to the multi-millions already counted in the tweeple world.

RT, or re-tweet means just that, you liked someone’s tweet so you decided to send it out to people in your “following” collection of tweeples. Think of this as forwarding an email to people in your email list.

Tweet-ups are like our photo meet-ups at PhotoMeetUps.com. Basically tweet-ups are people that met or meet on Twitter that agree to meet-up at an agreed location, then drink up! Well, the drink up is optional, but I’m sure it happens.

You’re either a follower, are being followed, or both, though I’ve never figured out how to people following each other don’t collide. That’s the beauty of Twitter, you can follow a tweep but they are not required to follow you back. The downside, there is twiddle dum spam out there, but Twitter lets you block people. Spam seems to just be everywhere, even when you pump gas they’ve got those annoying talking pumps where the mute button never works. My favorite gas stations don’t have talking mechanical idiots.

Now favorites is something else on Twitter, it’s a mechanism where you can “bookmark” your favorite tweets. Think of it as the old push-button radio where you programmed in your favorite radio stations, except you get the same message. I recommend you use this more for book marking your favorite tweeples if you follow many twitters like I do. And if you like to group your tweets so they’re easier to find, by everyone, use the “hashtag” technique by adding the pound symbol # (think iPhone), before (pre-text, i.e., #photographer) your word in your tweet. Don’t overdo this, it can cause your account to be suspended.

Obviously there is a ton more, a ton of money to be made, heck, there are a ton of books on Twitter and how to make money on Twitter, just do a search on Amazon.com (don’t forget to add one of my books in your shopping cart while you’re there, I have five kids to feed). Just remember, a tweet is a micro-blog composed of not more than 140 alphanumeric characters. There is so much, so just Google anything with Twitter and you’d be surprised what you’ll find, from twitteradders to twiddle dees and I’m sure even twitter dums. Thanks, rg sends!

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Model Talent Scouts—for the Inexperienced

I love the way the Internet and technology in general has made everyone a photo editor and in some cases, a talent scout.  Yep, your mother, your big brother, your boyfriend, your girlfriend, your sister, your bartender, everyone who loves your new photos is dead-on and you should be the next Victoria Secrets Angel. 

©2005 Rolando Gomez, Atlanta Lingerie

©2005 Rolando Gomez, Atlanta Lingerie

Gone are the days that professionals actually paid, on staff, for magazines, or in the case of talent scouts/bookers at agencies, meant anything to anyone—at least online.  With all these model/photographer social communities, instantly you’re a supermodel, especially if you’re the “pic of the day” or “featured” on the front page.  Heck, if you’re active in the community and post on the forums, even if you’ve never been published, you’re now a mentor, or better yet, a moderator.  Yep, you can now raise your rates from TFP (time for practice) to the supermodel rates of $150 an hour, throw in some nudity and your rates go up to $175 an hour, subject to bringing an escort with you.  (Note to self:  In the old days, escorts were basically call-girls, the kind that required payment but gave back more than photos.)

My God, actually, that’s Myspace, throw up a few cell phone photos of yourself, even the ones taken by yourself—that good ole arm extension technique, it’s in style—and “BAM,” as Emeril John Lagasse would say, you’re hot!  If fact, you’re on fire.  You’re the next culinary dish and now you can “kick it up a notch” and head to the big leagues—those TFP requests will come pouring in from GWC’s!

No, that’s not girls with credit cards that will take you on a shopping spree, but guys with charisma who will try and charm you out of your clothes.  And if you’re lucky, especially if you do crawl out of your clothes, you just might have a guy with credit cards that will take you shopping, after the shoot.

Now if Myspace, Facebook and all those modeling and photography sites don’t get your ego boosted about your talent, then just count the views on your photos on those popular social networking sites.  Make no mistake, the ones with the most views are the TnA types, no, not talent and assets, but those curvy things your momma told you to hide from your Sears (Victoria Secrets today) catalogue types when you were growing up.  Show that thong and baby your image view counts will go higher than a wedgy.  Proof that puberty does show it’s signs, even on the Internet.

So in a nutshell, if you’re online, remember, everyone that thinks your photos rock are bonafide photo editors and better talent scouts than those paid to do those type of professional jobs in real life—yes, listen to your family and friends, don’t even bother on go sees to real modeling agencies, they don’t know what they’re talking about.  What portfolio or book? You’ve got one in your smart phone taken by your friends, that’s all you need today, not to mention, you’re on Myspace and the page views are up and there’s comments to prove it and you’re on the way to becoming the next Victoria Secrets Angel.  Wish you all the best, rg sends!

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