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080515  |  Visit Charlotte

I photographed a marketing campaign for Visit Charlotte earlier this year. One day of location scouting, three days of shooting, five different locations, three lighting challenges, one very cool art director, two reliable assistants, and an awesome end client.

In one word: success!

Check it out for yourself:

Photo by Armando Bellmas
Photo © Armando Bellmas
Photo by Armando Bellmas
Photo © Armando Bellmas
Photo by Armando Bellmas
Photo © Armando Bellmas
Photo by Armando Bellmas
Photo © Armando Bellmas
Photo by Armando Bellmas
Photo © Armando Bellmas

See the work in action on the Visit Charlotte website.

080426  |  It only looks like the real thing

Armstrong ad

BBDO New York created and just released a series of print ads for the flooring company Armstrong. Each ad was photographed by Norman Jean Roy and features celebrity look-a-likes to emphasize their It only looks like the real thing tag line.

Armstrong ad
Armstrong ad

From Advertolog.com:

The campaign uses the theme “It only looks like the real thing” to show the upscale appearance and quality of Armstrong’s laminate floors. To highlight the theme, each execution features professional look-a-likes for well-known celebrities Lucille Ball, James Dean and Marlin Brando.

Armstrong ad

The photography is beautiful, natural, impeccably produced, and right in line with Roy’s style. Check out more of Roy’s work here.

080417  |  Creative creatives creating creative creative

Photo by Kelly Campbell
Photo by Kelly Campbell

Joshua Ferris’ debut novel Then We Came To The End is a funny and deliciously detailed story about a group of coworkers at an ad agency in Chicago.

It’s a fun read, especially for those of us who work in and with ad agencies.

One of my favorite parts of the book is when one of the agency employees Jim Jackers — struggling to come up with concepts for a particularly difficult campaign — calls his ornery old Uncle Max (who has graced Jim with ideas in the past) seeking new ideas and inspiration.

Max gives him a good idea and Jim tells him “he’d missed his calling.”

“You should have been a creative,” [Jim] said.

“A creative?” said Max.

Jim explained that in the advertising industry, art directors and copywriters alike were called creatives.

“That’s the stupidest use of an English word I ever encountered,” said Max.

Jim also told him that the advertising product, whether it was a TV commercial, a print ad, a billboard, or a radio spot, was called the creative.

Then,

Sometime later in the afternoon, Max Jackers surprised Jim by calling him back. “You folks over there,” said Max, “you say you call yourselves creatives, is that what you’re telling me? And the work you do, you call that the creative, is that what you said?” Jim said that was correct. “And I suppose you think of yourselves as pretty creative over there, I bet.”

“I suppose so,” said Jim, wondering what Max was driving at.

“And the work you do, you probably think that’s pretty creative work.”

“What are you asking me, Uncle Max?”

“Well, if all that’s true,” said the old man, “that would make you creative creatives creating creative creative.” There was silence as Max allowed Jim to take this in. “And that right there,” he concluded, “is why I didn’t miss my calling. That’s a use of the English language just too absurd to even contemplate.”

With that, Max hung up.

[Excerpt Copyright 2007 by Joshua Ferris]

080407  |  Bringing your vision and style to the ad table

One of the greatest validations of what we do as artists and creatives is having an agency, design firm, marketing department, or a publication bring you on for a project or an assignment based of your style of work. It’s happened to me and it feels great. And I love seeing it happen to others.

Photographer Richard Renaldi has a distinct style: very natural, solemn, and sensitive. Especially with his photographs of people.

Photo by Richard Renaldi
© Richard Renaldi
Photo by Richard Renaldi
© Richard Renaldi
Photo by Richard Renaldi
© Richard Renaldi

Renaldi recently wrapped up working on a campaign for Microsoft and McCann (the ad agency) that is all him.

Photos by Richard Renaldi
Microsoft ads photographed by Richard Renaldi

On his blog Renaldi writes:

In the end I am so happy…that [Microsoft/McCann] produced an entire advertising campaign of real people in eight by ten large format with all natural light- all extremely rare and unusual in this business especially in the digital age.

What’s even better is that they chose Renaldi to photograph it based on his style and vision, which is making photographs of “real people in eight by ten large format with all natural light.”

It’s a perfect example of good things coming your way when you stay true to your vision, are honest with and about your work, and make it your own way.