A Rolls-Royce, Rotolight and a ring
I’ve had a busy week. It started with a wedding and a pregnancy shoot and finished with a marriage proposal. Between times, I successfully managed a technically challenging half-day session in the offices of a new client. All good.
Rights and copyrights
I put a lot of effort into earning, building and respecting my clients’ trust in me. I am often invited to witness and record scenes and moments of considerable sensitivity, whether personal or commercial. My normal contract gives me the right to use all images myself: “The Client grants to the Photographer the right to copy, reproduce, display, publish and sell the Images for any purpose and in any form, whether in print or digitally, anywhere in the world and without limitation of time.” Many clients have no objection, and understand that showing my past work is the best way for me to win new jobs in the future. But not everyone wants photos of their wedding or their office party to be shared online. I never argue about this. If the client prefers, I willingly amend the contract to explicitly renounce all usage rights, retaining only legal copyright of my work.
It’s for this reason that I won’t be including any images from the pregnancy shoot in this post. (Believe me, they are stunning.) The mother-to-be asked for complete privacy and of course I will respect her wishes. I’ll be going back at the beginning of April to photograph her again with the baby.
Please move the Roller
The wedding was a civil ceremony. When it was over, my clients wanted to make group photos on the steps in front of the building. But the Rolls-Royce that had brought the bride from the following group was parked right at the bottom of the steps. I asked the driver: “Est-ce que vous pouvez gentiment déplacer la bagnole, monsieur?” The equivalent in English would be something like: “Do you mind moving the old banger?” “Bagnole?” he snorted. “It’s a Rolls-Royce.” “I know. It’s gorgeous. I was just joking.” And he did, very kindly, move it away. But not very far, and some of the wedding guests took it over as a cool photo prop.
Technical challenges
The corporate shoot was in the offices of the British Chamber of Commerce in Belgium. It was a gloomy day so I was pleased to have LED/flash lights from Rotolight with me. But I was working in three different spaces. In two I was able to turn off the fluorescent office lights and use what daylight there was. But in the third a board meeting was in progress and the office lights had to stay on – there was very little daylight there anyway. The beauty of the Rotolights is that I could easily ‘tune’ them, from 3880 Kelvin to match the fluorescent lighting all the way up to 6300 Kelvin to match the daylight. With my camera’s white balance on ‘K’, I just needed to remember to make the equivalent changes there, too, each time I moved from one environment to the other. Getting the colour balance more or less right in camera saved me several hours in post and gave better results.
All’s well that ends well
And finally, the marriage proposal. For once, it really was a secret. Not only had Alex not told her girlfriend she was going to propose, but there was genuine uncertainty whether the answer would be yes. We had plotted for weeks. She would propose on the viewing platform on top of the Cinquantenaire arches. I would be there 15 minutes in advance and would pose as a tourist photographing the panoramic views of Brussels. Happily, I can report that the answer was yes! It was a lovely moment and I managed to capture the surprise, the delight and the tears. I cried myself, but perhaps that was just the wind.
A good week.