Category Archives: Photo

Ricky Adam x Destroying Everything Extended Edition

Destroying book 2nd edition hi res cover
Ever since I picked up my first Dig, I was inspired by Ricky Adam’s photographs. As I flipped through each new issue I was blown away with the energy he captured with his camera. When I heard his first book “Destroying Everything” was coming out, I knew I had to own it. Now that he’s doing an extended edition, I wanted to catch up with him and ask him a few questions about it. If you missed out on his first book, you won’t want to miss this one. It’s one for the shelves.
For kids who might not know who you are, could just give a little background info on yourself?
Hello. My name is Ricky Adam. I’m from Northern Ireland, although I have been living in mainland U.K. for the last 11+ years. I first picked up a camera in 1997 and haven’t stopped taking photos since.…I really wish I had some coffee right now to kickstart my brain before I answer these Q’s.
ricky adam skiplickers
What made you want to do an extended edition, or is it going to be completely different than the first book?
Well, I was approached by an Italian arts publisher, ‘Drago Arts & Communications’ and invited to make a 2nd edition of the book. The 1st edition sold out quickly, so the timing was perfect. Since the release of the 1st edition I had taken more photos that fitted well. So, the publisher suggested making an extended version to include these extra photos. Also, I found a few old negatives that I wanted to include in the original book. Typically, after searching for them for months I found them pretty much as soon as the first edition came out. At least they will now see the light of day.
How did you go about sequencing the work?
With ‘Destroying Everything’ it’s quite sporadic. It was a difficult volume to edit as I didn’t have a book in mind when I was taking a lot of these pictures. The time span for the book is 1997 – 2013. I needed to edit a selection of photos that worked with each other as well as the title.
ricky adam scanning
How has your work been received outside the bmx community? 
It’s surprisingly done really well. Although, you have to consider that it’s not strictly a BMX book. It has elements of BMX but the focus is on youth sub culture. So, it’s appeal is more wide reaching. I’ve found that a lot of people who have picked up the book aren’t necessarily into punk or BMX. But they can still relate to it & get something out of it. Which is cool. Apparently, the main demographic who have purchased it, are teenagers (angry teenagers) haha. I’m pretty sure I too would have liked seeing this book when I was younger.
What’s the importance of shooting personal projects outside of bmx?
I really need to. I mean, I’d get burnt out shooting anything over a sustained, long period.  It’s good for me to have a few different projects going on simultaneously. This way I can leave one for a while and then go back to it again. Recently, I haven’t been taking that many BMX photos. I’ve been doing other photo work which has meant stepping back a little from BMX. (At least for the time being).
Any other projects in the works at the moment?
Recently, I’ve been going through my archive. Scanning lots of negatives and prints. There’s a lot of pictures, that for some reason I skipped over the first time around. Over the years my eye has become more refined, which in turn helps with editing. So, at the moment, lots of sorting and editing. I’m always taking photos, and the more photographs I accumulate, the more scope there is for shaping other projects. I want to do something with my street photos eventually, as well as the other projects I have going on. I’m not in any rush. When it feels right, I’ll do something with them.
I’m currently working on a book about my time spent in the Midwest of America from 2001-2005. Titled: ” The Freezing Heart Of America”. Until recently, I hadn’t really looked at the photos properly. For the last 8-12 years they have been laying dormant. Partially forgotten about. Prints and negatives messily piled up in the squeaky, bottom drawer of a grey filing cabinet. It’s getting there. i just need to finalize a few things.
super america
midwest cowboy
glad to cover 6
A few months ago I made a photo Zine’ about punk jackets titled ‘Glad To See The Back Of You’. Basically snapshots of the back of punk jackets from the region of the U.K. I live in.
When’s your new book being released? and where can people get a copy?
I’m not sure of the exact date. I do know that it’s due to be released soon. By the end of 2013.  The extended, 2nd edition of ‘Destroying Everything’ will have more pages, slightly different layout, updated soft cover & it’ll be cheaper and a lot more readily available. It’s being published by Drago Arts & Communications and is currently available for pre – order from Amazon as well as a host of other good bookstores.coming soon lo res fbb

Photo Gallery – Kill The Line Qualifiers

Rider: Max Bimar, Trick: whip

A photo gallery from the qualifying round of the Kill The Line event in southern France shot by George Marshall is online here for your viewing pleasure.

Photo of the Week: Fabien Gane by Kevin Proust

IMG_4721

This week’s photo is filled with symmetry and shapes, colors and textures. The trick is simple, but for a photograph like this, the trick doesn’t need to be crazy. The timing of the barspin is perfect- the front wheel is at 6 o’clock. The composition is precise and the framing of the action is neatly placed in front of a broad section of white wall.

“That was just a cold session between two rainy days in October 2012.
We wanted to shoot some “slopes” and this place situated at “Palais Sur Vienne” (a small town next to Limoges in France) is perfect for that.
It’s a spot where you can just about do anything: manuals, walls etc… and the marble is very clean to ride on.
To take this photo, I setup my gear across the street allowing me to take advantage of a distant view of the place. One difficulty was to avoid the flow of cars that would go in front of the lens. The lack of light obliged me to go up to 1600 ISO and open at f4 on my 70-200 Canon, to obtain a fast speed for this trick and therefore eliminate the motion blur, not having tripod and strobist with me.
With this frame, I wanted to show the symmetry of the place with the 4 cones in the foreground and the separation of the background in two part because of the pillar in the center and draw forward the color associated with the subject.
The only thing left to do was for Fab to do a beautiful Bar Spin on the right side of the setting and for me to take the shot at the apropriate time.

Canon 50D
ISO 1600
F4
1/640″

Check out more of Kevin’s work here.

Join the Flickr group for a chance to be next week’s photo.

Photo of the Week: Devon Denham

ddpotw

“I shot this photo about a year ago in Bellflower, CA while I was on a shoot for Redline. We were supposed to be at Woodward West shooting with the team while they were filming the annual “Week At Woodward” that happens every year. However, the team decided to venture back to civilization so we could shoot some street photos. I wanted to show Zack the oh-so-famous Bellflower Ditch so we ended up there mid-day.

The photo was pretty simple to setup with three flashes (2x Quantum Flashes 1x Einstein) bunched up to give one solid source of light to bring out Zack. All flashes were set at 1/4 power to prevent motion blur, but there probably wouldn’t be any cause it’s a stall type of trick. Also the flashes were all setting to the left of the frame, right on the edge. It can really help to bring all the flashes in any photo right to the edge to maximize your capability of getting a faster shutter, lower ISO, or smaller f-stop. I apply this to all of my photos. Basically bring all flashes to the edges of your frame but not in the photo. I shot the photo with some mid grade Nikon lens… 18-105mm at 70mm I think. Shot far enough away to get a compressed look from shooting 70mm but I wanted to get the rest of the ditch in the photo too. I really think a photo can make-it-or-break-it from using the rule of thirds so I placed Zack in the right third of the photo. Here’s a lasting thought though, I feel what makes a BMX photo most eye catching is a properly placed rider according to the background. In this photo I had a dark contrast between Zacks lit body and the overpass in the background. I also had a clean back drop for him on the gray wall. Ideally, I don’t like to have objects behind the rider like poles, trees, signs, etc. I always try and find a open spot in the trees for the sky as a back drop or a clean wall. It takes an eye but I can make your rider pop and become easier to see.

Shot on a Nikon D200
ISO 100
F 5,6
1/250″

Check out more of Devon’s work here.

Join the Flickr group for a chance to be next week’s photo.

“Dondai: A Barcelona BMX Trip” Photo Gallery

everypeoples_feature_dondai_barcelona_15

Jason Colledge shot a bunch of photos on a recent trip to Barcelona for London’s lifestyle website Everypeoples. Good stuff from Harry Mills-Wakley, James Curry and more.

Photo of the Week: Timothy Burkhart

Ryan-Wayne-Wallride_Timothy-Burkhart

I chose this photo because of the alternate angle and the lighting. The fisheye from above accentuates the pipe as a potential danger in the situation and you can tell how close he actually came to hitting it. The lighting is optimal and was achieved using only two flashes. Sometimes the key to a successful photograph is just finding an unusual angle.

“This photo is of one of good friends from here in Chicago, Ryan Wayne, doing a tight wall ride in Joliet, IL Ryan is someone that I ride with probably more than anyone else here in Chicago and we have been friends for a bit; despite that it seems like we don’t really shoot too many photos together, but recently we have been trying to be a bit more productive with our sessions.

We shot this photo on a little late night street session in downtown Joliet, IL riding with Anthony Loconte and Chris Zidek. Joliet is about an hour southwest of Chicago and is pretty much only known for it’s county jail and also the casino that is in the center of the whole town. It has a bit of a industrial era small town feel and is fairly deserted at night, which lets you pretty much ride whatever you want. We found this tight little wallride set up almost right out of the car, it wasn’t a super crazy set up, but was fun enough to play on. It was in a parking garage with really low ceilings and to make matters worse, on this particular wall there was a huge pipe hanging from the ceiling. Wallriding was a bit of a squeeze to say the least.

I set up two speedlights for the shot; I’ve been trying to dial back flash shooting lately and be more creative with one or two flashes opposed to using all three that I own for everything. I tried to shoot this with a 50mm while positioned lower to the ground first and get a more formal non distorted flattened out image, but it just looked too bland on this set up and didn’t really accentuate the low ceilings and the pipe hanging down. I threw on my 16mm fisheye and tried to workout a different angle, and had the idea I wanted to be above Ryan. I grabbed a garbage can that we found in the garage to give me a more bird’s eye perspective of the set up and I was wedged up against the ceiling while shooting. I positioned one flash at 1/2 power just out of frame on the bottom left of the image laying on the ground angled up at Ryan..pretty much right under him, then I had another on a tripod to the top left of the frame at full power to light the rest of the scene. It took a few attempts to get Ryan under the pipe without clipping his head, but after that we got a shot that we were both psyched on.

Nikon D800
Zenitar 16mm f/2.8
1/250
f/8
ISO 800
Nikon sb-28
Nikon sb-800
2 Godox Propac PB820 Battery Packs
AlienBees Cyber Syncs
Post processing done in Photoshop CS6”

See more of Timothy’s work here.

Join the Flickr group and be chosen for next week’s photo.

Focus On: Ivan Maslarov

Ivan was the first photographer I chose from the Flickr group to be featured for the Photo of the Week. His work is super clean and he has definitely claimed the shallow depth-of-field as his signature. He sees the photograph before he shoots it and lights it to his liking. He often crops his images, which is a sensitive subject sometimes, but he makes it work. I asked him to write a bit about his background and experience in photography, and he sent me the following, laid out with the photos and everything. Thanks Ivan!

_MG_6781

“My name is Ivan Maslarov and I started riding around 2000 I’ve been shooting since 2009. Shooting for me is stress usually. Flashes are flying down from light stands, batteries are dead, riders are demanding. I like that sketchiness I build on it and I like to think it helps me to stay focused and creative.

Shooting BMX gives a different kind of adrenalin from the one you get from riding. It also has its consideration, preparation and realization phase. And as with most tricks it all lasts just a moment. With digital photography the parallel continues­ – you understand if you have fallen or landed the shot immediately. I still ride and try to push myself and the camera adds a whole new layer to the experience. The majority of the time I will have all my camera gear when I am out for a ride and I will keep my eyes open for new tricks, new people and interesting spots.

When I was photographing the first very dangerous move to happen in front of my lens I was euphoric when I clicked. Not far away from the way my buddy was happy when he landed safely. You feel very responsible when someone is risking it and when they trust you to document it all. It was only the two of us and we were jumping and shouting out of excitement.

1

In the beginning the question was whether I buy a video camera or a flash to add to my wife’s canon 350d. I wanted to take part in the experience not only from riding perspective. Once I decided it will be photography I got a single pocket flash and this is where it all started. I was hooked, setting the camera on the ground at long exposure at night and running to snap the rider with light from up close. One power setting one zoom setting, just an on and off button and a trigger one. I slowly geared/geeked up building my kit with a lot of trial and error. I made my steps mostly on my own by reading and by looking at images and trying to analyze them and backwards engineer them.

2

My first published shot was a great feeling. Looking at your image on paper wedged in the middle of a mass reproduced mag is special.

3

Shooting with an analog camera is magic. It really feels like a ritual, especially when you take digital for granted. Just the thought that you have some special goo spread over translucent plastic and all that shoved in a dark box is mystical. It’s so superficial to me that I take much more consideration and respect when I practice it.
It is all manual in my case so I somehow connect to it more. The best part is that you don’t see the results instantly. You are forced to question and to try foreseeing. This kick starts your imagination and it makes you more focused on the technical aspect at the same time.

4

Shooting at night is great. You have so many choices and possible interpretations. It’s easy on the batteries and you can light more space with less energy. They are less people on the way and everything is far calmer, almost like a studio.

5

I love shooting with natural light – its all there its fires every time and obviously gives a very natural result. In my case I feel like I needed to go a long way with lighting my shots in order to start recognizing great natural light.

6

My biggest guilty pleasure is overusing shallow depth of field. It really feels like defeating the purpose of a two dimensional representation of reality. It tries to be three-dimensional and it actually is mostly recording blur, which is not really a representation.

7

I always try to remember that there is not a bad place or weather or light situation. They are only easy and not so easy situations. It just creates a challenge, which usually gets you out of your routine and helps you to develop.

8

Fish eye is seen as a gimmick, as an over used tool and as taking the easy way. It’s hard to use one! Because it usually introduces a lot more in the frame and because it distorts. You can’t apply it to all of your images but it definitely has its place.”

Virb.com Portfolio Site Review

Screen shot 2013-07-30 at 8.29.54 AM

A couple months ago when I was in the market for a new online portfolio, a friend at Fraction Magazine referred me to Virb.com. I couldn’t be happier with the platform. It’s $10 a month for hosting your site, they have a ton of customizable themes to choose from, and it is very user friendly.

Screen shot 2013-07-30 at 8.30.52 AM

Above are some examples of the themes you can choose from, click the image to see more. Virb allows you to personalize each theme to meet your needs exactly. Also, everything can be coded using html to customize it even further. All of the themes automatically include a mobile format.

Screen shot 2013-07-30 at 8.32.20 AM

This is the customization page for the theme I use. It is really simple and it gives you a live preview as you make changes.

Screen shot 2013-07-30 at 8.32.01 AM

This is the backend of my website. To create new galleries you just add new pages and then start uploading images. To organize the galleries you simply drag and drop into the order you want.

Screen shot 2013-07-30 at 8.32.01 AM

To add photos you upload them straight from the computer (always make sure web images are in srgb format) and use the drag and drop feature to sequence your photos. Really think about the sequence of your images to maximize the viewers experience.

Screen shot 2013-07-31 at 10.05.25 PM

It is just as easy to add video galleries to your site. You can upload straight from your computer or with a url directly from your Vimeo or Youtube account.

Some other features I was really into with Virb was the ease of connecting your social media. You can link your Instagram, Tumblr, and Facebook with just the click of a button. Virb also connects to bigcartel.com, so if you want to sell prints you already have a store front to start slinging from.

Overall I would recommend Virb to any artist out there looking for a quick, easily managed, professional portfolio site. It is so simple that you could have your site up and going within an hour of registering with Virb.

Disclaimer: This is just a personal product review on the service that I use. Virb.com did not compensate me in any way for my opinion. However, if anyone from Virb is reading this I would not say no to a free website.

Behind the Photo with Fat Tony

fattony

“To set up the shot I put my main flash on a tall light stand just over my left shoulder as I was crouching down with my 15mm fish eye lens. This was right at 180 degrees from where the sun was coming in from the trees and served as the only flash lighting up Scotty and his bike. The ambient light behind him gave a pretty good key light on his helmet, shoulder, and arm. I would have liked to have another key light hitting the back side of his rear tire, but I only had three flashes with me, and the other two were used to light up the under side of the take off. With that said, I set up my two fill flashes low to the ground just out of the right side of the frame pointing up at the under side of the wooden launch. Without them lighting up the take off it was very dark and shadowy with little to no detail in the wood. Since the take off was so unique in this setup it was important to me to show where he was coming from in the best way possible.

These trails are located behind John Jennings’ parents house, and on the day we were scheduled to shoot Scotty couldn’t get in touch with any of the locals to unchain the roll in, so he had to find a very creative (for lack of better words) way to get the speed for the gap. Being the boss that he is, Scotty not only got the speed, but fully clicked a turndown on his first and only go at it. One and done, in and out…off to the next spot!

PHOTO INFORMATION
Date: May 10, 2013
Location: Area 51 Trails, New Jersey
Camera: Canon 5D Mark II
Lens: Canon 15mm
Camera Settings:
ISO 100
f/5.6
1/320
Main Flash: Quantum Q Flash with Turbo 400 w/s battery pack (set to roughly 1/4 power)
Fill Flashes: Vivitar 285 (set to full power)
Transmitter: Pocket Wizard MiniTT1
Receivers: Pocket Wizard Receivers”

More post-processing techniques here.

Photo of the Week: Casey Smith

IMG_5701

“I shot this photo of Aaron Robinson at Northside Skatepark in Norfolk, VA on April 19th of this year. Although it was a few months ago, I specifically remember shooting this because it was during a bowl jam that I put on.

There were two things that really made this photo difficult to achieve; the first being the framing. Previous to shooting, I noticed the gap in the tree line could cradle a rider jumping that hip perfectly, but it took me multiple tries to get the timing and angle just right; luckily Aaron’s tables are so on point, he was able to do them over and over.

The second issue I ran into while shooting this was the weather. Although unnoticeable in the photo, the winds were horribly gusty (35mph to be exact) and this specific skatepark is landscaped with mulch and wood chips, so debris was flying everywhere. This combination creates an extremely difficult situation for the rider, especially when jumping a seven foot tall hip, but Aaron handled it very well.

I was very pleased with the final product, not only because I captured one of Aaron’s perfect tabletops (I have repeatedly claimed that he has the best tables in Virginia), but the fact that I captured a memory from that day which will now stick with me forever.

Technical data:

Canon 60D
Canon 18-135mm
1/1250
f/4.5
ISO 500
Zoomed to 39mm”

Check out more of Casey’s work here.

Join the Flickr group and add your images to the pool to be next week’s photo!