Clash Festival 2010 photoshoot – behind the scenes
The last two days I've had the pleasure of housing 2 of the 6 arrangers of the Clash Festival 2010. While they have been working like crazy on wrapping up the last things for the upcoming festival May 13. I've been photographing the 30+ acts performing or exhibiting at the festival.
The photos are meant to be portraits of the artists and are to be featured in their magazine which will both be available in an online version and printed which can be bought at the festival itself.
The first day, Monday, We were at it from 9.45 to 18.30 and today, We're shooting from 11.45 to 19.00, so it's some longs days with a lot of photos being taken - 17 GB on the first day to be exact.
Make sure to check out their facebook page for more info on the whole Festival as well as the artists. And also, this session was mentioned at their own blog.
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Rachel Hjort – The press photos
Not long ago I posted the Behind the scenes photos from the session with Rachel, Danish musician signed with Cocoon music, and as promised, here are some of the finished ones.
Makeup and styling was done by the lovely Mia Thielsen, and the furs was from Sten Bergstrøm, and some design by Kathrina Hjort.
Blogging about blogging – Meta Blogging
A few weeks ago I participated in a blogging course by Danish blogger and journalist Anne-Grete Belmadani.
I’ve decided to write this blog post on, well yeah, blogging, so I guess I’m kinda meta blogging this very moment. The post is going to be quite extensive, where I’ll dive into HOW TO BLOG, how to create a blog, how to make your blog more visited, so if you’re into blogging – have your own blog or just gets turned on by whatever I write, hopefully this is gonna be useful.
The course, which ran over two evenings of 2 ½ hours duration can be grouped into three broad themes;
1: How to get started
- To create a blog
- To select the content, name, theme
- To design the blog
2: General information about the "good blog"
1: SEO - Search engine optimization
- Increase traffic through a few easy steps
- Learn to use keywords
- Know your readers – website optimizing
Course leader Anne-Grete, had a rather fundamental basis approach to the course that first evening.
She walked us through creating our own blog - since I already had my own blog at that time, It didn't seem that relevant to me.
It was actually because of the person next to me at the course that I got new knowledge about SEO (Search Engine optimization), as in my case it is most relevant at this time, since I already made my experience with the creation, design, choice of content, etc.
At the end of the second course Anne-Grete posed some relevant questions that can be used in a reflection process when the plan for one's blog should be tightened up.
Despite the fact that around 70% of the course was wasted on me, I was somehow inspired to search for useful information on my own, and in the text below should be a combination of acquired knowledge from the course and what I myself subsequently read and tried.
1: How to get started
If you already have a blog and is fairly satisfied with the design, feel free to skip this section.
There are more and more opportunities to create your own blog online, and as more are using this medium, it becomes much easier to use.
A woman from the course asked “if the regular website is going to be replaced by blogs”.
With the blogging services provided today, you can pretty much do with a blog as you can with a regular website, only much easier. So unless you have very specific needs for a website (flash programming as an example), a will the blog be sufficient.
Before I get all completely confused, I’ll hurry up and differentiate between a blog and a blogging tool.
The latter is such as WordPress, Tumblr, blogspot and other websites / programs that offer a platform where you can have your blog.
I use WordPress, which is a program you’ll have to place somewhere on your own website's server - in my case http://adamsundphoto.com.
When it is placed on the server, you can access it via a specific URL and access the admin page where you can edit everything on the blog.

This stands as the clearest difference between WordPress and the other blog services, with Blogspot as one of the most popular. Here you will not need your own domain, instead you visit blogger.com and creates your own blog, called yourBlogName.blogspot.com.
Blogspot and WordPress are quite similar in structure and options, so I will talk about WordPress since I have the most experience with this.
Hopefully needless to say, this site is created using such a blogging service.
Designs can be freely downloaded and installed
plug-ins like "tweet this", random photos, tag cloud is all free plug-ins you can search, download and install free with a few clicks.
So, if you’re somewhat drawn to this whole blogging, swing by blogger.com and try to play around with it a bit – it’s scary how addictive this gets.
2: General information about the "good blog"
Where section 3 is about how to practically make the blog easier to find, this section is all about making the blog worth reading in the first place.
A good blog is an interesting blog - a place where the reader can get something, whether it is new knowledge, useful information, relevant links, interesting pictures or the ability to win something, - It's all about GIVING the reader something.
Think about it: What blogs and websites do you spend time on?
The websites I have bookmarked are:
- News - they give me information on current news situations.
- Blogs about photography and Photoshop - they give me relevant information on new products, guides to lighting, tutorials for image editing etc.
- Web Comics - they give me a good laugh.
Although the content differs, they all give me something useful that has some sort of value to me, whether it’s unique or something presented in a neat and goodlooking way.
Your blog should do the same. Either present your reader with something unique ( a guide YOU made) or something available other places, only wrapped up and served much neater.
If it’s somehow contrary to the plans you have for your blog, try to see if it can be combined.
For instance, I use my blog to provide my readers with useful information on various matters, but also to tell then what’s going on in my life. I try to keep it balanced so that readers don’t get bored with my jabbing about myself and canceled flights to New York (Damn you Ash cloud).
Use images
- Blog entries with pictures and read more often than those without – this is a fact.
Write catchy headlines
- Be provocative rather than boring and informative (the news media do it, so why shouldn’t we?)
Blog often
- Make it a habit to blog, write it into the calendar, and teach your readers when they can expect a blog entry from you. When reading your blog because a part of people’s daily routine, you’re on the right track.
3. SEO - Search engine optimization
Search Engine Optimization is a science itself, and I will only scratch the surface here.
In short terms, this is about making search engines like Google find your blog and how to make your blog seem relevant to the search engines, thus making it appear higher in the search results.
As a blogger, there are luckily some very practical things you can do to improve your chances in this blogging jungle we soon find ourselves in.
The practical tips, however, are only relevant if and only if the content on the blog is in place. It is no use making bad content easy to find, because people are not going to read even if it does come up first on Google.
There are a number of places where you can register your blog, thereby making it more accessible in search engines, and I recommend you visit the following pages:
Dmoz.org
Technorati.com
Google.com/addurl
These sites ask you to register your blog with a series of keywords.
These words, keywords, are alpha omega when it comes to SEO.
For my part, photography, Photoshop and tutorials are the keywords I most often use and as soon as Google catches a recurring pattern in a website's use of keywords, then it begins to understand what you are and how you should be categorized.
It increases your chances of getting the right traffic directed toward you.
Make sure keywords are both in the title, tags and main text, since Google considers these areas relevant (in that order).
Do you have pictures in the blog entry, write information about the picture in picture link (most blog services allows you to do this).
Google offers two very useful tools to be used in conjunction with your blog:
Google analytics allows you to get information about your visitors at a relatively detailed level.
Also see which keywords people use on Google to find your blog AND see who links to you who link to you.
Google Alert - this tool can be configured to send you an email every time people mention your blog / name / product / copy your text.
This can prove to be a useful tool if you need knowledge about your web presence.
Google website optimizer gives you the opportunity to see which pages the readers spend time on and the pages that get people to leave the site.
This is taken directly from the course with Anne-Grete Belmadani, so like she said, I would encourage you to ask yourself these questions and answer them to yourself:
• What is my blog about?
• What do I want give my readers?
• How will I give my readers this?
• Why do I want to blog?
• How can my blog back up my company's goals?
• How often will I blog?
If you feel like digging depper into blogging, there is plenty of useful information out in the blogosphere – here is a good place to start http://www.seobook.com/bloggers.
If you have tips on how to blog or you feel like I’ve missed something, please leave a comment.
Photoshop wizard on New site
You remember this post? Well here's the revelation.
Not more than a week ago, I was contacted by Kim Skovsby, a photographer and administrator of the danish online Canon community Canoneos.dk.
He came to me with a proposal: To become a part of the panel of experts writing on the new site that he is to administrate (whereas the old canoneos.dk appearently was controlled a bit more by Canon itself).
The site will have experts in sports photography, landscapes, portraits and so on, but he wanted me on board as the photoshop expert writing articles on different photoshop matters, making video tutorials and offering workshops and courses on the matter - basically the things I already do here on the blog.
Of course I still encourage you guys to visit the blog every once in a while (especially you English speaking dudes and dudetts - the other site is in Danish) but swing by
miteos.dk and drop a comment on how awesome this is ^^
Adam approves

cheat sheets for lighting
Well, as those of you who read my last couple of posts can guess, I'm not in New York - that darn ash cloud simply said access denied. So I'll wait, I'll wait until it feels safe and relaxed and THEN I'll jump on a plane and hurry to New York!
Yeah, I've spend my time good though. A few days ago I came across this absolutely fantastic site with 3 vital posts which I am now sharing with you guys out there.
First, here is a sheet showing how the angles of light affect your model
This chart shows the angle on the model and the direction as well (down means the flash shoots down on your model)
Found right here
The next one concerns light falloff which is a bit more tricky. The author of the original post does an excellent job in explaining it, and I suggest you visit it if you want a more in depth explanation. In short terms, it's about how light gets dimmer the farther away from its subject it gets - for instance, if you fire a flash directly in the face of a person, the nose will be brighter than the ears, not necessarily much, but often noticable. The further away you pull light source, the more even the light gets.
The other provides us with a sheet showing us the effect of how much lights falls off when you move the light source further away.
The final post is about how different reflectors work and how angles actually look like - a very handy tool in my opinion.
Hopefully this is somewhat useful to you guys as well.
Bam – you’ve been accepted
Bam is a first generation stock photo site. But whereas regular stock sites such as sxc.hu and istockphoto.com are for everyone, Bam is a small and exclusive society of photographers where a board screen new members and rarely accept new ones. Well, I've somehow been accepted, and the board told me that I was the first new member in two years. I'm not sure if this is because if they really really liked me or is because Bam has been more or less closed for new members the last couple of years. To be honest, I think it's the latter.
Anywho, Bam sells high quality images for news medias in Denmark and has been for many years (in cooperation with scanpix), so if you see some of my photos in the news papers anytime soon, this would be the reason.
New York Flight jeoparized because of Volcano erruption
I guess the headline says it all.
I'm scheduled to fly Saturday 7.50, but all flight traffic in northern Europe has been canceled, so at this very moment I'm actually not sure when I'll leave.
It's oh so exiting in the non cool way. ^^
Jill Greenberg – the manipulator
Every once in a while, you stumble upon something truly amazing whether it be a movie, a piece of music, a fantastic restaurant or a peach perfectly ripe.
That happens in photography as well, and it happened to me when I saw the work of Jill "the manipulator" Greenberg.
She's an american photographer who caught the medias attention when she did a portrait series of crying infants after George Bush was re-elected for his second period in office. The series was called Four more years and was her way of saying, screw you republicans - I'll make baby cries each time you win stuff. Yeah, I'm not sure that was the actual argument, but she made the babies cry genuinely (by having the parents offer candy and then take it away). Needless to say, America was outraged by this horrific act.

3 3/4 years later, the newspaper The Atlantic hired Jill Greenberg to portrait John McCain, the republican presidential candidate . Being the anti republican she is, she of course took advantage of the situation and did some interesting shots of the little knowing McCain. You can read the full story here or just take a look of some of the images shot of the dear old McCain:



Now that we've finished with the prologue, lets continue to what this should really be about - a great photographer and what we can learn from her.
After seeing her photos the first time, I rushed to youtube and searched for Jill Greeenberg + behind the scnes - I absolutely HAD to know how she made the portraits she did and how they were lit. And I managed to find some videos showing that, so if you have the time, lean back and take in what you can - I know I've done so a million time by now.
Something new and exiting
I simply love receiving news I'm not allowed to tell anybody about - and guess what - that just happened. I will, however, be able to tell more tomorrow.
It's something about specific people thinking my Photoshop skills are awesome and wanting the world to see.
AAAAAnd here's the relevation


