Yeah, about that🤣 by the time you hit 7 mill you'll improve for sure. Like you said, you are on 95%, and those last 5% can still use some work! Keep it up!
Five years ago I retired after 30+ years as a photographer and graphic artist. Since retiring I have done virtually nothing besides occasional drawing and my creativity has gone downhill. This video has made me start thing about doing some photography of my five year old grandson. I’m starting to get excited again!
You sound like me same careers but redundancy. I found using my camera phone with film preset helped get me back into the ‘real’ camera world. Good luck
Definitely!!!! Although the warmer images weren’t exactly what he was looking for . But can still appreciate the style of images he was initially intending to photograph
I absolutely appreciate your transparency in this. Knowing that "someone like you" can still get rattled or distracted, yet fully understand what to take away from it for next time gives comfort to those of us (::raiseshand::) who may feel similar nerves a little more frequently. ::grin:: Thanks so much for sharing.
If you're doing a celeb portrait and you're not rattled if they get frustrated, then you're not paying attention. KS could easily have given nothing after that. Luckily the man's a pro.
I love this video and the fact that you came off as real and unpretentious adds a great deal of authenticity to your story, especially since I can relate to your experience. I was to record Academy Award winning actress Celeste Holm for a television PSA. I carefully positioned the lights and set the ratios. We set up the camera and had the sound properly adjusted to the point we'd tweak it to her voice level. Then I went to Ms Holm and asked if she was ready for the recording and she said: "I will be when you set the lights properly." Gulp! Then she said "I want one soft light directly over the camera." So naturally I quickly rearranged the lights. By this time in her life she was older and that single soft light diminished the age that was apparent in her face. And it was a great learning experience for me.
Pete! First of all... This portrait is iconic. Not only for yourself but Kiefer as well. It'll be viewed as an iconic image of him forever. Big congrats sir. Your comment about the fog not showing up made me got me thinking! I find that when shooting with fog, if the scene is heavily lit from the front, it tends to wash out the image without showing the depth that fog can provide. I would recommend adding a black negative fill/chop beside your key light to prevent that light from spilling into the room and then use a light from the back/side of the room to light the BG and space. Backlighting fog always adds a ton of texture and reads as fog/haze a lot cleaner than when front lit. Food for thought! Hit me up if you want to chat more about lighting! It's been my passion for many years. In Toronto as well! Cheers man and congrats again on this career milestone!!
Thanks for sharing the frames where you DIDN'T get what you wanted - underexposed, too warm, whatever. Like so many of us, I beat myself up about the frames where I screwed it up. You created amazing portraits of Keifer, without a doubt.
I’m just a physical therapist, and I want to take some great photos at my workplace. This video has been a big inspiration for me. I admire you. Thanks, man.
Man, that’s why after so long on YT you remain the OG to me and I’m not the biggest fan or the guy who views all your videos. It’s simple admiration and respect for the content creator you are and the way you share all the technical aspects of your craft. Amazing work!
12:33 this is SO important for every profession where you have to deliver a result in a specific moment. This advice is golden, it's not easy, I struggle a lot with it, but it makes you so much better. Beautifully said and needless to say the portraits ROCKS
Man….i have been in such a creative lull and slump lately, but this video is making me pumped and needing to blow the dust off my kit and go record and shoot! This…This is why I started following you and started my journey! Inspiration to the max, my dude.
I don't think I have ever commented on any of your videos but feel like I have to now. I have watched probably 80% of your videos over the last couple of years. I think it is so cool how honest and humble you are with this photo shoot. The detail was great and the honesty of the pressure you felt at that moment even better. I truly find you inspiring and will keep on watching for more. No pressure just keep being yourself.
Pete you did great man! That 5% you referenced is something that will always happen. I’ve been shooting for years and it happens all the time. I would say it’s more a matter of us being so obsessed with getting the best out of the shoot. So rock on man!
Oufh!! These last videos … we have really missed the photographer McKinnon, good to see him back and at it, this is some next level storytelling and *doing* photography making these stories, loving it :)
This is how I felt when I did my first car photo shoot. It was my own car and location and everything came out awesome! I was racing against the sunset and there was a pool of water that the light was hitting and I said to myself "I need to park it right on the water" the shoot was epic. I got it printed and now it hangs on my wall reminding me that if you do what's uncomfortable then it will be that much better. Thanks to people like you for inspiring me to do something I thought was impossible. Thank you!
It is so refreshing to see you be so honest. I look up to you a lot as a photographer & I would have never thought that you still get nervous! Love the photos you captured. I photographed a wedding indoors yesterday & I have been stressing ever since I booked it. Let’s just say I may have been more stressed than the couple. I wasn’t the one getting married 💀🤣 It was low light and I had to act quick. I did my research for over a week & practiced some of my settings at home. It meant a lot that they chose me as their photographer. Sometimes we do the best with what we have.
Peter, I don't think I've commented on any of your videos yet, but I've been watching you over 6 years after a friend showed one video of you, ever since then you are the one person that still keeps my excitement going with photography, coffee and life. You are my role model, I don't normally say this to anyone. Hope I can be close to how you are one day.
Peter, I just wanted to thank you for this great video explaining how you went about the Kiefer Sutherland portrait. As many ahead of me have commented, your style and honesty has been refreshing and so helpful. And when you explained that you even changed the warmness of the light, after spending a whole day prepping, I felt vindicated for those times that I did the exact same thing!, I too am a great fan of Kiefer. Great job and thank you for this video once again.
You nailed it. That is why you're Peter McKinnon!! You say, "I'm Peter McKinnon", I just captured my dream image. Goals are there for a reason. You met yours. But you have so much more to offer. Your next great photo goal, I'm not kidding, is of you. Do the greatest self portrait you have ever made. Something you would hang on your own wall because it is so cool, and was done so well. Do it!!
The ability for a photography prophet like yourself to cut through the bullshit, shoot straight and tell us the good, the bad, and the feels, is insane. Your work is a blessing for all of us.
Love all your videos but this has so much more of that element of early PM videos than other of your recent videos. Even though they have been great too. More of these!
So happy for you! I was going to post precisely that, on your last video, they say " Never meet your heroes," now, I wouldnt call them heroes but people who Ive admired, I have met a few, who for obvious work reasons I cant disclose, but I have not been disappointed, awesome poeple the majority. KS is definitely and admirable meet! So happy for you once more.
Love it!!!! Kiefer might be your hero, you’re definitely mine. Love the inspiration you have for everyone. My photography might not be the best, but man do I learn a lot from your videos.
I think this is my favourite video you've made to date. The passion of the subject, your process and learning what you did. Great stuff. More like this, please :)
So fantastic. I remember that feeling and this brought it all back. What I’ve learned over these many years is that when I’m nervous about a shoot it really going to be good. It perks my interest and puts me on my toes. Thanks for sharing and I’m glad you got the opportunity you wanted!
It's so refreshing to see someone who is such a professional also struggle with being stressed out doing a shoot. Thank you for this video Peter, as always, it's inspiring.
Peter, The first video was awesome! To see you go total "Fan Boy" over being able to shoot THE portrait you have wanted to take forever was so cool. I had seen the Rolling Stone cover you had hanging in some of your other videos and wondered if you had taken it, so hearing the story about it filled in that question in a very fulfilling way. You're excitement over the shoot was infectious and the fact that one of your buddies, knowing that was a dream shoot for you and was able to make that happen, shows that you have some really good friends and speaks well for you as being someone who they think really deserves to get that shot. I am very new to photography so in this video the technical details from the shoot and your style of story telling really is helpful on planning and the way to think about what you want out of the photo you want to make, ...not take. Take it from a 62 year old OG from Texas, " Don't be afraid to tell your good friends you love them every time you leave them and always keep them close!"
This is such a valuable breakdown! Sharing your insights and techniques like this really helps the community, and it's always fascinating to see how a shot comes together, especially with a subject like Kiefer Sutherland. Super insightful and informative-thanks for taking the time to walk us through your process. Keep up the great work!
Your attention to detail and dedication to growing your passion and craft is infectious Peter!! Although my passion and business is not the same I can very much apply and take the directions from this and use them for my own growth. Absolute legend Kiefer is! so great when you meet the people and they exceed your expectations
Great job Pete (& Co)! You did it and you are still humble to say that there is always room for improvement. Wow! Inspired. I like the warm colors of the photos more. But, these are just personal preferences.
Man, your videos are just the best. You are such an inspiration, Peter, and have such a unique voice and personality. It really is inspiring just to watch you. Thank you for everything that you do
This was the most entertaining portrait breakdown I’ve ever seen. The way you combine storytelling, entertainment and teaching is just next level You are such an inspiration Pete 🫶🏻
Fantastic video! Really good to see the top-down drawing of the light sources and all the pre-planning. Of all your videos I've watched, this one is my favorite!
love the scrub Peter, I used to do that a lot with my students in class, so they are not lost in a scene, and are free to feel and be more creative when the moment comes
Peter I am watching this while at a buffet restaurant in Chinatown London UK. Stay blessed and successful and keep up the great work. Currently doing street photography with my Nikon D5500.
*Not gonna Lie your Story telling on How, Where and What is AMAZING. Your Skillz with Camera's is Amazing. I'm not much into Photography but MAN watching people with Skillz such as yours is just Really Fun to watch. It can help me in my Journey into Videography that I've been doing for a bit*
Thanks for sharing your approach, preparation, and reflections. A agree that a thought-out plan, test shoots, and setting up a solid scene is key in a high stress situation. The less you need to problem-solve on the spot and the more time you can spend focusing on working with the “talent” (and quite the talent in this case) and building rapport, the better the result in the end. Also, I hope you keep making these “breakdown” videos for key shoots in the future! Thanks for sharing!
I actually loved the warmth. It was more inviting and cinematic in my opinion and I think you nailed it!!!!! ❤ an accident that made it even more amazing!
Ok I just going to say it, I want that drawing that you did Pete just because it’s another form of your creativity. Great video and loved how you put everything together. Congrats bro.
Such a wonderful breakdown of the whole shoot and everything that went wrong and right! My first thought when you said next time I'd shoot it digital etc. was, well if you shot digital and got a perfect score, you would be in your perfect bubble but this 5% is where the magic and growth happens ❤ and it's because of these things that we all ended up stoked for the end result!
I love this shit. Peter, you are the reason why I recently bought a Pentax K1000 and just started shooting. I'm 19, and film is definitely not part of my time, but I love how it looks. True inspiration
Can I just say I really love the warmer images then the original one you set prior to the shoot . But I also appreciate your transparency on that topic
Back in my day before digital cameras it was done using a polaroid back on a Mamiya RB, that gave time to talk to the subject and let everyone relax. A couple of polaroids took at least 2 minutes before viewing to adjust the lighting, then rattle through 2 rolls of 120. That was it. Then take the film to the lab and pick up the next day. Good times.
I think that adjusting the light temperature worked out well. I know that your test shots were very much more your signature style, and I get that, but I think the warmth compliments his skin, the hat and the overall tone of the image. Congrats on the bucket shot!
I actually like the warmer tone. Your images are pretty good, you wouldn't guess you only had 5 minutes. As a portrait photographer I know connecting with the model and getting them to be comfortable enough with you to be themselves can take some time. It's the most difficult part as you can't really prepare for that. You managed that perfectly!
You make two great points, Pete. 1. We all gotta slow our roll and take the time we need to get the shot. Rattling gets the best of us sometimes. 2. The final words of just start are always a good way to go. None of us have the magic crystal ball, but living gets the job done. Congrats on photographing one of your heroes! 🤘🏻📸
Thanks Peter for sharing how you got the shots: the video is awesome and the photos are amazing, I like a lot the Widelux ones. And of course Kiefer Sutherland is super cool!
Great video! Absolutely loved the Kiefer video. Obviously, you can't repeat that shoot again, but it was a great set and it felt perfect for that shoot.
@PeterMcKinnon Wow! Kiefer! So cool. He was the voice of Ford ads for so long, and you’re a Ford truck guy. I was lucky enough to write music for three different Ford F-150 television ads that ran nationally in Canada around 2005, and the voiceovers were performed by none other than Kiefer Sutherland. You’d have been what, 20 years old? Maybe you saw one back in the day.
I hope you liked my drawings skills LOL.
I'm a designer by trade and my sketches are far worse XD
Need to have that framed too!
Yeah, about that🤣 by the time you hit 7 mill you'll improve for sure. Like you said, you are on 95%, and those last 5% can still use some work! Keep it up!
Gave me huge Casey vibes
Peter van Gogh
Five years ago I retired after 30+ years as a photographer and graphic artist. Since retiring I have done virtually nothing besides occasional drawing and my creativity has gone downhill. This video has made me start thing about doing some photography of my five year old grandson. I’m starting to get excited again!
I didn't know photographers ever retired 😭
@@ClassicalClown1756 He likely meant as a professional occupation. You are not supposed to work forever.
Pick that camera up and get excited again 😃
You sound like me same careers but redundancy. I found using my camera phone with film preset helped get me back into the ‘real’ camera world. Good luck
The warmer light was a great call. Much prefer that over the colder test shots.
100%. The warm shots are legit.
Came here to say just this. It's funny to me that as creative what we like can differ so much from what your viewers might like.
Definitely!!!! Although the warmer images weren’t exactly what he was looking for . But can still appreciate the style of images he was initially intending to photograph
I absolutely appreciate your transparency in this. Knowing that "someone like you" can still get rattled or distracted, yet fully understand what to take away from it for next time gives comfort to those of us (::raiseshand::) who may feel similar nerves a little more frequently. ::grin:: Thanks so much for sharing.
If you're doing a celeb portrait and you're not rattled if they get frustrated, then you're not paying attention. KS could easily have given nothing after that. Luckily the man's a pro.
I love this video and the fact that you came off as real and unpretentious adds a great deal of authenticity to your story, especially since I can relate to your experience. I was to record Academy Award winning actress Celeste Holm for a television PSA. I carefully positioned the lights and set the ratios. We set up the camera and had the sound properly adjusted to the point we'd tweak it to her voice level. Then I went to Ms Holm and asked if she was ready for the recording and she said: "I will be when you set the lights properly." Gulp! Then she said "I want one soft light directly over the camera." So naturally I quickly rearranged the lights. By this time in her life she was older and that single soft light diminished the age that was apparent in her face. And it was a great learning experience for me.
Pete!
First of all... This portrait is iconic. Not only for yourself but Kiefer as well. It'll be viewed as an iconic image of him forever. Big congrats sir.
Your comment about the fog not showing up made me got me thinking! I find that when shooting with fog, if the scene is heavily lit from the front, it tends to wash out the image without showing the depth that fog can provide. I would recommend adding a black negative fill/chop beside your key light to prevent that light from spilling into the room and then use a light from the back/side of the room to light the BG and space. Backlighting fog always adds a ton of texture and reads as fog/haze a lot cleaner than when front lit. Food for thought! Hit me up if you want to chat more about lighting! It's been my passion for many years. In Toronto as well!
Cheers man and congrats again on this career milestone!!
Thanks for sharing the frames where you DIDN'T get what you wanted - underexposed, too warm, whatever. Like so many of us, I beat myself up about the frames where I screwed it up. You created amazing portraits of Keifer, without a doubt.
The original video and this video are so damn good. I absolutely love this type of content.
Love the warmer shots. Great job!
Loving this new format of your storytelling.
same!
I’m just a physical therapist, and I want to take some great photos at my workplace. This video has been a big inspiration for me. I admire you. Thanks, man.
Pete, all I can say is, I’m 70 years old, and you are a great inspiration!
Man, that’s why after so long on YT you remain the OG to me and I’m not the biggest fan or the guy who views all your videos. It’s simple admiration and respect for the content creator you are and the way you share all the technical aspects of your craft. Amazing work!
12:33 this is SO important for every profession where you have to deliver a result in a specific moment. This advice is golden, it's not easy, I struggle a lot with it, but it makes you so much better. Beautifully said and needless to say the portraits ROCKS
This Video is a step back to the roots of Peters channel but on a much much higher level. So inspiring…
Finally! The breakdown we've needed! Thank you as per usual for this journey, Pete!
Thanks for watching! ;)
The energy, excitement release and hug at the end is such a great feeling.
Man….i have been in such a creative lull and slump lately, but this video is making me pumped and needing to blow the dust off my kit and go record and shoot! This…This is why I started following you and started my journey! Inspiration to the max, my dude.
I don't think I have ever commented on any of your videos but feel like I have to now. I have watched probably 80% of your videos over the last couple of years. I think it is so cool how honest and humble you are with this photo shoot. The detail was great and the honesty of the pressure you felt at that moment even better. I truly find you inspiring and will keep on watching for more. No pressure just keep being yourself.
Your self awareness and respect for the time of this high profile subject is something others could learn from.
Pete you did great man! That 5% you referenced is something that will always happen. I’ve been shooting for years and it happens all the time. I would say it’s more a matter of us being so obsessed with getting the best out of the shoot. So rock on man!
Equally just as good as the previous video, congrats man.
Appreciate it brother!
Oufh!! These last videos … we have really missed the photographer McKinnon, good to see him back and at it, this is some next level storytelling and *doing* photography making these stories, loving it :)
This is how I felt when I did my first car photo shoot. It was my own car and location and everything came out awesome! I was racing against the sunset and there was a pool of water that the light was hitting and I said to myself "I need to park it right on the water" the shoot was epic. I got it printed and now it hangs on my wall reminding me that if you do what's uncomfortable then it will be that much better. Thanks to people like you for inspiring me to do something I thought was impossible. Thank you!
It is so refreshing to see you be so honest. I look up to you a lot as a photographer & I would have never thought that you still get nervous! Love the photos you captured.
I photographed a wedding indoors yesterday & I have been stressing ever since I booked it. Let’s just say I may have been more stressed than the couple. I wasn’t the one getting married 💀🤣 It was low light and I had to act quick. I did my research for over a week & practiced some of my settings at home. It meant a lot that they chose me as their photographer. Sometimes we do the best with what we have.
Peter, I don't think I've commented on any of your videos yet, but I've been watching you over 6 years after a friend showed one video of you, ever since then you are the one person that still keeps my excitement going with photography, coffee and life. You are my role model, I don't normally say this to anyone. Hope I can be close to how you are one day.
Pete's introspection is gold, he's such a pro. 🙏
Peter, I just wanted to thank you for this great video explaining how you went about the Kiefer Sutherland portrait. As many ahead of me have commented, your style and honesty has been refreshing and so helpful. And when you explained that you even changed the warmness of the light, after spending a whole day prepping, I felt vindicated for those times that I did the exact same thing!, I too am a great fan of Kiefer. Great job and thank you for this video once again.
You nailed it. That is why you're Peter McKinnon!! You say, "I'm Peter McKinnon", I just captured my dream image. Goals are there for a reason. You met yours. But you have so much more to offer. Your next great photo goal, I'm not kidding, is of you. Do the greatest self portrait you have ever made. Something you would hang on your own wall because it is so cool, and was done so well. Do it!!
The ability for a photography prophet like yourself to cut through the bullshit, shoot straight and tell us the good, the bad, and the feels, is insane. Your work is a blessing for all of us.
What an honest and transparent way to look back on a beautiful shoot. Respect!
Whoa, this vid was epic! Keep going!
Love all your videos but this has so much more of that element of early PM videos than other of your recent videos. Even though they have been great too. More of these!
This is just boggling my mind! My memories are going back to like 2019ish. So much growth, so much. Intro, story, video. Jeeze amazing. Job and growth
So happy for you! I was going to post precisely that, on your last video, they say " Never meet your heroes," now, I wouldnt call them heroes but people who Ive admired, I have met a few, who for obvious work reasons I cant disclose, but I have not been disappointed, awesome poeple the majority. KS is definitely and admirable meet! So happy for you once more.
Love it!!!! Kiefer might be your hero, you’re definitely mine. Love the inspiration you have for everyone. My photography might not be the best, but man do I learn a lot from your videos.
I think this is my favourite video you've made to date. The passion of the subject, your process and learning what you did. Great stuff. More like this, please :)
Great work Pete...great video...that shoot with Kiefer was so raw....brilliant!
So fantastic. I remember that feeling and this brought it all back. What I’ve learned over these many years is that when I’m nervous about a shoot it really going to be good. It perks my interest and puts me on my toes. Thanks for sharing and I’m glad you got the opportunity you wanted!
Been following your channel for a while, keep it up!
It's so refreshing to see someone who is such a professional also struggle with being stressed out doing a shoot. Thank you for this video Peter, as always, it's inspiring.
Peter, The first video was awesome! To see you go total "Fan Boy" over being able to shoot THE portrait you have wanted to take forever was so cool. I had seen the Rolling Stone cover you had hanging in some of your other videos and wondered if you had taken it, so hearing the story about it filled in that question in a very fulfilling way. You're excitement over the shoot was infectious and the fact that one of your buddies, knowing that was a dream shoot for you and was able to make that happen, shows that you have some really good friends and speaks well for you as being someone who they think really deserves to get that shot. I am very new to photography so in this video the technical details from the shoot and your style of story telling really is helpful on planning and the way to think about what you want out of the photo you want to make, ...not take. Take it from a 62 year old OG from Texas, " Don't be afraid to tell your good friends you love them every time you leave them and always keep them close!"
This is such a valuable breakdown! Sharing your insights and techniques like this really helps the community, and it's always fascinating to see how a shot comes together, especially with a subject like Kiefer Sutherland. Super insightful and informative-thanks for taking the time to walk us through your process. Keep up the great work!
Your attention to detail and dedication to growing your passion and craft is infectious Peter!! Although my passion and business is not the same I can very much apply and take the directions from this and use them for my own growth. Absolute legend Kiefer is! so great when you meet the people and they exceed your expectations
Great job Pete (& Co)! You did it and you are still humble to say that there is always room for improvement. Wow! Inspired.
I like the warm colors of the photos more. But, these are just personal preferences.
Man, your videos are just the best. You are such an inspiration, Peter, and have such a unique voice and personality. It really is inspiring just to watch you. Thank you for everything that you do
Excellent! So happy for you Peter! Your work paid off! Cool stuff!
Dude, this was like going back in time to your older videos. Such a great vibe and a stellar photo with lots of craft knowledge. Bravo.
Absolutely AMAZING PETER !!. Can't say how much your work is an inspiration to me and also being able to live my dream everyday too !!!.
This was the most entertaining portrait breakdown I’ve ever seen. The way you combine storytelling, entertainment and teaching is just next level
You are such an inspiration Pete 🫶🏻
Wow! This video is a great teaching moment for photographers and for life in general!!! Thank-you Peter!
So happy you got this opportunity Peter, you owned it man.
Always love a nice BTS! Thanks for sharing your mind with us Pete!
Fantastic video! Really good to see the top-down drawing of the light sources and all the pre-planning. Of all your videos I've watched, this one is my favorite!
love the scrub Peter, I used to do that a lot with my students in class, so they are not lost in a scene, and are free to feel and be more creative when the moment comes
Peter I am watching this while at a buffet restaurant in Chinatown London UK. Stay blessed and successful and keep up the great work. Currently doing street photography with my Nikon D5500.
*Not gonna Lie your Story telling on How, Where and What is AMAZING. Your Skillz with Camera's is Amazing. I'm not much into Photography but MAN watching people with Skillz such as yours is just Really Fun to watch. It can help me in my Journey into Videography that I've been doing for a bit*
Hi Pete, this shoot was the coolest thing for you, it was also the coolest thing for me to watch! respect 👍
This whole story is just so thrilling and just unbelievable how talented you are.
Thanks for sharing your approach, preparation, and reflections. A agree that a thought-out plan, test shoots, and setting up a solid scene is key in a high stress situation. The less you need to problem-solve on the spot and the more time you can spend focusing on working with the “talent” (and quite the talent in this case) and building rapport, the better the result in the end.
Also, I hope you keep making these “breakdown” videos for key shoots in the future! Thanks for sharing!
I actually loved the warmth. It was more inviting and cinematic in my opinion and I think you nailed it!!!!! ❤ an accident that made it even more amazing!
Ok I just going to say it, I want that drawing that you did Pete just because it’s another form of your creativity. Great video and loved how you put everything together. Congrats bro.
Love the images and the interaction. Thanks for the motivation.and keep going Peter!
Another awesome video!! Great job!! Kiefer has ALWAYS been one of my favorites!!!
Such a wonderful breakdown of the whole shoot and everything that went wrong and right! My first thought when you said next time I'd shoot it digital etc. was, well if you shot digital and got a perfect score, you would be in your perfect bubble but this 5% is where the magic and growth happens ❤ and it's because of these things that we all ended up stoked for the end result!
Loved this one even more than usual because of your openness and how helpful it is to all of us photographers! 😎
I really liked the warmer light. These portraits melted me.
Continue to shoot shots that make you as nervous as this - it's how you grow to even higher heights. Rock on Peter.
I feel so proud of you. I don’t know you but it’s fun to see you excited. Great work man.
I love this shit. Peter, you are the reason why I recently bought a Pentax K1000 and just started shooting. I'm 19, and film is definitely not part of my time, but I love how it looks. True inspiration
I met my hero! It was great meeting you Peter!
Masterclass FOC. WOW. thanks Mr McKinnon
Can I just say I really love the warmer images then the original one you set prior to the shoot . But I also appreciate your transparency on that topic
Love this style of video and authentic storytelling. Using one word to describe it would be INSPIRATIONAL. Keep it going, Peter; loving your work 💪
Thank you for sharing your powerful knowledge and beautiful experience Peter 😊
Back in my day before digital cameras it was done using a polaroid back on a Mamiya RB, that gave time to talk to the subject and let everyone relax. A couple of polaroids took at least 2 minutes before viewing to adjust the lighting, then rattle through 2 rolls of 120. That was it. Then take the film to the lab and pick up the next day. Good times.
I like how you devoted time in this video to reflecting on what you could do better next time. Good lesson for all photographers
Love the background story. Super excited for you, Pete. This must have felt like a moment where it all paid off. Looking forward to the next 🙏🏽
These BTS vids are the content why I sub, keep rocking Pete
Love this! Your humility is admirable and that coffee looks delicious!
🤘🤘
Really liked the drawing and all the details incloted in the shot. It really helps to be patient and be ready for the shot
This breakdown was awesome. Seeing what went into it will never get old. All I can say is you f*** crushed it
I think that adjusting the light temperature worked out well. I know that your test shots were very much more your signature style, and I get that, but I think the warmth compliments his skin, the hat and the overall tone of the image. Congrats on the bucket shot!
Excellent work sir as always. Congrats on all the "check marks" you've been able to do on you bucket list this year.
Love the openness and honesty here man. Sick job
Love the breakdown of the shot! But most importantly…. We need Squarespace Pete back!!
I actually like the warmer tone. Your images are pretty good, you wouldn't guess you only had 5 minutes. As a portrait photographer I know connecting with the model and getting them to be comfortable enough with you to be themselves can take some time. It's the most difficult part as you can't really prepare for that. You managed that perfectly!
You make two great points, Pete. 1. We all gotta slow our roll and take the time we need to get the shot. Rattling gets the best of us sometimes. 2. The final words of just start are always a good way to go. None of us have the magic crystal ball, but living gets the job done. Congrats on photographing one of your heroes! 🤘🏻📸
Thanks Peter for sharing how you got the shots: the video is awesome and the photos are amazing, I like a lot the Widelux ones. And of course Kiefer Sutherland is super cool!
What else Peter can’t do? The photo-shot was wood burning! 🎉 🐐📸
Thanks for the video, it was very interesting. Congratulations on this project.
Peter - Director of the Inspiration Department. Blessings to everyone🤗
Am I the only one thst wants to see the digital photos and just watch him edit them to his liking, see the difference between digital vs. film
Great video! Absolutely loved the Kiefer video. Obviously, you can't repeat that shoot again, but it was a great set and it felt perfect for that shoot.
@PeterMcKinnon Wow! Kiefer! So cool. He was the voice of Ford ads for so long, and you’re a Ford truck guy. I was lucky enough to write music for three different Ford F-150 television ads that ran nationally in Canada around 2005, and the voiceovers were performed by none other than Kiefer Sutherland. You’d have been what, 20 years old? Maybe you saw one back in the day.
I truly prefer the warmer one, it brought some character to the combined with the haze and all the atmosphere you created. Well done.
I've got a portrait shoot next week, and this really did inspire me!! 📸 Brilliant storytelling as always!!
So glad i stumbled on your account several years ago! You keep me inspired- thank you! Love your videos
Great breakdown. And I actually love the warmer looking shots!
Always self reflecting. So much to learn from the master.