A few weeks ago, we did a shoot for our friends at Belt Stop/Keep Your Pants On. This belt company has been in the Boston Area for about 5 years and is currently expanding with an e-commerce site. We are very excited to see this site launch. Here are some of our favorite shots!
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Monday, December 19, 2011
Sunday, November 13, 2011
Falling back
Saturday, November 5, 2011
Season's Greetings
Over the past few years Will has been booking Christmas card shoots.
Obviously, this is not a new concept. People have been sending out personalized holiday photo cards for years. But one of our favorite shoots had a lot of great bloopers and those shots wound up on the final card. We LOVE this idea! Those of you who have small children know how hard it is to get a shot in which everyone has their eyes opened, is smiling and is looking at the camera at the same time. Why not share a bit of the mayhem and include the funniest outtake in your holiday greeting?
All photos were shot in the Public Gardens. Contact us if you'd like a session of your own! Packages start at $200. We welcome you on our adventure.
Sunday, October 30, 2011
Dressing up isn't just for Halloween
Last week we went to our fist costume party of the season and it made us think... it's amazing how a costume can really bring someone out of their shell, especially in front of a camera. All it takes is a wig, a hat or maybe some makeup and you have a completely different character to work with.
Jon came in for a professional head shot, but wanted to have some fun as well, so we wound up with this.
Read more about Krista's photo session at lillian alice
Who would you like to be?
Hope you join us on our next adventure!
j&w
Thursday, October 20, 2011
"A little vino would be keen-o"
We’re published!
Being part of the Bolalek Construction team that built the cellar was an added advantage during the shoot since Will knows this cellar better than anyone and could highlight the personal touches and details that make the space so special.
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Bolalek Construction
Secrets Of Life
A few years ago, Will worked on the build out of a wine cellar (as many of you know, he’s a carpenter by day and photographer by night, weekend and everything in between). Recently, the homeowners hired Will to photograph their wine cellar for the November 15th issue of Wine Spectator.
Read more from the homeowner here.
See more from wmannphotography on our new site.
wmannphotography
Bolalek Construction
Secrets Of Life
Thursday, October 13, 2011
The Mann behind the camera
What can I tell you about Will? So much actually, but we’ll keep it photo-focused for now.
I’ve known Will for more than half of my life. I knew him when he didn’t own a camera. When he took pictures, it was with my old Advantix camera (remember those?) or a disposable.
Fast forward a few years. That old Advantix camera is now more Will’s than mine and buying disposables is a such a waste, so what does Will find under the Christmas tree? A real camera. With buttons and a detachable lens and settings galore... his first Nikon, an N65, a gift from yours truly.
It’s so fancy.
Of course, two minutes later, the world goes digital so he adds a Nikon Coolpix E5700 to his arsenal. All that film and developing was getting expensive anyway, at least that’s the excuse. The digital camera fast-tracks Will’s journey to … photographer. For the first time, he can see the shot he's just taken and can adjust immediately. It’s a magnificent honing tool. But tools wear out (one day the optics on the Coolpix finally went dark), so we invested in more equipment. An F100 (a bit of a recluse now who hides in the basement and come out for long-exposure work), a D70 (now living with my jewelry-making, photo-taking, art-student little sister) and finally the D300 (or as I call it: his girlfriend).
So what else caused this need to acquire bigger and better? I mean, Will’s not a hoarder, collector or flashy spender. Actually, photography came to Will primarily through travel. He started noticing all the details that create an environment. Our vacation photos still showed us smiling and waving at the camera next to Mickey Mouse, or hanging with the resort pet cat, but more and more were of dilapidated statues settled on thick moss being hit just so by a late afternoon sun or the Empire State Building reflected in a puddle on a sidewalk somewhere on the lower east side.
An unconscious objective emerged: showing places we’d traveled to in a somehow different way. With his shots, Will wants to take you to where he was, show you why it is a special place and make you want to go there and see it for yourself.
So that was the starting point. During those years, Will focused mainly on landscapes, cityscapes, architecture and exterior sculpture. We traveled a lot to Florida, NYC, Mexico, Hawaii and, of course, in and around Boston.
And then came man... I can’t remember when it happened first, but this one sticks out most for me. While visiting friends in LA, we drove to Malibu and sat on the beach and Will caught an incredible moment. A little boy, maybe three or four years old, found a traffic cone on the beach and, with his dad, was playing with it. It was beautiful. Will pointed, clicked the shutter and that was that. A fraction of a minute of our lives. A fraction of a minute of that boy and his dad’s lives. Here we are six years later and I still remember that day, that moment. It’s one of my favorites of Will’s pieces. It is certainly a mile marker. People were getting in the way of the landscapes Will was trying to shoot, but rather than being roadblocks, they presented themselves as a new subject to explore and capture.
For me, this was the start of Will being on the cusp of something special. That Christmas, instead of another sweater or book or a new Bad Religion album there was a lens (I’m sure you’ve guessed from whom). And it’s been that way since. Fish-eye, sure; tripod, the taller the better; a monster bag to keep all this stuff safe, ok; a mortgage payment of a new camera, let’s do it.
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