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Jay Goldman is a professional photographer specializing in wedding, bar-batmitzvahs, personal and corporate events and more! His studio is located in Los Angeles, California where he has created the majority of his career. To see more of his work, visit his liveBooks8 website: www.jlgweddings.com.
I started my career 25 years ago in NYC. I assisted for a couple dozen photographers whose work I liked. There was no internet. I found their work promos in a double volume 1990 Workbooks that I stole from the ad agency my roommate worked at. On the weekends, I shot film, on a Hasselblad, 12 frames on a roll. Many headshots and musicians. I hand printed my client’s 8×10 black and white headshots in a rented darkroom.
Fast forward 25 years: technology has exploded. I now shoot all my work on a Canon 5DS, with 50 MB files onto a 64 GB card or tethered to my 27″ iMac. I live in LA and have a studio in midtown for 10 years. We are a highly diversified studio. Revenue split between Weddings, Bar-Bat Mitzvahs, Personal and Corporate Events, Portrait, Product, and Jewelry Photography.
JG: Imagecentric, nonbulshitty, and juicy. I think one of those is a real word.
JG: I am constantly tweaking the site.
I decided to have a New Work gallery, so I try to swap in and out anything that is exciting to me that I am currently working on.
The beauty of LB8 is how fast you can jump in, drop a photo into a gallery, see a live preview, publish and then jump out. It’s like the Matrix.
The answer is out there, Neo, and it’s looking for you, and it will find you if you want it to.
JG: This something that I always struggle with. Sometime I am attached emotionally to an image and want to use it, I need someone to tell me that it is not strong for the site. I get a lot of opinions from wedding industry colleagues and from my brides. I think the homepage images should change every 6 months.
JG: The whole redesign of liveBooks8 is amazing. I have been a liveBooks client from the very beginning. When liveBooks launched, the editSuite was revolutionary. Then it got a bit antiquated. Now in liveBooks8, the live preview is quick and you can try different things out. I think I have pressed every button in the design module. I found the design of my “Kind Words” page by accident. I would have never thought that I would be using circles in my design.
JG: My advice is to make sure that the site has impact and is easy to navigate on a mobile device. That is the way the majority of my clients are browsing JLGweddings (at least brides). Also, realize that on the initial visiting session to your site, they may not have the time to go past your first gallery. Pack that one much heavier with your strongest work. If you hook them there, you made the first cut, and they will go deeper into your site.
I made another gallery design choice:
Everyone is very good at one-handed scrolling at blazing speed through Instagram feeds. In my New Work gallery, I purposely made every image horizontal so the gallery can go full-frame on a phone and someone can scroll straight down through the gallery of juicy images without putting down their triple, venti, half-sweet, non-fat, caramel macchiato with extra hot foam.
Have a website you’d like us to feature? Email us at social@livebooks.com.
Casey Curry is a celebrity, portrait, and fashion/beauty photographer based in Los Angeles, California. Casey has worked with A-list celebrities such as Michael Caine, Kate Winslet, Billy Bob Thornton, and many others. To see more of work, visit his liveBooks8 website: www.caseycurry.com.
I’ve been studying light and taking pictures since I was the was a child although my start in the industry began with an assisting job for David LaChapelle. His creative approach fused with the talented photo crew he surrounds himself with set the bar for the level of production I wanted for my sets. From then, it’s been a slow burn of testing, developing my craft, and shooting commissioned work. As my aesthetic matures, so does my need to push the limits of what I can deliver for my clients – this can only be found through constant testing. I’ll often watch a film or look at a classic painting and think, “Oh that look would be great for this band/upcoming project.” It’s a continual path of discovery. I never stop learning.
CC: Clean, minimalistic, modern.
CC: Since I started constructing the layout and curating work, it’s been a daily effort. From here on out, I plan on updating my site on a bi-monthly basis.
CC: The homepage is intended to give viewers a taste of each section of the website. Additionally, each image is meant to showcase the diverse approaches I’m capable of.
CC: It’s been years since I use the old liveBooks, so I can’t attest to how much it differs. I can, however, say that it is the best self-managed website I’ve user, and I’ve used quite a few of them. The functionality is superior. It is not only user-friendly, but also technically superior with the built-in SEO and design customization capabilities.
CC: Although it’s important to stay true to yourself, get feedback from peers in your field – or better yet, from those you draw influence and aspiration from. I always try to surround myself with people who I feel are better than me, and I took the same approach when building my site. Also, you need to strictly limit the content you display (that’s where the help of others can really come in handy). It should only be the best of what you have to showcase and it needs to take your viewers on a cohesive journey. A good portfolio is one that doesn’t feel disjointed and doesn’t ever get boring.
Have a website you’d like us to feature? Email us at social@livebooks.com.
Nancy Ney’s website is our first featured website of the week for 2017! Nancy has dedicated the majority of her career to Advertising Photography. As a result of traveling for the last few years, she has shifted some of her career focus to be dedicated to fine art travel images. To see more her work, visit her liveBooks8 website: www.nancyney.com
I started working in NYC as a production assistant when I was in my early 20s. I was very interested in photography and began shooting production stills on the set and developing and printing them to give to the clients. From there, I started testing with models and put a fashion book together. I got a big client right away. Jacques Cohen Espadrilles with a full color ad in French Officiale. It wasn’t too long before I opened my first studio on Union Square and started working in fashion and advertising. I had a long career in N.Y. eventually buying a loft at 620 Broadway in 1996 and selling it in 2011.
How would you describe the aesthetic of your website in three words?
NN: The aesthetic of my website in three words would be Fine, Art, Travel.
How often do you typically update your website?
NN: I will update the website after I come back from visiting a new locale. So usually about four times a year with some updates in between.
How do you choose the photos that you display on your homepage?
NN: Choosing the photos to display is a painstaking task. Since I shoot in a 2×3 ratio and the homepage images are square, usually it is an image I love that crops well to a square!
What is your favorite new feature of liveBooks8?
NN: I guess my favorite new feature on liveBooks8 is the ability to see the way all the different platforms will look in the design center.
What’s one piece of advice you’d offer to someone designing their website?
NN: If I were offering advice about designing a photography website, it would be to keep the format simple and clean and be ruthless about your editing.
Have a website you’d like us to feature? Email us at social@livebooks.com.
Founded by Jack Glasser in 2005 with the taking of one senior graduation portrait, Glasser Images has grown and continues to grow into the future. This is driven by Jack’s passion for photography, creativity, and entrepreneurship as well as his vision for the company. To see more of Glasser Images, visit the liveBooks8 website: www.glasserimages.com
The goal of Glasser Images is to provide outstanding, personalized service and create quality and creative images that captures personality.
With a fresh, new, and modern perspective, Glasser Images creates and captures unique images. Whether in need of wedding photography and video, senior graduation pictures, family photos, or commercial photography and video, Glasser Images has a simple style and approach with a common goal – quality work.
JG: Clean, simple, and smart.
JG: We try to update with fresh images and featured posts every few weeks. If I have an idea to enhance the site, I update the site with the idea right away or write it down to implement at a better time.
JG: I choose at least one image from each of our photographers. I also wanted images to be eye catching, go together, and have the right colors.
JG: The customizability which has allowed me to display more information in an organized way in order to showcase our services better and connect services and/or pages together (i.e. wedding photography and engagement photos, links to the contact page, etc.)
JG: Don’t wait for it to be perfect or else you will never get it launched. A website should be an organic and changing marketing tool that changes based on your customers and the market.
Have a website you’d like us to feature? Email us at social@livebooks.com.
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