Vietnamese wedding photographers hit by recession

August 6, 2009

From the Look At Vietnam blog, we can see that Vietnamese wedding photographers are suffering in a similar way to Australian photographers, and in much the same way as rock photographers worldwide.
Wedding recession | Look At Vietnam

“Nuptial photographers complain amateurs have flooded the market and couples hit by the global cash crunch can’t afford expensive wedding photos.”

“Today, anyone can be a photographer, but a camera isn’t enough,” he said “A real professional photographer does not let the lab produce the whole picture. A beautiful photograph is not only about Photoshop, its about aesthetics.”

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Photo Challenge 3 – Blue

December 1, 2008

Our previous challenge was potentially a little difficult for a bunch of busy bees (although everyone rose to the occasion), so this time it was back to basics – “blue”.

Steve’s submission:

"Blue" - Steve

My thoughts: Personally I found it very hard to decide which way to go. I’m a fan of the Carlton Football Club, AKA The Blues, so the obvious way to go was with them. Then I had an idea to create an abstract shot of a blue sequined glam top I have, using a technique called light painting. I keep telling people I am not really creative, and my dismal failure with this idea proved it at least to myself.  Perhaps it was too late at night and I was using the wrong torch, but either way I hated the results.  So in the end I have gone with an image of a little girl at a market stall in Sa Pa, Vietnam.  She was sitting there for a long time, looking just miserable. Granted she may have been asleep as Vietnamese girls do work very hard from a very young age. What I saw surrounding her were plenty of signs of a daily battle to simply keep starvation at bay, so I read her body language as being a combination of both weariness and misery – she’s blue on life.

Shot on a Panasonic FZ18 at 1/320sec, F4, ISO 200

Mat’s submission:

"Blue" - Mat (Self portrait in blue)

My thoughts: I love this mirror, and I love the idea. I’d prefer for Mat to be more heavily exposed in the mirror, but I do get a rather ethereal feel from it, which by the sounds of it was Mat’s intention. I don’t see his blue expression, but I can imagine it from the body language. Without explanation I am more likely to think it is just someone walking through the frame. With a longer exposure or wider aperture I could see the expression more clearly.  I’d also like to see the walls whitened using curves and colour balance.

Mat says: For this shot I used the theme in three ways. The blue frame on the mirror, my blue shirt and the somewhat blue expression on my face. I shot this in low light with a 30 second exposure giving me enough
time to walk into the shot and pose for a few seconds before walking out of the shot again to give my reflection a faded ghostly appearance. It took a few attempts before I got one that looked ok.

Joepi’s submission:

"Blue" - Joepi

My thoughts: I really like this shot a lot.  The blue dress sets off the little girl’s carefree smile just perfectly.  Joepi has captured her in a position that shows vibrant movement, and I can imagine her skipping. I’m not at all distracted by the background, which makes the blue dress really stand out.  If I was going to be picky at all, and this really applies less to travel photography as we’re often documenting fleeting moments the best we can, I’d like to see the rest of her front foot and her bag and right hand not hidden by her dress.  A bit sharper in the face would be ideal too.  But at f1.8 from a moving tuk tuk she’s taken a great shot.

Joepi says: I was being carried around the city on a little bike tuktuk when I had a chance to take this shot. I like how her blue uniform just stood out amidst the gray city background, not to mention her smile as she realized my camera was pointing at her. It was quite a challenge to have a moving subject and me moving at the same time. After several clicks I was happy to have gotten a few good shots of this pretty little Vietnamese girl heading to school with a ruler in her pocket and her lunch in hand.

Canon EOS 400D DIGITAL
F-stop f1.8
Exposure 1/1600
ISO 100
Focal Length 50 mm

Next challenge:

Ken gets a reprieve from this particular challenge as, for the time being, he IS the theme.   Hope to have you back for the next one Kenneth Q.
And the next theme, due on Sunday 14th December, is Transition.  Some of us are going through one right now so let’s see how we express our respective states through photography…
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