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                                ZZ PHOTOGRAPHER FEATURE

his goal has always been to devote himself to art and make a living in it

24/1/2016

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take a look at his photos and learn more about Kevin Nasarre Krols by reading our interview with this amazing young photographer from Barcelona.

Kevin, please tell us a little bit about yourself to begin with. (How old are you, Where were you born and where do you live now, What is your profession and do you have other besides photography?

I was born in the summer of 1988, product of a Spanish man and a Belgian woman in a town on the outskirts of Barcelona, and if time cycles haven’t changed, I should be 27 years old by now.
I’m currently a freelance fashion/portrait photographer living in a small town very close to Barcelona although until recently I’ve been working in different areas, mostly as a waiter and stock boy. I’m currently trying to expand my photography activity to weddings, events and editorials.
 
Have you been involved in the arts in some form other than photography?
Well, my goal has always been to devote myself to art and make a living in it. That’s why I attended film school. Before starting with photography I’ve been involved in filmmaking activities as I was studying (that also included somehow photography), either directing my own short movies or assisting my classmates on every different aspect that I could help with (lightning, sound recording, script and assisting direction). After that my work has been more focused in small video projects for friends, relatives and particular customers, being that practically marginal as later on I took some sabbatical years away from the audiovisual world.

Seeing your remarkable work, I am curious where your creativity comes from?
Thank you! I’m not really sure if to call it creativity or personal delusions, but I guess I’m somewhat eclectic. Inspiration is something hard to get and I tend to not force it, whenever I have that “stimulus” I try to translate it into an image, or at least try to. I get a lot of inspiration from movies more than from photography itself, could it be a whole movie, or just a still, or a sequence, an actor/actress, an atmosphere, a message… but I also get a lot of ideas from music, paintings, literature and current world affairs. I must say however, that I get a lot of help from the amazing people I work with thanks to their vision and will to create beautiful stuff.

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Could you share with us how you first became interested in photography?
Well, from the very beginning and ever since I had use of reason my main interest was focused in cinematography. I’ve always wanted to be a filmmaker. But as I started getting into the business and seeing how complicated, competitive and draining it was, I got discouraged to continue my journey and I took a few years gap away from the industry. I’ve always liked photography and it has always been directly or indirectly part of what I was doing. I got my first DSLR camera in 2010 and ever since then I’ve been shooting but not with a particular reason, It was more for fun, for myself or just for picturing my relatives. It wasn’t until more or less 1 year ago that I decided to deepen into photography, after following some of the amazing work my former classmates are currently creating and recalled back some of the eagerness I had to create something, and so photography became a micro window to translate into pictures what I couldn’t express in movies. I never really wanted to get away from audiovisuals.

What equipment are you using now and with what did you get started? what is your favorite lens?
My first camera (which I still keep with me and use as well) is a Canon 500D. Currently the camera I most use is a Canon 5D MkIII. I’m a photographer that started “going serious” in the business with digital photography only, which I’m ashamed to say since I personally think that a true photographer is made of film and negatives. That’s why I would like to start doing some of my shootings in film as well and experiment with different techniques.
About having a favorite lens, I can’t say I do have one particular because it all depends on what you want to do. But I have a priority for prime lenses above 50 mm. I still have to try so much gear!
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Can you tell us about your work flow from the point you first step onto the street until you showcase the developed picture?
My workflow starts from the moment a shooting is settled. During the previous days I try to collect different ideas that I can use for the project, talk with the people involved (makeup artists, stylists and models) and I deliver them some examples of actual footage. If they give me green light I start working on the concept immediately. I try to be efficient during the shooting, I take only the gear that it’s necessary, I come with the lighting scheme ready and try to not lose too much time (especially when I rent a studio) Nonetheless, during the shooting I love to improvise and make the crew feel comfy and participate in every single aspect of the shooting so we can come up with unexpected great results, and it works!
I keep in touch with the crew even during post processing and I show them different edits so they can chose and give me a clear idea of how the final result can look substantially better.

Do you see a particular influence, be it a photographer or school on your work? Any subject that attracts you?
Like I said before, what most inspires me are movies and filmmakers like Kubric, Fincher, Hitchcock, Scorsese, Burton, Haneke and so, so many others but when it comes to photographers I find such a great inspiration in Lara Jade’s work, Frank Doorhof, John Keatley, Zack Arias, the master Cartier-Bresson… The list can be endless. I’m attracted by people, I love to photograph people in any areas, I like to look and try to tell something through their expressions in an attemp to portrait their personality and communicate something;  and may I say that one of my favorite kind of photography is street photography and documentary, being Vivian Maier a formidable role model for me. There are so many great artists I still have to enjoy and learn from them.

What would you say characterizes your work in comparison to other photographers?
Unpredictability! ahah, No,  I don’t know if my work can be unique or different from any other, it’s still too early for that since I don’t quite have a particular style yet. I don’t think that my work is currently any different from the world’s standards imaginary. I have still to figure out a lot of things, and what’s most important, learn. All I can say is that I try to approach every single shoot with an established personal view at a 50% from the final result, meaning that the other 50% comes from experimentation and ideas that come up during the shooting. It’s not that much like a screenplay from a movie, which gives me a bit more of flexibility when it comes to photographing something.

Among your works, which is your favorite and why?
Among my few shootings, for now the one that I like most is Extravagant Infantry. I always had this idea of shooting a female in a military outfit (nothing original, I know) but I like in general the result and the atmosphere created. I think it's the shooting where I most thought about location, outfit and concept in one. I loved Olga’s (the model) performance and attitude and the amazing makeup work and styling of Anna Opala (the makeup artist)

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Tell us your funniest or most awkward photography story.

Every shooting I do becomes fun when the crew’s attitude is positive and everybody is motivated for the project. There was this shooting we had, it was for a wedding makeup portrait and we wanted a natural glimpse on the model’s face. The mood at the studio wasn’t quite cheery so we decided to make the model feel smiley all the time but I was so uninspired that all I could say to the model was: think about something funny, that you’re getting divorced or so, or think about caca! I don’t know if this silliness helped to mend the shooting but the thing is that she didn’t quit smiling the whole shoot to a point that we got a very good result! ahaha
 
What would you tell a newcomer who asks for your advice on how to start?
I would tell to any newcomer that the first thing he/she should do is absolutely love and be positive about what he/she does. No matter what results you get, how notorious they are and even if they are a failure, believe in what you do and never stop trying. I’d tell them also to be cautious and realistic about this world’s expectations, everything is tremendously competitive and there are so many great artists there that can do what you do and better, that’s why I recommend them to keep always their feet on the ground and know that only a few fortunate can afford living from this (I’m not one of them). And I’d also tell them to not rely on gear so much because like we all know, the photographer makes the picture, not the camera, that’s why to every newcomer photographer, I’m telling you don’t aim for the best camera body, the best lens or the best flashes, that’s something that comes by itself with time and all the amount of money and time that you can spend on gear while being a newcomer, spend it on creating interesting sets and ideas and also on learning, learning and learning! Never take discourage as a defeat.
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don't press the shutterbutton unless you are convinced to catch the right moment

15/1/2016

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His credo, shown in the headline, says a lot about photographer Andreas-Joachim Lins, who never understood the way of taking  more than 2000 photos a session just in hope to find after all the best picture. Read our interview with this amazing photographer, who is based in Hannover, the capitol of northern Germany's federal state Lower Saxony.

Andreas, please tell us a little bit about yourself to begin with. (How old are you, Where were you born and where do you live now, What is your profession and do you have other besides photography?

I was born 1969 in my hometown Hannover where I still live and work. I am still in love with Hannover. The city is not as big as Hamburg or Berlin - but we have here so many interesting locations you will hardly find in other cities in northern Germany.

Have you been involved in the arts in some form other than photography?
I tried to paint but don't ask...

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Seeing your remarkable work, I am curious where your creativity comes from?
I really love to work with female models and visagists. It's about fashion but not only fashion. Good portraits do speak and I am still attracted by interesting and beautiful faces. To keep creativity up I sometimes change my photography and do landscapes and industrial nightshots. I often find new places where I will later shoot with women fashion and/or emotional portraits.

Could you share with us how you first became interested in photography?
I had my first experiences with photography at the age of 7. My - photoaddicted - father gave me a very simple Agfa-Camera and I started taking pictures. This first camera was a kind of mixed bag. It was an all-mechanic construction and the shutter did whatever it "wanted" to do - so no reliable exposure was the lame result. Even with this experience I was addicted and attracted by photography and my father gave me his Fuji-SLR cam. I was allowed to install a small darkroom in our cellar and I started to process my films from the beginning up to the final photo. Even with these brilliant results in digital photography - if you see for the very first time a photo developing under red light in a dark room - that is pure magic and will change a lot. Don't ask me how many times I saw the movie "Blow Up" by then.
In school I got in touch with one of the art teachers and he taught me many things about cutting rules, how to improve my point of view, my camera technics and the way to plan a shooting and so he pushed my photography to a new level. Later on after school I decided to go to a private photoschool to prepare myself for studies in photodesign in Hannover.
Final word: at least I was disappointed about what the students had to learn and to do later on and I changed my professional carreer to something completely different.

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What equipment are you using now and with what did you get started? what is your favorite lens?
For people photography I love to use my canon 5D Mark III and my Sigma 35mm ART 1:1.4. Even though I have my own photostudio I love to take my photos outdoor. The sigma and my 5D produce highquality pictures with great rooms and soft blurred bokeh. My second cam is my Olympus M1 with some additional lenses. The Olympus M1 is quite light and small and it makes a lot of fun to work with.

Can you tell us about your work flow from the point you first step onto the street until you showcase the developed picture?
First of all I have to plan, where I want to shoot my model. I think it is really important that the location will work with the fashion attitude / portrait mood. Next I get in touch with one of my visagists and finally we all (my model, visagist and light-assistant) meet in my studio. The model is styled (makeup / hair) by the visagist whilest I check the available outfitcombinations. On location we shoot and my light assistant (in a way he is important like Caddy Bagger Vance ;-) ) helps me to adjust my light (strobe, bouncer) to get the maximum out of the scene. Back home I import all my work into Lightroom, get myself a coffee and do the first checkup after all photos are imported. I mark all (for me) good or perfect pictures and delete bad ones. Then I start editing in Lightroom and do all the beauty retouch later on in photoshop. Check out for good tutorials about frequency separation and Dodge & Burn technics. ;-) At least I export my work to Flickr, 500px and/or instagram with 2048px max. length.

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Do you see a particular influence, be it a photographer or school on your work? Any subject that attracts you?
I really love what F.C. Gundlach, Helmut Newton and David LaChapelle did. Incredible works for a century of photography.

What would you say characterizes your work in comparison to other photographers?
One of the best things I learned from expensive analog photography - first think about your subject and than press the shutterbutton down. Ask yourself: is this photo / this moment worth it to be captured? I never understood the way of taking >2000 photos a session just in hope to find after all the best picture in the mass. I think the real art is NOT to press the shutterbutton unless you are convinced to catch the right moment when everything will be perfect. And: I normally don't wait for the right moment in my photosessions. I really try to create them.

Among your works, which is your favorite and why?
I really don't have one fav in my work. I really like some of my pics a lot without having the one and only favorite. People photography has two sides for me: technically and emotionally. If both sides are close to perfect I would say I got a new favorite. You see some of my favs here in this magazine :-)

Tell us your funniest or most awkward photography story.
“Fine Art Nude” workshops do have a lot of funny potential. At the beginning male students - men (age 38-50) - are talking about cameras, their experience and I often think whilst listening to them: wow - they must be really good. This "male show" ends the second, an (almost) naked female model comes in. Out of the blue these strong and "malebehaving" men get silent and sometimes you can hear a needle fall. Awesome ;-)

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What would you tell a newcomer who asks for your advice on how to start?
#1
Forget about technology. Buy a good camera (maybe go for interchangeable lens system cameras !) and TAKE PHOTOS. In my books lots of hobby- and amateurphotographers like to talk about photos much more than taking them. If you listen to them they all seem to be gods of photography as long as they don't have to lead a photosession.

#2
Watch and learn, how other photographers work. What do they use for equipment, light and so on. Ask, what they do and - more important - what they DON'T DO.
#3
Don't care about likes in social media. Likes doesn't tell about quality. I have seen incredible, awesome pictures with 10 Likes. So what? Forget about Likes - concentrate on improving your skills. Photography is compareable to languages. You have to speak them to get better. Therefor you have to take photos to keep and improve your skills.
#4
As long as you use digital photography, take all your photos in RAW. Again - TAKE AND USE RAW FILES ONLY. Only with RAW-photos you will be able to correct exposure, color temp. and much more in highquality editing later on. All my cameras never shoot JPG - just because I want to edit all of my works in Lightroom / Photoshop and I need the highest quality I can get from start to end.

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