Quick Tip on Quality: Never Compromise
Lisa Jane one of the country’s leading children’s photographers was speaking at a workshop I was attending many years ago. She told a story about a portrait she did of her best friend and his little boy fishing in her studio pond. A day or two after the shoot, they were both killed in a tragic car accident. The last photograph ever taken of this father and son was taken by Lisa.
She printed a 16×20, matted and framed it to personally deliver to her friend’s mother. Boarding the plane to fly to the funeral, the flight attendant would not allow Lisa to bring the print on board, since it was too big to fit in the overhead and violated FAA regulations. The pilot, over-hearing the entire story, took the print from Lisa and said, “I thought I had an important job flying all these people around, but my job is nothing in comparison to the importance of yours!” He took the print and put it behind his own seat in the cockpit.
I’ve never forgotten that story. That was at least ten years ago and there wasn’t a dry eye in the room when Lisa finished. All she wanted to do was make one point…NEVER compromise on the quality of your images.
I know we’re living in the digital age. We’re all into shortcuts, compromises to get things done quicker. We’re into instant fulfillment and too often driven by the I-want-it-now generation. So today’s blog is a simple reminder for all of us…slow it down guys…don’t compromise on the quality of your images, your hardware, your software or your marketing efforts.
Lisa said it best, “Never compromise on the quality and effort you put into every image. You never know how important it might become later on.”
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This post has 10 comments
August 13th, 2009
Great story and so true.
I used to give clients a second shoot and a large print if i felt i had done a second best job on a session, even if i thought they wouldn’t notice. It made me really think before taking the easy road.
Amazing work on Lisa’s site. That was very inspirational.
August 13th, 2009
no truer words have been spoken skip.
August 13th, 2009
Compromise is rarely a good idea ! Loved Lisa’s story. Our son was killed at a very young age and we treasure every single photograph and wish we had taken more !!
August 13th, 2009
We are so caught up in instant gratification that often quality suffers. I think of the great artists of the past whose works have endured for centuries because they took their time for quality sake. We need to learn to slow down and let our souls catch up to us!
August 13th, 2009
A photographer records a moment of time. Significance is the valuation that is reflected in that moment when visited or revisited by others. Photographers should always consider if the quality of the moment conveys the desired memories of the future.
I have been moved for today!
August 13th, 2009
My hat goes off to Lisa! Speed kills. Quality should never be sacrificed for speed. We are too caught up by instant gratification, have to have it yesterday. Excellence and quality are worth waiting for, what is the rush all about? Think of the great artists of the past. Their work has endured for centuries because they chose nothing but the best materials for their creations. Kudos to Lisa!
August 13th, 2009
Exceptional customer service, and just a nice human gesture by the photographer and the pilot.
Photography makes things forever.
August 14th, 2009
“Photography makes things forever” how profound is this? That is all the more reason to always do our best and not compromise. Can I use this quote if I give you credit?
August 13th, 2009
Thanks for posting this. I struggle with slowing it down. I work way too fast and it’s something I’ve been trying to improve on. This story will help me with my motivation to do so.
August 14th, 2009
Thank you all for your kind comments. It has been 11.5 years since the accident, I am so impressed that Skip could remember so many details! There is something I feel is so important that I wanted to add to the story. My friends mom had told him all she wanted for Christmas was a portrait of him and his son. We decided to photograph them fishing at my pond together since fishing was their passion. It rained for the first and second session we scheduled, and he said, “Let’s just shoot something inside of us with a background, it really won’t matter to my mom.” I told him that I don’t compromise my portraits for weather, we will wait. The perfect day came and I got the most amazing shot of them fishing together. He and his son went to see his mom for Thanksgiving, in Florida, the next week and were driving back when they were both killed. We had picked out the image for her before he left, so I printed it, took it to her, and they displayed it at the front of the church during the funeral. In our business we can’t afford to compromise, you just never know when a portrait you take of someone may be all a mother has left to hold on to….