CityView Magazine - Fayetteville, NC
Issue link: http://www.epageflip.net/i/101164
Capturing a soldier���s eyes is critical. We look someone in the eye, see eyeto-eye, make eye contact. The eyes are the proverbial windows to the soul, and what we look at first when we see a person. Above all, the eyes must be in focus. If they are not, whatever is in focus better be worth it. Content is king. A picture���s aesthetic and technical qualities are important, but a mother won���t like a photo of her child unless that smile is just right. Similarly, an amateur with an iPhone who catches a sudden rainbow above soldiers paying respects to a fallen comrade can beat a pro with an expensive Nikon and a plain sky. I once believed that great photos were few and far between, but no longer. Now I see they come at us as if through a fire hose. Life is always mortal, it���s always funny, tragic or moving in some way. It���s only our inability to recognize, isolate and record these moments that limits what shots we take away. Paratroopers are always seeking a mission, whether it���s a patrol, prep for patrol or just a prank on a fellow paratrooper. They are photo-op gumball machines. My camera is my primary weapon system. Immediately upon completing one mission, I prepare it for the next. That said, I���m still a soldier �����and I never neglect my M4. (For the geeks: I always shoot in RAW format, only use ���skylight��� protective filters when I���m around helicopters, and often carry a lightweight tripod for shooting at low light, even on long foot patrols. I use all four basic camera modes ��� program, aperture-priority, shutter-priority and manual ��� depending on the situation. I post-process in Lightroom, with the occasional foray into Photoshop.) Learning to predict when a situation will coalesce into an interesting shot is critical. That���s done by drawing on past experience with a like circumstance, knowing a subject���s intent and watching body language as a situation unfolds. Many successful news photographers hedge their bets by placing their camera���s shutter in machine gun mode, firing up to 10 frames per second. While I do this occasionally, the calculated single shot of a sniper more often works for me. Every fighting man knows that his slice of a firefight is just that, a slice. In combat, I have learned that watching the enemy and my fellow soldiers while trying to photograph them is difficult ��� and extremely dangerous. To limit my exposure to enemy fire, I focus on photographing paratroopers while using their defensive posture as a guide for my own. If they are firing to the left, I make sure to have cover in that direction even if I can���t see the enemy. When I can join the fight, I do. It might go without saying that, as an Army photographer, soldiers are my inspiration, but I might add that, after four years behind the camera, they continue to be a wellspring. If there are 3,500 paratroopers in our brigade ��� 1st Brigade Combat Team of the 82nd Airborne Division ��� then there are 3,500 compelling stories to be told, and a hundred times as many compelling photographs waiting to be made. CV Grease... It���s a Pain in the Drain. Pouring grease, oil or fat down the drain? OUCH! It can block our sewer lines, causing wastewater to back up. And that can hurt our drinking water at its source. It can harm the environment and your property, too. Wastewater overflow is costly to clean up, which could also hurt our committed efforts to keep your rates down. That���s why at PWC, we urge you to follow these guidelines ��� so you won���t have a pain in the drain. ��� Pour grease, oil or fat (let it cool if it���s hot) into a disposable container and put it in the trash. ��� Wipe grease from pans with a paper towel before you wash them. ��� Never put meat scraps down the drain. ��� Compost vegetable scraps or put them in the trash ��� instead of throwing them down the drain. ��� Don���t put other solid objects down the drain or flush them down the toilet. For more information, see the Environmental section of our website. Stop. Think. Prevent Overflow. faypwc.com CityViewNC.com | 51