Archive for December 2011


Gia Bella: An Infant Portrait in Chandler, Arizona

December 31st, 2011 — 12:45am

In my last post, I introduced you to my good friend, Paul Scott, who was acting as my stand in as I was setting lights for his grand-daughter’s portraits.  Here are a few of my favorite images from the shoot.

She looks so snuggly and happy.  I love it when little babies barely open one eye.

Infant girl portraits by Jared Platt (8)

This is one of my favorites.  I love all the hands holding her up.

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Infant girl portraits by Jared Platt (6)

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I labored over which foot shot to put in the blog post, I liked a number of them quite a lot, but I elected for this one in particular because the toes break the horizon line of her father’s hand.  It is often simple things like that which make the difference between a select and a reject.

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This one was pretty cute too.

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This was my absolute favorite.  I love the composition and I think Kelly (mom) looks like a million bucks.  Great shot.

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Photography by Jared Platt, Platt Photography

Slideshow music by Mindy Gledhill, courtesy of Triple Scoop Music

Comment » | Childrens Portraits, Family Portrait, Infant Portraits, Photography

He’s Kind of a Big Deal: A Portrait in Chandler, Arizona

December 30th, 2011 — 3:27pm

Photograph of Paul Scott by Jared Platt

You may not know who he is, but he’s kind of a big deal.  Let me introduce you to my good friend Paul Scott.  I was taking portraits of his grand-daughter (coming next blog post) and used him as a test for the shots.  I loved this portrait of him and wanted to show it to you, but I thought I’d tell you how cool this cat is.  He’s the most down to earth man I’ve ever met, patient and unconditionally loving.  I couldn’t begin to give him credit for what a great guy he is.  He’s a big music buff as well, he always has some obscure band to introduce me to, and you’ll never find him at a big rock concert.  It’s always the hole in the wall bar with twelve people listening to a fantastic band… that’s where you’ll find him.  But aside from all of that, he’s kind of a big deal!  He’s quite the unsung hero, or kind of like a super hero.  I can’t say any more because I think he likes his anonymity (he’s kind of shy), but I just wanted to give a shout out to my good friend Paul, who, though you may not know it, works quietly behind the scenes to make your comfortable little world a cleaner, nicer, better smelling place.

Photography by Jared Platt, Platt Photography

Post Processing by Lightroom and Silver Effects Pro 2

Comment » | Photography, Stories

Merry Christmas from The Platt Family

December 24th, 2011 — 3:54pm

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Merry Christmas from Platt Photography and the Platt family.

Here is the 2011 Christmas card photo shoot.  My wife, Danielle is always coming up with great ideas for our Christmas cards.  Each year, after Christmas, she starts working on the next year’s photo concept.  This years was particularly difficult as we had to find all the clothing and the props.  Some of it is completely authentic period clothing and some of it was either rented or even made for the photo shoot.

All of this started when my mother produced my grand-father’s kindergarten outfit from the early 1900′s.  Then, Danielle was able to find a dress from about 1890 on ebay.  She found some cute clothes for my daughter off the modern rack that had the same feel and then my eldest son and I rented various costume pieces and my mother sewed a few things we could not find.  I also needed a period camera.  The 4×5 camera I own is too new (circa 1940), so I put out an APB for wooden field camera and my friend Keith Pitts came through.  It is an old thing and in need of much work, but looks great.  Danielle also found an old wooden tripod, but there was no plate to connect the camera to the tripod, so we had to put the camera on a modern tripod and then lash the wood tripod to the outside of the modern tripod.  Then with a little photoshop work, I was able to remove the modern tripod where it was showing through.

You will note that all of the photos are cropped to an 8×10 aspect ratio.  I wanted to keep the authenticity of the shots even down to the aspect ratio common for the time period (i.e. 4×5 or 8×10) owing to the use of large format negatives, glass plates or tin types.  I suppose I get a little persnickety about the details, but I wanted it to feel very authentic.

Here is a photo of my grandfather wearing the outfit my youngest son is now wearing in our photos.  Earl is the one on the left.

My kids were thrilled with this photo shoot.  I told the boys, you are not supposed to smile on any of these photos.  ”Really?  Awesome!”  They loved it.

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This is one of my favorites from the entire photo shoot.  It was just a grab during the planning of the photo, but I love it, love it!

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Jackson was really getting into the role.  I explained to my kids that in old photos no one smiled because they couldn’t hold a smile long enough for the long shutter speed and that they were always uncomfortable because they had to hold still and they sometimes even had a brace on their neck to keep them perfectly still for the photograph.  So he did his best.  Indiana (my daughter) on the other hand just did whatever she wanted.

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I think this photograph is a perfect representation of Britton’s relationship with Indiana in comparison to the photo above.  Britton has taken it upon himself to be Indie’s protector and caring older brother.  He puts Indie first at all times and she is completely confident with her big brother as her backup.

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This is another one of my favorites.  Of course, the serious looks are perfect for the time period and not completely indicative of my wife and oldest son, but there is something very truthful about this photograph.  You know, I always comment on how “true” images are of people that I photograph, but it is always with limited information about the people and who they are, so I am making educated guesses about their relationships and personalities (which I seem to get right most of the time), but when I photograph my own family, I get to see these shots and the “truths” contained in them with complete confidence that I am reading them correctly.  There is something very proud in their relationship, a seriousness to it, complete with expectations and determination to succeed.  Not that they are not playful with each other, but there is an element of seriousness in their relationship not as prevalent in her relationship with the other children that makes this photograph ring true.

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And Indie continues to smile.  She was just happy to be there.

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Now, if there is one other photograph that rings “true” in this collection it is this one.  This is a very good indication of my relationship with my daughter.  She loves me very much and I am smitten with that little angel.  She has taken to telling me two things on an hourly basis. “I love you” followed by, “I miss you daddy.”  This, of course, melts my heart.  I am not sure she understands what that means, but she seems to understand that it means that she wants to be around me.  She was sick last night and called for me, and I spent a few hours up with her throughout the night, and although she was sick and I was tired, we both thoroughly enjoyed the time together.  So, that is what is happening here in this photograph.  She is breaking away from the family group because I am over by the camera and she wants to be near me, not in a crying and southed only by daddy kind of way, but in a genuine excited to be in my arms, kind of way.

My brother Rex Platt (my chief second shooter) is taking all of the photos that I am in, by the way.  Thanks to Rex for all his help on this photo shoot.  He is a great photographer and an even greater friend.

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This boy just makes me smile every time I look at him.

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And I love this photograph.  That little muff was made by my mother.  It was hard to get Indie to put her hands in it, but as it got colder in the evening, it was much easier to get her to see the wisdom in using it.

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My mother also made his nickers.  Thanks mom.  Good job!

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I think I could have enjoyed being a photographer in 1890, I am, after all a technical kind of guy and good in the darkroom, but I don’t miss the film days in the least.  I shot these photos and an hour later I was sitting in a yogurt shop eating frozen yogurt, looking at the JPG copies of the shoot on my iPad with NIK’s Snapseed App adjusting them and making some preliminary crops and treatments, etc.  Then I went home and loaded the RAW images into Lightroom and made the first round picks and started adjusting them.  Minutes later, I was showing the images to my wife and making plans for the final Christmas card and this blog post, which will be released on Christmas Eve.  This kind of turn around was unheard of anytime in the 20th century.  So I don’t miss film one little bit even though I have extreme respect the medium.

About Snapseed by NIK.  This is the best photo software on the iPad or iPhone.  It does EVERYTHING I need to do to a photo on my iPhone or iPad.  I used to have 30 different photo apps to do what I needed to get done, but now, when I am working on a photo on my handheld devices, Snapseed is all I use.  You have to get this app if you work on your photos at all.

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And while I am on the subject of NIK Software, I also have to mention the fact that every photo in this series went through NIK’s Silver Effects Pro 2 (a Photoshop, Lightroom and Aperture Plugin).  Silver Effects Pro 2 is indispensable when you are serious about a film look.  In this case, as much as I like Lightroom’s grain structure, I needed the photos to have a very realistic and accurate grain structure to match the historical feel of the photos.  And when I need REAL FILM GRAIN, I exclusively turn to Silver Effects Pro 2.  It is the gold standard for grain and film effects in digital imaging.  I will have to post a tutorial on using NIK Silver Effects Pro 2, it is a great bit of software.  I have included a screen shot below; it looks and feels a lot like Lightroom.  I am shouting for a few obvious enhancements that need to be made and if I am successful, it will be absolutely perfect!

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I suppose I am a photographer, truly.  I know that sounds strange to say, but when I call someone a photographer, it does not mean they own a camera and make money with it.  A photographer is a different breed of human.  We live to document and capture with “meticulous exactitude”, the world around us.  We don’t separate work from play.  Photography is life, we don’t live unless we record life.  I say this because I am so in love with this photo session because it was an opportunity for me to do something creative, fun and meaningful to me and my family and it was hard work, and it was fun and I cherish the moments we spent creating it and I cherish even more the moments I have spent looking at and thinking about the images and what they mean.  People look at art (paintings and sculptures etc) and ask, “what does it mean,” but they don’t do that with most photographs, when in actuality, every photo has as much or more meaning than a concocted piece of art, because photographs have the added element of reality embedded in them.  Even the randomly captured images have a deep meaning in them, stories, emotions, feelings, joys, sorrows, etc…  I have been spending a lot of time with these photos this Christmas because I am proud of the execution and in love with the meanings they project.

I hope you get to spend a little time with a few photographs this Christmas and get the chance to ponder what they are saying to you.

Merry Christmas, from my family to yours and from my photographs to you.

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Photographs by Jared Platt and Rex Platt, Platt Photography

Location: Gilbert, Arizona

22 comments » | Childrens Portraits, Family Portrait, History of Photography, Lightroom, Notes on Photography, Photographing, Photography, Photography Lessons, Post-Production, Uncategorized

The Middents Family Portrait 2011

December 18th, 2011 — 1:03am

The Middents family portrait was taken on the river walk in Shreveport, Louisiana.  This trolley was broken down, so we had the whole thing to ourselves.  It was a fun time with the kids.  We even rode on a carousel, and interestingly enough, the photographer gets to ride for free.  I suppose that is good, because turning around in circles while staring through a tiny hole in a camera with no peripheral vision and all backwards makes me a bit queazy, so I am glad I didn’t have to pay for that experience.

I was taking a larger group photo but when the kids draped themselves on their parents, I had to focus in on the individual relationships that were being displayed in the moment.  Group photos are over rated anyway.  It’s these little vignettes that make the memory hall of fame.

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Like I said, we had the place to ourselves.  I’ve been here before and there’s always someone else in the shot.

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There is something so precious about a child in a turtle neck.  I suppose it is just such grown-up clothing, so there is a nice contract there.  But add to that the rich red contrasted against her her ivory skin and it is irresistible.

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I like the close-up best because those eyes are so brilliant.  She is a pretty little girl.

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We were waiting for the carousel ride here.  I love the contrast here for all the same reasons and I love that enter sign.  This is one of my favorites of the entire session.

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The faces are priceless.  I have no idea what they were so surprised about.  Make up your own story.

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This IS my favorite image of the day!  I love everything about it.

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Then we went to the Bass Pro Shop and played around in their Christmas activities area.

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This one just cracks me up.

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Fast forward a few days.  You will remember the red bard from the Karren family portrait.  Crystal brought her kids out with us that day and I grabbed a few shots of them throughout the evening.  This little outfit is such a perfect little All-American dress.  I was very pleased with the images.

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This is definitely one of my favorites from this set of photos.

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Photography by Jared Platt, Platt Photography

Location: Shreveport, Louisiana.

Slideshow Music: Mindy Gledhill, courtesy of Triple Scoop Music.

2 comments » | Uncategorized

Just the Girls: A Portrait of Friends

December 17th, 2011 — 10:25pm

My friend and client and fellow photographer, Jessica Brownell, put together a group of her closest and oldest friends for a portrait session.  We spend an hour in the streets of Shreveport, Louisiana.  I lead the way and the girls laughed and chatted and told a million inside jokes.  A good time was had by all.  Here are my favorites shots of the group.

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Photography by Jared Platt, Platt Photography

Location: Shreveport, Louisiana.

Slideshow Music: Mindy Gledhill, courtesy of Triple Scoop Music.

Comment » | Photography, Slideshows

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