Blog

A food blog dedicated to the Kansas City commercial photography studio - Alistair Tutton Photography

winner of the 2012 pdn photography award

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Ever since I started my journey into photography I’ve been an avid reader of PDN. For me it’s the primary source of news and advice for almost all aspects of the commercial photography industry - ranging from advertising photography, to photojournalism, to fine art and wedding photography and pretty much every thing in between. It’s read by a lot of photographers and a lot of art buyers. The magazine runs a few specialized competitions - chief amongst them the “Photo Annual”, their annual photography competition. It’s a pretty big deal, from what I know.

So we did the usual thing of entering a couple of pieces (I think we entered last year as well) and you know what’s really weird and unexpected and quite wonderful? We actually won - we’re amongst the winners! We’re actually going to be published in PDN. That’s right, the magazine I love is going to actually feature a photo of mine. Yep, it’s in the June issue, out any day now (the on-line version is out and apparently it’s page 77 if you want to take a look). And having had a brief look through the on-line work the other images are absolutely breathtaking; and it’s an absolute honour (British spelling of course - we’ll talk about aluminium next) to be amongst folk like that.

I’m kinda shocked, I have been for a couple of months since we heard. We’ve been holding off on chatting about it until we saw it on the on-line version. And we got an email the other day saying we can feature the fancy graphic below and I get to go to a party in Manhattan - the fancy one - to meet the other winners - this is kinda cool.

Needless to say I’m “chuffed to bits” and pretty humbled to get this sort of recognition. I know that Kansas City’s had a lot of attention from PDN over the years - David Morris was featured for his really cool blackboard image this year. Austin Walsh had that wonderful Christmas video in there last year and, most ironically, The Wade Brothers are on the facing page to me this year - congrats lads. I’m sure they are others as well but this, for me, is pretty darn amazing!

So what did we win for? It was a really cool project that we worked on with Blacktop Creative and Ply Gem. We’ve done several projects for them over the years documenting their exterior home products. For this project they teamed with Extreme Home Makeover and donated all the exterior finish products for all seven of the homes they built in seven days for their Joplin Christmas Special. It was an incredible donation by them and a pretty emotional project to work on. The homes were incredibly unique and we were charged with capturing overalls and individual details of each home. Over the course of several days we worked on all the different aspects that Ply Gem had delivered. We had, honestly, some bloody awful weather. That meant we were on location for long periods, up well before the dawn, trying to get that perfect moment and we definitely found some gorgeous images of the homes. One angle we settled on immediately was a front elevation shot with a really dominent portion of sky in each image to make a set where the unique designs would hang together as a set. For this series we had a really short gap of good weather, and we literally ran down the street to get each image in as nearly identical lighting as we could get.

Thanks to everyone for all their hard work on the project - it was a really fun set to be on and the co-operation with the film crew was wonderful. The final result had some real meaning for a wonderful group of families.
Credits: Ply Gem, Blacktop Creative, Dave Swearingen - Creative Director, Adam Caselman - Assistant

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Our work….in print. Always cool.

Tearsheets are pretty darn fabulous and we had some odd ones last year - ranging from priests, to hangover cures, professional football (soccer for you American folk) and the architects and union workers who build the stadiums and even a clock maker who restores historic clocks - the really big ones. I love the variety of the projects we get to cover, and while I do have my favorites it’s phenomenal fun to be working with so many wonderful subjects. 

Credits:
Room 39
Sporting KC
Populous
Architect Magazine
Historic Preservation Magazine
Columbia Magazine
Assistant - Adam Caselman

Beautiful Interior Design.

If you’re going to be the owner of a leading interior design studio then you really should have a wonderful home - and this one is no exception. Full of gorgeous details and stunning vignettes one of my favorites was the skulls and antlers over the bed.







Credits:
Kansas City Homes & Gardens

Why Just Use a Regular Chair, When You Can Have A Piece of Art?

3 Axis is one of our wonderful Rosedale neighbours and our paths have crossed before - most recently at Arrowhead where they built the insanely cool 12’ tall football helmet for the sports science exhibit - it’s cool. So when they came up with an idea for a line of plywood stools we leapt at the chance to photograph them. These are wonderful and they literally are made out of half a sheet of plywood each.





Credits:
3-Axis
Assistant - Adam Caselman

We think all our work is art. This one actually is.

George Rousis is a great friend and an incredibly talented artist - he works in hand forged steel and other metals. Recently he needed some new images for an upcoming show. Here’s one of the pieces from that shoot - apparently it mimics the graceful curve of the female form, I just think it’s really sexy, and in the detail you can see the tool marks from how George formed the metal by hand.




Credits:
Organic Iron Concepts
Assistant - Adam Caselman

We Made It To The College World Series...Really.

Another one of our fantastic collaborations with Populous took us to Omaha and the brand spanking new baseball stadium there - after decades of using Rosenblatt as the home of the College World Series a brand new, purpose-built facility was constructed right in the heart of downtown Omaha, and it is beautiful.

It’s a lot of fun not just getting to photograph these stadiums but getting to photograph them on game day is fantastic. If you haven’t been to the College World Series make sure you get out there and enjoy it at least once - the atmosphere is wonderful.






Credits:
Populous
HDR Architecture
Assistant - Adam Caselman

Go Mules! We hung out with the college kids.

I finally got a chance to work with Gould Evans - and it was on a fantastic project. They recently completed the student union center for UCM - go Mules! And it’s an incredible facility. A lot of the project was centered on historic re-use with the old swimming pool being repurposed for a student lounge and the old gymnasium floor being recycled as a wall finish. We had a ton of fun playing with the climbing wall and didn’t even hurt ourselves.

PS The best part of the shoot was that we got to work with Adam on it - he’s now here as the full-time assistant/retoucher - and he’s really cool.






Credits:
UCM
Gould Evans
Assistant - Adam Caselman

Our Little Adam Goes to the Big Apple.

T-Mobile has been working with Wong Doody Crandall Wiener to develop a new concept for their retail stores and we got the chance to go and photograph them for the designers and for the corporate folk back in Germany. This involved travelling to New York to shoot in the Times Square store and also going to Seattle, T-Mobile’s US HQ, to photograph the corporate store. Lots of late night lock-ins survived with the use of gummi-bears and coke zero.

PS Thanks for the entertainment on our night off Jeff Smith - that was a whole lot of Seattle we got to see!




Credits:
T-Mobile
Wong Doody Crandall Wiener
Assistant - Adam Caselman

My Neighbours. They Rock, literally.

My neighbours (English spelling) are wonderful - they’ve been there for a couple of years and they are really nice guys. They’re also in a band. So I trade photography for them playing our annual studio piss-up - it’s kinda a win-win as I love working with them on their covers and I love hearing them play. For this one we did some simple images on a white backdrop and they’re working with an illustrator, Chance Bone, to add some unique feel to the final photography. We’re currently working on a new concept shoot with them that’s shaping up really nicely and they just did a project providing audio for a video for the Buckle.



Credits:
Antenna’s Up
Illustrator - Chance Bone

Tech N9ne Salue: Our First Time with Tech.

The first time we got to meet Tech and all the folk at Strange Music was with the Salue video for Big Scoob. In this one we didn’t do anything but open the doors of the studio for them to shoot the video. It was really good fun to hang out with everyone and watch the video unfold.



Credits:
Tech N9ne
Strange Music
Location - Vox Theatre

Tempting Treats from Blue Stem

While we enjoy shooting a variety of subjects, food has a special place in our hearts..or is it our stomachs? We recently had the pleasure of working with Megan and Colby Garrelts of Blue Stem restaurant. We were looking for an opportunity to capture not only final shots of finished desserts but images of the stages of preparation. Maybe it’s my architect’s brain that enjoys the building of things, the process of getting to the final result but taking photos of the stages of a dish really intrigues me…and let’s be honest…makes me hungry.

Enjoy the images below, I guarantee you’ll be ordering dessert with your lunch after this.








Credits:
Blue Stem

Our Gratitude is Boundless.

We’d like to just thank all of you who came out to our big anniversary bash last night at the Vox. We are proud of all the work we have done and it thrills us to be able to share it with you.

We’d also like to thank everyone who donated and bid on auction items to benefit Joplin, MO. We were able to raise over $3,200 total and that makes us proud.

We wish all of you a very happy, safe and relaxing fourth of July weekend and hope to see all of you soon.

Cheers!

Alistair, Kate & Adam

This is the Magic Bullet

Everyone wants the ‘magic bullet’. Everyone wants to know the one thing they can do to increase business and revenue. Guess what…I have it - CUSTOMER SERVICE.

Let’s face it — the immediacy of the electronic world we live in has made us impatient for recognition. When we send an email, leave a voicemail, comment on a blog, tweet, text, post to Facebook or update our status on LinkedIn, we desire instant gratification. We want the person we intended to receive our message to acknowledge it with an answer to our comment, question, issue or concern immediately — if not sooner. 

Is this fair? No. Is it polite to be this impatient? No. But that doesn’t stop us from getting frustrated, aggravated and for some, downright ticked off that our voice is being ignored. Or is it? Are we actually being ignored or is the person on the receiving end just as busy and overworked as we are? Do they even have the answer to our question, resolution to our problem or response to our comment, or do they have to get that from someone else? Perhaps they are taking the time to formulate a well-thought-out response instead of firing back without thinking first, which is another issue we all seem to face. (But that’s a topic for a future blog post.) 

As the person waiting for the response, we need to take a moment to see things from the other person’s perspective. While the issue/comment/question/concern might be the most important thing we have to worry about right now, it probably isn’t the same for the person on the receiving end. 

With that being said, when we are the receiver we need to acknowledge the sender. That person has one main need — to be heard. While “satisfaction” might rank up there, initially they just want to know that they have been heard. If you work in a world where a committee decides everything and communication requires approval from several people, you still should respond to the sender. Temper the sender’s impatience with an acknowledgment — for example, “I received your message and will get back with you as soon as I have an answer.”

Consider how many sales and potential new customers are lost just because the customer feels they haven’t been heard. The most successful organizations have made communication and acknowledgement a cornerstone of their corporate culture. Take Zappos, for instance. This brand has thousands of loyal clients and customers, and everyone else wants to know the secret. It’s not magic — all they have really done is made the most fundamental of human needs a priority.

Great customer service doesn’t just make the retail world go round. Every organization, association, corporation — every person, for that matter — can benefit by acknowledging the need to be heard in their clients, customers and members. 

How do you make sure you are acknowledging your fellow humans?

Capturing The Architectural Redesign of Helzberg Diamonds

Last year I was excited at the opportunity to do some architectural photography for Helzberg Diamonds. I was asked to photograph the interior re-fits of a whole series of Helzberg locations. The projet involved a lot of late nights, some interesting travel stories and some great experiences. The photographs we’ve included below are from the flagship location here in Kansas City. We are lucky to be so close to their flagship store located on the Country Club Plaza. The new merchandising cabinets are absolute works of art and the overall design of the stores is breathtaking. From the flagship - to the mall locations - to the free-standing stores - they are consistently brilliant.

In carrying out the shoots we had the chance to meet Parke Wellman, the architect who is responsible for this incredible redesign and she was gracious enough to say some very kind words about our work:

“I discovered Alistair and his team at the last minute, reviewed his extensive portfolio and determined that he has the eye for detail a retail space requires for photography. His schedule and flexibility dovetailed well with a retailer demands and needs. The multiple store photos turned out as expected and priced very competitively! We will be working again very soon.”

Parke R. Wellman, AIA, RDI - Divisional Vice President - Store Design, Construction, & Visual Merchandising

Thank you to everyone at the Helzberg locations in Kansas City, Chicago, New York and San Antonio for making sure each location was well prepared and for providing the elements that made for such a beautiful end result.





Credits:
Helzberg Diamonds
J.E. Dunn
Assistants - Andrew Hoxey

Go Chiefs!

We had an absolutely incredible opportunity last year to work with a great team on the Kansas City Chiefs’, Arrowhead Stadium renovations. Populous, Turner Construction and Burns & McDonnell partnered on the project and sent us on a long jaunt both inside and outside the stadium, capturing architectural photography of the raw spaces and lifestyle imagery against the architectural backdrop on game day. It really was wonderful, and I don’t think there are many spaces I haven’t seen at Arrowhead.

Thank you everyone for all the help in scheduling us for the shoots and in getting us access to the entire project - we even got on the roof on game day!






Credits:
Populous
Turner Construction
Burns & McDonnell
Kansas City Chiefs
3 Axis
Assistants - Ryan Yoakum, John DePrisco, Andrew Hoxey, Natasha Frederick