Sunday, 19 December 2010

Clifford Chance

 


A thank you to Clifford Chance for using us for two days at their Xmas party.

Getting the gear up 30 floors in Canary Wharf was actually easy thanks to Kevin who organised the whole event.

The setting was incredible and we were kept busy green screening everyone all night on both nights.

The most popular backdrop was our magazine cover themed to match the Jack Frost styling.

 Click below to see the thank you video we made for Kevin


Clifford Chance

Tuesday, 7 December 2010

Green Screen photography at the Chronicles of Narnia premiere

Another interesting green screen job for us. We were invited to cover the opening of Sky's new Screen 11 at the O2 arena. This is the biggest 3D cinema screen in Europe and is absolutely stunning!

We were setup in the VIP area with our green screen studio and instant printing kit. We had worked with 20th Century Fox on the original posters of the Voyage of the Dawn Treader as this film is titled. They provided us with layered artwork and we set it all up so we could put kids into the main ship or the smaller boat.

We automated the whole process for speed using a batch file to combine the layers into a composite image. This gave a great effect and the kids were amazed to see photographs of themselves on the Dawn Treader or in the smaller boat with the actors!

The whole process was so fast we didn't even have a queue so we were getting people from the face painting and magician queues and photographing them. Again brilliantly organised by Tania and Emma. We even had time for a meal at the O2 before packing up and getting home.

Capital Radio Jingle Bell Ball

A very busy weekend at the Capital radio Jingle Bell Ball sponsored by Microsoft Windows 7 at the O2 arena. We had to provide two pods to entertain guests before and during the concert. So one was set up for Green Screen, the other for Video.

Early start Saturday as I had the scarey job of photographing the stage. Scarey because I had the whole arean watching me and had to direct the lighting and get the big screens fired up to show Windows 7 and Capital FM's logos. Those screen refresh slowly so it was a tricky shoot in low light but the Nikon D700 coped as usual by cranking up the ISO, didnt even use a tripod! 

On the Green Screen pod we had a huge dressing up box and a couple of electric guitars. We photographed kids and sometimes parents in front of the Green Screen, then dropped them onto the concert stage with an overlay of a cheering crowd. Then we printed and mounted a photograph for each of them. These will be up at www.capitalradio/windows7.

The video pod was to celebrate MSN's 15th birthday, we filmed guests dressed up again in all manner of weird costumes wishing MSN a happy birthday. The best one gets to be featured in their advertising. It was a hard weekend, but great fun and well organised by Jeremy, Tania and Emma.

On the Sunday evening our crew were all allowed in to watch the concert whilst I volunteered to guard the equipment.

Monday, 22 November 2010

Cirque Du Sony Ericsson

Made this purely as a thank you for everyone who attended the FMI Group party

Cirque Du Sony Ericsson

Green Screen Photography in a tight space!



We attended a brilliant party organised by FMI Group for Sony Ericcson to treat the Carphone Warehouse group as a thank you for their work. The party was at the Circus bar in Covent Garden. We had a very small space to work in but managed to put up a small green screen and floor. Lighting was tricky, no room either side for the usual shoot through umbrellas to light the green screen, so we had to position wireless flash guns on the floor lighting up the screen. We shot the guests using a softbox with another wirless flash inside, all driven by the built-in commander flash on the Nikon D700.

We managed to get a viewing station set up on a counter, with the Mitsubishi Click system powering a 9550 photolab. We shoot wirelessly using a Nikon D700 with a low light 24-70mm f2.8 pro lens linked by a WT-4 to a hub. As we shoot photos are sent to the viewing station. Guests choose the pose they like then the images are sent to the Click system. Elaine was operating the Click's green screen software. We had designed a selection of Circus themed backdrops all branded with Sony's logos.

The most popular by far was the Tiger in the cage, followed by a circle of fire, then a more subdued harlequin backdrop to match the Circus theme. There was entertainment all night, Burlesque dancers, trapeze artistes, Hula dancers and stilt walkers, who all performed on the stage which is right in the centre of the venue. But we were by far the most popular attraction, absolutely mobbed all night, and by the end of the evening 280 large 9"x 6" photographs had been shot, editted, green screened, printed and framed!

Monday, 18 October 2010

Caroline & Martins wedding

Just to prove you don't have to spend thousands to get great wedding photos and a video of the photos set to music!




Had a good time at St Leonards Church in Flamsted, very interesting and ancient place, dates back to the Saxons, so no flash allowed. Sun was in and out and I had to move all around the Church using secret doors shown me by the friendly Verger and Vicar. I was allowed onto the High Altar and got some lovely shots of the Rood Screen and Stained Glass.

Anyway, have a look, thanks Caroline and Martin for letting me enjoy your wedding. And thanks for the message from Sunny Barbados saying you loved the photos and the video. For all the photographers who claim it takes weeks, these were all editted and on the website for the couple to view on honeymoon the next day. And the video was finished and up too, even though we went straight to a Masonic Masked ball after the wedding.

Special thanks to nikon for the D700's low light capabilities and the gorgeous f2.8 24-70mm lens. Did use the SB-900 outside for fill though, when the sun came out it was real winter sun!

Click here to see the video


Caroline

Sunday, 19 September 2010

Had a lovely early start for a Sunday morning, photographing the youngsters swimming and running in the CoSTa Aquathlon this morning. Photos are up at www.fullframeevents.co.uk, here's a link to the video we made for them for fun.

Saturday, 4 September 2010

Caroline

here's a video I've just finished for Caroline and Sarah. I shot their Civil partnership today and although I only got back at 6pm all the photos are editted and up on the website at www.fullframeevents.co.uk under galleries, and I've made the video as well. Guess this proves that if you get the photos right in the camera you don't need to spend days post proeccesing them :)


Caroline

Thursday, 12 August 2010

Naked women covered in food?

Got your attention! We had a cracking day out with Eventwise rewarding the hard working employees of Frank PR. They are the most innovative PR company around with the most amazingly designed website www.frankpr.it, well worth a look.

So when we were asked to do something different to help make their day out memorable we were happy to help. Emily (Frank PR) and Oliver (Eventwise) had organised a Roman themed day with gladiator battles, toga making, a huge feast with the afore-mentioned naked ladies covered in fruit (well, not for long!) and somehow arranged sunshine.

We were there to capture the action, and then in the evening we opened our green screen studio to the Pimmed up workers. Two original swords from Gladiator and a choice of a dozen different themed backdrops soon had the photolab going flat out as we took, editted, printed and framed nearly 200 nine inch by six inch photos.

Ok, here's the naked lady....
if you ever want your employees to get their five a day this would work judging by the speed the guys from Frank undressed her. I shoot at 8 frames a second but by the time I had got there and focussed only the Ivy was left!

So thanks to everyone for a great day out, here's the video we made as a souvenir of the day, just for fun. I'll facebook it so you can share it around.

Tuesday, 27 July 2010

www.fullframeevents.co.uk

Made a sample video showing what we do. Animoto is great for this kind of thing, easy to use.

Have a look here

www.fullframeevents.co.uk

Monday, 28 June 2010

Bishop Stopford Prom

So straight after Kevin & B's wedding it was off to Bishop Stopford's prom. Had a problem with the Lastolite Hi-Light, whoever put it away last time hadn't folded it properly, so the spring steel inside was twisted! Always carry a Leatherman tool, the pliers did the job much to our relief! Next problem, all the viewing stations had been used at home so had to reset all the IP adresses. Then we realised we hadn't set up the new event in Graham's excellent Event pro software. That only took a couple of minutes as we were only charging £5 a photo mounted with no other options and only one photographer, me! Elaine was running the viewing stations and the Click printing system, plus handling all the sales and mounting the photos.

Then the Click switched itself off! This is an ultra-reliable piece of kit, but it wouldn't reboot. I could hear the fans struggling so decided to give it 30 mins to cool down as the sun had gone in and we were outside. I started shooting the tables and the presentations inside the event. As that drew to a close I went out and checked settings etc and prepared for the rush! I restarted the Click but was swamped by eager year 11's in some magnificent outfits wanting to give it some attitude on the White screen studio. I explained to them as I shot that the pictures would be on the website but not available on the night. When I had a few spare seconds I glanced over at Elaine and could see surrounded 20 deep by eager customers, and clear bags with mounted photos in were being proudly displayed, so I knew it had decided to work!

So from 10 pm til 12am we worked flat out and produced nearly 200 framed photos between 2 of us! That's down to experience, excellent kit, and very willing participants who knew value when they saw it. We get close to Studio quality photos at 9"x 6" in seconds using the same gear as in the Studio, but we work faster,

So thank you everyone at Bishops, and here's your free video as a thank you! Click the link below, then use the HQ button!



Bishop Stopford Prom

Saturday, 26 June 2010

Kevin

Ok, I didn't really want to do weddings as I can't bear the thought of something going wrong and letting a couple down on their big day! But Kevin called me and when I explained my concerns he told me not to worry as he had other people with cameras. So I took THREE cameras with me, six memeory cards and six pare batteries, plus spares for the flash guns:) I called the St Albans registry office the day before and cjecked on restrictions for photographers etc.

I arrived almost two hours ahead of the wedding in case my ultra reliable car broke down so I would have time to get a taxi :) I met the Registrar and she was lovely and helpful. I took some practice shots but pretty much nailed the lighting straight away, really easy with the D700 and SB-900 combo. I decide to shoot RAW just in case.

Everything went really well, got Kevin and B arriving, shot reportage style with some artistic shots of the Canon, Rings, Flowers etc to pop in the video. I had agreed a fixed price with Kevin for all the images on DVD as no-one else would. Can't believe one guy asked for over £5k just to cover a one hour civil ceremony! I made this video as a present to Kevin and B for such a pleasant day. I certainly will do weddings now as it was enjoyable and rewarding. They are very happy and that's what counts! Here's the low res version on the video i made for them, there is a high res version being blown onto DVD as we speak.

Kevin

Thursday, 17 June 2010

Putney Park School

Great night at Putney Park School. We shot their charity fashion show which was very well organised and all the kids had great fun. then we moved into the green screen studio and put the girls onto various magazine covers. Here's a link to the video we made for them. We raised a lot for their cause, and the girls went home with stunning photos printed instantly and frmaed while they watched. We were flat out but enjoyed the night.


Putney Park School

Tuesday, 1 June 2010

Nurses

This version shows the funnier shots in the studio, and the whole crowd having a great time. This was also at the Nurses and Engineers Ball (see below) and shows how we manage to capture the atmosphere of the night. That's why we bring two photographers :)

Nurses

Nurses

This is a short video of some of the photos we took at the Nurses and Engineers Ball at Chilcott Hall in Southampton. This is the parent friendly version showing the arrivals and shots in our white screen high key studio. A great night, we were flat out shooting and printing, the students took full advantage of the crazy pricing we offered, and the area we had to work in was perfect.

Nurses

Joe Hussain Trophy

A video of some of the photos taken at New Hall School whilst we were covering their Joe Hussain Trophy competition. Yes, that's Nasser Hussain awarding the prizes. His late father Joe taught Cricket and this day was in his memory.

Joe Hussain Trophy

Tuesday, 18 May 2010

Do you really need two photographers to cover an event?

Well, you do if you want to keep your customers happy! We managed ok with charity balls and school proms as most of work is done in the portable studio. When we are shooting Hi Key, Green Screen or Black Screen the guests come to us, aided and abetted by announcements from the DJ, adverts in the program, and a mention on any social networking sites set up for the event.

When we get a quiet moment (doesn't always happen) or when the evening is getting towards the end, we switch the SB-900 on the D700 off commander mode (it controls all our studio lights) and into manual back curtain mode with a diffuser. Then with a f1.4 lens and lots of creamy high ISO we hit the dance floor:)

We have usually managed a semi reportage style as well as the formal poses, but now the Spring has sprung and the Summer is coming, it was finally time to get more cameras. We have magaed with a mixture of Nikon and Canon semi pro cameras, but needed long range wireless.

We have a lot of bookings for Cricket tournaments, Football seven a sides, and Aquathlon/Biathlon/Triathlon evemts that definitely need two or sometimes three photographers as the action is on multiple pitches or spread over different venues.

The Nikon D-700 was favourite, but then we realised as it was mainly sporting events we were covering the extra range of a crop factor sensor would be a benefit in costs and coverage so added some D300's with 70-300mm VR lenses. This gives us a reach of 480mm, almost the same as the Sigma 150-500mm we use on the full frame cameras.

A sneaky purchase of some 1.4 extenders takes that even higher on all the cameras, in fact the Sigma 150-500mm on the D300 with a 1.4 extender gives us over 1000mm reach, and we still get sharp f8 apertures with 1/500th shutters in reasonable light with no noise!

So now we can field a team of three photographers, all with WT-4 wireless transmitters fitted with www.byteitcornwall.co.uk directional antennas sending back to a highly boosted receiver (cheers matthew)!

All of this is controlled by the excellent Event Pro software running on three viewing stations supplied by Graham Russell at www.emmalexsolutions.com

I will write a separate blog about this amazing software soon, it has made a huge difference to how we work and how our customers choose their photos. Brilliant!

So yes you need more than one photographer if you have multiple areas that need coverage. And no, it need not cost a fortune to kit them out or train them! In fact if there are any photography students out there who fancy a (paid!) summer job and don't mind long hours and travel, get in touch!

Thursday, 29 April 2010

EBF Boxing April 2010

EBF Boxing April 2010

Some of the action from the EBF event we covered. Fun night!

Tuesday, 6 April 2010

How to get a Professional Photographer with a complete studio at your Event...FREE!

Yes it can be done! While there's no such thing as a free lunch, you can get a Professional Photographer to cover your Corporate Ball, School Prom, Rugby final or Charity Event free.

Even better, if you pick the right company they will bring a mobile photo studio and print stunning photos on the spot. Some will even frame them for you. So what's the catch?

When we attend events free, we rely on the quality of our professional camera equipment, lenses and lighting to produce results that the guests couldn't possibly get close to, even with high quality point and shoots. There is no pressure put on guests to purchase anything, but once they see the sheer quality of the photographs they always do. That's how a proper Event Photography company works.

By bringing portable wireless lighting and a green screen or high key white screen, the photographer can produce near studio quality photographs quickly and efficiently with a limitless variety of backgrounds, magazine covers, film posters and more.

The latest high end photolabs such as the Mitsubishi Click coupled with wireless viewing stations placed around an event allow the Photographer and his team to quickly print and mount the photographs the guests want, so prices can be kept low. Real photographs can be produced on the same equipment used in high street labs very quickly.

We usually charge £7.50 for a photoshoot and large 9" x 6" photograph mounted ready to display. We offer three for £20 as guests always want more than one. Each guest, couple or group are shot in a variety of poses, usually full length, 3/4 length, landscape head and shoulders and a closeup. We can even do a digital makeover whilst adding different backdrops.

For some events like School Proms and the Boxing Events we cover we reduce the price even further to just £5 per photo! We can do this as we know we will produce a lot on such a night, and young boxers and school kids don't have huge salaries! We'd rather sell more for less and keep everyone happy. We also get more sales from the website after such events.

So yes, you can have all this FREE at your event, provided we are confident we will sell enough photos to cover the costs of the time, labour, travel, equipment, insurance and consumables. If it's a small event of just say 50 people or less we would rather set a fixed price for the night and give everyone photographs.

That would be £250 for the night for example and everyone would receive a framed 9x6 photo. Any extras would be charged at just £5. We do charge less than anyone else, some companies want £15 for a framed 9x6, some even more. That's their choice, it's a free market and we enjoy what we do, we would rather be out photographing than sat indoors counting profits.

But we offer more than just coverage on the night! After EVERY event we attend we set the photos to music and make a video which we give to the organisers free. We also facebook ALL the photos that people have paid for. And we let the organisers have photos for use on their websites. Plus every picture is put on the website as people often want more copies for parents etc. So you get all that as well.

The expertise and experience of a Pro photographer who is used to working in all kinds of situations and lighting is a valuable commodity as those of you who have paid hundreds or even thousands for a days shoot will appreciate. But we really can get very close to studio standards, after all we are using the same cameras, lenses and lighting, and running the same software. The main difference is time, we work quickly.

At outdoor events we rely on the expertise and equipment used by our photographers to get the shots the parents and spectators just can't. We use 500mm sports lenses on fast Nikon D700's to get vivid and sharp shots even in dull light. As these are image stabilised we don't even have cumbersome monopods so can cover the whole field quickly.

So yes, there is such a thing as a free event photographer, unlike a free lunch. But you can also work another way with us. What about a wedding reception where you don't want your guests to pay? Or a corporate product launch where you want potential clients to leave with a souvenir photos? Or a Sweet Sixteen where you want to treat your guests? Maybe you want all the players in your team to have a team photo? Easy. we have prepaid packages that bring the price down even further!

We recently attended an event where the organisers wanted every guest to have a framed photo as a memento. There were 100 guests so we agreed on a package of £350 for the night. We ended up printing and mounting over 150 but as it was a great night we didn't charge for the extras, but did get a hotel room for the night thrown in and our bar bills paid:)

We do charge less than anyone else, and have the latest equipment and technology. Therefore we get booked quickly so please contact us as soon as you can to book us for your event.

Wednesday, 31 March 2010

Sigma 150-500mm tested for Rugby!

Took the new Sigma 150-500mm lens out for a trip on Sunday morning. Gloomy day so wasn't expecting too much, but I was very impressed with the quality of this piece of kit! It was fun to watch the parents gawping at the size of the lens, and one guy even asked where my tripod was! Don't need it with this stabilised beastie:)


It focussed quickly and accurately, hunted a little sometimes in 3D mode but in centre frame mode was spot on. I took a couple of hundred shots and have already sold lots so the club will benefit!

I'll post some here, or look in the Gallery here on www.fullframeevents.co.uk.


When I got into the clubhouse all the players and parents wanted to see the shots, and as I had done an event the night before I had the Mitsubishi Click system in the car. So I set it up with Grahams excellent Event Pro software running on a Dell touchscreen and got swamped!


The guys who run the club wanted to see the print quality so it was back to the car for the 9550 printer. As soon as they saw the quality I was besieged by parents wanting photos so ended up busily printing and mounting all by myself.

Everyone loved the photos and I'm now the club photographer for the finals in May. I'va also had a lot of sales from the website so maybe the moral of the tale is to always carry a complete portable photo studio around with you:)



EBF Boxing 27th March

Had a great night shooting for the EBF on Saturday. I thought it would be mainly the fans being photo'd with the boxers and promo girls in front of our illuminated white screen so took all that gear down. When we set up I quickly realised that wasn't the case as I was given a free ring pass!

I had to shoot the action throughout the fights, and then leap in the ring at the end and shoot the ref giving the result. I haven't shot fast action under those sort of lights so used the Sigma 24-70mm with the Nikon SB-900. I made a basic error of setting it to shutter priority to freeze the action, but the option to go faster than 1/250th wasn't turned on so I wasn't too impressed with the results.

The Boxers however loved the shots and you can see them under the galleries. We sold a lot on the night. Next time I'm knocking the lens wide open between f2.8 and f4, cranking up the ISO as you don't get a lot of noise even at 6400 on a D700 and will try without flash as they've promised me more lighting. Should be able to get 1.500th I reckon. Good learning experience though, and a great night!



Posted by Full Frame Events at 09:27

Monday, 22 March 2010

Review of the Sigma 150-500mm lens for Sports Event Photography

Let me say straight away that I know expensive Nikon lenses are unbeatable on Nikon cameras. So don't go throwing test graphs and data sheets at me. But I've found the paying guests at our parties and events don't care what lens is used as long as it's a great photo. We've stopped taking the really expensive lenses to Events as they get damaged, are extremely heavy, and basically overkill.

I brought a Sigma 24-70mm lens at Xmas to use on my backup Nikon D700 as we were so busy with Xmas parties I needed a second photographer to help. I ended up using it myself and letting the other guy use my pro Nikon glass. The Sigma is lighter and when you are printing 9" x 6" photographs there is NO difference in quality! In fact it focuses just as fast and is as sharp as the Nikon.

I've now been appointed official photographer for our local Cricket team, and am working with Herts County Cricket to shoot the U-16's in action as my son is in the squad. I've also just been asked to cover all the sporting events for the local private school, so will be shooting Football, Rugby, Cricket, Lacrosse and Netball and more.

Obviously we will need a team of photographers to cover all this so I priced up a kit for each photographer based on a D700 camera, WT-4 wireless transmitter to send the images back to our Mitsubishi Click, spare batteries, memory cards etc. The stumbling block was the lenses. Nikon glass was out of the equation, and I was very happy with the Sigma 24-70mm.

So I brought a new Sigma 150-500mm imaged stabilised lens to try out. I've used every sports lens going for both Canon and Nikon, usually renting them for events as needed. The Bigma is a well respected lens at 50-500mm but is too slow and lacks image stabilisation. So the Bigos looks ideal with it's clever Optical Stabilisation with two modes for monopod use and hand held.

I've tried getting away with 200mm and 300mm lenses in the past for Sports, using doublers, and know that for the photos I want I need at least 500mm. The logic there is that you need 10mm for every meter, and the pitches are big! I'm never more that 50 meters from the action, so 500mm gives me the range to get a full frame photograph of an individual which we can then offer framed. I'm not too worried about blurring the background, it looks nice and can isolate a sportsperson from a busy background of spectators, but I'm not working in packed Stadiums with huge crowds (yet:)

I've found the Sigma 150-500mm performs well. I tested it in sunny and overcast conditions and it gets the shots I want. I'm not posting any yet as they are of U-16's but once I've got permission they will be in a gallery called "Sport" on the website. The lens is not too heavy, zooms smoothly and the image stabiliser works really well. I've used all the different focussing modes on the D700 and prefer the central focussing mode to the 56 point 3D mode which sometimes locks on to the wrong competitor.

Colours are vivid and accurate, there is no problem with chromatic aberrations or lens flare, not suprising really when you see the size of the flowerpot lens hood included. The lens is big and really looks the part, the parents at the matches I attend often give up and put their SLR's away when they see I'm shooting, exactly what we want to achieve! I tend to shoot away in full manual with auto ISO turned on in case the sun slips into a cloud. Looking at the shots I've taken I'm mainly at f8 with shutter speeds around 1/500 to 1/1000 which freezes the action nicely.

The low light capability of the Nikon D700 kicks in often, some of the shots with auto ISO end up at 1600 or even 3200, but there is no grain or noise unless I really crop heavily, but if the shots are properly framed there's no need to. I leave white balance at auto and keep the quality at Medium Jpeg with optimal quality turned on in the hidden menu. That ensures the images get sent quickly through the air to the Base station, and that when we have thousands of images the separate viewing stations don't slow down as parents are searching through the images. We still have more than enough resolution to crop if needed, with plenty left for a 9" x 6" print at 300dpi.

At around £700 on the street these are affordable professional lenses that every photographer should consider. I got mine from SRS Microsystems in Watford who were extremely helpful. They let me test the lens thouroughly in the store and outside in the High Street. The lens focuses down to just over a meter so you can get stunning close-ups. I've even shot team photos and informal portraits with this, couldn't be bothered to switch lenses so just moved back (a lot!) and have been impressed with the results, no distortion and beautiful perspectives with accurate depth of field. You really can focus in on an eye and let the lens and camera do the rest.

So in summary it's a stunning lens ideal for Sports and Wildlife which is beautifully built and feels natural to use. I'm really happy and will be kitting out the team.

Monday, 22 February 2010

Lastolight Hi-Lite first test with Nikon Flashes!

Finally got round to using the Lastolite Hi-Lite portable backdrop. It's the biggest size they do at 9 feet wide by 8 feet tall, unfolds like one of those kids tents, and is hollow inside. The idea is to create a high key white backdrop behind whoever you are photographing. The people can stand right in front of it without creating shadows.

So we took it to a sixteenth birthday party and were given the smallest room imaginable to work in! We set up with a Nikon SB-900 inside the lastolite on a tripod, facing the rear with the wide-angle deflector down and the white diffuser fitted. We had another Nikon SB-600 in front on a stand with a large 60cm softbox. The idea was to use the tiny flash on the Nikon D700 as the commander and work in Nikon CLS mode so we could control both light sources from the camera.

No-one online or in any forums could tell us if this would work, but amazingly the CLS system worked THROUGH the Hi-Lite background, and also triggered the softbox which was slightly behind the photographer! So thank you Nikon, just saved me about £1000 I was going to spend on pocket wizards:)

(we did borrow some in case it didn't work, but no need, always be prepared though)

We found the best settings were the SB-900 at 1/4 power as it was a huge area to fill with light, the SB-600 on 1/8th power and the camera set with the onboard flash as commander set on -- which only emits the signals the strobes needed. We shot mostly around F6 with shutter speeds between 100 and 200 depending on how active the people being shot were, and how many there were.

Using the focussing light on the Nikon is a great way to get people to smile on cue rather than shouting over the party din, we just tell them to grin when they see the light!

You can see examples of the shots at www.fullframeevents.co.uk under galleries, look for Jordans 16th. There is a direct link here

http://www.fullframeevents.co.uk/#/gallery/jordans-16th-birthday/

Feel free to ask any questions, thanks, Paul.

Friday, 19 February 2010

FREE Videos of your Event or Party Photographs

We were shocked when a photographer who had taken some shots of a friends daughter wanted £800 to put the photos into a slideshow ! So we worked out how to do it ourselves and it's now a very popular part of what we do. We create a video on our website of the images set to music with the special effects matched to the beat. It takes time so we had to work out what to charge.

We quickly realised we could offer this as a FREE service as a thank you to anyone who books us to cover an event! At the end of an event or party we have all the images we have editted, airbrushed and green screened stored on the system. We set these to music that is relevant to the party or event we photographed. The client can request special songs. We of course pay the proper licencing fees where necessary.

The finished video goes up on our site in a special private area where only those with a password can see it, and the customer can then send the link and password to all the friends and guests. This is all done FREE of charge!

We then realised that if we put the high resolution photographs into the same software we could produce a full resolution video suitable for viewing on a HD television and by burning this onto a DVD we can make a permanent memento of the evening. This takes a lot longer and we do have to charge for this, but we keep the costs down by doing it in-house. We charge £100 to do the authoring and editting, then just £10 per DVD.

We will post some examples shortly

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Thursday, 4 February 2010

Is Black the new Black?

The latest trend in event and party photography seems to be shooting people in front of a black backdrop with side lighting. The style is similar to Film Noir and is being called "Pellier Noir" after Pellier Noir Events who use it and there are various courses and lectures you can attend to learn how to shoot this way.

Photomart offer a talk on the subject by Paul Rogers on February 25th, and Ian Griffith at Event Photos has courses running. Speak to Paul Rogers at www.pellierevents.co.uk to book a very useful training course!

It's an interesting style and if done properly produces dramatic and moody photographs. It's fascinating that Photography goes through cycles like fashion or music, and this is going right back almost to the very beginning.

If you look at early Victorian photographs you will see dark backgrounds and side lighting that produce the same effect. That's because they had little control over depth of field and lighting. So the backgrounds were dark, and the light was usually through a side window from the North. Even the early portrait painters used this style way before photography was invented.

To produce this effect you need a black background and some remote side lighting. With clever lighting you don't actually need a black backdrop, but it's far easier with one. You don't want direct flash on your camera so you need to use a remote trigger or sync cables to fire your off-camera flash or strobes.

We offer everyone who books us for an event or party the choice of high key white backdrops, Black velvet backdrops or green screen. In fact we can bring all three to an event. Or using green screen technology we can replicate high or low key shoots by replacing the green with black or white! We also offer instant digital makeovers using software familiar to magazine and fashion editors.

You are welcome to reproduce this article in your blogs as long as you credit us at www.fullframevents.co.uk .

Thursday, 28 January 2010

Party Photographer - Making a Party really memorable

Most Party photographers can do an ok job of photographing guests at a party. It's not difficult with the right camera and a good flash. nearly everyone has a phone with a camera or a pocket camera and they all work. But have you noticed how the millions of pictures on facebook all look the same?

People look like they have been distorted in a funfair mirror and are in shock! They have almost white faces, red eyes, bulging noses and are usually blurred. That's because compact cameras have a very small flash pointing straight into the face, a tiny lens and an even smaller sensor to capture the light. Yes they have millions of pixels but they are all crammed in so tight they can't capture enough data.

When we photograph a party we are using professional full frame cameras with proper lighting. We use expensive bounce flash guns with diffusers to smooth the light. The sensors on our cameras are huge, but capture the same amount of pixels. However each pixel is much larger so we get accurate colours and make the most of the light. Our lenses cost thousands of pounds each, and they don't distort as we get in close.

At most parties we set up a portable photo studio. We usually start with a high key white backdrop which is lit from inside. It gives a smooth white backdrop and shows off the guests outfits. We also use a softbox or two in front of the guests to wrap them gently in soft flattering light. This way we can photograph everyone as they arrive as this is a very quick way to allow guests a full body shoot, 3/4 length shoot and a close-up.

As we shoot, the photographs are sent wirelessly from the photographer to the special large touch screen, and guests can choose the ones they like. We then instantly print a large 9"x6"proper photograph and mount it for them in a display. We charge £10 for this service, and offer 3 prints for the price of 2 if they want more than one.

Then when the initial rush is over we go into the crowd as the pace picks up and get shots of the dancing and general madness. Whilst this is happening the other members of the team convert the photostudio into a special effects green screen studio.

Now guests can pose again in groups or singly and we can give them a stunning digital makeover using the same software the professional use for magazine covers and modelling shots. Then we can put them into a fashion show, onto a magazine cover or even on stage with their favourite band. We have hundreds of different studio backdrops we can use and people love the choices.

Once we have finished if the guest likes what we have done we can print a massive 12"x 8"photograph and frame it for just £15. Or they can have the 9" x 6" at the same prices as before. It's a lot more work for us but usually the initial rush has subsided and we don't mind taking the time.

No other professional photographers could do a full shoot, digital edit, makeover and green screen backdrop for anywhere near this price! Some of our guests have paid £400 for a similar shoot in a shopping centre and we got better results!

At the end of the party we put all the walk around shots on a CD for whoever is hosting the party to use however they like. Then when we get back to the studio we put all the green screen and makeovers onto our website

This is in a private area so the public can't access it. Each guest will have a card with the password on so they can order reprints, downloads for facebook, or huge canvas prints directly from us at sensible pricing.

Then as a special thank you we take all the shots and make you a video set to music of the night as a special souvenir. This is online but can be put in high resolution onto a DVD for just £20. Again, pro photographers will charge up to £250 for this!

So if you would like us to attend your party FREE, get in touch. We can also arrange for a prepaid package so guests don't have to pay for any photos as they are all paid for in advance a a massively reduced rate.




Tuesday, 19 January 2010

Blue Screen Vs Green Screen

So you've decided to take the plunge and get a green screen...or a blue screen. You're sick of lugging huge backdrops around in a variety of shades and patterns, and have realised that high-key white is not the new black, it's old hat and boring! Event Photographers argue endlessly over this, but there's really no need!

What's the difference in blue and green screens then? Why not yellow or pink?

It really doesn't matter what colour your backdrop is if you want to use chromakey software to replace the background with a digital backdrop. As long as it's uniform in colour and uniformly lit. And it's different from what your subjects are wearing!

If you are using a dedicated piece of Chromakey software like greenscreen wizard or Photokey, then you will need blue or green as that's what the software is looking for. If you are doing it by hand in photoshop then it can be pink, yellow, fluorescent orange, even white or black. If like us you are using a Mitsubishi Click System then you can select any colour to be chromakey just by clicking on a part of a sample photo.

Bear in mind at an event if it's going to be busy you may get people wanting quick photos who don't care about the background. That's great as it's much quicker to just shoot and print, without the extra work that chromakeying involves. In that case Blue looks nicer set up and also as a background, it's more natural than green.

We tend to find more women wear blue dresses at an event than green! And there are more blue-eyed people around than green! Men tend to wear blue shirts and ties more often than green. Hence the popularity of green screens. So be ready for that to happen. We take both colours in case, and can swap quickly. In fact the event organiser at one event turned up wearing a green dress, shoes and jacket and had big green eyes! We tried to shoot as the backdrop was a different colour green, but in the group shots her body totally disappeared, so we had to swap backdrops!

The downside to Green screen event photography is people with very blonde or silver hair. The green tends to be reflected into the hair and this is tricky to fix. The best way to avoid this is to have a separation light shining from above only on the hair, not on the backdrop. The experts say to move the subject 6-12 feet from the cloth, but that's not always possible due to space, and is impossible with groups. Good software helps, but great lighting is better.

If you want a real green or blue screen just like a certain George Lucas uses, we can help. A dyed muslin background will work, but isn't ideal. Proper chromakey screens are a much lighter shade of green or blue and are almost fluorescent in colour. They have a white backing with special loops in the material that diffuses the light rather than reflecting it back into the hair. We get ours made at the film studios by the same people who make the ones used on set. We also have rings inset down both sides so it can be tensioned with bungees to the stand, avoiding creasing. They aren't cheap, but the difference in use is amazing!

Email me if you are interested, we can get these made to any size, and I mean ANY size!

You are all welcome to use this article on relevant blogs etc, but you must put a link to www.fullframeevents.co.uk . Thanks.

Friday, 15 January 2010

Make your Event memorable!

I can guarantee that any event I attend is truly memorable:) That's because we provide the people there with lovely photographs that will last for many years. I design a custom overlay for every event I attend which is added as I print. So when people look at the photos from the event they remember where and when it was.

The photographs I produce on-site are really durable. I use a Mitsubishi Click system with a couple of different dye-sub printers that produce real photographs with a special layer to protect them from dust, fingerprints and more. Much more actually, at each event I go to I take a shot at the start of the event and stand it rolled up in a pint of Coke! It's a trick Stuart from Systems Insight showed me on their excellent training course. If anyone asks what it's for, I take the photo out, pat it dry and there are no runs, streaks or faded areas! Amazing really, try that with an ink-jet!

For themed events like Bond nights, Hollywood parties, School proms etc I design a backdrop relevant to the occasion. Then using the green screen as a backdrop whoever is operating the touch screen system can quickly drag this onto the photo and the green is replaced with the backdrop.

You can see example of this in action at www.fullframeevents.co.uk

Event photography by full frame event photography

If you are considering becoming an Event Photographer this guide may be useful. I spent a long time researching all the kit needed to be a successfu Event photographer, testing and costing carefully. It's all current gear available now so it's up to date unlike some of the guides I read.

I've been on training courses and I've done quite a few different Events now, so this is to help others avoid some of the common mistakes. This guide to Event photography is based on my personal experience and you are welcome to reproduce it as long as you credit www.fullframeevents.co.uk or add a link to this page.

I do recommend anyone interested in Event photography going on the excellent training course supplied by Systems Insight, speak to Mike Orr , Stuart or Darren. I've also found the Event Photographers Society really useful.

It is divided into sections as follows:

1, Camera Equipment needed for Event Photographers;
2. Lighting equipment for Event Photography;
3. Printers for Instant vEvent Photos;
4. Mitsubishi Click system for Event Photography;
5. Green Screen Event Photography;
6. Starting an Event Photography Business.

1. Camera Equipment for Event Photographers.

You don't NEED the latest high-end professional DSLR with pro glass lenses to shoot an event! It's nice to have good kit but that should be a given for any Pro Photographer. In reality the customer at a football tournament, school prom or black tie event doesn't care what kit you have as long as the results are good, and you don't want to be carrying a heavy camera with fragile glass in an environment that is often boisterous and busy !

You don't need to shoot huge resolution RAW files and won't have time to post process or mess about with hundreds of settings.You are aiming to get a sharp, vibrant and well lit photograph of enough resolution to print at your final output size. Conecentrate on making the people look great!

I do recommend a wireless workflow which I cover later, and again you need the files to be small enough to send quickly. I use a Nikon D700 but that's only because I have one for Property photography as I need the full frame and low light capablilities
(see www.fullfamefotos.com for examples).

I shoot jpg at just medium resolution for most events, and use a Sigma 24-70mm HSM lens so I can quickly zoom between individuals and groups. A Nikon D40 with a kit lens will do just as well. and I always carry one as a backup. It also takes my Nikon flashguns and is much lighter than a D700.

It is important to have a backup camera, I've even made do with a Nikon Coolpix P6000 when my D700 was being used pitch side at a Cricket Event. With proper lighting (see lighting section) I got almost identical results shooting people in front of a green screen. You must have at least one fully charged spare battery for each camera at an event, a couple of spare and preformatted memory cards, and spare batteries for your flashguns. I use the new Duracell rechargeables for the flashguns as they stay charged in the bag.

So don't go mad on the camera kit, it will get bashed around at an event! As for settings, indoors I shoot at around f7.1 to f8 for groups so I get good depth of field, I use shutter speeds of around 125 to get sharp shots as I don't like a tripod, too restrictive, and I use ISO 400 to get enough sensitivity. White balance is easy on a Nikon, see lighting but the flash setting will do. For individuals and couples I open up to around f5 and shoot full length, head and shoulders and a close-up. Outdoors events are more dependent on the available light and the lens.

One tip, using a wireless transmitter to send the images straight to your PC, Mac or Click system avoids the pitfall of people (the ladies mainly) wanting to see each shot on the back of the camera as you take it! That gets them through quicker and lets your team at the workstation show the images properly at full size. I do actually keep the images stored in the camera as a backup though in case the wireless system stops working.

Another tip, if you are shooting groups at a School Prom or Corporate event, take a stepladder! If you get above them and shoot down it changes the angles and stops the people at the front looking much larger than those at the back! This lets you squeeze bigger groups in as well, especially useful if you are shooting in front of a green screen at an event.

Also, if you ever get a large group of girls at a School Prom or Sweet Sixteen event, take LOTS of shots! It is very hard to get a single photo where every girl is happy with how she looks, guys really are not as fussy. The girls will buy the photo that they look best in.

We tend to charge the standard rate £10 per shoot including a 6x9 mounted photograph, but do offer incentives for groups such as discounting copies of the same photograph, or offering 3 for the price of 2 if they are different shots that need processing.

2. Lighting Equipment for Event Photography

I don't use studio lighting for indoor events! Initially I used the standard large softbox above the camera and shot in front of a grey, back or white backdrop. But that's boring and old hat nowadays, the lighting is very flat and there is always the risk of people tripping over cables and the hassle of finding a nearby power socket.

At School proms, Bar-Mitzvahs and especially Sweet Sixteen parties it gets very busy and although we carry full insurance I don't want a heavy studio light falling on a guest. It's the same at Corporate events and Black Tie dinners, there's usually a huge rush after dinner for photos and even a taped down light can get pulled over by an inebriated partygoer!

So now I use a Nikon SB-900 on the camera with the wide-angle flap down and the soft diffuser fitted. This controls two other Nikon SB-600's also with the wide-angle flaps down using Nikon's excellent CLS lighting system. The two SB-600's are mounted on sturdy but portable stands and shoot through white umbrellas for lovely soft lighting. You can do the same with Canon Speedlights, or a radio trigger and some Vivitar or similar flashguns.

At an Event you don't want to be messing around changing lighting when you have queues, but this setup is flexible and light enough to be safe to move quickly if you need to. The Nikon system lets me control the brightness of each flash directly from the camera without having to touch the lights.

As we use Green Screen backdrops at most events to add effects and digital backgrounds, I have to ensure the backdrop is evenly lit to avoid problems when chromakeying out the green. By mounting the umbrellas high up at either side and shooting through them, the green (or blue) backdrop gets evenly lit where it matters. The guests get a nice flattering lighting setup which I can easily adjust for large groups or closeups. I

I shoot on full manual with the on camera flash at about 1/32 power to give a little fill light, (I also use the wideangle flap and the soft diffuser!) but mainly to trigger the two mounted lights. These are usually on about 1/8th power which is plenty! Recyling is very fast and I've never had to change batteries yet at an event, although I have charged spares on hand.

If I get a large group like a football or cricket team at a sporting event I can quickly move the two sidelights back and up the power.If it quietens down and we get a guest who wants some special shots, the lights can be moved so one acts as a keylight and one as a fill for classic Rembrandt lighting. We have professional makeover software running on the workstations so can enhance pictures quickly if someone wants portfolio shots.

The SB-900 on the camera can also be removed and used as a slave for hair lighting or other effects, triggered by the on canera flash. So we can do a three light setup easily! White balance is crucial, on Nikon cameras just stand where the subjects will be, set the white balance to "pre" then hold down the wb button for three seconds. When the display flashes, point the camera back between the lights and shoot. If it says "good" in the display, you are set to go. If not, try shooting again straight at one of the sb600, it will work!

The real beauty of this system is that it all fits in one calumet rolling case and is easily portable! It is very flexible for other types of photography. These flashguns are just as powerful as studio lights, and we even carry Fong diffusers and softboxes just in case we get a chance to do some glamour photography. (and yes, you can book us for private shoots!)

3. Printers for Instant Event Photos.

I used to to run a large independent company selling calibrated colour printers, scanners and displays into the corporate design market and previously worked with Canon, Xerox, Mitsubishi and Tektronix as a colour consultant. So choosing the best Event printers was an interesting exercise!

Inkjets and colour lasers were instantly dismissed as I needed portability, reliability and photographic quality. Plus I needed to know exactly what each print would cost. An inkjet will produce the quality with a bit of tweaking but will never match the quality, speed or durability of a dedicated dye-sublimation printer.

I don't believe in compatible inks as I've seen first hand the amount of R&D that goes into a manufacturers own ink. So ink-jet prints are going to be too expensive for event printing. Lasers are fast but lacking in colour quality, and extremely tricky to transport. After testing all the current offerings I decided on the Mitsubishi 9550 DW linked to the Mitsubishi Click system as our basic workhorse for producing large 9 x 6 inch photographs.

As I use a full frame camera this is exactly the size the camera shoots at, so no cropping needed! The photographs are fast and very accurate thanks to the dedicated colour profiling we use supplied by Systems Insight and fine-tuned by me!

The dye-sub process basically involves heating the ink on a ribbon until it turns into a gas and sublimates into the special paper. This is a true continuous tone process so the colour gamut is much wider than other processes, giving smooth and accurate skin tones with no dot patterns.

You can actually roll a photograph up and stand it in a pint of coke, leave it for hours and then wipe dry without any signs of running or fading, as demonstrated on the training course by Stuart! These photographs really won't fade and are fingerprint proof thanks to the special coating. They will last longer than any other photograph!

The fixed cost per photograph allows us to offer discounted pricing for pre-paid events like weddings or school proms as we know exactly what our costs will be per photo regardless of how much of each colour is used.

But we also offer a unique digital make-over service for events using a very special PC with professional retouching software so needed a printer we could connect directly. And we wanted to be able to offer instant 12" x 10" photos and other large sizes for Sporting Events like football and cricket events where team shots are popular.

So we decided on the larger format Mitsubishi as well as we have now found out it also works on the Click! Consumables for the Mitsubishi Event printers are readily available and therefore discounted prices help bring the costs down. Some of the more obscure brands like Shinko and Olmec are often tricky to source.

We are happy with the speed, quality and reliability of our printers, but more importantly, our customers love the results.

4. Mitsubishi Click System for Event Photographers.

My background is in colour technology as mentioned, but prior to that I was a DEC system manager, I have a HND in Computer Science and am a qualified programmer. Yes, I'm old enough to have done all that and spent 7 years in the Army controlling Artlillery fire by computers and by slide rules and log books when those systems were taken out.

So i'm probably more of a technical geek than most photographers. So why did I choose a dedicated turnkey solution for producing event photographs rather than use my expertise in PC and Mac solutions?

Laziness really, why re-invent the wheel! I quickly realised that to make any money at all in Event Photography you have to produce very good photographs to a very high standard very quickly! Workflow is very important. Initially I was either going to use a big 27" Mac with a studio display for quality to handle all the incoming pictures, or go down the Windows 7 route with a couple of fast Sony Vaio AW notebooks with their gorgeous Adobe RGB 18" monitors, with either system linked to a dye-sub or two.

But once I started looking at the workflow and software required I realised the Mitsubishi Click would cover all the bases. Yes, I could run either system quickly and use dedicated green screen software and professional retouching software to produce stunning results. But then who would take the photos? I needed a system that was streamlined and simple to use so I could train others to use it.

My first event was a corporate Xmas dinner and the only person available to do the green screen effects, printing, mounting and sales was my wife! The Click system is very straightforward, you set up a new event and pictures are sent wirelessly from the photographer. Selecting them by just touching the screem allows for full screen previews, once the customers have decided which photographs they want it is quite easy to drop in a green screen background and print, all by touch!

Camera cards and CD's can be easily read or burnt, multiple printers are supported and the whole system runs smoothly and look very professional. We've even had customers connect their own cameras or mobile phones by bluetooth and print their own photos! My wife managed well on our first event, and we had over thirty satisfied customers that evening, in a very short period of about 2 hours from when the meal ended to going home.

Many purchased multiple photos, with different backdrops and effects, but she handled it all while I took the shots. Now we have more trained assistants as it did wear her out a bit :) But I still wanted the flexibility and power to use more specialised green screen software to drop in overlays and fine tune some of the more tricky effects.

So with a bit of help from the techies at System Insight I worked out how to access the system directly, and underneath the smooth software front end is a powerful windows PC. So now if we get a really special request (like "put me in the Oval Office with President Obama") I can jump in and alt tab to Photokey or Portrait pro running in the background! And yes, you can print directy to the dedicated 9550DW by dropping jobs straight into the queue, email for details:)

You can also boost the processor speed, add more RAM, put in a HDMI graphics card to support external displays, even change out the motherboard if you are brave enough and don't mind voiding your warranty!

I'd recommend this system to anyone starting out, and would also recommend you buy it from Stuart or Darren at Systems Insight as they know the system well!

5) Green Screen Event Photography

To be successful in Event Photography as in any business you need a key differentiator, something to make you unique. We all provide basically the same service, photographing people having a good time and offering prints or downloads. Some specialise in niche markets like weddings or school photographs, or certain types of events like Equestrian or Motorcycling. I chose Green Screen Event Photography for a variety of reasons.

I like the portability of our lighting system and didn't want to spoil that by having to carry around various huge coloured backdrops for different occasions. I find it boring having dozens of people shot the same way, and I'm sure most people who go to events are getting fed up of the same bluey grey backdrop, or the "ultra modern" white or black high or low key shoot.

I want to have fun at an event and want the guests to experience something new. So we shoot everyone in front of a blue or more usually a green screen and then our special software can replace that colour with any of our 2500 digital backgrounds! This gives us the flexibility to add classy studio backdrops to Black Tie and Corporate Events, and lets us choose appropraite colours to enhance what the guests are wearing.

For School proms and Sweet Sixteens we can get the guests flying through space, on stage with their favourite rock bands or in the latest movies. Bar and Bat-Mitzvahs are great fun as we can transport the guests anywhere in the world, and for all events we offer free personalised overlays and designs so the event is memorable and unique.

The secret to Chromakey Event Photography is keeping the workflow fast! If you offer a guest 2500 choices, expect a huge queue or a lot of disapointed people. We tend to design 10 choices for each event and will print an example of each so they can decide before we shoot. That way if they are going to be posing alongside a Twilight Vampire or on the dance floor with John Travolta, they can strike an appropriate pose! It does slow things down having to add backdrops but we prefer the interaction and the guests enjoy the experience.

It's not all about getting them shot and printed to us, some event companies work like a slaughterhouse concentrating on quantity rather than quality, that's what the auto cameras at theme parks are for, we would rather spend a little time earning our money!

We prefer green screens to blue screens as less people wear the actual shade of green we use. Blue clothing, eyes and jewellery are more common and can cause probems unless you know how to mask out those areas. We use very special green screen material now, direct from the film studios. This is a special white backed material that absorbs light and glows evenly. Ordinary green muslin will reflect light and cause problems especially with very blonde hair. Contact me for details, it's twice the price but worth it!

Don't worry about evenly lighting the backdrop as many claim, that will just cause more spill and you need more lights power and cabling! You can't get your guests the recommended 10-12 feet away at an event, which you need to if you light the backdrop! Imagine if you were shooting a group and they all had to be 12 feet in front of the cloth!, how big would it need to be! Using pro software lets you quickly adjust for spill and reflected green light.

The trick is to light the people not the backdrop, that should only appear in the gaps anyway and if you have a light enough green it will work. Less is more, light from the sides and above so any shadows are still green and they will disappear.We use overlays and backgrounds to get realistic Magazine covers and special effects .

People don't notice that usually the models on magazines go in front of the title heading but behind the informative text! And watch out for copyrights, design your own magazine covers that are similar but not identical, you can buy these from the USA as overlays. .PNG files are best but won't work on the Click, you need to do what we do and switch.

The President Obama shot is a good example, He is in the background, the guests are dropped in on top, then the desk is added as an overlay in front.

6. Starting an Event Photography Business.

Don't believe some of the salesmen out there who claim it's a licence to print money! That is their job and they do it well, but like any business you need to really work at it. Most pro photographers woudn't dream of doing a photoshoot AND supplying a framed large photograph for a tenner! And don't think just because you get a booking at a black tie event for example with 100 people that you are going to sell 100 photos !

30% of those people won't even want a photo taken! That's just the way it is. There won't be many single people wanting a photo on their own, and there's always a large group who want just one shot of all of them, but will buy additional copies at a discounted rate. That leaves the couples, so that brings you down to around five singles, a large group and twenty couples.

You will earn about £300 at an event of this size. Ok, that's a small event but just about possible for two people to cover so that's only one assistant to pay. Then there is the cost of the prints, mounts and bags, travelling costs, insurance costs not to mention an hour to setup and an hour to pack down plus sometimes many hours of waiting for a dinner speech to end.

Don't forget the website you need, the adverts to get bookings, the expense of all the gear, marketing your website, the admin and post production work to get the images online. The usual business costs of stationery, phone bills, promotional gear and all the insurance.

Also remember there are a lot of excellent photographers out there, and anyone can buy a good camera, lens, and a fast printer and go out and do this. The big companies will already have the big events sewn up, So you need to use your contacts, ask around, advertise and promote. Offer to do some small events free for the practice, but still charge the going rate. Even if you only sell 10 shoots in a night, the experience is invaluable before you tackle a busy event.

Once you get a booking, splash out on some pop up banners showing what you do, flyers and business cards. When you get there and setup, take a few test shots of the bar staff, waitresses and event organisers to test everything. Frame these up and give them out as gifts, asking them to show the guests! Great advertising! Get the DJ to tell guests where you are and what you are doing. Work the tables if it's quiet. Above all enjoy it and be polite and professional as you are representing us all!

That's enough secrets revealed for now, if anyone wants to ask any questions feel free. This is just my opinions and experience so far, I'll add more as I get time. If you find this at all useful, please tell others, I'm not charging to write all this, nor am I selling anything, but links to my site www.fullframeevents.co.uk will really be appreciated, or a mention in any blogs etc. I only work locally 30 miles around my location in Hemel Hempstead and share events with other event photographers if I can't get there, it's top far away or I need more photographers, so the link won't hurt your business! Cheers, Paul Harrison