How YOU can become a National Geographic Photographer with THESE 5 Tips!
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- Äas pĆidĂĄn 22. 05. 2024
- In this video, I share with you 5 SECRETS to how you can become a photographer with National Geographic.
I draw upon my 15+ years as a professional photographer, to give you advice and guidance to how you can get your photographic work published in leading publications.
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In summary, here are my 5 tips for becoming a photographer with National Geographic:
0:00 Introduction
01:10 Think Stories, Not Images
02:47 Photograph What It Feels Like
03:55 Find Your Niche
05:23 Tell Stories That Matter
06:51 Get Your Work Seen
Links to National Geographic Opportunities:
Internships with National Geographic www.nationalgeographic.org/so...
Grant Opportunities for Photographers, Scientists & Adventurers -www.nationalgeographic.org/so...
VISIT MY WEBSITE: gallagher-photo.com
INSTAGRAM: / sean_gallagher_photo
FACEBOOK: / sean.gallagher.photogr...
EBOOK: gallagher-photo.com/learn
Secret 6 (!) for you awesome people here in the comments đ... Your camera doesn't matter! Don't let your equipment hold you back. Impactful imagery can be taken on ANY camera. It's about the human story, the way you communicate emotion and the importance of the issues you choose to focus your lens on. That's what really matters....Download your copy of my new eBook ⥠gallagher-photo.com/learn
Thanks for sharing your experiences! My dream has always been to become a professional photographer. Before I started my career, I joined National Geographic's YourShot community. I did this to learn more about how stories are told from different parts of the world. After getting several photos published, I applied for a job as a professional photographer in my hometown and have been active for over five years in this job.
So, the tips you give in your video are precious!
Glad the tips were useful. Great to hear your experiences. I am glad your photography journey is going well! â
Hi Sean! New to the channel and a sports photographers with a passion for photojournalism. Found the channel while browsing for photojournalism, as I consider to be one of the most demanding discipline of photography. Be good in everything is hard but the way that photojournalist are require to perform is definitely something that really sparks my day!!! Loving the content! Cheers
Hi Carlos. Thanks for the comment and for following along. Yes, photojournalism has its challenges, but so does sports photography! We can all learn from each other đ€
Thank You Sean for the feedback, it does mean a lot. Will be following, as possible, as I will end next July my course project. "Working days and studying nights!!!" Cheers @@SeanGallagherPhotographer
Great stuff, Sean! Much appreciated. And this is not only about photography, it could be about music, songwriting, art, painting.
Thanks, Chip. Yes, lots of overlap to the other arts đ
Thanks â€
These simple yet beneficial points are well explained ...thank you Sean...
Thank you for watching and taking the time to comment. Glad they're useful đ
Thanks a lot Sean. You really answered it so simply.
Thanks for watching đ
This is very helpful. Thank you Sean
Thanks, Casey. Glad it was helpful đ
When i am working in a very poverty stricken area, where people are not familiar with photography or documentation, etc and they think i am doing something very creepy, then how should i make them understand what my true motive is? How to make them understand that i am being a voice for them?
This is a good, and important, question. First you need to ask what your motivation is for being there. Is it for your benefit, or for the community's. If it's the former, then you shouldn't be there . If it's the latter then you need to find a way to communicate with the community what you're doing and why you're there. I often collaborate with local-NGOs or charities in the areas that I photograph. I will contact them before I arrive, explain my intentions and then meet with them when I arrive. I will often spend lots of time with people before even making any images so they can get to know me, build trust and learn what I am doing and the purpose of my photography.
Really like your video. Thank you for sharing
Thanks for watching!
Awesome tips... thanks for sharing đ
Glad they were useful, Sangeeta â
Great tips, thanks!
Glad they were helpful. Thanks for watching đ
Thank you!
No problem!
Great tips Sean!
Glad they're useful, Anastas đ
Suscribed! Thank you for sharing
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Excellent tips!
Glad they were useful to you, Gian Luca đ
Great video Sean.
Thanks for watching, Nikhil! âïž
thankyou â€â€â€
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Thank you for went to china and record Chinese culture. This helps more people know about real china and build a bridge between different cultures. Really appreciate that
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nice video, thank you. As a photographer the hard part is to deal with so called "photo editors" who are basically office workers and dissolutioned phototographers.
Best is indeed to follow your own path in photography.
I hear you. Getting your work noticed is hard and sometimes frustrating. It can take years. Keep your eyes open for opportunities. You never know where the next photo-project may take you. Good luck, Michael â
Come to Vegas your Images are Amazing.
Viva Las Vegas
When I was in my 20s I lived in a monastery and we allowed Steve Curry to come to shoot a yearly baseball game we played against the local volunteer firefighters in rural cape Breton Nova Scotia. He couldnât make it and so he came weeks later and staged the whole thing using monks and nuns that werenât in the game. I had to have several conversations with NG as they decided if they should run them, which they did. Iâve never really seen documentary photography in the same way. A very interesting experience.
Interesting story đ Not all photographers are the same. Thanks for watching, Flora.
Yeah strange. I think the part I couldn't understand was the editorial process. They really did try to ask questions that would allow them to use the photos and when I wouldn't bend the truth they ran them anyway. It's just an interesting part of equation of looking at an image.
@@SeanGallagherPhotographer
Thank you for sharing your experience. This happens more often than we realize. Much of the photography passed off as travel photography is actually staged. Once I learned this, it made me angry. There is a famous French photographer who has made a living out of taking portraits of Vietnamese and passing them off as "just a regular moment in a regular life of a local," when in fact, he actually pays locals to pose for him. I learned this from talking to the son of one of his most iconic subjects. He doesn't advertise his photos as candid, but he markets them as candid without using the word. Once I discovered this, I eventually learned it is actually a fairly common practice. Because a large part of the appeal of travel photographs is that they show the viewer an authentic scene from a place they will probably never have the chance to visit, I make it a point to try to have as little impact on the actions of my subjects as possible. I think my work captures the essence of life in central Vietnam in a way the work of many other photographers does not. You can see for yourself. Not one of my subjects has been asked to pose or paid to model. instagram: @benquick_vn
Has National Geographic ever done a story on the Tijuana River sewage pollution? That's a huge story in San Diego.
I'm not sure. Maybe search the past issues online?
hope that one day gonna be natgeo photographer đ„°
Good luck on your journey! âđž
After clicking the raw photos, are they get edited in softwares or published as original raw images?
My workflow is to shoot in RAW, then edit those files in Adobe Lightroom. I only adjust simple things such as brightness, contrast, saturation, with very little cropping. I then export as Jpegs. I never add or remove things from my photos, as I work in the field of photojournalism and documentary photography.
@@SeanGallagherPhotographer your reply contains the exact things I wanted to know đ...thank you
Great. Good luck with your own photography đ
Thank you sir, â€
I want to be a part of Nat Geo family.
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Im currently in 11th grade, what colleges or courses would you suggest for photography as my career path?
Hi Bruno. To be honest, I wouldn't recommend studying photography at college per se if you want to pursue photojournalism for example. My photographic hero, Sebastiao Salgado (please Google him) studied as an economics major. I myself, studied Zoology at college. You can teach yourself many of the technical aspects of photography, or attend some some small photojournalism workshops to learn about photo-essays etc. Depending on your specific interest, my advice would be to choose an academic focus for your major and have photography as a minor. Shoot photos for your local newspaper, or college newspaper to gain experience too, then look out for internships in regional newsrooms, then national ones. This is just advice though. You must choose your own path and everyone's path is different into this profession. Good luck on your journey!
thank you so much ! this greatly helped!@@SeanGallagherPhotographer
That is great advice. You don't need to study photography at college to be a photographer, unless you want to be a photography professor/teacher. @@BrunoSorr2719