In Memory Of David Cramer

31 March 2010

David Cramer (on left) with his partner, Avi.  Photo dated November 8, 2008

Last week the Dry Heat Gallery lost an artist and a dear friend.  On the evening of Thursday, March 25, 2010, photographer David Cramer was in the field heading an expedition to photograph wild horses when he suffered a massive heart attack.  He passed away later that night.  David was widely known for his fine art nature photography and his advocacy for the preservation and freedom of wild horses in the American southwest.  David was also an active member of the New Mexican Horse Project, New Mexico’s largest wild horse sanctuary and genealogical study.  When Rick and I wanted to start photographing wild horses, it was David that volunteered to help us and he chaperoned us on several outings, always knowing right where the horses were likely to be.   We thought of David as a kind and generous soul, we are so thankful for the time we shared his friendship and we will remember him through his many photographic works.  You may learn more about David Cramer and view more of his photography on his personal website.

-DeAnna Dimmitt and Rick Meiers

Dry Heat Photography

Please feel free to leave to leave your thoughts for David in the comment space below or by clicking the “comments” link at the top of this post.

Haitian Earthquake Relief Effort

1 February 2010

In response to the recent and devastating earthquake in Haiti, starting January 14th we will donate $25 from every wedding booked until February 28, 2010 to the American Red Cross International Response Fund.  Your wedding can provide aid for others in need!

To check availability and to schedule a consultation call 505-730-8576

We look forward to hearing from you!

-DeAnna Dimmitt and Rick Meiers

Dry Heat Photography

Defining Success

25 January 2010

Just now I was checking up on my facebook wall and right away the status update of a friend of mine caught my attention and sent my brain off on another one of my benders.   I know I’m not always the most popular kid on the block because I speak my mind, and I do it for two reasons.  One, because some things just need saying and two because deep down I feel the need to be an advocate for my peers in the photography industry and especially to be an advocate for the most important people of all, my clients both current and future.  So here goes nothin’; speaking up about something that has been weighing heavily on my mind lately.  By the way, the aforementioned status update read Don’t chase success, chase excellence.  Success will follow.

January is the time of year commonly known to wedding professionals as bridal fair season.  We all pack up everything we own and schlep it across town to various venues that host huge trade shows catering to the newly engaged bride who is just embarking on her wedding planning journey.  Bridal fairs can be hugely valuable in that regard because it is an excellent marketing opportunity.  You go, you meet people, make connections and ultimately close deals, at least that’s the plan.   We’ve done quite well with the shows this year and I am pleased with our success, as it were.    The thing that eats at me is when I see other mass produced photog studios actually bragging about their numbers and not only that but bragging about how little they charge and about how big the discounts they offer as booking incentives are.  So they might as well say “your wedding cost less at Wal-Mart” and then show a  touching photo nicely lit with diffused lighting to induce a sense of calm.  I’m sure a lot of brides, not really knowing what’s going on see a deal like that and think to themselves how awesome a find this must be.  Now, to be clear, this is not an essay of shameless self promotion because like I stated earlier I am an advocate of the true professional photographer and I am an advocate of the client who wants the best and needs to know how to find it.  Whether “the best” is Dry Heat or another studio is purely besides the point.

What I actually want to talk about is how we define success.  What does success mean to you?  Well, to me it means seeing a return on an investment, accomplishing a goal, taking pride in my work and knowing that  I act with integrity.  So in a nutshell, I work extremely hard for years to hone my photography skills.  After working for someone else for a considerable amount of time I open my own studio where I actually work even harder to produce an outstanding product and the success of it is that people hire me based on merit to photograph the most important day of their lives.  I am committed to my clients and they know it, they see me working hard for them and they appreciate it.   I am reasonably priced for my demographic and I do believe in fair compensation.  Does this sound like a reasonable definition?  Here’s what I don’t understand; why a photographer would work for well below industry standard wages and then offer a huge discount to boot and brag about it to top it all off.   Let me just turn it around a little bit so that we can see eye to eye.   Let’s say you go to work tomorrow and your boss tells you that your pay will be cut by 40% but don’t worry because your hours are being doubled.  So that means you will now work twice as hard to make only %10 more money than you were in the first place except now you are over taxed, burned out and doing a half assed job on everything because there is simply not enough hours in a day to do any better.  Would you call that success?  Furthermore, how motivated would you feel to actually carry that work load?  Think about it, you know the answer.  So if this scenario is true for everyone else, why would it not also be true for the photographer?  Sure, photography is an incredible career and every working professional feels (or ought to feel) eternally grateful for being able to turn this passion into a legitimate job but make no mistake folks photography, and especially wedding photography is time consuming, physically and mentally demanding, and most of all while it can be taught to an extent, having the ability is something you either do or do not have.    I have to ask, why would you intentionally sell yourself short so that you can run to stand still and let your quality control slip between the cracks and then call that success?  Who wins in this situation?  Not the photographer and most certainly not the bride.

Thus concludes tonight’s edition of me running my mouth in public ;-)

-DeAnna Dimmitt

Dry Heat Photography

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