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Rangefinder
Magazine
January 2004
Profile: Craig Kienast by John Iacovino
Breaking
New Ground: The Evolution of Fantasia
Life changed rather dramatically for Craig Kienast about
four years ago when he crossed an imaginary line between portrait photographer
and fine artist.
“
They’re both good trades,” Kienast says. “It’s
just that I was getting bored with the one and didn’t know I could
become the other and still make a good living.”
What changed him?
Digital photo manipulation tools and
the work of photographer Darton Drake changed him, for starters. Once
Craig made his commitment to a
new art form, his clients’ incredibly positive reactions were all
he needed to keep pushing him over one “edge” after another.
Is he way, way out there today?
Yes.
Is he happy?
Big yes.
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| “Violin Girl.” This girl’s best
friend was her instrument. Her mother asked if we could do something
special with her and the violin or with sheet music. I don’t
think she expected this! Lens: Canon L 28–70mm f/2.8. I started
with a Rembrandt background for both the girl and violin then melted
the two together. |
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Craig’s photographic art form, which
he calls “fantasia art
prints,” has helped him fall in love with his career all over again.
It’s paying the bills quite well, too. And Craig believes it might
just be what keeps his portrait business viable another decade.
Today,
in the small market town of Clear Lake, Iowa, Kienast gets more than
double the fees of his nearest competitor (about $1200 for most
of his high school senior orders, and a little less for those who don’t
want the “fantasia” treatment). In a typical year, he shoots
about 100 seniors, 12 weddings and another 50 or so assignments for children
or families.
He considers every session a commissioned work of art—and charges
appropriately.
Please Don’t Make Me Do That…
Craig’s introduction to digital photography was at a Darton Drake
seminar and he remembers his total lack of excitement—not with
Darton, but with the digital medium being introduced.
“
I actually walked out on that portion of the class in favor of the pop
machine,” he recalls. “The last thing I wanted to do was
make a senior ‘bigger than the school’ or put him on a basketball
court with Michael Jordan or make him sit on a box of Pop Tarts.”
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| “Attitude Girl.” This was taken in an
alleyway using available light. The ghost image was from her studio
session and pasted on the wood at 30 percent opacity. I call this
one against the grain. |
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Craig
knew those gimmicks would take time to produce, and he doubted if seniors
or brides, much less their parents or spouses, would be willing
to pay for what seemed little more than an arcade souvenir. “But
that’s not what was taught at the seminar. I wish I would have
stayed in the room that afternoon, I would be way ahead of where I am
today,” Craig laments.
“
I admit it—I needed a digital attitude adjustment,” he says. “Yes,
the digital manipulation process gives you the power to be corny, but
it also gives you the power to be sensitive and subtle—to craft
and create,” he says.
Craig shoots with a Canon 1Ds. With 11 megapixels to play with, every
click of the shutter has the inherent resolution to become a wallet-sized
print or a tapestry big enough to fill any wall.
When he knows an image
is to be worked into a fantasia, he chooses a background that will add
an element of depth and flow to the image. He’s
painted several backgrounds that tend to take him in the direction he
eventually will go inside his computer. His backdrops are sold exclusively
through Photo Showcase backgrounds: (www.photoshocasebackgrounds.com).
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“Coffee.” This image was created for
our local espresso bar. The photograph is of the owners and is composed
of eight different images, the steam was created using incense.
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Lighting techniques are pretty much the same as for
any non-digitally reworked photograph. Craig uses one main light source,
a Photogenic PowerLight
1500 SL, and a host of Larson Softboxes, especially the 4x6- and 6x8-foot
boxes.
What sets his fantasia print style apart is his “after the
click” bag
of toys. Working primarily in Adobe Photoshop, Craig subtly enhances
the eyes—the whites of the eyes and the eyelashes. He also removes
imperfections, but not all of them.
“
The little twist in a young man’s smile is part of his story. I
leave that. The lines in a woman’s lips are sweet—I leave,
or even enhance them,” he says. “But the wrinkle under a
subject’s eyes if the subject is only 18 years old or white dust
particles on a subject’s black shirt get rubber stamped away,” he
says. Using Photoshop and/or Painter,
Craig turns the skin on women and
children towards porcelain.
For most backgrounds, Craig tends to dull,
blur, and repaint the patterns of the backdrop so they conform to the
features of the subject while
they set the subject apart from the background.
“
The contrast between the enhanced features of the subject and the subdued
and reshaped tones of the backdrop are part of the theater of my finished
images,” he says.
The computer image reworking process takes Craig
about 15 minutes. He usually does this with his own favorite music playing
in the background—different
music for different images. “Music really is a part of the creative
process,” Craig says. He concentrates every bit as completely on
this process as he does when the camera is in his hands.
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“Screaming guitar.” Seniors bring sports
stuff, cars, friends and pets as props for their senior portraits.
I love it when they bring something that they’re passionate
about and many times that’s a guitar. It is nearly impossible
to get this much emotion out of a 17 year old when mom is watching,
so when I want drama and excitement like this, mom has to leave
the room. |
“Head and Shoulders Prom Dress.” Sometimes
the effect is very subtle. For this photograph I softened the girl’s
skin and pulled the background to give added direction towards the
subject. You don’t always have to show the whole dress in
order to show all the beauty. |
The specific
techniques and digital tools he uses are not trade secrets. He readily
shows them in his seminars, prints them out in step-by-step
form in his periodicals, and shares freely with photographers in chat
rooms—or just in conversation.
“
Besides providing a new spark of job satisfaction for photographers,
I’m extremely curious to see where other creative professionals
go with these ideas,” Craig says. “I fully expect to be blown
away by the photographers who soar light years past my few attempts at
this process. Other photographers’ work is part of what will push
me forward 5–10 years from now—you know, keeping up with
the Joneses,” he says.
Though Kienast’s style is easily recognizable
even to the casual observer, no two finished prints are ever alike.
“
The mood from the session and the impression the subject has made on
me influence whether my finished image will be playful and bouncy or
gothic and eerie. I don’t always get it right, but when I’ve
picked up the right vibe from the subject and reflect that back to them
in the finished print, they go crazy. They love it and they will go to
great lengths to own that image,” he says. “Usually the first
words they say when they see their art print are ‘Oh, my God!’ If
you can get that reaction, the sale is a given,” he says.
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| “Blue Horn Girl.” A
blue gel was used because the horn was chromed. I used the history
brush in screen
mode to highlight her eyes. |
“Car.” In this image I used a 70–200mm
Canon L lens to compress the background. Using the liquid smear
tool in painter I achieved the motion and brush strokes. |
Apparently,
Craig hits the mark quite often. Up until this year, he shot and prepared
a fantasia print for each of his seniors and all of his
brides. The fantasia image is printed on archival photo paper on an Epson
2200 or Epson 7600 printer, then framed for each of his sales sessions.
Up until this year, he sold two of five of his seniors the print at an
average price of $350.
“
I’m in a small-town, small-income area,” Craig says. “If
I did this in an upscale urban market, I could increase that price by
three times and still sell it.”
This year, Craig made an administrative
change. He now asks his seniors in advance if they want a fantasia session
added to their basic session.
If so, they pay an extra $25 at the time of the shoot. He says approximately
7–10 seniors accept the add-on session. So far this year, only
three people who have accepted the add-on fantasia session have failed
to purchase the print.
Many request more than one fantasia to be created.
Some seniors or parents opt for the much larger, canvas version for up
to $1200, unframed.
The Making of Fantasia Prints
A fantasia print is quite a bit more than a highly retouched
image, it’s closer to a competition print.
It is actually overworked, but in a tasteful way.
First,
any blemishes are taken care of using either the
clone tool or the healing brush (illustrations 1a
and 1b).
This is where the conventional retouching stops.
Then Craig spends some time with the eyes—eye whites
and eyelashes—using Photoshop’s dodge, burn and
several sharpening techniques (illustration 1c). On occasion,
Craig slightly
reduces the pupil size using Photoshop’s liquid
filter in the “pucker” mode.
Now the subject
gets a face-lift, so to speak. Craig opens the image
in Painter. “I use Painter 6, and in this version,
I use the ‘Liquid Smear’ tool to soften
the skin to achieve the porcelain affect. In the
new version,
Painter
8, they changed the tool and made it a part of the
Blenders package. (illustration 2). I also use this
tool to selectively
smear the
background to achieve a flow or direction through
the image, so that everything revolves around the
subject.
A border or matte is usually placed around the finished
image using Photoshop layers to complete the piece
(illustration 3a
and 3b).
The finished image is usually printed out
on Craig’s Epson
2200 (13x19 prints) or Epson 7600 (20x30 prints),
or sent to American Color Imaging to be printed on canvas.
For the Epson
prints he uses either Epson’s Enhanced Matte
photo paper or Ilford’s Galerie Smooth Pearl
paper and Epson’s
standard inks.
Extensive samples of Craig’s
work as well as his teaching materials can be seen
on his web site
www.photock.com.
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“
People will purchase art. If that art happens to be of someone they love—if
it happens to pull at their heart strings, they purchase even more willingly,” he
says.
Of course, Craig still sells his clients the rest of
the standard packages. His seniors still bring several outfit changes
or ask to be
photographed
with their pet hamster or golf clubs. They go on location for sunsets
over Clear Lake, bring their girlfriends or boyfriends, and ask for their
nickname to be printed on their wallets. Craig says he now can tolerate
those tried and true traditions and even welcomes them.
“
As long as I occasionally get to produce something really special—like
maybe just once a day—then I’m happy,” he says. “Because
in addition to our industry’s ‘right-of-passage’ photographs,
my clients and I understand I will also be producing something we can’t
exactly predict the outcome of. There’s the anticipation that we’ll
not only capture time-honored photo memories—we will also create
a distinctly separate moment in time.”
All photographs in this
article were taken with the Canon 1Ds camera. Also the Canon 28–105mm
lens was used for all images unless otherwise specified.
Craig Kienast
will be present a program at WPPI ‘04 on Monday,
February 22, from 8:00–10 a.m. in BALLY’s, Las Vegas. The
title of his program is “Breaking New Ground.” John Iacovino
is a journalist with 20 years of newspaper and magazine publishing
history. Ten years ago he founded Blossom Publishing, a design
and print firm producing high-end print marketing projects for portrait
photographers. Blossom Publishing currently works with 600 photographers
annually nationwide.
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