Guest Blog: Behind the Scenes at the Derby by SARA TANNER

My name is Curt Bianchi, and I'm guest blogging for Straw Hat Visuals today.  In my real life, I'm a software engineer at Apple, but once a year I play sports photographer as part of Bill's Kentucky Derby crew.  This is my sixth Derby with Bill, and I thought I'd share some behind the scenes insights into the making of Kentucky Derby photographs.

While the Derby is known as "the fastest two-minutes in sports," for Bill it lasts most of a week.  He typically arrives at Churchill Downs on the Tuesday before Derby Day.  This is by choice.  One thing you don't see too much in the magazine is how much Bill loves to photograph the entire Derby experience, from the barns and exercise riders to the fans and their hats.  The Derby is perhaps without peer among American sporting events in terms photographic opportunities, but you rarely, if ever, see Bill's non-race work featured in print.  The advent of DSLR video and post-production software like Apple's Final Cut Pro changed the game, providing Bill and Laura with the tools to create multimedia pieces for SI's Web sites.  These pieces are an ideal outlet for incorporating all of the creative elements that make the Derby such a compelling event for Bill and Laura to cover.

Racing at Churchill Downs is an all-day event, with 11 or 12 races stretching from late morning to dinnertime.  That means exercising the horses on the track takes place early, starting before dawn.  Bill's usual routine is to be out of the hotel everyday between 4:30 and 5 a.m. in order to shoot the activity on the "backside," the area where the barns are located.  Bill has shot the backside for something like 28 years, and he never gets tired of it. There is a tremendous amount of activity here, with more than 40 barns packed into a fairly tight space.  It also feels intimate.  Horses, exercise riders, hot walkers and trainers are everywhere, and the sunrise brings ever-changing light. As Bill said in an earlier blog post, it's "peaceful and beautiful; tranquil, but exciting."  It's a great place to be a photographer.  Bill loves to wander the backside with a 400mm lens, and he's a master a picking out details with it.

Serious preparations for the Derby itself begin on Friday of race week with the marking of spots.  After the morning training session is done, all of the photographers from the various press agencies get together on the "frontside," where the grandstands are located.  Spots are marked along the finish line, on both the inside and outside rails.  There is a pecking order for this.  The Churchill Downs official track photographer gets first choice, followed by the major media outlets such as SI, Associated Press and Getty Images, the great local papers --The Louisville Courier Journal and the Lexington Herald Leader.   The spots are small, usually 18 inches to 3 feet wide.

Once the spots are determined, cameras can be installed.

This year, SI covered the race with three photographers: Bill, Heinz Kluetmeier, and Gary Bogdon.  Bill always covers the first turn and the finish line.  This is a lot of territory, encompassing a bunch of angles, so Bill installs upwards of 30 cameras to capture it all.  Obviously, he can't be in all places at the same time, so most of the cameras are pre-composed and focused by Bill and fired by assistants.  A few others are handheld by other assistants.

Bill places a dozen cameras under the inside rail, just after the finish line.  These cameras -- equipped with lenses ranging from 14mm to 400mm lenses -- give the perspective of horses running nearly on top of you with the grandstands in the background.  Other cameras are clamped to stands 1/8 of a mile ahead of the finish line, providing a higher perspective of the race.  These have wide angle lenses and are mostly composed to directly face the grandstands.  All of the cameras are wired so that they can be fired remotely, as the photographers here have to stand some distance away from the rail in order to avoid creating distractions for the horses.  Another set of cameras is placed on the roof of the grandstands.  These give you the sweeping shots of the fans and the track.  With the Derby run late in the day, the lighting is usually gorgeous for these shots.  After Bill composes and pre-focuses everything, the cameras are then "bagged" with plastic bags in case it rains before Derby time and to keep the cameras protected from dirt and moisture during the day while the racing card takes place and the grounds crew prepares the surface.

The last set of remotes are installed on the outside rail of turn one.  Which brings me to my job at the Derby this year…  In the past, I've handled what I would consider non-essential shots; that is, shots that wouldn't seriously detract from the overall shoot if they failed.  One of my favorite Derby memories is from two years ago.  It was raining on race day and in the afternoon Bill got the idea to install a camera under the rail to shoot the horses' hooves close up, splashing in the mud for a multimedia piece.  I took the equipment out to the location where Bill planned to meet me to set it up.  But he got delayed and sent me the text, "Can't get there.  Do what you can.  Good luck."  This was my first time using a pocket wizard -- something you wouldn't ordinarily use in this environment -- but with Andy Hancock's help, we got it all working.

This year, Bill upped the ante, asking me to man turn one.  Turn one is the location for one of the most iconic shots of the Derby -- the pack of horses rounding the turn with the Churchill Downs twin spires in the background.  Bill sets up turn one with three pre-focused, pre-composed cameras: A mid-range lens to capture the spires, and a 300mm and 400mm to come in tight on the horses rounding the turn.  These are all wired together so that they can be fired with a single remote trigger.  An assistant --my wife, in this case -- only has to push the button at the right time.  Sounds easy, right?  But there's also the problem of exposure, which cannot be pre-determined because of the changing light conditions.  For instance, last year it rained all day, right up until a minute before the horses left the starting gate, when the sun came out.  It made for incredible images with mud flying everywhere, but it was a scramble trying to get exposures changed.  Not only that, we shoot the horses "twice around," meaning the light could be different from one time to the next.  For the inside rail shots, last minute changes aren't possible because the assistants have to be off the rail around race time, so you do the best you can.

In addition to the pre-composed cameras in turn one, I was assigned to shoot a handheld 600mm.  Now, let me just say right here that I've never shot a 600mm lens, so the prospect of getting tightly composed and properly focused shots of horses running past me at 35 miles per hour or so seemed a bit daunting.  But like I said earlier, there are races all day long, so I practiced.

In between all of the set up and preparations, Bill also finds time to shoot the fans and what he calls "feature work."  Not much of it will find its way into the magazine, but this kind of shooting is one of the reasons Bill keeps coming back.  One of the best places to shoot fans is from the paddock where the horses are saddled and the jockeys are mounted before each race.  It is packed with spectators, and Bill can use his 400mm for tight crops and shallow depth of field.  He also finds time to wander the infield, which is a completely different world from the grandstands.  All in all, Bill's days are packed and sleep is in short supply.  The same goes for Laura, who in addition to capturing audio and video at Churchill, does most of the post-production work and all of the video editing.

Finally, race time approaches.  For me, the Derby is both exhilarating and nerve-racking.  My wife and I got to turn one about an hour before the race in order to be there before the horses are lead from the barns to the frontside and into the paddock through a tunnel in the stands. Bill made one last check and set exposures, but there's still plenty of time for the light to change, and of course, it does.  My main job is to stay on top of the exposures of the pre-composed cameras and shoot the 600mm handheld.  I was so pre-occupied with the light that I completely missed the horses coming out of the paddock and parading in front of the stands before being lead to the starting gate at the far end of the track.

Once the horses are off, they are on top of you quickly and you've got about a five second window in which to shoot in turn one.  The long lenses are shot wide open, so depth of field is extremely limited.  I absolutely could not have shot that 600mm on manual focus while tracking the horses.  Today's auto focusing cameras and lenses are a boon to photographers, dramatically increasing the success rate of mere mortals such as myself.  And even then, it's not that easy.  Back in the day when Bill came up, everything was manual focus, and the ability to focus long lenses on rapidly moving subjects separated the men from the boys. It's one of the essential qualities that have made top notch sports photographers such as Bill and Heinz Kluetmeier so successful.  For the Derby, Bill shoots a 600mm handheld from the outside rail about 70 yards past the finish line -- he still shoot manual focus so that he can compose the way he wants quickly.  He shoots the horses all the way down the track coming toward him, but most often the money shot is a tight one of the winning horse passing the finish line and the jockey celebrating.  That's the shot that made the cover when Calvin Borel won aboard 50-1 longshot Mine That Bird in 2009.

After the race, it's a scramble to get cards back to the media room so that they can be copied onto computers and uploaded to the magazine's offices.  The Nikon cameras Bill uses have two card slots which can be configured so that each shot is written to both cards.  This enables Bill and Laura to give one set of cards to SI's Photo Operations Manager Erick Rasco while keeping another set of cards for their use in prepping another multiple piece.  Erick is so calm, friendly and fast when he is on location with the photographers it makes an incredible difference.

We also have to clean and pack all of the equipment. This may seem like an afterthought, but cleaning and packing is extremely important and is not taken lightly.

You are talking about a massive amount of fragile and expensive gear.

We typically use wet wipes to clean off the equipment.  Fortunately there was no rain on race day so the cleaning part was easy this time -- we finished it in about three hours.

When all is said and done, we got out of the Downs at around 10 p.m., time enough to get back to the hotel and order pizzas for everyone and a night of post-production editing.

My thanks to Bill and Laura for another great Derby.  I had a great time, and so did the backup (or is it primary?) brain.

The multimedia "Beating the Odds: The 138th Kentucky Derby" is now on SI.com

Days Before the Derby by Bill Frakes

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Tomorrow is the big day.  The 138th running of the Kentucky Derby. Laura and I arrived in Kentucky on Tuesday to get settled in, and to start work on several multimedia pieces.

We’ve been at the track every morning by 5 a.m.  It’s my favorite part of this event.

Dawn on the backside of Churchill Downs allows me to make beautiful pictures at a slower pace.  It’s peaceful and beautiful.  Tranquil, but exciting.

But I don’t come to the Derby just for the horses.  I come for the people.

I’ve been covering this event for more than two decades, and through the years I have made some of my closest friends here.  People like Bill Luster, Dan Dry, Matt Goins and Skip Dickstein, just to name a few, are the main reason I wouldn’t miss the Kentucky Derby.

The Run for the Roses also gives a chance to catch up with colleagues, like SI senior staff writer Tim Layden.  He is a wonderful writer and great friend.  Working with him is always a pleasure.

He was the subject of our first multimedia piece, a multi-camera stand-up where he gives viewers his picks for this year’s race.

Our second multimedia is a backstage look into the making of champion race horses and the beauty of the Derby.

Stay tuned for more....

Backstage at Nikon Solutions in Germany by Bill Frakes

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What a wonderful weekend in Germany. Old friends, new friends, lots of toys, terrific food and chance to learn from some impressive teachers.

Yasuo Baba from Nikon Professional Services Germany invited Laura and I to come to Dusseldorf to spend five days doing workshops and giving talks at Nikon Solutions in Essen.

I was excited about having a chance to work with some great folks, and spend time interacting with the 11,000 photographers who would be attending the expo.  Plus with plenty of fine German beer for Laura, I knew it could only be a happy environment.

Before anything else I need to talk about Yasuo for a moment.  This was a mammoth undertaking. I think it has to be the largest event of it's kind in the world.  With his team at Nikon Germany, he put together not only an impressive group of speakers, but also filled a giant hall with a wide range of corporate friends and provided a brilliant environment for everyone to learn and share.     He had time and kind words for everyone.  Gracious and generous while under so much pressure and stress is a lesson we can all learn from.

The last month I've had a chance to work often with my long time friend Joe McNally.  Every time I hear him present it's an education.  He is not only incredibly knowledgeable about photography, he is just flat out fun to listen to.

Laura and I were backstage with Anne Cahill right before Joe's first presentation on Saturday -- he was lighting an elephant and a lingerie model with small flash -- and there was a lighting diagram/sketch Joe had drawn on a piece of cardboard lying on one of the shipping cases.   Some of the group--and I am not naming names here,  but it wasn't me, were discussing selling it on Ebay.

I got the chance to make a new friend this weekend who spends significant time with some of my old friends.  Florian Schulz is a contributor to  National Geographic with a world of talent.  Seeing his work on display and meeting his young family was a joy.   I hope to see more of him down the road soon.

The guys from Profoto Germany knocked themselves out to help us with various lighting solutions.  They  introduced us to their ProDaylight system for our shoot with the body builder and gymnasts.  These are an extremely powerful continuous light source -- they will be very helpful particularly for video solutions.  These lights allowed us to show the audience exactly what the light would look like, why we placed the lights where we did and -- more important -- allowed the photographers in the audience to join and shoot with me.   At one point I was struggling to make a point so I invited some of the crowd to come and sit on the floor with me to see things from my, literal, point of view.  About 150 flooded out of the seats and surrounded me.  This was really fun for all of us.

Photo by Carsten Bockermann

Nikon Solutions was a 2 day festival.  Each of the days, we did three presentations: one on DSLR video, one on a Love of Photography and a live shooting demonstration with multi remote cameras.

I always learn more than I can teach at this type of conference.  I have shot about 150,000 frames now with the Nikon D4 but every day I get new information that helps me make the images I want to make.  Each of the other presenters opened my eyes to useful solutions.

It's time to take the inspiration and information and get back to work.

Tomorrow first thing, we are loading up 20 cases of gear and heading to see another group of old friends at my favorite yearly event, the Kentucky Derby.  The only place to be the first weekend of May, every year.

Nikon Solutions Expo by Bill Frakes

This week, Laura and I are traveling to Germany for Nikon Deutschland's Nikon Solutions Expo. The Expo, April 27-28, brings together professional photographers, hobby photographers, and photo enthusiasts to showcase some of the latest technology and hold educational workshops and seminars.
Nearly all of my ancestors came to the USA from Germany, and it's always a treat to be back "home." My great great great great grandfather Wilhem came to the States on a boat by himself when he was five years old, with a small suitcase and a note pinned to his chest.  His parents sent him during the European potato famine as they could not take care of him.  This is a guy I would like to have met.  Talk about tough.

We're honored to be a part of such an inspiring group of presenters including Joe McNally, Serge Romanov, Jens Brüggemann, Mayk Azzato, Robin Preston, Florian Schulz, Ralph Man, Sebastian Wiegärtner, and Maike Jarsetz.

We will be presenting three times a day at 10:45, 12:45 and 17:15 on D-SLR Video, Sports Photography and the Simple Love of Photography -- if I am not on the stage you'll be able to find me trying to absorb some of the wealth of information being offered.
Wir würden uns freuen Sie dort zu sehen.

Manfrotto's SYMPLA Announcement and More from NAB by Bill Frakes

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NAB is great fun. For gear heads, it just doesn't get any better than this. Every corner you turn there is something exciting and intriguing to play with. Over the past two years, I’ve had the opportunity to help design and test Manfrotto’s new supports range, the SYMPLA.

The SYMPLA is the perfect match for the flexibility provided by HDSLR filmmaking. It provides multiple supports for your camera and lens, making it well-balanced and stable. It is easy to adjust, easy to pack, and easy to customize.

Comfortable and convertible, the SYMPLA expands creative potential by allowing you to shoot where you want.

In our exclusive behind the scenes video, you can watch many of the different ways we utilized the SYMPLA.

I’m honored to get to introduce the SYMPLA at NAB today, April 17 at 11:30. I’ll be discussing the design and the SYMPLA’s special features.

Yesterday was even better. I got to just roam the floor and visit my friends.

Before I entered the hall, I bumped into Tim David from Apple, who really need to watch where he is going, but that turned into the best surprise of the day. While I was talking to Tim, Garrett Rice - also from Apple came by and made me laugh for 30 minutes. A very nice way to start the day.

Inside, my first stop was Eileen Healey at Chimera -- if there is a nicer person alive I don't know who it is.

Next Dennis Wood at Cinevate. Their new jib is really cool, and I haven't told Laura yet, but we will have one soon. If Dennis only had a little more energy...

Then to Chris Kearns from Small HD Monitors. I love their products. The new D7 monitor is sweet. Incredibly lightweight. It's going to be a huge help with handheld cameras.

I went by Nikon's booth, but the crowd was too big, and so I'll head back today and visit with all of them. There is never enough time with those guys. Kris Bosworth, Scott Diussa, Mark Kettenhoffen, Sara Moosbrugger, Mark Suban, and if I have enough time I'll talk to Mr. Silverman, but that usually requires a few hours and an instruction manual.

A huge bonus for me is the Manfrotto booth where Stacy Pearsall -- check out her new book -- and Andy Dunaway are doing demos and helping explain things. Really fine folks that I am lucky to have as close friends.

Capturing Your Vision Workshop by SARA TANNER

The countdown is on for Bill’s upcoming workshop Emotional Motion: Capturing Your Vision sponsored by Adorama and Nikon. This special event is Thursday, April 19 from 5:30 – 8 p.m. (EST) at the Adorama Building in New York. Deadline to sign up is Wednesday, April 18.

Registration is $25 and each attendee will receive a $25.00 coupon at the event in exchange for a copy of their registration receipt.

The coupon will be valid for 30 days towards the purchase of any merchandise when presented at either Adorama’s retail store at 42 West 18th Street, New York, or for an online purchase at www.adorama.com

Lights, Camera, Action by Bill Frakes

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Karma B Flame is a rap and hip hop artist based in our home town of Jacksonville, FL.

Her music producer, Willetta Smith, mixed the music for our piece Istanbul and its many faces. Willetta is known in close circles as Mamado, as in "Mama-do-it-all," and she does.  She's a very skilled music producer, painter, tattoo artist and video editor, among other things.
They are an incredibly talented and overlooked duo who wrote this song specifically for a music video to be made with the Nikon D4.
They like the song so much that they plan on including it for Karma's upcoming album. More on that when they publish.
Our concept for the video was simple -- she is a beautiful woman with big dreams and immense talent.  We wanted to harness her skills as a dancer and create a video where she is twirling in and out of a daydream, using the camera in various lighting situations to do that.
For the most part, we lit her with a 2k light diffused with a Chimera Medium Quartz bank, but we also did a couple sequences with Lite Panels where power and space weren't available.
We used an EZ-FX jib and Cinevate Atlas 200 linear tracking system to employ smooth motion without the rigging required for a larger production.

We wanted to use the D4 in a different way than we did in Istanbul.  That film is a multimedia project shot as a documentary.  This production is a video that was shot in a completely controlled environment.

We wanted to show the range of DSLR video and what this technology is allowing us to do.

We hope you like it.

Lights, Camera, Action from Straw Hat Visuals on Vimeo.

From the Nikon Nordic Tour... by Bill Frakes

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Five cities.  Five countries. Five days. Crisscrossed Scandinavia this week talking photography to groups in Estonia, Finland, Norway, Denmark and Sweden as part of the Nikon Nordic Tour.

It was an ambitious schedule, but the Nikon Nordic team was on top of everything.

Joe McNally‘s flight was late.  He flew from DC to NYC to Prague and into Tallinn — overnight.  He landed, sans luggage, and came immediately to the Museum of Art and gave a perfect speech to a  full house.  He never missed a beat — total respect.

Joe over Finland.

It’s a real pleasure working with Joe.  We’ve been friends for a long time . Not only is he a terrific colleague, wonderful photographer, and excellent teacher, but even better, he is flat out fun to be around.

Joe in Oslo.

We had tremendous audiences at every stop.

I can be pretty talkative. It may come from growing up in a small Nebraska town, where I was happy to find anyone to talk to... So many of our stops were exceptional. In Tallinn, I was onstage an extra hour.

Peter Brodin kept giving me the “stretch” sign, which of course I loved.  The audience was engaged and challenging me, which just solidifies how much I love teaching — thanks Mom.

Our venue in Copenhagen, the Royal Library.

Responsive, invigorated crowds were capped by a standing room only crowd in Stockholm at Fotografiska — one of my favorite galleries in the world.

I'm so thankful to everyone who came out. This tour was a great chance for me to learn from some very talented folks.

Me, Peter Brodin, and Joe McNally.

I rolled onto the plane this morning more in love with photography than ever.

Time to make some images.