Last
updated June 9, 2004
If You Don't Know Who Joe Photo Is
You Should - Read On
Interview with Joe Photo
Mark: Why don’t you tell me a little
bit about your background so that our readers can learn
more about you.
Joe: I was born in Baltimore, Maryland
in 1967, December 22 and I lived there for a year and we
moved to Ohio We moved to a couple of homes in Ohio. I moved
around a lot so we lived in Ohio for awhile, then we lived
in Milwaukee, we lived in Georgia for a year, moved and
back to Milwaukee, then to Chicago and then California.
Mark: What did your dad do?
Joe: He works in HR. He was working for
Miller Brewing Company when we were in Milwaukee and Georgia.
We got here in 1985 when he was working for First Interstate
Bank and so anyways, we moved to Mission Viejo. I was a
musician and played the drums. I was into heavy metal and
long hair and so the friends that I hung out with weren’t
the most reliable people. The band fell apart when the neighbors
started complaining.
Mark: Were you a photographer when you
moved here?
Joe: I wasn’t shooting at that point.
I was just drawing and painting. In my senior year at Capo
Valley, my art teacher Mr. MacIluee said, “Why don’t
you take a photo class?” So the first semester of
my senior year I took a photography class and I loved it.
I started photographing people. I loved photographing people
as opposed to still lifes or landscapes.
That sparked my interest in photography. I finally found
a medium that I could express myself artistically because
with my drawing and painting, I wasn’t a realist but
I was always drawn toward realism but I just didn’t
have the abilities to do photo realism with my drawing and
painting. So I found that in photography I could capture
reality but then it was a lot easier to manipulate reality
through the use of different filters, lenses and things
like that. That’s how I really found my medium to
express myself.
Mark: So you were shooting film at that
time?
Joe: Yes.
Mark: Did you do your own processing?
Joe: I would shoot 35mm film and I loved
being in a darkroom, I loved it! So then, right after high
school I started taking photo classes at Saddleback College.
Mark: Any particular teachers?
Joe: I had classes with Ron Leighton and
with Jerry Burchfield. Ron was the head of the program then
and so he’s the teacher I had the most frequently.
To back up, I started taking classes at Saddleback and
I got a job working at Olan Mills Portrait Studio for a
year in Lake Forest. They said my portfolio looked good.
I started working for them and doing really well. I realized
wow, I’m making them a lot of money and I was only
19 years old making but I was making $300+ a week. I was
stoked! I had really good salespeople as well. So it was
a busy studio. I did a lot of family portraits. You absorb
their technique for family portraits in really a couple
of weeks. You figure out how to do it and then it’s
just a matter of doing the same formula. I got bored with
that and so I decided I was going to start taking classes
again. I finished my AA from Saddleback College in 1991,
graduated in 1991 with an Associates Degree in Photography.
I transferred to Cal State Long Beach where I started in
their Fine Art Photography program. In my first semester
the densitometry class instructor, the head of the photography
program there Neil Chapman, told the class of 60 students
that the Fine Arts processes that we were going to be learning
as Fine Arts photographers were going to be outlawed and
banned by the government because of the chemicals. There
was a big controversy about the chemicals being flushed
down into the water system. So he recommended in his thesis
that year ((he was working on his Masters thesis), that
by 2000, film was going to be obsolete and that everything
was going to be digital
I got really shook up. I’ve got two more years of
Fine Art processes and I’m like, "what am I going
to do after that?" and then film is going to be obsolete,
it’s going to be all digital and everything is going
to be done in PhotoShop. So I switched into the motion picture
film department and video production and I ended up getting
my degree in radio, television and film. I started studying
film history and cinematography and thought cinematography
is cool and that’s an extension of my photography
and writing. I got into that program, I graduated in 1994.
When I graduated, two significant things happened. One,
my wife and I had our first daughter, Mikayla. She was born
May 3, 1994. Second, I was working so hard that last semester
on a lot of different student film projects, I realized
that I was frustrated because I didn’t feel I had
enough say in the final product. I realized that I didn’t
like to work with a lot of other creative people who had
all this other input in the product.
Mark: So the Director of Photography was
calling the shots.
Joe: Yes, but even at the student film
level, it’s like the Director has a vision, I was
a camera operator really, much more than the cinematography
kind of switched that around and everybody had a little
bit of a hand in it but, I was really, really frustrated.
We were living in Dana Point at the time and I felt like,
I have this degree now but I don’t want to be going
to LA and working 10 and 12 hour days on motion pictures
as a second and third assistant to the camera operator for
years until I developed this career. So I was also doing
video production at Calvary Chapel at the time and I was
doing some really cool things with artists who displayed
their work at Calvary. I would film interviews and apply
different styles and techniques like on MTV, so I tried
to incorporate some of that into the video production stuff
that I was doing and one of the guys that I was doing video
with at that time said, “Why don’t you do a
photography business instead of doing this film thing?”
And my wife also at the same time was kind of hinting at
that same thing.
So that kind of revolutionized my thinking. It was like
a paradigm shift and I then began to start to pursue getting
family portrait and children as clients, that’s what
I was familiar with. Stuff like weddings, still so traditional
that I hadn’t recognized the fact that photojournalism
was being done at that point in weddings. So I said I’ll
start my business but I don’t want to be doing weddings,
I’ll just do family portraits and kids.
Mark: And you were still shooting film?
Joe: I was shooting film and I was picture
framing at the time. I had been picture framing all through
my college years. For eight years I picture framed at frame
shops and then in 1995 or 1996 I went and saw a program
over satellite broadcast Wedding Portrait 2000. I don’t
know if you remember when that came out but they satellite
broadcast these movies. You paid $60 for that 8 hour day;
you sat in an AMC theatre. I went down to San Diego and
they gave you a workbook as you came in and then you got
to see like 8 or 10 different nationally known wedding photographers
speak for about 40 minutes or so, show their work and then
answer a few questions. I realized wow, these are people
that are making a great living doing wedding photojournalism
and I could be doing that. So that’s what really sparked
the idea in my mind.
Mark: Who were some of the speakers on
that presentation?
Joe: Gary Fong, Dennis Reggae and Calvin
Hayes. Andy Marcus was also a part of that project and I
was like, wow, he’s got a killer set-up and he’s
doing really well in New York and then there was a gal in
Colorado, Wendy Saunders. She had some really cool work
too and I thought, OK, all the presenters have ideas that
I could incorporate. There wasn’t one person I said,
Ok, I want to be exactly like that, but I drew from all
of their collective information and took little bits and
pieces and molded it into what I wanted to do for myself.
Mark: What were some of those factors?
Was it black and white, was it Dutch angels?
Joe: Yes, definitely tilted angles and
spontaneous images. I love what Dennis had to say about
being a quiet observer and my personality is definitely
much more of just quietly observing and moving around the
clients on their wedding day and creating images with whatever
the light factors are and the spontaneous moments. The challenge
of me moving around and finding those moments and capturing
them as opposed to setting them up really appealed to me.
However, on the flip side of that, I am very idealistic
so there are times when I have the couple 15 minutes together,
I like to place them in an environment, have them interact
with me in a way that makes it look like they’re the
only two people around. I really try to focus on them, with
the backgrounds blown out. So I picked up some of those
techniques from what these photographers were doing. Marketing
myself as a Fine Art photographer doing wedding photography
as opposed to turning out several weddings a weekend. So,
I wanted to be more exclusive.
Mark: When clients came in and saw your
work, what was their response?
Joe: They loved it. It was a blessing
for me to shoot a wedding as a journalist. I photographed
a wedding with a bride and groom that were really good looking
and it was great because they gave me a lot of freedom to
do whatever I wanted to do. They trusted me. Then I created
a sample album from that wedding and I was able to show
that style to all my new potential clients.
Mark: Do you still have that album?
Joe: I still have images from that wedding
but the album was dismantled and refilled because when you’re
starting out your business, you don’t have very much
money. I kept refining the style of the images. Now, I continue
to refine and I continue to grow which is amazing to look
back even a couple of years and think, wow, I was doing
so good then but man, my images are smokin’ now. So
what can the future possibly hold? How can it get any better?
Mark: Are you still shooting film?
Joe: I don’t shoot film at all any
more. I haven’t shot film in two years.
Mark: And when you made that conversion
from film to digital, what were the stepping stones, what
carried you in that direction? What told you you had to
try it?
Joe: That was a huge step. Initially it’s
a huge investment. $10,000 easy and a bunch of camera bodies.
I went out on a wedding with John Barber and I said I just
want to come out and assist. Let me be your second shooter
(he couldn’t find an assistant for this wedding).
So he gave me one of his camera bodies and I shot it and
I was like so thrilled. It brought me back to the days when
the excitement that I had when I was in the darkroom in
the very beginning and I was creating images and watching
them come up in the darkroom, except this was immediate.
You shoot it and you immediately see what the image looks
like and I was thrilled! I was just so energized by that
prospect and being able to share the images with guests
and with the bride and things like that at the wedding,
although I didn’t do that so much at his event, because
I didn’t want to step in and do that, but I was just
thrilled. So then I bought a camera, started to incorporate
it into my reception photography which I felt was the weakest
link in my whole wedding day. I felt like I wasn’t
very creative with my flash use and I was just very safe.
I wasn’t shooting wide open anymore, and I would back
it up to F5, F6 or F8 and just blast the flash to make sure
that I got it. I wasn’t doing bouncing off walls and
things like that, dragging the shutter, because I wanted
to be safe. I didn’t want to miss it. At a buck a
proof it was expensive to experiment with stuff like that.
But once I started experimenting with digital and I could
see it right away I began bouncing flash, dragging the shutter
and doing all kinds of cool stuff to get more exciting images
and it wasn’t just stale anymore. It became fun. I
would shoot 90% of the wedding with still film, for four
months I did this. From September to December in 2001 I
was shooting a little bit of reception coverage with digital.
And then I would give the clients a CD. I didn’t even
print those images. I would edit, give them 100-200 extra
images on CD and say, “Here you go, take this. I’m
not going to print them but this is some extra stuff you
might want to have.” I still fulfilled my contract
with the paper proofs, and get them into a package. So that
was just a bonus to allow me to experiment and play with
the digital.
Mark: So it reignited the flame you had
when you were working in the dark room?
Joe: In every way. And in additional to
that, it also allowed us the freedom to just shoot like
crazy. I’ve got my editing down so that I don’t
edit out the bad shots, I pull out just the good shots.
Subjectively, if you’re taking out your bad shots,
you’re going Ok that’s a bad shot, that’s
a bad shot, over and over and over again. The client will
see like 1 out of 4 or 1 out of 3 of my proofs. So 2 out
of 3 or 3 out of 4 times your saying that’s a bad
shot, that’s a bad shot subjectively attitude. I’ve
flipped that around psychologically and go, that’s
a killer shot, I want that one.
Mark: That’s great perspective.
Joe: So, that works out very well for
me and takes me so much less time now to edit out my, or
to bring out my good shots, put those into another folder
as opposed to pulling the bad shots out.
Mark: Great suggestion. Do you have role
models today that
you look at their work and you say great stuff.
Joe: I love Mark Seliger and Greg Gorman.
There are some awesome women photographers. Women have an
advantage. They have more connections between the hemispheres
of their brains and are able to move much more quickly between
the two and that also gives women an advantage to be able
to capture weddings both romantically and technically.
Joe: It’s all about the bride. It’s
not really about the groom at all, he’s just there
and a lot of time doesn’t really want to spend a lot
of time doing photographs. But the bride has dreamed of
this day for like all her life and I find that I have such
a great and easy way with brides and am so comfortable around
them while they’re getting ready and interacting with
their bridesmaids. I’m much more comfortable in that
environment than I am with the groom and the groomsmen when
they’re getting ready and so, I really focus on the
bride and the attention to all of the details that she’s
going through and the preparations that she’s making
and I think that puts them at ease but I’m sure that
it’s a personality trait that I have that makes it
really comfortable for them to be around me. Where I would
suspect that a lot of male photographers, perhaps its not
as easy for them to be there, around the bride while she’s
getting ready and maybe in their nervousness, perhaps talk
too much or concentrating on different things, or something,
I’m not exactly sure. I haven’t pinned that
down yet; I haven’t really put a lot of thought and
effort into it until yesterday when I was talking to this
wedding coordinator. We were talking about female photographers
and how I really admire their sensitivity towards the approach
toward the day.
Mark: How did you get the name Joe Photo?
Joe: When I was working at Olan Mills,
we had a breakfast one morning with all the local photographers
in the Orange County area. There were 8 or 10. Jokingly
at that breakfast they called my Joe Photo and everybody
laughed and it kind of stuck and then the rest of that breakfast
they were referring to me as Joe Photo. I was like, that’s
really cool and then I got Joe Photo license plates on my
car.
Mark: Lastly, you’re sitting in front
of a photo of a bride and groom running through a Plaza
in Italy and the pigeons are being blown away by their dashing
toward them. That’s kind of become a signature photo
for you hasn’t it?
Joe: That was the first wedding that I
did in Italy and I was in Venice at Saint Mark’s Square.
When I shot that shot I just remember it was like it was
happening in slow motion. We’re in Saint Mark’s
Square, it’s the first time I’ve been in Europe
and I thought, Ok this is the place. We have to do photographs
of the bride and groom in the most famous square in Europe
and it’s known for the pigeons. There were a good
amount of tourists in the Square. You know, I explained
earlier I don’t like other people in my images so
I told the bride and groom, I have this idea of you guys
running through these pigeons and we’ll kind of see
what happens. Celeste, you can see her veil is really long
and her heels are really high. I said, Celeste, are you
up for running through these pigeons holding hands? She
said "sure whatever you want me to do." So we
bought a couple bags of bird seed and we dumped them out
in Saint Mark’s Square. I had them hold hands and
I said run through the pigeons. I’m shooting and I
kid you not, as I’m shooting, it was like slow motion.
I’m shooting and I’m like boom, I shot that
shot and in my head I just shot an insane image. And in
the 1/25 of a second whatever that that image was captured,
I knew that there was a killer image from that little series.
So they ran through one time, I shot 8 frames and then they
turned around and I had them run back through before the
pigeons ate all the bird food. They came back through and
that wasn’t as successful as them coming back toward
me but I got back from Europe and had that film processed
and I couldn’t wait.
I created a promo, modern postcard of that to start promoting
myself with that image and then I also entered that into
print competition for my first year that I started entering
prints at WPPI. I shot this in October of 1999 and started
entering in March of 2000. I entered three images and that
shot got 2nd place for wedding photojournalism. I didn’t
even enter the premier category. I didn’t even know
about the premier category. I’m sure I could have
gotten the grand prize for the premier category for that
shot but I met a lot of great people at WPPI.
Mark: Any last minute advice to our readers
about getting into wedding photography or portrait photography?
Digital, film or otherwise?
Joe: For those starting a business I really,
especially if you fall into the more artistic category,
I recommend taking business classes at Saddleback or your
local community college. Get some business courses and maybe
marketing courses. I also recommend networking with other
photographers in your area that you can get to know. Get
to know whose doing what. Get involved and start sharing
ideas and you’re going to grow exponentially once
you start sharing your ideas with other photographers and
you start getting their ideas. That can really increase
your growth. Find your passion and the clients will find
you. There is still a market for traditional wedding photography.
So if that’s where your heart and your passion lies,
then follow that route. If it is for wedding photojournalism,
or for portraits, or for whatever it is, find what makes
you happy so that you’re thrilled to be doing each
job.
Mark: Nobody’s going to promote
you better than yourself.
Joe: You really have to do that and go
after what you want. There’s got to be somebody to
shoot celebrity weddings. There’s got to be somebody
getting published in Martha Stewart. Somebody’s got
to be doing it. Why can’t you be that person? So go
after your dreams.
Like wow. I mean I’m encouraging people for sure to
start networking with other photographers in your local
area and develop referral networks and groups. I can say
over and over, that we assume that everybody does that but
I don’t think that’s the case for a lot of the
rest of the country. So I’m hoping that I can be a
beacon of trying to promote that sharing that we’re
so blessed to enjoy.
Mark: Well thank you Joe. We appreciate
it very much.
Joe: Thank you.
Visit
Joe Photo's Website
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About the Author
Mark Montgomery started taking pictures in High School and
by his junior year was a staff photographer for the yearbook.
During that time he used a 4x5 Graphflex with sheet film
in two sided packs. He loved shooting sports but needless
to say the 4x5 was pretty limiting and HEAVY to boot. “There
was this 35mm Yashica that sat in the camera closet and
I asked the Advisor if I could use that camera. After one
game, I was hooked. The next year I was Senior Photo editor
and shot all sports in 35mm while using the 4x5 for groups.
I stayed with 35 as I grew up keeping photography as a hobby.”
About 10 years ago Mark got serious about his "hobby"
and took a class at the famed Santa Fe Workshops in Santa
Fe, New Mexico. “What an eye opener! Thanks to the
patience of the workshop instructor Eddy Soloway, I realized
how out of date I was on the art of Photography.”
Since then Mark has attended another workshop in Santa Fe
and a second one in Big Sur, California. He turned professional
in 2001 and has taken many more classes through West Coast
Schools (operated by PPC) and seminars in Photoshop from
several Photoshop Gurus (Jack Davis, Stephen Burns, Kevin
Kubota). He now shoots all digital and specializes in wedding
and portrait photography with digital enhancement through
Photoshop.
Mark can be reached at info@OCshowbiz.com
Visit
Mark Montgomery's Website
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