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How fashion photographer MOJA collaborates better using Capture One Live

In the life of a photographer, you learn to expect the unexpected. When plans change at a moment’s notice, having the right tools can be a lifesaver. For fashion photographer MOJA, Capture One Live came to the rescue when clients had last-minute comments and the crew was unable to be on set for the project “Sicily, Women and Cinema”.

See behind the scenes of the project and discover how MOJA uses Capture One Live for better collaboration off and on location.

 

 

“We have faced a few problems [with the shoots]. Some of the places we were shooting in were a bit small and we have a team of 30 persons. It is quite difficult to move them around the place,” explains the Luxembourg-based photographer MOJA about the project.

“Sicily, Women and Cinema” is a 12-day shoot intended to show off the unique scenery found in Sicily and encourage more film studios to choose the island as the location for their next film. The result of the shoots will be shown at the Cannes Film Festival.

Shooting in the historic center of Palermo, Sicily, MOJA and his team were forced to improvise when only four people were allowed to be on the balcony where the first of the 12 shoots took place.

The crew looking at the images being shared in real-time while MOJA is shooting

As the art director, head of costume and many more essential crew members were being turned away from the location of the shoot, MOJA and editor Jan Wischermann were setting up their first session with Capture One Live.

With a simple link, the crew could follow the shoot in real-time through a browser from the neighboring building and give directions for different poses or costume corrections over the phone.

“It is really a discovery for me. I really enjoyed this product, which is very easy to use, and today it saved us,” says MOJA.

Long distance image sharing

In addition to being shown at the Cannes Film Festival, the photo series will be published in several Italian and international magazines. With the help of Capture One Live, MOJA could check in with one of the clients in Milan during the shoot, sharing the images across cities as they were being taken.

“They didn’t know exactly what they wanted. With Capture One Live, we had the opportunity to show them ‘live’ what we were shooting here in Sicily.”

Photographer MOJA and head of equipment Yasmine Sweetlove checking lights and settings ahead of the Capture One Live session

“That saves us a lot of time, a lot of money because we don’t have to bring an extra crew here,” says MOJA.

“It was really something I enjoyed, and I can ensure you that we will be using it for the next 10 days here and for life.”

Discover seven ways you can benefit from using Capture One Live on your next shoot. 

Get started with Capture One Live here.

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Capture One Live portrait workflow with Yaneck Wasio

Yaneck Wasio is part of a team of photographers specializing in artistic and candid wedding photography, creative portraits, headshots, and commercial photography.

Based out of Orange County, California, Yaneck recently added Capture One Live to his workflow to make the process of collaborating with his clients more efficient and seamless.

Join David and Yaneck to learn how everyone in his team has benefited from Capture One Live and how to best integrate it into your workflow.

You will learn how to:

  • Setup Capture One Live
  • Shoot tethered into Capture One
  • Collaborate with your remote clients

Download a 30-day trial of Capture One.

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capture one webinar workflow efficiency

Improving your efficiency – Import

Mark your calendar for our efficiency webinar series!

Throughout May and early June, we will divide up the Capture One workflow into specific tasks and deep dive on how to improve your efficiency for each one.
The first webinar in the series will explore the import process and teach you how to make your imports as efficient and powerful as possible.
Attend this webinar for tips on how to be consistent when importing images and learn how to automate laborious tasks such as Naming and Metadata.
Join David to get to grips with some of the less attractive but highly important steps of your workflow.

The webinar will teach you how to:

  • Create Naming Presets that can be used time and time again
  • Use the Import Viewer for fast culling
  • Add Metadata on import
  • Add Styles or Presets on Import

Once you’ve brushed up your import skills with this webinar, look out for the next in the series, which will explore how to make your editing workflow as efficient as possible.

Photographer credit: Ausra Babiedaite

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Reimagening Sicilian stories with fashion photographer MOJA

In the wake of the #MeToo revelations, Luxembourg-based fashion photographer MOJA wanted a way to engage in the conversation, show support, and celebrate the strength of women. The result was a photo series he named “Women and Cinema”, which, for the fourth year in a row, will be featured at the Cannes film festival. This year he is putting the spotlight on Sicilian scenery, cinema, and femininity.

 

In 2017, fashion photographer MOJA started his portrait series “Women and Cinema”. Above is his reinterpretation of Disney’s Mulan (1998)

“We love to go to Sicily because Sicily, contrary to what everybody thinks, is a matriarchal society,” says MOJA referencing the historical associations many have between Sicily and a macho Mafia culture. He points out that the image of a macho Sicilian society has been reinforced by how the island has been represented in film.

In his upcoming portrait series, MOJA and his team will be using many of the unique locations on the Italian island as a backdrop to reinterpret iconic scenes from 12 classic and modern movies set in Sicily putting female roles at the center.

Left: “The Bride wore Black” (1968) reinterpretation from 2017 b MOJA Right: “Vacanze Romane” (1953) reinterpretation from 2018 by MOJA

“The problem we had when selecting films to reinterpret is that all the films of the neorealism period, which is the period where Italy created the most beautiful cinema, were very, very masculine: Fellini, Pasolini, all these ones,” explains MOJA.

“Unfortunately, women in these films often have the same role – a role which either ends badly or where she is an object and not a subject. We, therefore, have to reverse the story and think of it in another way.”

Inviting cinema to Sicily

Working closely with the Region of Sicily for this year’s iteration of the photo series, another objective of “Women and Cinema” is to show the island in a new light and as a prime location for movie production studios to film their next blockbuster.

“Sicily is still today, unfortunately, too often ‘remembered’ and accompanied by certain messages due to some films, certainly beautiful, but which tell of a land and a people that no longer exist,” says Manlio Messina, the Regional Minister of Tourism, Sport and Spectacle in the Region of Sicily. He adds that in the last year they allocated almost 5 million for film productions and that they will set aside another 12 over the next two years.

2019 reinterpretation of the 2011 movie “My Week with Marilyn”

“Thanks to ‘Sicily, Women and Cinema’ and other projects we are working on in the world of cinema, we want to relaunch a more authentic image of our land and a ‘sweet’ invitation to discover and travel around Sicily. We also want to show everything the richness and potential that today’s Sicily, a land of traditions but also of constant change, has to offer to cinema in terms of stories and scenery.”

Modernizing the image of Sicilian women

Messina also hopes that the project can tell a different and more modern story about Sicily and the women there contrary to the way most of the celebrated and famous movies from the region have done in the past.

“The strength that characterizes Sicilian women has always been there, albeit hidden in the shadow of social dictates. This reinterpretation project celebrates the strength of today’s Sicilian woman, finally recognized and out of the shadows, illustrating this change of vision very well.”

 

2021’s reinterpretation of “La Dolce Vita” (1960) by MOJA

All in the details

The 12 shoots, which are set to take place over two weeks in April and May, are bringing together a team from Sicily and the rest of Europe – including retouch expert and Capture One ambassador Jan Wischermann – who has been planning every detail for the past months.

“We work with the daylight to see when the sun will be on each shoot, and we plan every single detail with the lighting. All the people involved have worked and modified the pictures with their expertise,” says MOJA and adds that “the final product is not as interesting as the journey to get there.”

Want to know more? Follow along on Capture One’s social media as we join MOJA and Jan Wischermann behind the scenes on the 12 photoshoots over the next two weeks to see how they use Capture One to achieve their vision.

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