Mark_McCall
TPF Noob!
- Joined
- Nov 7, 2011
- Messages
- 59
- Reaction score
- 10
- Location
- Lubbock, Texas
- Can others edit my Photos
- Photos OK to edit
Shot entirely in studio.

LOL.There must be a lot of rock, trees & fire in your studio. :er:
I like it...I think this is probably one of my more favorite of your images. About the only one that I might enjoy more is the soldier/coffin shot, but it's one I have mixed feelings about because of the emotion that comes with it and the fact that I know it's fake.
Basically, I think you are great at what you do... I'm just not sure I care for it on a personal level.
For instance, you won a wedding award on your guy in a tux with the church behind him. The lighting was superb. The shot was really stellar, except it was a model in a tux in front of a digital background at a studio...Honestly, it bugs me a bit that you entered it into a wedding competition and won.
This shot is similar...everything about the shot is fake. Guys dressed up in costumes in front of a digital background with a good photographer with an extensive lighting set up. I can appreciate the technical merit of it, but any feelings that are brought up by the image are ruined because I know it's not real.
Honestly, I'm just not really a fan of this type of work, but then again, you know that from the 'other' forum.
No offense taken.I like it...I think this is probably one of my more favorite of your images. About the only one that I might enjoy more is the soldier/coffin shot, but it's one I have mixed feelings about because of the emotion that comes with it and the fact that I know it's fake.
Basically, I think you are great at what you do... I'm just not sure I care for it on a personal level.
For instance, you won a wedding award on your guy in a tux with the church behind him. The lighting was superb. The shot was really stellar, except it was a model in a tux in front of a digital background at a studio...Honestly, it bugs me a bit that you entered it into a wedding competition and won.
This shot is similar...everything about the shot is fake. Guys dressed up in costumes in front of a digital background with a good photographer with an extensive lighting set up. I can appreciate the technical merit of it, but any feelings that are brought up by the image are ruined because I know it's not real.
Honestly, I'm just not really a fan of this type of work, but then again, you know that from the 'other' forum.
No offense taken.
As for any awards or accolades I've received, all I can say is that the means of which an image comes about matters none.
What matters is the end result.
You can't spray perfume on crap and expect gold.
It takes forethought, time, planning, execution, design and presentation to create art.
If you feel images that only images that are politically correct should be considered for any type of award, I've done that too. But that's not what satisfies me artistically.
I create these images to satisfy the inherent need I have to make real the image I see in my head.
The image you mention, "Never say Never" took almost a year to create.
I had the image in my head for several years before that.
I approached a complete stranger I met at a dept. store and asked to photograph him. He was not a professional model, but rather, a character study I found in public quite by accident. He was the perfect face I saw in the image in my mind's eye.
I shared my idea with him. We was open to the idea and agreed to be a part of the project.
I had the perfect setting in mind and put it all together using a very precise lighting pattern, with just enough background blur and kicker lights to get the image as perfect as it can be. I didn't just "spray perfume on it".
Fuji has awarded it their Masterpiece Award, but I didn't create it for any other reason but to satisfy me artistically.
Someday, when that artist light goes off in your head, you'll see what I'm talking about.
To be perfectly clear, the work was 100% Mark's. I am sorry if I said anything earlier to imply that he was using other people's work for his composites. That was NOT the intention. For the 'Never say Never' shot, I believe he took that shot of the Church some years back.First thought when I saw this was 'wow! - talk about being in the right place at the right time...!' which I suppose is all that counts for you (not having a go, honest). I can totally appreciate the concept, the composition, the lighting of the subject - I get all of that...
but i'm kinda with Kerbs here, it feels like - and this may well not be the right choice of words, but it's the best I can come up with - a bit of a cheat, like my senses have just been pick-pocketed...
With 'never say never' - again, excellently executed - if you were upfront with the competition organisers then no probs, however, is the background someone else's picture? did you personally draw / paint it / create it digitally if it's not a photo? Basically, for me, even if it's your concept, if someone else produced part of the image then it's not 100% your work, and getting an award for that is something that I do have a bit of an issue with, sorry.
Apologies George. You may be missing the point.All that aside, that still doesn't make this a firefighting image(or Fully Involved) It makes it guys in costume standing in front of a digital background. A guy in a tux in front of a digital backdrop at a studio does not make it a wedding image...or the people dressed up as soldiers in front of an empty coffin in a studio...well, you get the picture.
It is a single capture. Nothing is edited in or out.It seems like it's basically a montage of multiple images.
The image of the church behind Mr. Jones was captured by me personally. It's a very historic church, and a bit of a tourist attraction. I photographed over two dozen historic churches in four countries so I do not remember exactly where it was. Somewhere in central Europe.With 'never say never' - again, excellently executed - if you were upfront with the competition organisers then no probs, however, is the background someone else's picture? did you personally draw / paint it / create it digitally if it's not a photo? Basically, for me, even if it's your concept, if someone else produced part of the image then it's not 100% your work, and getting an award for that is something that I do have a bit of an issue with, sorry.