Showing posts with label Ben Freeland. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ben Freeland. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 5, 2009

Photography Spotlight :: Christopher Kim

 

I discovered the photography of Christopher Kim by absolute chance. I was doing a Google search on a model, and it led me to a test shoot posted in his blog. As I browsed through the assorted images, it was really hard to believe that Christopher was a student. But then again, he’s not your typical inexperienced student. Christopher already did internship work for French Vogue and Art Partner.  He’s done numerous test shoots with respected model agencies, including Re:Quest, Red, Ford, Major, Elite, VNY, Fusion, Q, and Public Image. Oh, and he was published in The New York Times Magazine last year!

 

 

Originally from Los Angeles, the 23 year-old is now starting his senior year at the School of Visual Arts in NYC. Christopher explained to Homotography that he’s been doing photography work for about four years. And as for what inspires him, he said that classic art (Greek and renaissance in particular) intrigue him.

 

     

 

You might recognize some of the faces he has captured that we’ve already featured in Homotography, such as Hakan Norling, Ram Boneh, Iuri Jasper, Michael Hartney, Adam Trodd, and Ben Freeland.

 

  

 

Other models that are featured here include Salieu Jalloh, Josh O’Sullivan,  Steven Didas, Niels Raabe, Nigel Lysaght , Andrei Flinker, Joel Coleman, John Woodruff, and Joe Lazo.

 

 

+ more Photography Spotlights

Saturday, May 9, 2009

Light Injected Clothes With Puma L.I.F.T Ads

 

Now here’s a cool concept in this new Puma L.I.F.T  campaign: let the models wear the Puma shoes with underwear only and light-inject the rest of the outfit over their naked body! The purpose is to showcase that the ultra lightweight Puma L.I.F.T shoe weighs 173 grams only.

 

 

The ads were photographed by Nadav Kander for ad agency Droga5 and feature models Ben Freeland, Cameron Bailey and others. Also there is a commercial by director Rupert Sanders.

 

 

 

See the before & after shots example in the two pictures below.