Sunday, April 22, 2012

Shannon and Crew | Albert Lea Family Photography

Meet Shannon and her 3 amazing boys.  I graduated from high school with Shannon and she was practically BEGGING me to do her family photos.  Ok, maybe not begging, but she did at least ask.

I was caught a little off guard after we did the first shot of her and all her boys.  As soon as she said, "Ok boys, go play," she told me that she wanted more of them being them than anything else.  GAME ON!  I haven't done candid shots in a while and it was a nice treat to just get snap happy.  Someone's gotta keep me on my toes.

For your viewing pleasure...















You can find these and more on our Facebook page.

Friday, April 20, 2012

Friday Favorite - Pre-Wedding Excitement | Owatonna Wedding Photography

This week's Friday Favorite is from the engagement session of Jennifer and John.  These guys were fun to work with.  John was sweating like crazy (he says because of the humidity, I say finally realizing the wedding is almost here :-) ) and Jennifer was just working it.


This is my second (so far) favorite photo I have ever captured.  The lighting that's highlighting Jennifer's hair, the light wrapping around John's back, the holding of hands, just barely touching lips...UGH...just a perfect moment.  While I'm not a fan of the sepia tone too often, I feel that it adds more to the emotion of the moment.  Maybe next week I'll post a photo from their wedding in Owatonna, MN.  Hmm...

Thursday, April 12, 2012

Friday Favorite - Engage!


You ever have one of those moments when you're doing something and when you're done you're like, "Huh!  That didn't turn out like I wanted but I like it!"  This is that moment.

Back in 2009, I went up to Minneapolis with a friend to spend some time with a mutual friend of ours and her boyfriend.  Well it just so happened that Minneapolis was celebrating their sesquicentennial (that's 150 years) of being a city.  So they decided to have an absolutely AMAZING firework show on a famous bridge (can't remember which one but it wasn't I-35) over the Mississippi River.  I got absolutely trigger happy that night and even a little artistic.  What I did with this shot was click the shutter, zoomed all the way in, and then zoomed out as fast I could.  And this was the result.

Can't help but think of Captain Picard on Star Trek: The Next Generation and say "Engage!"

Sunday, April 8, 2012

What photography means to you

There's an age old question that a lot of people ask: "Why?"  When it comes to photography, these questions are no strangers.  Why are you so expensive?  Why can't I get a disc of my images?  Why can't I just print the photos myself?  Why go through you when my friend has a camera too?  (That last one kind of rhymes.)

I recently read an update on Facebook from fellow photographer Christopher Lee Photography (Website and Facebook) that they get asked these similar questions.  I couldn't help but feel for him and be instantly put into his shoes.

A lot of people that didn't know I was going to get into portraiture photography would complain about the high prices and lack of "service" they were going to, or did, receive before going to a family friend "who used to do photography back in the day."  I couldn't help but think to myself, "If others are charging so much for so little, I'll do the opposite."  Then I started realizing something and I changed my whole mentality:

Photography is art; a one time masterpiece

Don Giannatti, a renowned photographer in Phoenix, AZ (Website), couldn't have said it any better, "We have one moment to capture a photograph forever."  This has been my mantra for the past couple of years and believe in it with every inch of my soul.  And I'm sure if you ask any other photographer, that's the exact same way they feel as well.  It is our number one purpose to capture every moment possible, whether on purpose or accident, so that it will never be forgotten.  Now some may think, "Well of course you can capture the same moment again.  Especially if you posed it or if it's a reoccurring event ."  Let me rattle your brain with some science.

If you think of time in a linear fashion that doesn't have the ability to go into reverse, every second we live will always be a second lost.  If we say or do something that we regret, we have no way of going back and changing or preventing from that moment happening.  If you do something that was a lot of fun for the first time, and you do it again, it won't be as fun as the first time since you've already experienced it.  Now it might be MORE fun than last time, but if you didn't know that that particular situation was at your disposal, could you have done it within the same sequence of time?  No, because we can't go back in time to recreate the first event to enjoy the second event, nor can we recreate the same event the exact same way, from each step you took down to each laugh you had..  We can only enjoy each event in a time sequential course.  You can DUPLICATE the event, but you can't recreate EXACTLY the same event.

Now if you take that same mentality and put that into photography,  we can't make the same exact mistake twice, we can't recreate the same exact pose twice...we can't recreate anything the same exact way as the first time.  We can close, but when you look at the tiny details; strands of lose hair, angles, lighting, color, all the minute, microscopic details, it will never be the exact same.  So when I say "a one time masterpiece," it literally IS a one time masterpiece.

Ok, let me take this down to a more manageable post now...

Now, let me go over the questions of "why" from earlier.  I'll start on the ever deciding question: Cost.  There's just no way to sugar coat this, photography isn't cheap for both parties.  But for the client, it's an investment.  You're investing in products and services of moments, you want from a trusted source, to be handed out to your friends and family and for your home.  Do you pay your accountant to do your car repairs and expect your car to work like it should?  Probably not.  You take your car to a mechanic who can pinpoint the problem in record time, repair it, make a few phone calls, take a shower, take an extended lunch and have down time all before you go on your lunch break for the day.  And I'll bet you my left pinky toe he charged you a lot of money.  But you're going to pay it because you trust their expertise and their work.  Photographer's are the same way, but with a way less, and possible reoccurring, cost.  You pay a photographer for their expertise of capturing those masterpieces and creating art for your walls.  And the photographer has chosen the absolute best vendor to print those masterpieces for you that will best fit their style and compliment your walls.  Which brings me to the next question.

The question of, "why can't I just print the photos myself?" feels like having a piece of ourselves ripped from our body in the most torturous way possible.  All photographer's value their craft and their art.  If you take your photos to a one hour photo lab, provided you have been given a print release and the disc of the photos, you're basically telling us that you value our time but not our work.  A lot of the one hour photo labs don't have the proper color correcting software or capabilities that a professional lab has AND when your photos get printed, the colors are more than likely going to be off and the person working behind the counter won't take the time, nor care, to correct it.  So what you're paying for when you order prints from the photographer is professional quality color, the photographer's art and hi-resolution photos.  (Maybe in another post I'll explain hi-res photos.)

On to the question of the disc.  Why don't a lot of photographer's offer a disc with your photos?  It's simple really: Protection.  The protection covers a wide area; copyright, print, stealing, claiming...just to name a few.  We don't want our photos to be stolen and claimed as someone else's and put all over the internet or sold to a company who might use the photos for promotional reasons.  The photos we create are intellectual property according to the Federal Copyright Act and we still own the rights to those photos.  Another reason why photographer's might not offer a disc is because you then have the ability to go where you want to print them out and honestly, we don't want our masterpieces printed on poor quality paper or with poor quality ink.  Whether you want to believe it or not, it does reflect on us and our quality of work.

(I promise, we're getting to the end of this.)

The final question: why choose us over your friend or relative who has a camera similar to us.  This one should be a no brainer.  Assuming your friend of relative has little to no experience with photography, they won't know what they're doing.  Photographer's are very meticulous, on an obsessive level, about making photos.  We pay a MASSIVE amount of attention to detail about color, position, camera settings, composition, posing, lighting, angles, hand placement, clothing placement, head position, hip placement...EVERYTHING!!!  I've completely lost count at how many times I've heard this line: "We had our friend/relative take our photos and we were so disappointed.  I really wish we would have hired a professional to take our photos."  Every time I hear a story like this, it just breaks my heart.  No one should ever have to receive poor quality photos.  Ever.

So what does all this technical, artsy, fartsy stuff mean to you?  Literally everything.  When you hire a photographer, you're telling us that you trust us to capture moments in time for you and create masterpieces for you.  You're not just paying for pictures, you're investing in masterpieces of art that have been carefully crafted with proper lighting, posing, composition, our vision, and for one-time moments that can never be returned.

So the next time you want or need to have photos done, don't ask yourself, "how much can I spend," but rather, "what kind of quality do I want?"

(FINALLY!  THE E N D!!!)

Thursday, April 5, 2012

Friday Favorite - Drenched Flower

A lot of you have seen my portrait work.  But what you may not know is that I enjoy ALL styles of photography.  Landscapes, astrophotography, storms, fine art, abstract...it's where it all started.  So I've decided that every week on Friday, I'm going to showcase some of my other work pieces I've done with a short description of how it happened and why I like it.  With that being said, enjoy :-)








This was my first ever "magazine quality" shot I ever took.  Back in 2008, I had a pinched nerve in my knee that made it very difficult to walk.  I had been stuck inside the house for weeks on end.  The pain, complete numbness from the knee down, and the ability for my knee to buckle at any given time, made it very hard for me to drive or walk even 50 feet.  I decided to go in my backyard and photography some flowers that a commercial building had (our property lines literally touch each other) after a late July storm.  I wasn't out there too long and only took about 50 photos before I quit.  When I uploaded the photos to my computer, this is what I got.  No editing.  No touch-up.  No change of color.  What you're looking at is straight out of the camera, or SOOC for short.

Every time I look at this photo, it still gives me a sense of serenity, accomplishment and awe.  You can see every detail in the folded petals, every rain drop and the background is just blurred so perfectly so that your main focus is on one single flower plant.  You would think that I meticulously had the right settings, got down to right angle, envisioned what I wanted and hit the button.  The honest truth is: this is a snapshot.  Yes I said it, a snapshot.  I was still in the early stages of learning my camera, and photography in general, so I purposely tried to ruin this shot so I knew what settings did what. And this is what I came out with.

Monday, April 2, 2012

Birthday Bash Giveaway!

WOOOO!!!  We gonna party like it's 1999 all over again!


This month is a special month for me.  I'm turning another year older on this month and I want to celebrate my birthday month will all of you.  I want to give you guys a gift instead of me receiving one (besides, my gift is still in the oven and won't be here until the end of May, beginning of June).  Here's the gift I want to giveaway:

26 of you will get a $50 gift certificate towards session and prints!

That's right, I said 26 people will get a $50 gift certificate towards their session and prints.



Contest rules:
  • If you're already a fan of my Facebook page, all you have to do is "SHARE" the status update from my page with your Facebook friends and you'll get 1 point into the drawing.
  • If you're NOT a fan (yet), go like my Facebook page AND share the status update with your Facebook friends and you'll get 1 point into the drawing.
  • Every time you see a status update with "Birthday Bash Giveaway!" in the text, share that update with your friends and get an additional point into the drawing.  There is no point limit so share away!!!
  • There has to be a minimum of 200 "Likes" on my Facebook page for the giveaway to be, well, given away.  If you have shared any or all of the status updates to gain an entry into the giveaway and there were UNDER 200 "Likes", you will still be entered into the drawing.  Just need 200 "Likes" for the giveaway to be given away.
  • Deadline is April 24th and a winner will be chosen via random.org on April 25th.

That's it!  Need 200 "Likes" on Facebook and just share each update with "Birthday Bash Giveaway!" in the text and you could EASILY win $50 off your session and prints.  Good Luck and "Sorry for Party Rockin`"!


PS: If I get well over 200 "Likes" on Facebook, I'll throw in a little sumtin` sumtin` extra ;-)

Sunday, March 4, 2012

2013 Senior Rep Program

The 2013 senior year is right around the corner and I'm looking for a few good high school seniors who will be graduating in 2013. 1 guy and 1 girl from Albert Lea, Alden-Conger, Wells, New Richland-Hartland-Ellendale-Geneva, Glenville-Emmons and Lake Mills will be selected for the program.

The senior rep program is a pretty easy and sweet deal for ANY senior. I'll take your senior photos for free and in return, your refer your friends to me. Each time someone you referred books me, you'll get a print credit. The more referrals you, the bigger the credit you get.

There's a $50 deposit to start out with it (I'll explain that in a little bit.) When you have your first referral book with me, that $50 deposit gets put on as a print credit. After the 1st referral, you'll get additional print credits based on a sliding scale. As a side note, each referral is an ADDITIONAL after your first:

1-3 referrals - $15 print credit per referral
4-6 referrals - $20 print credit per
7-9 referrals - $30 print credit per
10-12 referrals - $40 print credit per
13+ referrals - $50 print credit per


So let's say you get 5 referrals: $50 from deposit (first referral) + $80 (the other 4 referrals) = $130 print credit.

So as you can see, it doesn't take long to get some money built up for the prints.  And if you get enough referrals, you won't need to pay for anything!  Free session plus free prints?  Can't complain.

Here's what I ask in return:
Go "Like" my AMP Studios page
"Share" a promotion I posted on Facebook OR "Tag" my page in a status update twice a month
Refer anyone who is graduating in 2013 to yours truly :-)

You'll be given 50 business cards with a photo of yourself from the session with my business info one side and your name and a discount for the referred person on the other. 

Now I've only got a few "rules":
1. I can be the only photographer that does your senior portraits
2. Can't be afraid to get dirty
3. Dress to impress
4. A signed model release and contract

5. The person you referred MUST bring with your card for you to receive credit and to get the discount towards their session and prints.

To explain the deposit:
If you don't get ANY referrals, it's a compensation of my time and would NOT go towards prints. If this does happen, you will need to pay full price for prints.

To be considered to be a Senior Rep, you need to send an email to ryonm@amp-studios.com with the following information.  ***ALL INFORMATION MUST BE ENTERED TO BE CONSIDERED***
Your name
Your parent(s) or guardian(s) name
Your parent(s) or guardian(s) phone number
Your birthday
What school you go to
Why YOU think you should be a Senior Rep

You have until May 31st to submit your request to be a senior rep.  All sessions will start sometime in April so that you may start handing out your business cards and refer your friends by May.