I spent a couple of hours yesterday evening at a seminar put on by National Geographic Photographer Catherine Karnow where she discussed her style and some of the key drivers in her photography. The gist of the first part of her presentation dealt very much with her views on how to build a strong image. The second hour or so was spent on her analyzing some of her images and pictorial stories.
https://www.nationalgeographic.com/c...herine-karnow/
She is completely self-trained and never watches photographic tutorials or reads books on photography. As she has been a successful commercial photographer for decades, she has developed a style and approach. If anyone gets a chance to listen to her, she is an excellent and entertaining presenter. Most of the images that she showed would have been savaged by the members of this site for various technical and compositional reasons. Her images that are published as editorial images are not staged, but all of her other work tends to be. Most of her images contain people.
I thought I would mention a few points that she made that I found might be of interest to the members.
1. She shoots virtually 100% of her work using aperture priority, using exposure compensation (usually +). She does not understand why people would chose to shoot in manual mode as that adds a level of complexity that takes away from composing and taking the shot.
2. She only uses a lens hood to protect from precipitation. If the sun is shining she will either allow flare to happen or shield the lens with her hand. She often shoots back-lit images because people do not squint when the sun is behind them. She does use a clear filter on her lenses.
3. She shoots Canon full frame cameras (5D Mk IV currently) and most of her work uses focal lengths between 28mm and 35mm. She does not like long lenses because of their weight and because they reduce intimacy. She suggests most of her National Geographic colleagues do the same.
4. Virtually all of her images contain people.
5. When she shoots landmarks or local icons (for example the Eiffel Tower in Paris), she will compose her images so that the landmark or icon appears in the shot, but is not the subject of the image. To paraphrase her, everyone recognizes the landmark or icon, but she tries to show what the locals who are used to seeing the icon do.
6. 100% of her work is Photoshopped. She does not believe in SOOC images. Editorial work can be heavily retouched so long as nothing in the image is added, removed or moved.
7. She works hard to get drama into her shots through dramatic lighting, dramatic skies, poses, etc.
8. She loves shooting throughout morning or evening "golden hour". She continues to shoot right through to the end of "blue hour". She said she never shoots indoors during those periods, assuming that the light is good.
9. She shoots a lot and will spend hours and even days at a specific location to get the shot that she wants. She engages with her subjects verbally and through physical gestures, even if she does not speak the local language. She does have a local guide along to help her with language / translation issues.
10. She will shoot hundreds of shots during a shoot. She does not check the rear screen of her camera during a shoot as she fears that she could miss a shoot.
11. She engages with her subjects and will always get permission to use the images. She will not always get permission to get the shot before taking it so as to not miss the moment. She finds that once she has gotten permission, people don't mind her taking more shots.
"Permission" in her view ranged from formally approaching someone to take pictures to getting a head-nod or wave acknowledging what she was doing. Model releases are something she gets as well if she fells that she has a "commercial" shot. She will only do this if the face of the subject is visible. If she gets a model release, she will get everyone whose face is in the shot, including recognizable but out of focus faces.