Prints That Win: WaterCourse

Steeno Jamie_WaterCourseYou may not think that an accounting, finance and human resources professional would be inclined to turn out gorgeous photography like the winning image, WaterCourse, pictured at left. But maybe you haven’t met photographer Jamie Steeno yet.

Green Bay, WI-based Steeno is the force behind this stunning image as well as other industry-recognized photography. In March, WaterCourse won the Sunset Print Award at the Wisconsin Professional Photographers Association‘s annual competition.

WaterCourse was taken as the sun was setting over the Columbia River Gorge in Oregon, Steeno explains. It was taken with multiple exposures, and then six photos were stitched together to create the final effect.

Steeno says she’s been taking photos ever since her mom put a camera in her hand when she was about 7 years old. She played around with the craft for years, and “truly paid attention to it about two years ago,” she says, when she got involved with WPPA.

She’s been fine-tuning her photography by learning Photoshop as well as proper composition, exposure and color balance. Not surprisingly, the ambitious professional was asked to take the helm as director of WPPA this year, and she’s pursuing her masters of photography degree.

Steeno juggles her burgeoning photography career with her day job as a business manager for a manufacturing company that reaches 120 different countries. She also produces photography for the company’s website and advertising needs, she says.

Having her work judged in print competitions is a vital part of the education process. “It’s super important,” she says. “Everyone who participates in PPA should be involved in print competitions.”

Prints that Win: Evening Mist

Evening Mist by Cindy Strupp

One of the great things about photography is the Eureka! moment when all the pieces fall into place for the perfect scene. Modern digital photography allows us to manipulate and create that moment in the processing stage, but when it happens naturally, there’s something special about it.

Such was the case with Evening Mist by Cindy Strupp, owner of Revelation Photography in Carlisle, Pa. Strupp’s capture off the road in between the wedding ceremony and reception won a Sunset Print Award at the Professional Photographers of Pennsylvania competition, and was the competition’s highest-scoring print.

“It’s one of those images that get traction because you look at it and fall in love with it,” says Robert A. Howard, the event chairman and a former Sunset Print Award winner himself. “The jury chairman challenged the initial score and asked everyone to get up and take a closer look at it to see how pin-sharp it really was.”

The final print is pretty much the scene as captured by Strupp with just a bit of touch-up work to remove some annoying power lines, the bane of photographers far and wide, and to add a bit of texture with an OnOne Software plug-in.

“It was a typical wedding where you have half an hour at most to do outside pictures on the way to the reception. We were driving from the church to the reception, it started pouring rain, and I thought, ‘Oh great,’ but it stopped by the time we got to the outdoor location. I took one look at the creek with the fog rolling off of it and it was perfect,” recalls Strupp. “The fog stuck around for maybe five or ten minutes, but when I got to the rest of the wedding party it was gone. Those moments are so fleeting; when you get them, you get them.”

Prints that Win: Reverie

Reverie by Kelly Willis, Modello Fine Portraits
Reverie by Kelly Willis, Modello Fine Portraits.

Kelly Willis, owner of Modello Fine Portraits in Deer Park, Texas, made a deal with one her best clients who wanted a boudoir photo session. She gave the client and any friends who also wanted a boudoir session a special rate if they agreed to pose for photos she could use at competition.

“She posed and let me take that picture for competition. It was shot in my studio with a canvas backdrop. After I shot it I edited in Photoshop and took it into Corel Painter and painted it. The flowers and the basket were not in the image; I composited them in. She had bent her leg where the bottom of the foot was showing and I didn’t like that,” explains Willis.

The image scored a perfect 100 at the recent Southwest PPA District competition and won a Sunset Print Award. Beyond the overall composition and Willis’ masterly painting, the judges were drawn to the rim lighting.

“I had a strip of light on the right-hand side, the direction she’s facing, up against the wall angled toward her to get that rim lighting. I had a fill light in the back of the room and a reflector on the other side to throw just a soft light on her back; I didn’t want a strong light,” explains Willis.

The print originally scored a 91, but one of the judges challenged it. He wanted to review the image because he thought it was flawless and used a perfect color palette. He was especially drawn to the use of rim lighting. Upon further review, the other judges concurred and brought the score up to 100.

“One of the judges pointed out that there are eyes in the background, and another saw a face and thought it had a haunting quality,” recalls Willis. “I didn’t do that on purpose, and didn’t notice it until the judge pointed it out. I worked on this image for how many hours and didn’t notice that?”

Willis says she used a filter for the water effect in the foreground and edited the image in Photoshop to get the exact colors she wanted to use prior to taking it into Painter.

“I edited it in Photoshop by adding and changing color, compositing in the basket and flowers, and then painted the entire image in Painter. The original background canvas had a design with a darker brown, but because of her hair and yellow scarf I wanted to bring out the yellow, for example” explains Willis.

The image was printed on a fine-art watercolor paper with a deckled edge by Jonathan Penney Inc., Chapel Hill, N.C.  Though created and printed specifically for competition, this image is representative of Willis’ commercial work as well. “I like to paint the final image and provide a one-of-a-kind oil painting portrait for my clients,” adds Willis.

To find out more about the Sunset Print Award, competitions where the award is being presented, a portfolio of past winners, and the Sunset inkjet media product line, go to www.sunsetprint.com.

Prints that Win: I Could Be Great!

Dog Photography by Kenny King

Kenny and Debra King help rescue dogs. That’s not all they do with their stellar portrait photography, but they’ve honed their process for animal photography to the big benefit of a local animal shelter, and particularly the animals themselves.

“We are big dog people and we rescue. One of our cocker spaniels passed away about five years ago. We started looking around at the rescue sites and noticing that all the photography was not just poorly taken, but it made all the animals look like you didn’t really want to take them home with you,” explains Kenny King, who with his wife, Debra, owns Dream Copy Photo in downtown Owensboro, Ky. “My wife and I decided that we would look for a local shelter and take more happy pictures, not behind a cage or a screen, or on a leash. Since that time, about four or five years ago, we’ve been photographing about 100-150 animals per year for them.”

Though it’s easy to say they have the process down, Kenny says, “It’s really like we’re doing it for the first time every time; it’s just unpredictable with an animal. They’re not able to adopt animals out until they’re fixed, and once they are they’re immediately able to put them on the website, so sometimes the day of their surgery is when they’ll bring them into the studio. So they’re a little groggy and easier to hold still for a few minutes, but on the bad side they don’t look as playful.”

The dog that garnered a Sunset Print Award, and a perfect 100 score to boot, at the recent PhotoPro Network competition in Owensboro was a little different. In this case, the dog was a little wild and King took about 50 shots until someone came into the room and dog stood at perfect attention for the perfect capture.

“I was on the print crew at the competition, so I was setting the print on the turntable spinning it around and I can hear the judges saying, ‘This has to be a show dog. The pose is just amazing; I don’t know how they got the dog to pose like that,'” Kenny recalls. “You get what you get most of the time, and that’s exactly what happened. I think the judges liked the lighting and how the rim light came down the side of the dog and the back of the legs to create separation from the backdrop. It’s just a two-light setup, but keeping it off the trunk is always a major deal because it has a shiny surface.”

Kenny adds that Debra does a lot of the color schemes for backgrounds and props, and this particular setting was the perfect complement to the dogs coloring. “The white in the dog is cream enough so it works well; it toned just perfect.”

Congratulations to the Kings, who are now automatically entered into the Sunset Print Award national competition. To find out more about a regional or state competition where a Sunset Print Award is being presented go to www.sunsetprint.com. Remember, only winners of each of those competitions are entered into the national competition. Good luck!

Get Recognized, Win Big Prizes in the Sunset Print Awards

Sunset Print Award
Photo by previous Sunset Print Award winner Ann Naugher, M. Photog., CPP, at the 2012 Southeast PPA District competition.

 

Sponsored by LexJet, the annual Sunset Print Awards are again being presented at select PPA events and other regional and state competitions. Sunset Print Award winners receive a crystal Sunset Print Award trophy, a lapel pin, a $250 gift certificate for Sunset inkjet media and entry in the year-end national Sunset Print Award competition.

Sunset Print Award winners at each competition receive an additional prize, an iPad Mini, if the winning image is printed on Sunset inkjet media, though entries do not need to be printed on Sunset media to qualify.

Each winner in the regional and local competitions is automatically entered to win the Grand Prize in the national Sunset Print Award competition. And, in order to be entered in the national competition you must enter and win a Sunset Print Award at one of the competitions. Click here for a list of upcoming competitions.

The Grand Prize winner receives airfare for two to Sarasota, Fla., with lodging at Lido Beach resort for three days and two nights, a $500 Visa gift card and national recognition. Second and third place winners receive a $500 and $300 Visa gift card respectively.

“The Sunset Print Award has become the coveted award in the photography market, and from my perspective as a board member of the Professional Photographers of Michigan we couldn’t be more appreciative of the award,” says Tina Timmons, owner of The Portrait Gallery in Vassar, Mich., a previous Sunset Award Winner who also prints for other photographers for competition. “And, when we print for competition we prefer Sunset inkjet media over any other paper.”

To find out more about the Sunset Print Award and upcoming competitions, as well as a gallery of previous winner and information on Sunset inkjet media, go to www.sunsetprint.com, or contact a LexJet customer specialist at 800-453-9538.

Prints that Win: Curves of Iris

Award Winning Print by The Portrait StudioMichael and Tina Timmons, owners of The Portrait Gallery, Vassar, Mich., have been featured here before for Prints that Win, but for their printing expertise. Sterling photographers in their own right, they also know how to print for competition, and print winners.

This time around, Tina is being honored for her capture of an Iris from her garden called Curves of Iris. Michael had quadruple bypass surgery (!) last year following a heart attack. We’re pleased to report that he’s recovering nicely, and the Timmons are back to their frenetic pace.

“Needless to say, we were home a lot more than we normally are, so I had more chances to enjoy my flowers. This year I didn’t get to see them at all,” says Tina. “I shot every day through the Iris season, and picked my favorite to enter in competition.”

The result was this beautiful rendition, which won a LexJet Sunset Award at the Professional Photographers of Michigan print competition. Tina says that her typical method for capturing flowers is to use a tripod and a macro lens, followed by some enhancement with Nik filters and some additional cleanup in Photoshop.

“Sometimes we’ll add a reflector fill outdoors, or we’ll do subtractive lighting if the flower is in open sun. We’ll use those tactics to control what lighting is available in nature,” Tina explains. “The Iris has a poetic motion about it with the leaves and the way everything blends together. When I work with any flower I’m very cautious about what’s in the background so there’s nothing distracting, including other flowers.”

The standard print medium for competition and the couple’s interior décor work is LexJet Sunset Photo eSatin, printed on an Epson Stylus Pro 9880 wide-format inkjet printer, which is then laminated. Though Curves of Iris was printed in the usual way, it was printed for this competition on a Hahnemuhle watercolor paper to provide a more fine-art look to the image.