
Last week, my friend Jeff invited me out to shoot the Verge XM’s Not Another Xmas Party featuring Tim Chaisson and 2 sets by The Trews at Tattoo Rock Parlour. Click below to see the photos.

Last week, my friend Jeff invited me out to shoot the Verge XM’s Not Another Xmas Party featuring Tim Chaisson and 2 sets by The Trews at Tattoo Rock Parlour. Click below to see the photos.

When my friend Duarte asked if I’d want to help out with this year’s HoHoTO event, I couldn’t say no. HoHoTO is a Holiday party to raise sorely-needed funds for Toronto’s Daily Bread Food Bank.

I’ve recently partnered up with Intel as one of the judges in the “Get in to Win” competition happening at www.facebook.com/IntelCanada . If you want a chance to win more than $20 000 in prizes from Intel all you have to do is grab a photo or video of something you’ve shot and tell us the behind the scenes insider tips that makes it amazing. Intel’s looking for the clever and neat way you shot edited or posted it and everything you need to know is on the intel canada Facebook fan page at facebook.com/intelcanada

So now that we’re almost at the end of the this year, I figured it’s about time I release my workflow article that I’ve promised to myself and to others. This is something I’d like to write about every year because I really think that your workflow is something that should be constantly evolving. When I first started shooting, I would message photographers I admired on flickr to learn about their workflow. It’s not something I asked in an attempt to copy, but rather learn new techniques or seeing how someone else could approach the same problem in a different manner. New equipment and software comes out every year that makes our work as a photographer easier to manage and process and upload and why should our workflow stay static just because we’re comfortable with it?