Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1996/05/15
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Having photographed for National Geographic for 28 years, I can tell you that shoooting 1000 rolls of film a year is not excessive. Many newspaper, magazine, and commercial photographers do that. I did more than 20 articles that took between 2 and 9 months in the field. In all those, I averaged about 300 rolls per article, which was quite normal at the time. On one article that seemed to never end, I consumed about 500 rolls, which I thought was too much over too long a period. But that was a personal reaction. Stanfield and Allard do tend to shoot a lot. They can go to the 500-900 rolls of film per article. But in Stanfield's case in particular, almost every frame is usable, beautifully composed, well exposed, and publishable. The additional coverage is not over-kill. It is just expanding the "look" at the subject, to be sure that everything of value and interest is photographically covered. And in his case, you see his fabulous Vatican coverage, the definitive work on the subject, transformed from article to book to video and everything else NGS produces. They are not getting everything from the pig but the squeal. The heaviest film users for Geographic though are not the real pros who used to be on the staff. They are the "should never have been assigned" freelancers who are running scared in the field and who think if they turn the motor on, surely something good will pass in in front of it. The record for this kind of shooting was some years back when a woman photographer took a couple of years in South America, shot more than 1400 rolls, and never had the coverage right. NGS had to send in someone else to finish it up and make it publishable. The obvious lesson there was that the photographer was not at fault. NGS was for not pulling her off the job after a month or so. I am reminded of a Japanese fable that speaks to this kind of coverage and shows the value of in-depth work. No space for it here, but suffice it to say that all good writers write vastly more than is printed. Singers, musicians, and athletes practice constaantly to get it right. Having a photographer shoot 10-100 times as much as is published the first time is not excessive. It is producing what a fine editor needs in order to select the best. That said, I must also add that if HCB really did shoot 2 rolls of film on a country for a magazine assignment, then the magazine was cheated and HCB was more arrogant than I have ever heard said about him. I am a great admirer of his work, but would find such an action to be unprofessional. There is no way to preconceive a true running story, photojournalism instead of movie-making, and there is no way to predict what the editor or the magazine needs as a final product. Try to imagine one of LIFE's greats, or Dave Duncan, or even Stanfill trying to pull such a stunt. It is an absurd story, and I truly hope it is not true. Fred Ward (alive and well and publishing books in Maryland) *** Visit my Gem Book Publishers site *** http://www.erols.com/fward/ *** *** fward@erols.com