Very nice video, here is point number five. It’s not what you know it’s who you know, getting work is about access to the work , so networking is important!
I enjoyed your narrative Jodie. Your opening remarks hit a cord around the "normalisation of beautiful images" being just a "norm" these days. I think you are entirely right - people care less about the clinical perfect focus and perfect even lighting of every filtered face there is, and they seem to be drawn to the person first, and the images they produce second. The challenge, as always, is getting yourself, and your vibe, and your charisma in front of the right people. Something I have struggled with for a very long time.
Great video! Looking forward to seeing more of them, spotted you on Scotts channel, I like listening to Scots videos and his views which can give a bit of a reality check sometimes for people and there are some cold hard truths in a lot of what he says. As a hobby photographer and not ever wanting to work in a professional capacity its still great to see what working as a photographer is like. Seeing the artists priorities/views and getting a glimmer of behind the scenes. Your images are great your photos seems to be only the starting point for you before you create your art or final image. The resulting images are amazing and have their own style that look a bit different to other commerical type of shots you see.
As a new photographer in the industry, I am constantly looking for advice and inspiration from experienced and successful professionals! One of my favorites is your agent at Tin House Studios! I have heard this advice before but the way you have presented it truly resonates with me and inspired me to start a new body of work! I'm looking forward to new content from you! Thanks!!!
I watched your interveiw with Scott and many of the things that you said, I can relate to. For example when you mentioned about the world ceasing to exist and the emotional high after a shoot. I feel my images. When I know I have captured the moment I stop taking images.
"How are you able to post videos so often? I've already watched three, and now I see that this one was the very first one, and there are even more! You just started a few weeks ago-fantastic!😎
100% about books, I recently bought some CONTACT books from the early 2000's (for those that don't know they were like a massive yellow pages for photographers) and googling the photographers 80% of them don't exist, some had very unique styles. (those were the 20% that still exist today.) Trying to find those images are impossible even with google lens. So much ISN'T on the internet ( or easy to find, especially in good quality). So much knowledge and inspiration are in books. When you google something you are seeing exactly what someone else is seeing when googling something. Finding yourself/style is hard because everyone is trying so hard to be the same.
It’s interesting how Scotland would choose ahistorical methods of interpretation such that the images reference AI and digital enhancement resulting in the creation of simulacra. Photographers and indeed all artists should be mindful of cultural appropriation and reinterpretations that belong to the mode of interpretation (in this case digital image manipulation) rather than the subject itself. The beauty industry in particular has to be careful not to bring narratives that are far removed from historical accuracy in pursuit of disposable aesthetics one encounters when turning a magazine page. Yohji Yamamoto speaks well about this and also references the importance of Alexander McQueen in ideas of ‘truth’. Naturally every project has its own contexts but national identities aren’t particularly palatable for methods of deterritorialisation.
I work with advertising and I'd like to get into fashion, but it feels kinda overwhelming since creating a single editorial requires me to round up several different people who may or may not share my vision (in a collab I can't be too picky) and I have a very hard time finding stylist whose work I actually like.
why hello , popped this way from watching the interview with Scott, as a extremely technical minded though which always makes finding a creative identity a bit odd and random at best
Request/tips for future videos: Please help us viewers by adding a bit more to the video description, including people or resources mentioned in the video (The History of Fashion, by Nancy Hall-Duncan; Alexander McQueen; etc.). Include at the beginning of links so they become clickable. Great video. I'm looking forward to seeing others you share.
😂😅 596 views. I haven't played the video yet! No disrespect to the creator or the content. But drop the fake ego. If you were successful you wouldn't be doing UA-cam. And let's say if you wanted as well 590 wouldn't be the numbers.
On UA-cam it is difficult to find informative, new and refreshing content, there are any number of succesful photographers or people of other professions on UA-cam who wish to reach a wider audience. Some of them are using UA-cam as a marketing tool for their education products or to disseminate information that is not readily available.
i'm glad my algo suggested this, much of what you're saying extends to artistic disciplines beyond photography
Great first video Jodie
The single best video I have watch on photography in YEARS. instant subscribe.
Thankyou, really happy to hear you found it helpful! 🙏🏻
Really inspiring advice! Could not hit the subscribe button fast enough! 🙏🏿
Very nice video, here is point number five. It’s not what you know it’s who you know, getting work is about access to the work , so networking is important!
I think you dont know how much i needed to hear that. I need a break after seeing his for sure. Thank you so much for those precious informations
As a fashion photographer of 40 years it’s interesting to hear a younger photographers perspective on the business 😇
Sharing this widely, fantastic content for all creatives
this is one of the most valuable video ever on youtube about photography advices. Please keep making more!
I enjoyed your narrative Jodie. Your opening remarks hit a cord around the "normalisation of beautiful images" being just a "norm" these days. I think you are entirely right - people care less about the clinical perfect focus and perfect even lighting of every filtered face there is, and they seem to be drawn to the person first, and the images they produce second. The challenge, as always, is getting yourself, and your vibe, and your charisma in front of the right people. Something I have struggled with for a very long time.
Scott brought me here, and subscribed! This video is gold. ❤
Great video! Looking forward to seeing more of them, spotted you on Scotts channel, I like listening to Scots videos and his views which can give a bit of a reality check sometimes for people and there are some cold hard truths in a lot of what he says.
As a hobby photographer and not ever wanting to work in a professional capacity its still great to see what working as a photographer is like. Seeing the artists priorities/views and getting a glimmer of behind the scenes. Your images are great your photos seems to be only the starting point for you before you create your art or final image. The resulting images are amazing and have their own style that look a bit different to other commerical type of shots you see.
As a new photographer in the industry, I am constantly looking for advice and inspiration from experienced and successful professionals! One of my favorites is your agent at Tin House Studios! I have heard this advice before but the way you have presented it truly resonates with me and inspired me to start a new body of work! I'm looking forward to new content from you! Thanks!!!
Great video. Definitely subscribed. Will watch with anticipation for more nuggets of inspiration - got my cogs working already! 👏🏻
You absolutely nailed everything, it's basically all about story telling!
I watched your interveiw with Scott and many of the things that you said, I can relate to. For example when you mentioned about the world ceasing to exist and the emotional high after a shoot. I feel my images. When I know I have captured the moment I stop taking images.
I like the way you roll!😊
This is great and Agreed! Im actually reading 20th century photography
Love McQueen. Miss his energy. I thought of him multiple times while watching your interview w/ Scott. Good luck! (And I’ve subscribed!)
Thankyou so much!
Oh aye, I miss him too, so much. What a legend.
Yesssss after seeing your interview with Scott and clocking your energy, seeing you starting youtube made my day! Subcribed!
Same here! So happy right now!
I saw your interview with Tin House Studio yesterday. Love your work. I have subscribed.
"How are you able to post videos so often? I've already watched three, and now I see that this one was the very first one, and there are even more! You just started a few weeks ago-fantastic!😎
Love this! Thankyou!
Amazing amazingly informative video! Kudos on your first video m guessing!🍻
Thankyou! Yes, first video 😅🙏🏻
Loved this, you are a good communicator
Saw your interview with Scott. Now I'm being recommended your video. The algo doing what it's supposed to do.
100% about books, I recently bought some CONTACT books from the early 2000's (for those that don't know they were like a massive yellow pages for photographers) and googling the photographers 80% of them don't exist, some had very unique styles. (those were the 20% that still exist today.) Trying to find those images are impossible even with google lens. So much ISN'T on the internet ( or easy to find, especially in good quality). So much knowledge and inspiration are in books. When you google something you are seeing exactly what someone else is seeing when googling something. Finding yourself/style is hard because everyone is trying so hard to be the same.
Spreading the link Jodie, like your long interview on Tin House Studio as well. Good advice for me there as well, need to get my photog mojo back.
Thanks alot Jodie!!
This should lead to some interesting viewing. I'm ready for more like this.
Great video! Thanks
Nice. Thanks. I like your advice.
Loving your new videos, thanks for this!
Incredible tips. Love this. Great work 🙌
Great video! I love your organic and holistic approach to creating imagery.
Agreed with scottt. :). Criminal to have so few viewers! Earned me follow!
Really great. Please, keep going. Thank you.
you had me at hello
Love ur work amazing ur starting a UA-cam channel 😮
Great video... and that hair wow. 🤩
Thanks, you’re excellent!
great video, thank you
Good advice
It’s interesting how Scotland would choose ahistorical methods of interpretation such that the images reference AI and digital enhancement resulting in the creation of simulacra. Photographers and indeed all artists should be mindful of cultural appropriation and reinterpretations that belong to the mode of interpretation (in this case digital image manipulation) rather than the subject itself. The beauty industry in particular has to be careful not to bring narratives that are far removed from historical accuracy in pursuit of disposable aesthetics one encounters when turning a magazine page. Yohji Yamamoto speaks well about this and also references the importance of Alexander McQueen in ideas of ‘truth’. Naturally every project has its own contexts but national identities aren’t particularly palatable for methods of deterritorialisation.
Hi, Tin House Studio brought me here...I like your hair though.
I work with advertising and I'd like to get into fashion, but it feels kinda overwhelming since creating a single editorial requires me to round up several different people who may or may not share my vision (in a collab I can't be too picky) and I have a very hard time finding stylist whose work I actually like.
0:26 Didn't photo win the IPA's 1st Place / Advertising/Beauty?
why hello , popped this way from watching the interview with Scott, as a extremely technical minded though which always makes finding a creative identity a bit odd and random at best
Request/tips for future videos: Please help us viewers by adding a bit more to the video description, including people or resources mentioned in the video (The History of Fashion, by Nancy Hall-Duncan; Alexander McQueen; etc.). Include at the beginning of links so they become clickable.
Great video. I'm looking forward to seeing others you share.
Oh, and what were the four tips? That could be in the description, too. Still, great video!
Hey Stephen thankyou for your suggestions! I’ll be sure to update this video shortly, and include those in the future! 🙏🏻
interesting video.
Hair
hi...
😂😅 596 views. I haven't played the video yet! No disrespect to the creator or the content. But drop the fake ego. If you were successful you wouldn't be doing UA-cam. And let's say if you wanted as well 590 wouldn't be the numbers.
On UA-cam it is difficult to find informative, new and refreshing content, there are any number of succesful photographers or people of other professions on UA-cam who wish to reach a wider audience. Some of them are using UA-cam as a marketing tool for their education products or to disseminate information that is not readily available.
I should also add, that succesful photographers mentor other photographers.
Thank you, I definitely needed this. I always compared to much of what's on IG and doubt myself. I need to get back into books.