- Used Book in Good Condition.
Amazon Exclusive Content: The Photographer's Story
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Michael Freeman's Letter to Amazon readers:
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Photographer Michael Freeman Photographer Michael Freeman Everyone’s interested in stories. We read them
in books and magazines, watch them at the movies and on television, listen to them over a meal with friends, and tell
them ourselves. Deep down, it’s the prime entertainment, and always has been. Not surprising then, that so many
photographers want to know how to do it with their images. ing for the stand-alone great is one thing - and yes,
it’s probably the supreme challenge in photography - but storytelling with photographs involves much more. It can, and
should, include the great s, but it also needs to do things like carry a narrative, and above all keep the audience
watching the show or turning the pages.
How do you do it? That means how exactly, not how vaguely. It’s never enough to put down a selection of favourite
pictures and say, ‘they tell a story’. What story? Is it told well? Does it keep people looking, and following the
thread? This is what this book is about, and it’s a subject very close to my heart.
The reason why I’m close to it - and frankly why most of my professional photographer friends are close to it - is
that it’s the core skill of being an editorial photographer. All my working life I’ve been on assignment for one client
or another, and the assignments have nearly always been a story. The magazine calls and says ‘we’re running a story on
this - can you shoot it?’, or ‘here’s the writer’s text; can you make this work?’ And then it starts, the by-now very
familiar process of research, logistics, fixing, shooting, sorting out problems, worrying about how it’s going, and the
missing that I really need, and have we got there yet? During the shoot, it all feels badly unfinished, until
there’s a moment and suddenly you realise you really did just take the last , and it ties the story up one and for
all. This is not at all a good moment, even though you’ve been trying to reach it for a long time, because all of a
sudden it’s over. I love all of this, of course, and now I think it’s time to write about it and break the whole thing
down and show how, exactly, photo stories happen.
The Photographer's Story: Additional images
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The Photographer’s Story was a very different book to do because of the sheer number of images. Each of the stories
featured itself needed between a dozen and 20 images, and we also wanted to show how the images related to each other,
in layouts and in slideshows. Yet at the same time the length of the book is fixed, so the danger was running pictures
too small to be worth looking at. In the end we developed some design solutions that I’m pleased with, including ways of
showing the structure of a slideshow — in print. There’s so much that goes on in a slideshow that even the conventional
storyboarding methods used in film and television weren’t enough. Anyway, the net result on the picture selection was
that we had to drop a large number of images, which couldn’t be helped. So here are some of the images from the Elephant
story described on pages 62-63. These are not out-takes - they play a key role in telling the story of the Thai elephant
today.
The Elephant Story The Elephant Story Click here to see the Elephant Story in full
Michael Freeman's Top Ten
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I’ve been asked to list the top ten ‘must haves’ in professional editorial shooting. Everyone likes lists, but the
trouble is, the really important things are dead obvious, like the camera and stuff, but it’s not very interesting to
read about, is it? Here some more things:
Michael Freeman's Top Ten Click to read the complete list!