List of External Blogs from National Photographer.
Posted in Network updates on January 25th, 2010 by admin | | Comments Off
National Photographer is all about giving; and this month we will be looking at offering charity event work for some of the deserving charities across the UK for this year.
We are looking at the starlight cause for children. We will be working with other organizations as well as doing our own annual fund raiser events to help raise find to help less fortunate children.
Don’t forget to visit our website again soon for more updates which will be revealed soon!
Posted in Chat on March 7th, 2010 by admin | | No Comments »
City Photography is a network of website with photographers near you.
The websites for city-photography work on the basis that National photographer in partnership with GTWCMT who host and design the sites and handle the SEO and SEM as well as the updates to the websites.
There are other simple service providers that are in the industry for making money from the website sales, but City-photography is different.
City photography is run by photographers for photographers and the aim of the websites is to allow photographers to remove themselves from directories with the simple paragraph listing, and to show there work on a full website and work together with city photography on a local level.
Posted in Chat, Commercial Photography, Portrait Photography, Wedding Photography on February 14th, 2010 by admin | | No Comments »
The Sigma 50-500mm EX DG HSM APO ultra telephoto lens is not only a mouthful to say its also a bit of a handful in your hands.
With all your camera kit at the ready on loaded you could be carrying around 4KG of photography kit in your hands and with this long ultra telephoto lens measuring in at just under 15 inches (lens with hood) you know how much of a handful these are going to be and how essential a tripod is.

The lens is handy for outdoor shoots, but not for indoor as it becomes far too slow for indoor use and produces slightly soft images. however I purchased this lens to replace a 55-200mm Nikkor DX lens that was far too light on the camera and above 135mm the camera would always jump even on a tripod. This lens isn’t too bad and as soft as you may think as many people are slightly blind so it will come across as normal and I have had many clients say that they cant see where the images are soft, so Maybe all the reports of the lens being soft of from us over critical photographers that want pin Sharpe images?
Another plus point with this lens is that its tight and not sloppy so you really do cause a vacuum when your are using it and there is a lock on it at certain points, though I never need to use it to stop lens creep. and another handy point I should make is that the end lens is easy to remove with a few screws that are easy to access so cleaning this lens on this inside isn’t hard at all, though I find that little dirt is pulling into the lens..
If you’re a summer out door photographer then this is a good lens, it not for ramblers due to its weight and after carrying this around all day or for a good part of it you do know what you have been doing.
It isnt front heavy either so its not too bad in that respect, but with the handle (tripod mount) it can make trying to hold it a little akward as it guides you hand too far back and therefore weakens your hold on the camera and lens. With that said, after a few hours, you will want a tripod and a sturdy one at that.
If you look at the money costs of the lens in comparison, the F2.8 lens are going to be around 5 times the price of this lens and if you work out the value of this lens and its costs it does make it very good value.
Posted in Kit Bag on January 26th, 2010 by admin | | No Comments »
Boudoir Photography is alive and kicking in the UK and much like trashing the dress and boudoir bride, Boudoir Photography has been heavily influencedby Americans.
Quite often many of the clients require the “American Beauty photo” which seems to be broadly required and is a costly shoot with all the fresh roses having to be purchased for the shoot and for the single photo.
While many ladies have some ideas of the photographs that they would want during their Boudoir photo shoot, the list is limited to around 3 different shots, and therefore may limit their opportunities to allows for something new and individual.
The photographers creative nature and style makes a difference in the actual photographs finish and for many they would rather not copy the images as a like for like to achive the photo that is requested.
While keeping within the same theme, this photo uses chocolate buttons as a replace to the rose petals. As you may guess this is a little more of mess from the heat of the studio lighting making a show essential after the photo shoot.

You can find out more about the bouoir photo shoots offered by National Photographer on our Boudoir Photography website: http://boudoir.nationalphotographer.co.uk/ Or for more updates and information why not visit our Boudoir Blog on wordpress: http://boudoirphotographyuk.wordpress.com/
Posted in Boudoir Photography on January 25th, 2010 by admin | | No Comments »
There is a wide range of different styles on boudoir photography as different people and different photographers take there own ideas of the meaning of the photographic genre for boudoir.
We have been looking at Boudoir photographers and its history and evolution over the past 90 years to follow in some ways the boudoir photography style and concepts behind Boudoir Photography have changed.
In this time period there was not such thing as boudoir photography unless it was an invention of French bedroom photography, and it was known as glamour photography and in some cases erotic photography, which should be distinguished from porno graphical photography which would be sexually explicit in nature and not within the genre. And dating back to the 1800’s there was the pin-up cards.
Taking a wider look at photography; The camera in the early 1900’s was a big bulky thing and required lots of chemicals and a range of tools to work and it wasn’t until the invention in 1913 that the 35mm camera came into existence. This small, portable device made nude photography in secluded parks and other semi-public places easier, and represented a great advance for amateur erotica. Photographers had the new ability to take impromptu photos without carrying around a case of large clunky apparatus.
In the 1920s and 1930s Mandeltook numerous pictures in natural settings, and became known for his exceptional photographs of the female form and followed the “new age outdoor movement”. These were published through the Paris studio and if you recall that in that time period, its was ‘cool’ and exciting to be French and emulate the styles and fashion flare.
The age of the sliver screencame up with a cinematic milestone in terms of how they worked at marketing the stars of the films to sell the films and Glamour grew as advertisers have long linked sensuality with there products. with the sexy photograph of the films stars in an advertisement or to create interest is intended to persuade consumers that if they buy the tickets they get to see this diva.



The standards and style of glamour photography have changed over time, which have changed with the reaction the changes in social acceptance of that type of photography. In the early 1920s, photographers like Ruth Harriet Louise and George Hurrell photographed celebrities to glamorise their curves by utilising lighting techniques to develop dramatic effects in the photos.In December 1953 Playboymagazine was instrumental in changing the world of glamour photography as the first magazine which focused on nude models and was targeted at the mainstream consumer. Playboy published its first edition of with Marilyn Monroe on the cover, and nude photos of Marilyn Monroe inside. Monroe’s star status and charming personality helped to diminish the public outcry. However, until the 1950s, the use of glamour photography in advertising or men’s magazines was highly controversial or even illegal.
During World War II pin-up pictures of scantily clad movie stars were extremely popular among servicemen. Early glamour modeling was often associated with “French postcards”, small postcard sized images, that were sold by street vendors in France In the early 1900s.
The pin-up became popular and depicted scantily dressed women often in playful poses seemingly surprised or startled by the viewer and were typically a Vargas style of photocard. with the popularity of the pin-up many companies used the style as a platform for advertising the products while alluring men with the art work on the cards.
Of course with the advertising companies not wanting to convey a sexual nature or lean towards the pornographic images which would have been unheard of at the time, the nature of the Pin-up was about the sensual side of the woman and was more directed towards a teasing nature to invite the them to play and still retain the decorum of the company and her ‘values’.
The 1960’s saw the liberation and the invention of the mini skirt, the decade was the decade of love and sexuality.
urge to ‘find oneself’ the activism of the 1960’s and the quest for autonomy were characterised by the changes towards sexual attitudes at the time.
The modern consensus is that the sexual revolution in 1960’s was a typified by a dramatic shift in traditional values related to sex, and sexuality. Sex became more socially acceptable outside the strict boundaries of heterosexual marriage.
We also saw a large jump in photography as pornagraphical images became more public and the firm British reserve or stiff upper lip, gave way to a more relaxed lose approach as views changed. We saw to areas of glamour with the nudest and the models, as well as the sexual images and what was tolerated. The two areas of what was Glamour and What was Pornographical was a large debate that went on though the 1980’s as beach post cards were regarded as pornographic and caused a large outcry as children and holidays were associated with the seaside and these types of cards were on view in many of the beach towns and city shop fronts selling memorabilia and a stick of rock.
What was considered “glamour” has changed with the times. In the 1940s, clothed “pin-up” pictures were “glamour.” Many movie stars were featured in pin-up poses showing them in swimsuits. but in the 1950’s and early 1960’s, photographers such as Peter Gowland started to produced glamour images with partial nudity.
Only in the early 1970’s did some leading men’s magazines begin to show pubic hair and later then genitalia.
In the 1970s and 1980’swe saw a large debate about the nature of boudoir and glamour photography with a debate raging on for many years about what would be classed as pornographical images and what was called art. The debate reached around the world with the followers of Glamour using the art lovers love for the classical nude paintings as a stand on Pornographic images. At the time many of the museums were attacked by the protesters against the pornographic nature of the images and status of nude men had there ‘bits’ broken off and to meet with some of the public demand many classical art works were removed from the shows.

After the debate the world took a different view of glamour photography and set certain levels of what was acceptable and could be termed glamour.
These were set out as:
After Playboybroke through, many other magazines followed and this was instrumental in opening the market for the introduction of glamour photography into modern society. Today, softcore nude photographs of models appear in publications such as Perfect 10, or tabloid newspapers such as Britain’s The Sun’s Page 3.
News papers in the 1980’s and as far back as the late 1960’s stared girls in glamour poses and was a feature found in the British tabloid newspapers like The Sun, and consisted of a topless or even nude photograph of a female glamour model.
This sensationalised the newspaper and when the sun relaunched the flagging newspaper in tabloid format on November 17, 1969, Rupert Murdoch began publishing clothed glamour photographs on its third page.
The first edition featured that month’s Penthouse Pet, Ulla Lindstrom, wearing a suggestively unbuttoned shirt.
Page Three photographs over the following year were often provocative, but did not feature nudity but did so in later years.
Gradually, Page Three girls would be featured more overtly topless poses, with their nipples clearly visible. Although these photographs caused a great deal of controversy at the time, and lead to more debate into the what was glamour and what was art. The Glamour images are credited with the increase in sales that established The Sun as one of the most popular newspapers in the United Kingdom by the mid-1970’s.
The feature gained its name from the tradition of publishing the photograph on the newspaper’s third page. Women who model for the feature are known as Page Three girls. Although “Page Three” and “Page 3″ are registered trademarks of News International Ltd, the parent company of The Sun, similar features are found in competing British tabloids (such as The Daily Star) and in other newspapers around the world In an effort to compete with The Sun, the competing Daily Mirror and Daily Star tabloids instituted their own Page Three–like features under different names.
Some critics consider it to be sexist, demeaning, and exploitative, while others regard it as softcore pornography that is inappropriate for publication in a national newspaper. In 1986, Clare Short, MP for Birmingham Ladywood, led an unsuccessful House of Commons campaign to have topless models banned from all newspapers., and typically the Page 3 girl was issued in a Sunday News paper, but was later removed from the Sunday issues.
During the mid 1980’s we saw the launch of the men’s magazines, on of the most well known is the FHM Magazine that began publication in 1985 in the United Kingdom under the name For Himand later was to change its title to FHM in 1994, although the full For Him Magazine continues to be printed on the spine of each issue.
Founded by Chris Astridge, the magazine was a predominantly fashion-based publication distributed through high street men’s fashion outlets.
After the emergence of Loaded magazine (regarded as the blueprint for the lad’s mag genre), For Him Magazine firmed up its editorial approach to compete with the expanding market and introduced a ’sports’ supplement FHM became one of the best-selling magazines in Britain during the mid to late 1990s, selling more than 700,000 copies per month.
Loaded was founded in 1994 by Mick Bunnage, Tim Southwell and James Brown. In its early days, the magazine’s readership was once memorably described as “50% Sun readers and 50% Guardian readers”. Brown has described the irreverent comic Viz as an inspiration for Loaded.
Loadedcaptured the lad culture of the 1990s ; its glorification of British male “rogues” like Liam Gallagher, Oliver Reed, Paul Gascoigne was only outstripped by its fondness for titillating photo shoots with nubile C-, B-, and occasionally A-list celebrities. In the early covers these were lased with male icons for film and TV.
Loaded’s defined a ‘laddish’ culture that was ground-breaking and was to reverberate around the world. Both magazines were ” lads mags”which grew in popularity for the mixed content of fashion and pictures of girls which they contained, From a personal point of view they were a mix of sports gadgets and the top-shelf mags that was the usual haunting ground of Playboy and, Mayfair, which typically contain photographs of attractive nude women, and sometimes sexual activities including oral sex, sexual intercourse.

The lads mags and the news papers brought forward the readers wivessection where the general public ‘girl next door’ types could submit their pictures and they would go to press. For many of the girls this was a launch pad to a career in Glamour modeling, fame and fortune. for FHM it was the High-street honeys and many of the magazines featured girls from all walks of life.
The Lad’s mag’s are reversing the trend, by emphasizing glamour while showing less nudity, in favor of implied nudity or topless such as with the handbra technique, where a woman hides her nipples and areola by covering both breasts with her own hands. This rolled back the tradition of glamour photography and topless modeling with a more sensual style of photography which we now terms as glamour or boudoir photography.

The Photography within the Mens magazine can cover a range of subjects, wheather this is an interview of a celebrity or a fashion article they do tend to learn on the side of suggestive photography to sell and brings us almost to the full circle on the use of pin-up cards to sell products.
While the pin-ups of the 1940s were typically stars of the silver screen todays media driven and full colour world has opened its doors to almost everyone and the chance of being famous or adored is widely used and accepted, reality TV is some what to blame with the life altering programs like Model Behaviour and big brothers as well as pop idol and Britain’s next top model.
Other TV programmes have also brought to life the realisty and confidence boost of womens bodies with programmes like how to look good naked, which has ushered forward the trend for women who are not size zero to get out there and strut their stuff and look good.
Boudoir Photographers have found that there has been a growth within the boudoir and glamour industry following these programs and women have got in touch with their feminine side. Many women are unaware of Boudoir Photography as it has been for most part of their lives glamour photography or lingerie modeling which has been seen in many catalogues and also we have seen the lingerie sellers such as agent provocateur use a more sexual and desirable photo to sell their products. (and stunning these photos are) Many women want to buy into that life style and look as good as the models and often real people and often go for the professional boudoir and glamour photographers to get just what they want.
Posted in Boudoir Photography on January 22nd, 2010 by admin | | 3 Comments »
Priston Mill and Tythe Barn are situated on the same site and offer two different venues nestled in the countryside just 6 miles from Bath and 10 miles from Bristol Both venues offer affordable prices; the Tythe Barn priced at £1,925.00 and the Watermill costing £1695.00 on a Saturday plus an additional £100.00 for the ceremony.


With a nice ornate and lawned garden the venues offers you a good backdrop for your wedding with their years of exsperience in organising weddings, celebrations, civil partnerships, corporate and special events.
Find out more on our wedding photography website, Wedding Elegance
Posted in Wedding Photography on January 20th, 2010 by admin | | No Comments »
One of the widely used lenes is the 50mm Prime Lens and this stunning 50mm Sigma Lens offer great Image quality and is one of the most used lens in my kit bag.
Perfect for detailed shots, Portraits and even landscapes, it is one of those lenes that you will keep on your camera.
Click the image for the Full Screen view of this press page review of the Sigma 50mm F2.8 EX DG Macro lens.
Posted in Kit Bag on January 20th, 2010 by admin | | No Comments »
With the new launch of the National photographer wedding elegance wedding photography service, which was launched on the 6th of January this year. We have seen a rise in people hitting the wedding photography website looking for wedding photographers.
The wedding photography site has seen a rise in the visitors over the week that it has been online and the duration of their stay be extended as we have planned the website to have a 3-way navigation system which offer the wedding photography hunters.
The new website uses a top navigation button system for the basic information that couples may want and then there is buzzwords that help clients find the information such as their wedding venues or certain posts that may have wedding photography or wedding albums contained within the site.
The wedding photography websites search function also allows users to ask questions which will guide them to the answer, and we will be working on this system to cover more content and questions that couples may want to ask the photographers here at national Photographer about their wedding and its photography.
Not only did we post up articles about wedding photography that we do, but we have also given background information into the photography, the styles and how we do some of the things that we do.
The site has averaged 511.37 hits per day over the last 8 days and we will be looking at some subtle changes to the sites content as we believe that there may be too much textual content on the pages. As you know we have wrote many articles about promotion wedding photography and designing wedding photography websites, so why don’t we do it ourselves? well that’s just one of those things that happens.
With the wedding photography site monitoring we can also see what clients are liking within the content and how this effects their use of the website and the contact which is being made. by the clients.
CEO of National Photographer Rory Witham Said ” It is nice to be able to see everything in detail about our users as often you just don’t get the feedback.. I believe that the wedding photography website provides information to the client in a number of ways so that they can have as much or as little detail as they want when on the site.”
Posted in Network updates, Wedding Photography on January 19th, 2010 by admin | | No Comments »
Today sees the launch of the national photographer photography training website.
We have been looking at making the site workable from day one as the old website was 4 years old and out of date and a little older fashioned.
The new website was planned and announced about 7 months ago but work has been slow due to the other websites we have updated and work we have done. The new website is under development as we run through the layout of the website and also give user rights and format that’s simple.
The NEW Training website has videos and more online resources for members and clients from the training website. It is a work in progress as we add the content to the website over the next few weeks, it will be a little slow going at this time.
Posted in Network updates, Photography Training on January 18th, 2010 by admin | | No Comments »
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