What would Rembrandt do? by Bill Frakes

Late last night I was roaming the back streets of ancient Zurich. 24 f 1.4 on a D300s, just appreciating a lovely early autumn time in one of Europe's treasures. Freed of technical limitations--that camera can literally see in the dark-- and it's so small and light, and with that lens attached I feel a connection to an earlier group of photojournalists working the scenes with fast 35 millimeter lenses attached to the smallest film cameras of the day. Romantic maybe, but those who have been on the ground doing this work can feel what I am feeling.

I was thinking about an earlier time in my life--my second trip to Europe--I was in my early 20's and had 18 hours in London enroute to a meeting with a baby orangutang in the Hague. (The trip with the small primate is a story for another day.)

My father was in the Army Air Corps during the second World War, stationed in Sherwood Forest, and always spoke so captivatingly about England.

I was determined to see all of old London town, and capture it on film. So I refused sleep. All night, strolling the city, making long, slow exposures on transparency film and the venerable, omnipresent TriX loaded in my Nikon F2, pentaprism--no meter, no motor drive--with a 24 2.8 attached. Having to make each exposure count--no blasting away hoping. It was about thinking first, knowing the limitations of the film, and then making it work as best I could.

I thought it might be my only chance to see one of the Capitals of Europe--as a young newspaper photographer in the South, visions of globetrotting were not yet on my horizon.

Half a lifetime later, 8 million miles flown, thousands of trips taking their toll on my back, so many visits out of the US to places relatively near and far that I lost count long ago, and I am still restless. Driven to photograph, to get what's in my mind and my heart captured on something--film, a sensor, paper--so that I can share it with the world.

I used to look at things twice, once especially for my Dad. Now I do the same, but now the second look is for Havana, my daughter who always reminds me to take a picture of what I see just for her.

While I was taking that slow walk in this wonderful Swiss city, soaking in everything around me I started thinking about the distant past. The great painters, DaVinci, Bruegel, Rembrandt, and I wondered what they would do with the tools we have now. What could they see, what would they record, where could they drive the art?

Or more recently, Gordon Parks. Imagine what he could have done with these tools. I know I would read his blog every day...........

I love the technology. And I am determined to use it to not do things more easily, but to do things better. To go further.

And those thoughts just pushed me to keep going, and looking. Enjoying.

Zurich by Morning by Bill Frakes

August brought home what I really love about working in the USA. The simple, sweet and almost naive. Nothing fancy, just good solid old photojournalism and storytelling.

A frog jumping competition in Valley City for Sports Illustrated. It was featured on SI.com and in the iPad edition of the magazine as a leading off and a multimedia.

A week teaching multimedia and hanging with friends like Seth Gitner on Minnesota's Border Lakes for Apple.

The NFL Hall of Fame game in Canton, OH for Sports Illustrated.

Shooting a music video of Bluegrass Legend Ricky Skaggs from the Grand Ole Opry with our friends from Nikon--Bill Pekala, Mark Suban and Bill Fortney

The Tom Watson Watermelon Festival in Thomson, GA which got wonderful display on the iPad edition of Sports Illustrated, and also on SI.com. Again an iPad leading off and a multimedia in the magazine.

Sports Illustrated sent us to Georgetown, KY to spend some time with Cincinatti Bengals defensive lineman Tank Johnson. Incredible access and cooperation. It was an epic shoot. You can see it on SI.com, and in the iPad edition of the magazine.

We closed out August with time in Los Angeles and Dallas teaching and making multimedias.

In Dallas, we shot a BMX race that SI.com and SIKids.com both posted.

After five weeks enjoying part of an American summer, we are back in Europe. Watching the sun roll up over the Alps, the river valleys thick with fog, knowing that very shortly I would be enjoying a delicious continental breakfast filled my entire being with goodness.

Laura and I are in Switzerland shooting and teaching this week.

Havana Daydreaming by Bill Frakes

I try to spend at least an hour day with books. If I am lucky that is an uninterrupted pleasure.

My daughter loves reading and art above all else.

As you can imagine, we really get along.

Today was delicious. Havana and I went through five photography books, front to back. Slowly. Savoring the art. Discussing the content. Appreciating the sacrifices.

Larry Towell--The World From My Front Porch Leonard Freed--Black in White America Henri Cartier Bresson--The Modern Century Keith Carter--Photographs--25 years W.Eugene Smith--Dream Street

It was a black and white kind of day.

American Photo Magazine Feature by SARA TANNER

The September/October issue of American Photo magazine highlights the best sports photographers and their amazing images. Among those featured is Bill's "slit" camera photo of Marion Jones winning the Olympic 100-meter final in Sydney, Australia. Be sure to check out the magazine to read Bill's comments about his groundbreaking image and see the other talented photographers' works.

Manfrotto School of Excellence Webinar by SARA TANNER

Register now for a free Webinar on Understanding Motion and Emotion taught by Bill. The Webinar is hosted by our friends at the Manfrotto School of Excellence on September 9 from 2-3 p.m. Be sure to check it out for tips on shooting action and get your photo questions answered by Bill. UPDATE Thanks to the 998 folks who signed up and attended the Webinar. I hope it was as much for fun for you as it was for me--Bill

Nikon Road Show in Los Angeles and Dallas August 23-29 by Bill Frakes

This week Laura and Bill are joining our good friends from Nikon Professional Services to teach multimedia seminars in Los Angeles and Dallas. Los Angeles:

Nikon - D-Movie and Multimedia Seminar (SHORT SEMINAR) Tuesday, August 24, 2010 from 6:00 PM - 10:00 PM (PT)

Nikon - Multimedia Workshop, Success on the Video Frontier (ALL DAY SEMINAR) Wednesday, August 25, 2010 from 8:00 AM - 8:00 PM (PT)

Dallas:

Nikon - D-Movie and Multimedia Seminar (SHORT SEMINAR) Friday, August 27, 2010 from 6:00 PM - 10:00 PM

Nikon - Multimedia Workshop, Success on the Video Frontier (ALL DAY SEMINAR) Saturday, August 28, 2010 from 8:00 AM - 8:00 PM.

Palio-di-Siena by Bill Frakes

Last week we were in Italy. We spent time in Florence, Bassano del Grappa and Siena. One of the world's greatest sporting events takes place in Siena - Il Palio. Il Palio takes place twice each year, once in July and once in August, and its origins date back to Medieval times.

The show is incredible. The post parade is two and one half hours of traditional medieval uniform and song. It is truly a site to behold in the 21st century.

It was my third trip to the Palio, so I had a pretty good idea going in about what I wanted to do. We were each able to secure a position -I took the head on position by the start and finish line, Laura was i a balcony position. But neither of our positions could capture the chaos that is the Palio. For that, we knew we were going to need some remote cameras.

With the help of some Italian speaking friends of ours, I was able to secure an overall of the Piazza del Campo on top of a bank, and two overheads of the winner's parade to the Basilica after the race.

The overhead camera of the Piazza del Campo had to be in six hours before the race. We weren't sure exactly what the light was going to be like for the 8pm race, so we set the aperture and shutter speed we wanted and put the camera on auto-ISO. The auto-ISO capabilities of the D3s are extremely helpful in situations such as these.

That camera took over 1,300 photos. It captured a very nice angle of the race incorporating the scene into the image. That is the picture Sports Illustrated chose to run in their Leading Off section of the magazine.

We also set up two cameras on Athenas, the new Gitzo remote control heads. They are really incredible to work with. We also set these cameras up 6 hours before the race and gave each 3 positions to shoot. Through the head's software and Nikon's Camera Control Pro, we could change the settings and the positions of the cameras remotely. This head expands the way we can make images. With planning and foresight we have the opporunity to make photographs from places we otherwise couldn't be.

When the race was done and we were able to start editing back at the hotel, we realized that we had more than a couple really nice images. We quickly sent a gallery to Sports Illustrated and put together a 3 and a half minute multi media for the web and another 2 minute piece for the iPad.

Schipol, old friend by Bill Frakes

Laura and I are in the KLM lounge at Schipol. Interesting that in a year that has seen me on more than 100 different flights, the three airports I have visited the most are:

1) Jacksonville International 2) Hartsfield in Atlanta, GA 3) Schipol in Amsterdam

We are headed to Sienna, for the Palio. An incredible, centuries old horse race. Our flight to Florence was cancelled so we are scrambling to make other arrangements.

And by that I mean I am working two cell phones with agents on both sides of the Atlantic, and pounding the keyboard on my Macbook pro.

Laura meanwhile is on her machine cutting a video interview I shot Tuesday in Washington, DC--she'll finish it and upload before we catch our next flight in four hours. The old slogan, there is a deadline every minute, sure fits how we work.

And I would modify it to be not only a deadline every minute, but a different medium to file for constantly. Working in print, web, emag and broadcast television and radio gives us so many different outlets for the stories we want to tell.