MichaelBagleyPhoto's Blog


Last chance to order prints from 2008-2010!!!

We hope you have visited our new website at www.michaelbagleyphoto.com and that you like the new format.

As part of our marketing overhaul we are also restructuring our order fulfillment process.  Beginning in June our images for sale will be integrated into our website, providing seamless viewing and ordering of client photos.  In preparation for the change we will be deleting all of our images presently online from 2008, 2009 and 2010, including:
Best of 2008
2009 Bill Volk Leukemia Cup, Keyport, NJ
2009 Lightning Atlantic Coast Championship, Toms River, NJ
2009 Hobies at Wildwood, NJ
2009 Barnegat Breezer, Bayville, NJ
2010 Bill Volk Leukemia Cup, Keyport, NJ
2010 Barnegat Breezer
2010 Lightning North American Championship, Toms River, NJ
2010 Avalon Cup, Avalon, NJ
2010 Flying Scot Atlantic Coast Championship, Toms River, NJ
2010 Great Chesapeake Bay Schooner Race, Baltimore/Annapolis, MD

We want to provide you with one more opportunity to purchase prints and products from past years, and we are offering them at a substantial discount.  Place an order by May 31 and we will take 20% off your total order price.  Prints, enlargements, gallery wraps, coffee mugs…everything is 20% off.  To obtain the discount simply type in the word “CLEARANCE” at checkout.  We hope you’ll take advantage of this great offer.  And spread the word to your crews and fellow sailors so that they have the opportunity to grab a print or a gift before they disappear.

To view the images and place an order please visit michaelbagleyphoto.shutterbugstorefront.com.



MBP Has A New Website!

We are pleased to present our new and improved Michael Bagley Photography website: www.michaelbagleyphoto.com.

Our goal is to present the array of services we provide in an interesting and easy-to-navigate format.  If we hit our mark, please let us know.  If there is something that needs attention, please let us know that too!  Thanks!



Charleston Race Week

This year the season started early with a trip to Charleston, South Carolina to work with our friends Allen and Daniela from Photoboat to cover Charleston Race Week.  Though the drive is long – and with today’s gas prices, not cheap! – it was an adventure worth taking.

Friday’s racing was exciting, with winds hovering between 15-20 knots and seas rolling in at 4-6 feet.  Daniela and I used Viewfinder to cover the two offshore race courses while Allen took care of the three inshore circles with the dinghy.  The racing was hard fought and the action on deck was fast paced.  I did most of the driving so Daniela could concentrate on shooting, and she did a great job capturing close up images of the shipboard action.

When I awoke Saturday our friend Jim Cantore on the weather channel was warning of severe weather including tornadoes for the area.  Yes, Jim can be a drama king, but in this case he didn’t seem to be exaggerating.  In fact, by the time the judges had to make a call about the day’s racing the sustained winds were already above 30 knots.  No racing in those conditions.  I hauled Viewfinder onto her trailer in case the major storms did come through, and then spent most of the day wandering around Charleston exploring with my camera.  What a beautiful city!  Great architecture, friendly people, lots of green space, and I even found a schooner!  I am looking forward to getting back there again in the future.  Fortunately, the dangerous weather never did bother Charleston.

The weekend wrapped up with light winds but blue sky and warm temperatures.  Again Daniela and I focused on the offshore racing and we were able to get some nice images.  Allen started with the inshore crowd, but the Melges’ and J’s aren’t too exciting in 5-10 knots of breeze, so he joined us outside the jetties.  Between the three of us we had thousands of shots to share with the sailors.

It was great to visit a new place and fun to work with the Photoboat crew.  Next stop: Cedar Point Yacht Club’s One Design Regatta on Long Island Sound on the first weekend in June.



Getting Ready!
April 3, 2011, 6:15 am
Filed under: Uncategorized

We picked up Viewfinder from the mechanic today, and she’s all ready to head to South Carolina for Charleston Race Week in the middle of the month.  Where else will we be in 2011?  Check out our calendar here. We look forward to another exciting season of racing and sailing photography!



Top 5 Favorite Photos of 2010

We shot tens of thousands of photographs in 2010.  We deleted a bunch of them.  But we had a lot of keepers, too.  Looking through the library was a trip down memory lane, reminding us of all the people, places and events we had the pleasure of witnessing and shooting in the last year, and many of those memories are great ones.  What were our favorites?  Well, we could probably present a Top 50 list here, and still have leftover material. But for efficiency’s sake we have narrowed it down to our Top 5 Favorite Photos of 2010.

Favorite Photo #5 - e33 in the Avalon Cup

An e33 in a trough in the Atlantic

We were invited to photograph the Avalon Cup, an annual regatta from Avalon to Cape May, New Jersey.  The wind in August on the east coast is not reputed to be exciting, but this year the Avalon Cup fell just after there was some major storm activity well offshore in the Atlantic Ocean.  We launched our Viewfinder in Cape May to head north to the start, and as soon as we reached the mouth of the Cape May Inlet we knew we were in for a ride.  In fact, we considered turning around and heading home.  The wind was reasonable – 15-20 knots out of the northeast.  The sea, however, was putting up a fuss and presenting 6-12 foot rolling waves for our boating pleasure and the 25 mile run north, normally an hour-long trip, took us over two.  We were greatly rewarded for the effort, though.  Two fleets competed in the Avalon Cup, a Flying Scot fleet that sailed a buoy course in their home waters, and everyone else who would cruise the coast to Cape May.  The sailing was exciting, and the aforementioned rollers provided unique photographic opportunities as a boat after boat dropped into a trough and we captured just the rig rising above the crest.  The day, which earlier had started with an uncomfortable commute, turned out to be great fun, and we captured some good images.  As we returned to Cape May at day’s end we had the pleasure of shooting our friend the schooner AJ Meerwald.  Bonus!

Favorite Photo #4 - Promo shot for Folk Engineered

Jake aboard his Folk Engineered bicycle in front of Newark City Hall

Our friends Marie and Ryan build hand-built bikes and run a company called Folk Engineered.  They build great machines and needed some photography to show off the high degree of customization they put into each one of their bikes.  In May we created three images, including this one of Jake who worked for the City of Newark and commutes on his bike to City Hall each day.  Two other shots included Ryan showing the speed of his bike, and another customer doing some “urban camping” in the city with his hybrid cycle.  The photos were printed as postcards, and have become very popular as Folk Engineered displays at trade shows, bike swaps, etc.

Favorite Photo #3 - Mystic Whaler before the storm

It was a dark and stormy night...

The Great Chesapeake Bay Schooner Race is always the highlight of our shooting calendar.  Forty or fifty schooners descend on the Chesapeake Bay and race from Baltimore to Norfolk for bragging rights and to raise money for the Chesapeake Bay Foundation.  The boats are amazing and the people are awesome.  This year the weather at the start was cold and wet with decent breeze to propel the schooners down the Bay.  Just after the big boats crossed the line a dark squall line came marching down the Severn River toward the fleet.  We captured this shot of Mystic Whaler as she braced for the storm and worked to move through the fleet.  Happily, the squall line was heavy on rain but light on wind, and everyone had a great sail to Virginia.

Favorite Photo #2 - Shadow

Whatchyou lookin' at?

In December each year we team up with our friends at Camp Bow Wow to offer holiday pet portraits.  The sessions provide pet owners with the opportunity to have a photo of their dog for their holiday card, and the fees for the sessions are donated to a worthy cause.  This year we raised over $600 for a local beagle rescue organization!  Photographing dogs of all shapes, sizes and demeanor is a treat every time, and this year proved no exception.  Shadow the Boxer decided he had modeled well enough and his session was done.  That’s when we caught this look.  He seemed to be serious.

And…Favorite Photo #1 - Family pictures with Help-Portrait Asbury Park

You won’t see the images here or anywhere.  That wasn’t the point.

In December we joined up with a great crew in Asbury Park who volunteered to be part of the growing movement called Help-Portrait.  Started in 2009, Help-Portrait is a simple concept: Find someone in need.  Take their picture.  Print it and give it to them.  On December 4 thousands of photographers all over the world shot tens of thousands of portraits of people who otherwise might not have the opportunity to have a holiday photo.  We were lucky to be counted among those photographers, and it was a moving experience to say the least.  There are many stories from the day, but two best sum up the meaning of Help-Portrait.  After photographing a woman in her mid-30′s and her three children Mike was saying goodbye to the family.  The young mom, who when she arrived was reserved and appeared exhausted, smiled and said “Thank you.”  When Mike began to respond she interrupted and said “No, really, thank you.  I have never had a photograph like this taken of me in my whole life.  Never.  Thank you.”  Later on in the day another mom shared with us that she would be sending the photo we shot to her son’s father who hasn’t seen the boy in three years because the father lives in Georgia and neither parent can afford to travel.  It was a gift to be involved in such a wonderful project, and we look forward to the 2011 version on December 3!

2010 was a great year.  Thanks to everyone who came before our lens.  Thanks to those of you who invited us to be a part of your event, your regatta, your family.  We appreciate the opportunity.  We are looking forward to an even better 2011!



MBP Photos Used by Folk Engineered

Three images shot by Michael Bagley Photography were selected by Folk Engineered to be featured in their new series of postcards.  The cards depict the different “personalities” of three bikes built by Folk Engineered Custom Handmade Bicycles, including a speedy road bike, a comfortable commuter bike, and a rugged multi-purpose ride.  The back of the postcards, which were designed by Folk Engineered’s Marie Pasquariello, show detail shots of the various components that go in to building a bicycle.

For more information about handmade bicycles visit www.folkengineered.com.

Jake commutes to Newark City Hall

Kyle does some urban camping

Ryan races downhill

The back of the postcards, designed by Marie Pasquariello



Starting the Season

Winter can feel like a long time.  When the boat is winterized in November, spring seems like it is years away.  Regular winter blizzards help support the theory.  Slowly but surely signs of change appear.  Days get longer.  Temperatures rise.  Trees bud.  Boats are back in their slips.  And boating season is upon us.

Last weekend made it official.  We traveled to Connecticut to shoot the Cedar Point Yacht Club One Design Regatta.  We were grateful to be partnered with our friends at Photoboat, who have made the One Design Regatta a regular on their schedule, but had to be away and couldn’t cover it this year.  So they called in reinforcements.  We enjoyed two days of good wind and good sailing.  Saturday offered three races, all of which were competitive between the fleets of J80′s, J30′s, J105′s, Farr 30′s and Beneteau 36.7′s.  The breeze continued to build Sunday morning, but the racing had to be called early due to a tornado warning.  Fortunately, the tornado never formed, but a hearty thunderstorm passed through, vindicating the judgment of race committee.  Back ashore, we printed our photos of the win, place, and show boats, and the framed images were used as the regatta trophies.

To check out the photos visit Photoboat.com.  Next stop: Keyport Yacht Club Leukemia Cup Regatta on Saturday and Sunday.

And so it begins.  Another season aboard Viewfinder, committing a sailing moment in time to pixels.  Here’s hoping summer feels as long as winter did.

Beating to windward

Revelation prepares to set the spinnaker.

Excitement aboard Mischief



Using Flash on Location

Spent a day last week at a workshop led by Joe McNally, one of the modern masters of lighting.  Joe is particularly skilled at using small flashes (he shoots Nikon, so the SB900 is the current weapon of choice) and simple tools (like reflectors, bed sheets, and white walls) to create stunning, dramatic photographs.  He demonstrated several of his techniques during the day, including making corporate portraits and sports/athletic images.  If you’re interested in lighting and ever have the chance to learn from Joe, don’t miss the opportunity!

A few days later we met up with a couple of friends who were kind enough to spend time in front of the lens as the sun faded in the sky.  We followed some of Joe’s advice and used one SB900 off camera to create these images.  Many thanks to Mary, David and Danise for their willingness to stand in the cold while hungry!

David and Mary

David at Sunset

Danise

Mary

Mary in the Hood



Getting In Touch With The Inner Sailor

For more than a decade my profession was working as a boat captain.  Serving primarily on traditional sailing vessels like schooners and skipjacks, most of my days between April and November were spent behind the wheel of a sailboat working with great crews to make the ships sail as best they could.  In 2006 I returned to New Jersey to embark on a different journey, and since then my time on the water has been used primarily to shoot sailboats and sailors as they make their ships sail as best they can.  I have been privileged to see some tremendous sailing in front of my lens, and I often can feel connected to the excitement that unfolds before me.

Reaching for Virgin Gorda

Nothing, though, can replace the feeling one experiences actually being on board a sailboat.  Last week I had a wonderful opportunity to revisit that feeling.  I was one of four captains representing Project U.S.E., the nonprofit I work with, as we led a group of MBA candidates from Wharton Business School on a leadership development program on board sailboats in the British Virgin Islands.  The week-long expedition, part of the Wharton Ventures program, provided participants with the opportunity to learn and test leadership concepts and styles, challenge themselves in a new environment, network with fellow Wharton students, and have some fun.

A weather system was working its way through the Caribbean at the beginning of the week, and the unsettled atmosphere led to several days of rain, gusty winds and significant swells from the north.  It was as if we planned it!  My crew, six impressive individuals ranging in age from 27 to 31, were all new to sailing.  Beginning with the basics – bow, stern, port, starboard, boom, mainsail, jib, tacking, jibing, and so on – we worked our way through exercises and drills.  After just two days the participants were running the boat like old hands, even in spite of several serious cases of mal de mer thanks to the northerly swells!  Traversing the length of the Drake Channel their sailing skills and enthusiasm grew each day, and so did their leadership abilities.  Our structure enabled each participant to serve as the leader for a day (“Captain du Jour” as it came to be known), and the CDJ was responsible for managing the vessel and the crew during the day.  Departure times, sail plans, meals, etc. all required consideration and decision making.

Leading the Race to Road Harbour

On the last day we created a regatta wherein the four Wharton Venture boats raced one another back to Road Harbour in Tortola.  The learning my team did during the week paid off for them as they won the three hour race handily, beating the second place boat by more than a mile and the other two boats by significantly more than that.  It was their great teamwork, strong leadership, attention to detail, determination, and, most of all, enthusiasm that helped them deliver the win.

As I shared the week with the crew of Friends’ Ship II I was reminded of all the things I love about life aboard a sailboat.  Watching my team progress from uninitiated landlubbers to skilled seamen and women was a treat.  Their enthusiasm for learning and discovering the wonderful sport of sailing reinvigorated my own.  And thanks to my team, this summer as I am photographing sailors and sailboats I will be a little less observer and a little more participant.  I will feel that much more connected to the special feeling that can only be experienced on a sailboat.

The Team - Jeanine, Prem, CY, Luisa, Walter, Mike and Yin



A Visit to Folk Engineered

Yesterday I had the pleasure of visiting Marie Pasquariello and Ryan Reedell at Folk Engineered.  Marie and Ryan custom design and hand build beautiful bicycles for a variety of clients.  They do so “the old fashioned way”, creating a drawing based on customers’ needs and size, hand cutting parts, welding each piece individually, and custom finishing with components suitable to the bike’s purpose.

Shooting at Folk Engineered presented quite a few challenges.  Most especially, the warehouse in which they work is large and cavernous.  Charmingly cluttered even!  So lighting had to be focused on the subject without introducing distractions in the background.  Also, because some operations have time limits associated with them (e.g. welding, drilling), set ups had to be ready before the process, and then we had to adapt to any surprises within seconds.  It was a good challenge!

Here are a few samples from the day.  In the coming months we will be documenting the entire process of bike construction, from initial client meeting to final delivery of the bicycle.  For more information about Marie and Ryan and the great bikes they build visit FolkEngineered.com

Ryan runs the drill press

Marie finishes the plan drawing

Ryan brazing a seat collar in place

The precision "joinery" of a hand built bicycle




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