Alexandra Sophie Photography

Alexandra Sophie Photography

 http://www.alexandra-sophie.fr

https://www.facebook.com/AlexandraSophie.photography

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What kind of equipment (camera body, lens, filters, flash, tripod, cleaning equipment other) do you use?

 

I use a Canon 5D mark II with one single lens, a 50mm f/1.8. I also have an underwater case which I use when needed. That’s about all! I recently purchased a medium format film camera, but that’s another story I hope to talk about once I develop my first film roll.

 

What do you like and dislike about your equipment, specially your camera, and how would you improve it?

 

I’m using this same single lens for over five years, and I love it. Before having the 5D mark II, I had a Canon 400D, that’s the only improvement I ever did since I started with DSLR. I strongly believe than having a limited range of material, plus my only lens to be a prime lens, made me become a better photographer, and I recommend this to everyone starting in this field. Don’t adapt your material to yourself, but start by adapting yourself to what you have. You will learn to think more and will notice many things that you would not have if you had too many lenses to think about. After several years, you will really know what you need and depending on that, you can purchase more material, or not.

 

What is your favourite lens, and why?

 

As previously mentioned, it is a simple 50mm f/1.8. I loved it on the crop-sensor of my 400D many years ago, and I still love it as much on my full frame. I use it to shoot everything, fashion, portraits, art, wedding and even concerts. I find it not too wide neither too short, and the light, deep of field and flares it produces are perfect for what I create.

 

When you travel, what is in your essential photographic kit bag?

 

I carry everything I own, everywhere I go. Be it the neighbourhood or the other side of the world.

 

What kind of software/tools do you use for post-processing, if any?

 

I use Photoshop. CS3, CS4 sometimes CS5 or CS6. The truth is that it depends whose computer I am using, and since we are often travelling, it really depends at whose place we landed.

 

How long have you been taking photographs? How do you find inspiration? How do you take your pictures?

 

I got my first non disposable camera twelve years ago, when I was eight and requested one for my birthday. It was film, and soon my parents took it away from me because I shot too much and it was really expensive to develop everything! Later, after taking photos with everything possible, such as video-cameras found here and there, I saved money and purchased my first DSLR when I was fifteen.

About faces, I tend to find important not to see models before the shooting. I like to keep this first impression raw, not knowing anything about their life. I like to imagine who they are more than knowing who they really are. I love spontaneity, and often I don’t know where the photo shoot is going to happen either. Models tell me about their favorite place they found some time ago and we go there together. I look around, set my camera depending on the conditions and the shooting starts.

My style used to be very natural and light, full of youth and freedom. I still like these photos, which represent me for most people. However, I feel more inspired to create stronger images now, with deeper meanings, often in relation to identity: human kind, human kind and its environment, sexuality, age, feminism…  For some strange reason, it often leads me to take darker photos often related to water.

 

Which style of photography do you like the most, and why?

 

Photos I like watching are rarely similar with the ones I create. It may be high end fashion photography, parents photographing their children, strong art projects…

 

What goal are you working towards within your photography and when will you know you have reached it?

 

Goals keeps changing, and I doubt I will ever feel like I have “reached it”. I guess that is in the nature of humans and that is what make us evolve and progress. I feel like I pass milestones, though. Younger, my biggest dream was to have a photograph featured on a book cover and it soon came to reality. It’s still one of my favorite job to do, but I now aspire to create strong and meaningful series which would be exhibited around the world and why not published into a book. I’m working hard for this, but I don’t want to rush. On a very different type of work, I also dream to shoot a campaign for a big brand and shoot editorials or covers for big magazines.

 

Looking at your own work, which piece is your favourite? Why? Please provide a link to the picture.

 

My favourite picture is this one: http://a1.4ormat.com/vfs/4588/thumbs/135705/0x550.jpg

I don’t really know why, it just is. It’s not my favourite series, though.

 

Does your work fit into any one or more distinct genres (nature, landscape, long-exposure, black-and-white, infra-red, urban, artistic, macro, vintage, vernacular, social, street)? If other, please specify.

 

I have a hard time classifying my own work, as most photos doesn’t really fit in any category. But I guess it would be more artistic/portraitures/fashion and with a touch of nature?

 

Are there any photography websites that you visit regularly?

 

Does facebook count? If yes, facebook.

 

What is the one most important lesson that you have learned since you started taking photographs?

 

It certainly is a lot harder to apply than to say it, and I myself sometimes suffer from this, but you should not compare yourself and your art to others. And work hard for your projects. When you think you are working hard, work harder.

 

And finally, what other interesting photographers would you like to see in this blog?

 

Without hesitation, Alain Laboile and Jacqueline Roberts.


Lukas Vasilikos Photography

Lukas Vasilikos Photography

http://www.lukasvasilikos.com/

http://www.street-photographers.com/author/lukas

http://lvasilikos.blogspot.com.es/

http://www.flickr.com/photos/vasilikos/

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What kind of equipment (camera body, lens, filters, flash, tripod, cleaning equipment other) do you use?

 

I  use canon 5d ii and an Olympus om-d5. I use 35mm on full frame body.

 

What is your favourite lens, and why?

 

My favorite lens is the 35mm fixed. I use it for long and it is so familiar to me that sometimes I know the frame that I will get even before I look through the viewfinder, I know what I will keep and what I will leave out of my photo. Having said that, I can decide if I will act to take the shot or not even when I just hold the camera in my hand in a relaxed manner.

 

When you travel, what is in your essential photographic kit bag?

 

My canon with 35mm lens and an Olympus om-d5 with a plastic holga lens 50mm.

 

What kind of software/tools do you use for post-processing, if any?

 

Lightroom 5 and then CS6  for final editing.

 

How long have you been taking photographs? How do you find inspiration? How do you take your pictures?

 

I discovered the world of photography through a course that I attended in 2006.My inspiration is from classic photographers and movies of Tarkovsky etc.

 

Which style of photography do you like the most, and why?

 

I like shooting in the streets, I like getting in touch with people unknown to me, I like the fact that I create a reality of “my own” through street photography. On the other hand, I am also attracted in shooting people familiar to me, trying to witness the emotional dialogue between the photographer and the subject. In this case I use a totally different technique than the one I use when I make street photography.

 

What goal are you working towards within your photography and when will you know you have reached it?

 

My primary goal is to enjoy the shooting process. Through photography I have been to places, I have met people, I have collected remarkable experiences. At a secondary stage there are many things I would like to achieve, however these things are part of the journey, they are not the journey itself. If we know where is our target point, then we also know when we have reached it.

 

Looking at your own work, which piece is your favourite? Why? Please provide a link to the picture.

 

I would say that the “uncanny” project is my favorite part. The reason is that this project is directly linked with my being, my beliefs and my experiences. It represents a constant dialogue between me and the world, or the way I fit in the world and it really makes me happy when I manage to make this very own dialogue a dialogue between me and the viewer.

 

Does your work fit into any one or more distinct genres (nature, landscape, long-exposure, black-and-white, infra-red, urban, artistic, macro, vintage, vernacular, social, street)? If other, please specify.

 

Street photography and something like personal documentary.

 

Are there any photography websites that you visit regularly?

 

I visit magnun photos and street-photographer.com a collective of some street photographer that I’m member.

 

What is the one most important lesson that you have learned since you started taking photographs?

 

I think that first of all learns to be patient. Apart from this, it’s to be alert all the time.

 

And finally, what other interesting photographers would you like to see in this blog?

 

http://www.flickr.com/photos/waxypoetic/

http://www.flickr.com/photos/p_wayser/


Julie De Waroquier Photography

Julie De Waroquier Photography

 http://www.juliedewaroquier.com/

 https://www.facebook.com/pages/Julie-de-Waroquier/122494317108

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What kind of equipment (camera body, lens, filters, flash, tripod, cleaning equipment other) do you use?

I own a Nikon d700, a 50 mm1.4 and a 18-55 that I rarely use. I also use a tripod, especially when I take self-portraits.
 

 

What do you like and dislike about your equipment, specially your camera, and how would you improve it?

 I don’t need a lot of equipment, I’m satisfied with what I have because I can achieve various effects with the wide aperture of the lens, and take high quality shots because of the great sensor of the d700. However I’d like to try new lenses, to get a new vision.
 
 

What is your favourite lens, and why?

The 50mm1.4, because it’s been my best friend for 5 years.

 

 


When you travel, what is in your essential photographic kit bag?

All the equipment detailed above, and basic props, such as a white dress or fake flowers, to be able to dress a model if have an unexpected idea.

 

 

What kind of software/tools do you use for post-processing, if any?

 I started with Gimp but I’ve been using Photoshop for several months now.

 

 

How long have you been taking photographs? How do you find inspiration? How do you take your pictures?

I started photography 5 years ago, though at first it could merely be called “photography”. Inspiration is quite unconscious for me, my ideas come spontaneously from everything that I like, memories, feelings,… it’s all mixed in my mind, and I try to express it through more or less conceptualized pictures.

I take pictures in 3 steps. First, I elaborate the idea, I draw a little sketch and try to organize every detail. Then, during the photoshoot, I try to reproduce my idea as closely as possible. Finally, I edit the picture (from basic editing to photomontage).
 

 

Which style of photography do you like the most, and why?

The style of photography which I like the most could be called “surreal”, because I love when photography, which is supposed to “catch the moment”, finally manages to create the moment. I like when a picture surprises me, moves me and makes me think at the same time.
 
 

What goal are you working towards within your photography and when will you know you have reached it?

I try to express universal wonders. In my photography, I want to show mental pictures that we could all have in mind. And I think it’s an endless task!
 
 
Looking at your own work, which piece is your favourite? Why? Please provide a link to the picture.

It changes all the time, because I put all my soul in each of my pictures. At the moment, it would be “Burning tears”: http://a3.4ormat.com/vfs/4498/thumbs/5263145/1600×1200.jpg

 
 


Does your work fit into any one or more distinct genres (nature, landscape, long-exposure, black-and-white, infra-red, urban, artistic, macro, vintage, vernacular, social, street)? If other, please specify.

I suppose it can fit in surreal or fine art photography.

 

 

Are there any photography websites that you visit regularly?

I follow a thousand of photographers’ works every day, I love to be amazed by other people’s pictures!

 

 


What is the one most important lesson that you have learned since you started taking photographs?

That doubting is part of the artistic process. You can’t get rid of it if you decide to follow an artistic path.
 
 

And finally, what other interesting photographers would you like to see in this blog?

I recommend Magdalena Berny’s works!