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Portfolio Reviews

February 8, 2011 in News, Personal, Photo Review, Photography, Review

In the midst of some difficult times professionally – being laid off and thrust out into the job market again – I was contacted by a number of my faithful readers with ideas and opportunities to take on some small projects here and there to help out as things were tight.

Of particular note, I’d like to thank Tim Collins of Second Shootr who has contracted me to write a series of guest articles for the blog over there. Also, Friend-of-the-Blog Chris Stern asked me to design the logo for his new blog that will be launched in the coming weeks. I’d also like to highlight another contributor to this blog, Steve Kalman, who approached me about providing him with a professional portfolio review so he could have an objective critique of his work and would be able to get a sense of what works and what might need some improvement. (You can read his testimonial guest post below this one.)

Thank you Tim, Chris, and Steve for your support during these last few weeks. It has meant so much!

I would like to go back to Steve’s portfolio review, actually. His feedback about my review gave me a great deal of encouragement to continue to offer such services to the community at-large. To that end, I’d like to take this opportunity to announce that I am now accepting requests for portfolio reviews to help my fellow photographers learn and grow in their craft.

My rate is $99 for up to 10 photos and $15/photo for each additional image. It will include a report with an overall assessment of your work along with an individual review of each photo. Rest assured, I am gentle in my approach, but honest. I try to be as constructive and encouraging as possible without being negative.

If you would like more information or to get started with your review, please contact me at reviews@jasondmoore.com today!

Taking the Next Step

January 31, 2011 in Photo Review, Photography, Review

The following is a guest post from Friend-of-the-Blog Steve Kalman.

How can I make my photos better? That’s a question that every photographer asks, starting with the first set of returned prints as a beginner and continuing through to yesterday’s shoot.

I’ve:

  • Bought gear
  • Taken workshops
  • Bought (and later upgraded) Photoshop
  • Subscribed to Lynda and Kelbytraining
  • Bought more gear
  • Bought (and upgraded) Lightroom
  • Bought and read books
  • Upgraded gear
  • Bought Photomatix (and other HDR software)
  • Rented gear
  • Practiced dozens of tutorials
  • Oh, and bought more gear (and bags)

Does this sound familiar?  Over the years I’ve managed to get a lot of photos I like, enough that I can sort out my favorites and from there my best. I’d show my galleries to friends, family, and co-workers and get lots of praise, which is nice, of course, but not helpful. Those nice people just don’t know enough about light and how the eye travels a photo and composition and technique and so on to offer advice or suggestions for improvement.

It was time to ask a professional.

I’ve been following Jason’s blog for a while now, and even had the honor of writing a guest post about a year ago. I participated in his points-of-view project a few times and learned quite a bit about different ways to interpret the same vision. From time to time I’ve asked him for a bit of PS help that he’s graciously given (and usually turned into a blog post). Earlier this month, I hired Jason to do a portfolio review for me. I asked him to look at my website, which has a top10 folder (with 12 shots).  I asked him to evaluate them as a set and individually, telling me what I did well and where I could improve.

We had an interesting discussion about price, since this was the first time Jason was approached about this.   Here’s an excerpt from our email exchange on that topic:

From Jason: I’ve looked around at a few other sites that offer similar services that charge quite a bit – upwards of $300 for a dozen or so images. Granted, a thoughtful review takes time (particularly for a series of photos) and the reviewer’s opinion is worth something, too, but it doesn’t make sense to charge an arm and a leg either.

All of those considerations in mind, I would think a fair rate would be $99 for the first 10 photos in the portfolio and $15 for each additional photo. Does that seem reasonable to you?

Reply from me: It isn’t only the money/price. It is also what’s offered for the service.

If you’re going to look at each photo and offer a few words (good, tighten crop here, etc) then it is probably not worth the money.

If you’re going to make an assessment of the group as a whole, then look at individual photos and suggest changes (filters, crop, color correct, levels, guiding the viewer’s eye and other even more sophisticated changes) then the price is fair.

Jason gave me a 5 page report with all the detail I hoped for. I read it several times looking for individual photo comments and general themes. I saw some patterns. I realized that a few of my favorites were really better than the ones I put in the “top10” gallery. I re-edited a few based on his comments. Then I went out and tried to apply the lessons.  Did I get my money’s worth? You be the judge. I’ve included links to the gallery and the report, inserted a before and after of the San Juan Island (Wa.) Lighthouse and wrapped up with a picture that I intentionally took and edited with his comments in mind. The changes are subtle, but the picture definitely flows better with the distractions removed and the emphasis added. If bullet point list at the top of this post feels familiar to you, then I’d recommend you contact Jason and get your own portfolio review.

The gallery: http://www.stevekalman.com/top10/

The report (PDF).

Before and after:

The new picture:

“Waiting for Spring” - Photo by Steve Kalman - Copyright 2011

Friday Photo News & Updates

April 9, 2010 in Guest Blogger, Inspiration, News, Personal, Photography, Photoshop

I’d like to start off by thanking everyone who responded to Wednesday’s post about continuing to build our Photoshop & Photography Community. I truly appreciate you taking the time to share a little bit of your stories with everyone. If you haven’t shared yet, please do! I’d love to hear from as many of you as possible!

There is a lot going on over the next couple of weeks through the beginning of May – personally, here on the blog, and across the digital imaging industry.

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Points of View Photo Project #30

March 25, 2010 in Inspiration, Photography, Photoshop, Workflow

Points of View Photo Project #29 - Source Image 2Welcome to our 30th week of the Points of View Photo Project!

I know we’re a day early this time around. I have a product review coming up tomorrow in conjunction with a special discount from our friends over at Mpix that you won’t want to miss!

This week’s source images come from regular contributor, Hendrik Demey of Antwerp, Belgium. Check out our entries after the jump, and if you’d like to share one of your photos as our source image in a coming week, please send it to pov@jasondmoore.com and you could see it featured here very soon!

In the meantime, here are this week’s Points of View:

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Points of View Photo Project: #23

January 29, 2010 in Inspiration, Photography, Photoshop

Points of View Photo ProjectWelcome to our 23rd edition of the Points of View Photo Project here at Jason D. Moore Photography!

We saw a really good showing this week with 5 participants in the project! Thank you all so much! I think we have a great mixture of interpretations this time around that I’m sure you will enjoy. I particularly appreciate it when someone really makes it their own and does something special with it – be it a nice processing treatment or an outside-the-box edit job.

Before we get too much farther I’d like to, once again, extend an invitation to you to share your out-of-the-camera original images to serve as our starting point in an upcoming week. Read on down to the bottom of the post for more info and where to send it.

And now, on to the images!

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Points of View Photo Project #22

January 22, 2010 in Inspiration, Lightroom, Photography, Photoshop

Welcome to the 22nd edition of the Points of View Photo Project! This week we have been lucky enough to have a chance to work with not one, but three source images from reader and blog contributor Steve Kalman who challenged us to produce an HDR image, if we were so bold to try it.

Read on to see what some of our regulars have done with these photos and to learn how you can grab next week’s source image and participate in this excellent project that gets your creative juices flowing, invites you to experiment and try new things, and opens you up to the different perspectives that can come from a common image.

Also, be sure to scroll down to the bottom to find out how you can share your photos and a source image for one of our upcoming editions of the project!

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Points of View Photo Project: #21

January 15, 2010 in Inspiration, Lightroom, Photography, Photoshop

Welcome to the 21st week of the Points of View Photo Project here at Jason D. Moore Photography!

For those of you new to the project, each week I post a source image that is straight out of the camera that readers are free to download and manipulate however they please (as long has it is used for the sole purpose of this project) and then send it back to me for posting here. The goal is to share the many different interpretations – or points of view – that can be applied to a common source image.

This week, we have 3 different takes on the original coming from myself and a couple of our regulars, Andy and Hendrik. If you would like to participate, click on the “more” link below and find out how you can take part in our special, reader-submitted HDR Points of View Project.

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