Shooting ‘Lifestyle’ with X-Photographer Kerry Hendry

Official X-Photographer Kerry Hendry was recently asked to shoot a product-lifestyle photoshoot for a very special client – us! Here she shares some useful tips and techniques to help you produce similar, stunning results.

Kerry Hendry - webOfficial X-Photographer Kerry Hendry was recently asked to shoot a product-lifestyle photoshoot for a very special client – us! Here she shares some useful tips and techniques to help you produce similar, stunning results.


The brief

Shooting the ‘X-Lifestyle’ was the brief – featuring lovely creative hipsters, out and about with their beautifully styled beards and retro looking cameras. The desired outcome: a collection of images that can be used worldwide for marketing the (fabulous) X-series cameras.

Planning

My mind was immediately racing with ideas – where, when, models, styling – what if it rains?

I love the creative side of life – and working out how you can translate the images in your mind into reality.  What look am I going for? Styling? Locations? Where to capture the best light – and how?

Aim high – super ambitious ideas will challenge and stimulate your creativity. Get out of that comfort zone and work out the ‘how’ !

And so it began – working up a mood board of ideas, selecting outfits, booking models, styling and location ideas.  For that true ‘hipster’ style Cheltenham was perfect, and as I only live a few miles away I know the town like the back of my hand.

Know your kit – I probably shouldn’t say this but I only ever read the manual if I get stuck or if I’m working out a new feature. Fuji X-Series are very intuitive and once you ‘get’ the Fuji way – you’ll never look back. Make sure you know all the key features to squeeze the very last drop of performance out of your camera

Making it Reality

Models were booked, outfits agreed, hair & make up booked, locations recce’d – and double recce’d!  We were super lucky to have a two very special locations on board to work with.

Light & Locations – ensure you recce your locations at the time you want to shoot them. We deliberately ended up at the boating lake as late in the afternoon/evening as possible to get the best light

For the first day we shot at The Boathouse & boating lake at Pittville Park in Cheltenham and for our second day of shooting, I managed to arrange early morning access to one of the most beautiful locations in town – the Sandford Park Lido – a 50m Art Deco open air pool in the centre of Cheltenham.

Be clear what you want to achieve with styling, less is often more – better to have 2 or 3 key outfits ready to go than a room full of clothes to wade through. Think accessories – shoes, jewellery, hats – all great props

Location, location, location

Some locations are perfect – no outside interference, no people in the background, no traffic, no kids playing football around you.  Others – you have to be a bit more creative, or dodge the traffic at least!

Engage & Direct – unless you have the luxury of a seasoned model (and sometimes even then), you will need to direct the shoot. If you can’t find the words to describe what you want, show them! It’s always entertaining to see a photographer try and model, which always breaks the ice

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We shot in peaceful parks, standing on a traffic island on a busy road, shooting across two lanes of traffic, waist deep in wild flowers – not to mention balanced on the edge of the boathouse deck trying not to fall in.  Boats drift artfully, photographers just sink.

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Experiment with depth of field – we all love the fast Fuji lenses with the delicious wide apertures, but do experiment. Putting your subject in context for a commercial shoot can be important, so look at your backgrounds and stop it down from time to time

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Work it – if you are just setting out, don’t be afraid to use some of the assisted options – face detection, the tracking autofocus, it’s all there to help you achieve the best photos possible

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Deliver – rule No 1 of any commercial shoot – deliver what the client needs. Listen, plan, deliver – only then cut loose and add those bonus images

Above all have FUN. Fuji to me is freedom – freedom to be individual, freedom to create, freedom to experiment.

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After two days of shooting the team was exhausted – most important thing of all – one very happy client (and no one fell in the lake!)

I hope you find these tips helpful and may they inspire you push the boundaries a little more and try something new in your own photography. Go on, sprinkle some Fuji magic!!!


About Kerry

Kerry Hendry is a fine art equestrian photographer who is passionate equestrian commissions and adventures. Her equine images have been widely published in national media and sell worldwide. A keen rider from a very young age, Kerry combines her three main passions in life: horses, photography and travel.

Visit Kerry Hendry’s official website here
Visit Kerry Hendry’s official Facebook page here
Visit Kerry Hendry’s X-Photographer gallery here

Upcoming event

You can meet Kerry at Wilkinson Cameras Digital Splash show in Preston, on Sunday 11th October.
Kerry will be giving two talks which will cover her adventures with the Fuji-X system – looking at landscape, portrait and fine art equestrian photography:

 

7 thoughts on “Shooting ‘Lifestyle’ with X-Photographer Kerry Hendry”

  1. Nice pictures — but they could be for ANY product being pitched to style-obsessed twentysomethings. You could just as well have photographed all the models holding a green block so the client could later composite in its mobile phone/energy drink/pack of e-cigs/whatever. Of course that’s not the photographer’s fault, as presumably she was just being the servant of some marketoid’s creative brief. But is grinding out generic buy-me imagery what we aspire to?

    Incidentally, if Fuji thinks this is who its customers are, then obviously I don’t belong in its “product family.” Maybe they’re telling me to push off and find another brand…

  2. JL (above) has a point, at least about Fuji’s marketing strategy. I am 63, and own two Fuji cameras. (S5 Pro SLR and X30 compact) Most of the type of people shown in the photos are the sort who would almost certainly only ever use their smartphones or tablets, and would rarely be seen with a ‘real’ camera, Retro, or not.
    Fuji is either trying to capture the smartphone market, or hanging its hat on the completely wrong demographic. Time to get a new Ad Agency.(Good photos though, Kerry)
    Regards, Pete.

  3. I’d like to see the cover widened in terms ‘who are x’ users? I find the current marketing (good as they are) a bit ‘clichéd’, bright, stylish young things with a retro twist to their lifestyle. As a professional and a recent (about one year) convert from Nikon (after at least 10 years), I have used the Fuji X’s for every sort of assignment you can imagine, from actor head shots, product shots, portraits, street, documentary to fine art. The point I am making is that the versatility and convenience of the ‘x’ system is a breath of fresh air in my photographic life. Gone are the days of arriving home with ‘sloping shoulder’ syndrome and recuperating the next day. I am free to make images again without ‘over thinking’ settings etc. The intuitive way the system works has meant that I can concentrate wholly on what I am seeing once more, without the barrier of equipment weight and pure bulk getting in the way.
    How about some marketing images that reflect this new found freedom for those of us who have taken the ‘x’ system to our hearts in spite of a certain amount of prejudice from the old school. ‘A good big one beats a good little one’ is certainly not true any more!