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This page is a a collection of tips, musings and notes about my life and work as a photographer.
Why Phlog? A bad conflation of photography and blog, but hopefully we can phlog photography into shape.

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Womanwise 19

This was my second opportunity to photograph Kenisha Thom. The first came when I was in Tobago recording last year’s Great Fete Weekend and The Bridge publisher Chenier Belgrave asked me to schedule a session with Kenisha and her family.

Kenisha_FullLink
I should note that I’d packed strategically for Great Fete, working with gear and backup gear built around using an extended strobe that I’d be waving around on what might technically be described as a “stick” actually the top two extensions of an old PIC lightstand to model light in an event that might technically be described as “wildness.”

So that’s what I had for the shoot, along with a small light modifier I’d packed as a nervous afterthought.
Those photos turned out pretty well, in spite of the fact that after posing Kenisha and her family artfully on a neighbour’s hammock, attractively slung between two trees with really radiant light spilling all around it, the whole thing collapsed, mercifully harming nothing but my reputation.

For this return engagement, Kenisha politely but unequivocally declined any notion of showing the scars from the brutal attack she suffered in Tobago, which was to be the subject of the story.
The photo opportunity would take place at her Santa Margarita home, so I packed gear to take advantage of what I hoped might be attractive exteriors.

The housing project wasn’t finished and punishing heat and dry weather conditions had turned the struggling lawns a quite distinctive shade of brown. The sunset, which I planned to shoot into, also joined in, offering an image shattering background in shades of dull gray.

I pressed into service the new Cactus radio triggers that I’d bought to fill in a small but notable gap in my location shooting capabilities.
I use radio slaves in the studio and on commercial shoots, but neither of these solutions work with the kit I use for my personal work, a pair of Canon strobes. Much of the work I do with this gear is handily accomplished using Canon’s
STE2 infrared trigger, which supports ETTL control of the two strobes, but a light based triggering solution is utterly stymied by even moderately bright outdoors light and distances beyond 16 feet or so and any position that loses line of sight with the trigger.

Not a problem indoors, where the infrared signal can bounce around a bit, but outdoors, getting that synchronisation can be a bit like threading a needle with wicketkeeper’s gloves on.
I don’t do enough small strobe work outdoors to justify the
pricier and, it’s said, more reliable units, and the Cactus triggers, which I sourced from Cowboy Studio, seem to offer terrific value for the price.
The strobes trigger in manual mode, and do so reliably in my experience so far.

The full length shoot of Kenisha Thom was done on a neighbour’s lawn with two strobes staggered in height from the left. The upper strobe is at just over quarter power, the lower one, meant to light but also to taper off the former model’s tall frame was set at just under quarter power.
Both strobes had CTO warming gels and
Lumiquest light modifiers in place and I shot from roughly thirty feet away from the subject on the long end of a 70-200mm zoom.

The closeup photo used on the cover reduced the lower light a bit more and angled it upward to balance the overhead light for a classic beauty light effect.
On reviewing the images, I really should have gone in the opposite direction with the warming gels and shifted the colour balance of the strobes down into a cooler blue to match the dull glow of a disappointing sunset, then an overall colour correction would have warmed up both subject and background.

Still, with a sparkling, sculpted beauty like Kenisha before the lens, there’s a limit to the damage my spot misjudgements could do to a photo of a two time beauty contestant.
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Womanwise 18

Not strictly a Womanwise shoot, but a intriguing opportunity to meet and photograph a victim of a heinous crime who refuses to remain silent. Read More...
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Womanwise 17

Photographing Miss World 1986. It's a tough job. Somebody has to do it. Read More...
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Womanwise 16

This is what TT$70,000 worth of jewelry looks like. Read More...
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Womanwise 15

My first photographs of Lystra Cudjoe in three decades. Read More...
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Womanwise 14

Mystie Thongs, engineer and promoter is simply a joy to photograph. Read More...
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Womanwise 13

Photographing an Elite model. Oh this work is so very hard. Read More...
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Womanwise 12

Destra Garcia looks great with child. Another session with a worried subject turns out really well. Read More...
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Womanwise 11

A Womanwise shoot goes pear shaped. How I wrestled a difficult shoot to the ground and why it didn't matter anyway. Read More...
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Womanwise 10

Carolyn Pasea of Question Mark Entertainment overcomes her nervousness to pose for a daintily professional photo. Read More...
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Womanwise 09

Photographer's notes on a portrait session with copyright lawyer Allison Demas and her daughter. Read More...
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Womanwise 08

Photographer's notes on a family portrait session with Wendy Fitzwilliam and her son Ailan. Read More...
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Womanwise 07

Photographer's notes on a shoot with Dr Pat Mohammed at her Santa Cruz home. Read More...
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Womanwise 06

Photographer's notes on a photo shoot with Crystal Felix, singer and actress. Read More...
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Womanwise 05

Photographer's notes on a session with filmmaker Mariel Brown. Read More...
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Womanwise 04

Photographer's notes on a session with Dr Patricia Dardaine-Ragguet and the children at her school. Read More...
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Womanwise 03

Photographer's notes on a photo session with Marjorie Boothman for the Sunday Guardian Read More...
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Womanwise 02

Photographers notes on Womanwise 02, Sonya Wells, MTV film producer. Read More...
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Womanwise 01

Photographer's notes on Womanwise 01, with the women of HaHaHa Productions. Read More...
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