Monday, January 6, 2014

Big News... Round Two!

It’s been one week since we launched our new brand and we have been overwhelmed with the response! We are almost to 5000 likes on our Facebook page and the hundreds of shares, comments, retweets, reposts,  etc… have been unlike anything we have seen! We can do nothing but thank you all for your support of us and our growing business! While our business is booming, we have some other really exciting news.






As many of you know, Adam has been working at The Masters Inn summer camp since 2007. The Masters Inn is where many of our shoots have taken place and it has played a huge role in our business and our personal lives. We met there, got engaged there, and lived there. Through The Masters Inn, we have seen hundreds of lives changed and we have seen God move in big ways. We are nothing but thankful for how camp has influenced our lives. In 2013, with a new family of five and a growing business;  our house quickly became small, our free time quickly diminished, and we realized we had to make a change. After many months of prayers and thoughts, we have decided that Adam is going to leave The Masters Inn and devote more time to our business and our family. This week we moved into our new four bedroom house and we plan on finishing our basement with a family room and an office in the next year :)


2013 was a year of rapid growth and nonstop going. This year we are going to focus more on simplifying our lives and spending time enjoying life. With Adam no longer at The Masters Inn, our turn-around time for photos is going to be quicker, the dates we have available will increase, our social media and blogs will be updated more frequently, Adam will be teaching photography classes through Pastiche at Main, we will design and sell more albums , Adam will build more picture frames and sell more prints online and at Pastiche. Hopefully the many changes will benefit you all and our business will be able to grow even more! There is much to look forward to in 2014 and we cant wait to share it with you all!




Wednesday, January 1, 2014

Meet the Mullins'

I {Sarah} have been waiting since summer to share these pictures with everyone. We wanted to wait until the big brand reveal so I'm so happy to finally be able to post them! I also wanted to take a minute to let everyone get to know us a little! 

Adam and I got married in 2009 and did our first shoot a couple months after we were married, then we got asked to do our first wedding in 2010. What started off as just taking a few pictures for friends and family, quickly turned into a growing business! I was eventually able to quit my day job and run our growing business full time. A dream come true for me! 

Don't misunderstand, this was not an overnight success and it did not come without struggles. Taking pictures has always been amazing, but learning how to work for ourselves and run the business side of things was a learning process, and it still is today.

Fast forward to 2012 and Adam and I became instant parents to Aubri and Deitrich though foster care. Six months later baby Jax was born! Doing about three shoots a week and then having an instant family of five left us feeling overwhelmingly busy and blessed and we wouldn't change it for anything! 

2014 is looking really exciting for us! We have already booked more weddings for 2014 than we had in 2013 and we are keeping busy during what is considered the photographers "off season." We are working on a few more big surprises that we hope to announce this year. Keep your eyes on our Facebook and blog and see what is going on with us as we learn how to manage three children and a small business all at the same time!











Tuesday, December 31, 2013

New Year, New Brand!


Adam and I could not be more excited to share with you our new brand! Since we began shooting together in 2009, we have not changed anything about our brand. We have changed and evolved so much in the past 5 years that we really felt like we needed a new a fresh look that matches our style and image. We have been hard at work with the AMAZING Shelby Goodman of Honeysuckle {Blog & Shop}! She took our scattered thoughts and turned it into something we could not be more proud of! Please take a look around our new website, blog, and updated Facebook page and let us know what you think! We would love to hear from you!




-What’s in it for you!
Here is the fun part! We are so very excited about our new brand that we are feeling pretty generous! We are giving away three gift cards to three people {$20 to Starbucks, $25 to Pastiche at Main, and $30 to iTunes} and 1 session {to a new client that has never booked with us before}.

-The details
In order to be entered into the giveaway you must go to our Facebook page, and “share” AND “comment”  on this post {}. For an additional second entry, share one of our pictures on Instagram and tag the picture with the hashtag #adammullinsphotography.

-BONUS for the winner of the session, if they are a bride or future bride, and they choose to book us for their wedding, they will receive 10% off of their wedding package!

So go and get busy and let us know what you think!



Thursday, May 16, 2013

Rare Nikkor Lens.

I recently bought this lens on craigslist, I have no idea what it was used for but it is a beautiful lens. I have emailed Nikon and they have been sending it all around the company trying to help me figure it out. Any help would be greatly appreciated.

Check out www.facebook.com/adammullinsphotography to see our work.







Check out www.facebook.com/adammullinsphotography to see our work.

Tuesday, October 30, 2012

Vision




These two pictures were taken within seconds of each other, but lens selection, framing, lighting, and some post processing change the entire mood of the pictures.

This shows that a photograph depends largely on the person behind the camera, not just the person in front of it. 



 


 My wife and I were looking at the exact same thing, standing in the same place, at the same time, and took two completely different pictures. Neither one is “better” than the other, they are just different. 

 She went for a clear, sweet, lighthearted picture. I, on the other hand, wanted a more dramatic picture. We each adjusted our cameras and lenses accordingly and we each got what we wanted.

 Next time you are photographing, take time to think of what you want, come up with a vision or a mood for your photographs. You don’t have to let the subjects in front of the camera determine what the end result looks like.

Monday, August 13, 2012

Night Sky Photography

I was asked to write about how I took pictures at night.First off, it is incredibly easy to achieve beautiful results. You don’t need a top of the line DSLR or expensive glass. All you need is a camera that you can adjust the exposure manually and a tripod. 

Obviously, you need a clear night, but a few clouds is actually a good thing. A wide angle lens is usually best, a kit lens set at 18mm will work just fine. Mount your camera on a tripod, put it in manual mode, and try these settings. Turn your iso up to 3200 (it might only go to 1600), open your aperture to F/3.5, and set your shutter all the way at 30 seconds. Put your camera in manual focus and turn it all the way to infinity. If the image is too bright, turn your iso down, if it is too dark, turn it up. Find a place in the sky where the stars are easily visible but there is also some sort of subject; cars, cityscapes, lonely trees, airplanes, and anything else interesting make great subjects. Look for other light sources or moving objects that might be interesting as well. Anything that is moving will be blurry or even not existent in the final image since your shutter is open so long. Just to the right of the image I shot was a warehouse with bright lights, which is why the bottom right of my image is so bright. I shoot everything in RAW which allows me much more flexibility in post processing. For my image, I adjusted it in camera RAW and then opened it in Photoshop and turned the contrast up and did an exposure adjustment layer. 

Go out and try it. Let me know if you have any questions :)

Thursday, July 26, 2012

Tokina 11-16 F/2.8 DX ii lens review


Tokina 11-16 DX ii

 I just received my Tokina 11-16mm f/2.8 AT-X116 Pro DX II from Amazon. I usually don’t review lenses but I decided to review this one because I could only find a handful of reviews on it myself.

Tokina 11-16 DX ii next to tamron 18-270 and Rokinon 14
I own many wide angle lenses and I have tried to avoid buying this lens, but it fills a niche that no other lens I have can fill. Just so you know, I carry the Tokina 11-16 in my bag over my full frame14mm F/2.8, every nikon 18-whatever kit lens, Nikon's own 10-24, and Tamron's super zoom 18-270mm. 

 First off, this lens is not for everyone. Obviously, it is not a full frame lens (even though it fills the frame at 16mm.) This lens is also not for the casual photographer who wants another cool lens. In my opinion, this is a specific lens to fill a specific need; in my case, 
I needed it to be able to shoot SHARP pictures in LOW LIGHT from the front row of a wedding. 


IT IS WIDE! A kit 18-?? lens is just not wide enough to get an entire bridal party from the front row. I could use another wide lens but they are lacking in the areas bellow.

IT IS SHARP! Tamron, sigma, and Nikon all offer similar options. Nikon has a lens with more zoom range but at the cost of Sharpness. Tamron and Sigma offer some close competitors in zoom range and aperture but they are just not anywhere close to as sharp as this one.  My 14mm full frame lens is sharp, but shooting with a full frame lens on a DX camera kinda defeats the purpose of a wide angle...  Anyway, this lens is SHARP!

IT IS BRIGHT! At F/2.8 all the way through, I can let a good amount of light in. The kit lenses and many of the other zooms are F/3.5 or F/4 wide open, and when they are wide open, they arnt sharp. The Tokina is nice and bright, but also sharp wide open.

AUTO FOCUS is FAST. I wouldn't expect anything different from such a wide zoom. The focus is accurate and locks on quick. The push/pull mechanism they use to switch from manual to auto focus is weird and it takes some getting used to, but I rarely switch back and forth so it is a non-issue for me. This older Tokina 11-16 did not have an autofocus motor but this one does :)

It is heavier than a kit lens but it is nowhere near as heavy at my 70-200 F/2.8 so the weight does not bother me a bit.

I really don’t know why Tokina decided to make this a ZOOM lens, but I’ll take it :) 90% of the time, people buy a wide angle lens to be able to shoot at the widest angle possible... I guess it would bother me more if the lens wasn’t tack sharp or if it caused a variable aperture; Since the lens is sharp all the way through and has a consistent aperture, I actually like the little zoom I have.

This Tokina has very LOW DISTORTION. Straight lines stay straight. The only time I’ve noticed some small distortion is when the subject is in the far corner (but with a lens this wide, distortion is to be expected.) Some of the other competitors have much worse distortion. 

Tokina 11-16 DX ii vs. 18mm and 14mm
 This is just a comparison of a few different wide angle zooms. There is a HUGE difference in an 11mm lens and a 18mm lens.













This Tokina 11-16 F/2.8 DX ii lens is the best DX wide angle lens on the market now. No other lens can match it's sharpness, wide aperture, and price. At $750.00 it is cheaper than many of Nikon's lens but still out performs them. With the added addition of an autofocus motor, superior build quality, and this lens just being ridiculously sharp, this lens will fill a spot in my bag for a long time.