Tuesday, December 8, 2015

2016 Workshops & Photo Tours


Click here for slideshow

Click here to view the full 2016 workshop program

Gift freedom of choice and heaps of inspirations to someone who enjoys creative challenges and wants to build on their photography skills? Choose from basic to advanced workshops, tailored one-on-one sessions or special occasion workshops and photo tours! 

The workshops are based in Christchurch, but can be organized anywhere.

Vouchers are available from $99 including the gift card, an envelope and postage to any destination in New Zealand.



For more info visit majamoritz.com or facebook.com/majamoritzphotography


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Wednesday, September 16, 2015

Creative quotes




Enjoy this little creativity boost :)

(Compiled from images of creativity quotes on Google)

Tuesday, April 15, 2014

 Photo Compositing Challenge


"Heartfelt" is the title of this art photo compositing. Although I am normally totally into pure nature photography, I sometimes like to indulge into photo compositing when there is no better way to illustrate something I want to express with my photography. This photo compositing came into being for a wedding and proved so popular that it has become my bestselling art image so far :)
My photo compositing normally is very clearly recognizable for even an untrained eye, because I normally only use it when real photography cannot do the job the way I am visualizing it or depends on too many outer factors.
I truly enjoy these little escapes into the world of "anything is possible" creations, when there is a chance. I am also happy to do photo compositing creations as an assignment or teach this art form on a one-on-one basis. It is done in photoshop.





View more about my workshops

Thursday, August 8, 2013

Visualization Challenge



Dream…..daydream, visualize, envision! Take a break, take some time out for dreaming! Embark on a journey to the inner places of inspiration, listen to what becomes perceivable, if you stop looking around in the outside world for it. Allow inner pictures to arise, allow them to be fantastic and unreal. The more you can allow this to happen in the world of your imagination, the more you will be able to manifest your ideas later on in reality. Even if sometimes it might seem that nothing can be realized the way it looked like in your dreams, keep believing in your dreams! It just might not have been the right time for their realization - they will manifest when they are ready, if you stay open and ready for them!
The importance of active and passive dreaming is huge, it helps you to create your images before you go out and take photographs! It is the process of creation in the world of imagination where everything is possible. This is your chance to pick from the source of all potential. Be lavishly, dream abundantly. Let your imagination travel to wherever it wants to go, and let it surprise you!
This is such an exciting and joyful journey of discovery, which takes you to the veracity of your own self, yourself as a photographer and a true new way of expressing your very own unique perception. This is exactly where you ideally want to source your ideas from and carve your images out of imagination before you grab your camera and go out to shoot.
Thinking comes second, because in contrast to dreaming it is limited and sometimes can even turn desperate, but it is a perfect tool to help realize what the dreams have drafted. Bring out your unique way of creating images - you will know when it works, you will just love it!

What can you do, if it doesn't work? Stop looking outside to what's already there, stop looking sideways to what others have done or are doing, stop reasoning about problems which hold you back (equipment, skills, opportunities, or circumstances).
Start believing that everything is possible. Start looking inside to your inner source of stillness and nothingness, which holds all potential. It is no different to the ancient ways of creation in our world, we are all connected to that beautiful power, we just need to open up to it and start being receptive and participate. Stop trying to control this process, it doesn't work, you will just unnecessary limit yourself. Ask for inspiration, and it will come. Don't try to force it - it is a gift. Invite inspiration, make your inner space comfortable and inviting, and inspiration will visit bringing heaps of gifts for the host. If it keeps eluding you, stop doing things and just practice to become still, observe, listen - until this magic source opens it's doors for you. It is there, in that stillness, that you will find what you are looking for. As long as too much distraction is taking place, the precious source of inspiration might remain undiscoverable.


View my website
majamoritz.com


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Saturday, May 18, 2013

Lighting Challenges in Portrait Photography

This image shows my favorite light situation: Natural sunlight from behind plus a flash bouncing off an umbrella to lighten the face beautifully.

Check out the lighting setup in all sorts of different lighting situations for the series of portraits of NZ authors last year, who were representing New Zealand being the Guest of Honour at the Frankfurt Book Fair 2012 on lightingdiagram.com/user/majamoritz

This is the setup for the lighting situation for the image above:


Learn more about lighting diagrams here lightingdiagram.com and create your own diagrams. It's free for private users!

View my portrait photography, each with it's own lighting chart
lightingdiagram.com/user/majamoritz

View my portrait portfolio
majamoritz.com


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Friday, March 8, 2013

Judging Challenge and Criteria











Just had the opportunity to be the sole judge for the February competition of CPS, the Christchurch Photographic Society. I really enjoyed this challenge. This inspiring opportunity took me on a visual journey through a great variety of photography: Landscape, nature, portrait, sports, architecture, flower photography, stage, fine art, studio, funny and humorous photography, children, illustrative, cultural, feature, bird photography, car photography and of other vehicles, historic, creative, illustrative, macro and motion, photojournalism and personal photography - WOW! Quite a few examples of good postproduction and image manipulation as well.

I have tried to do my best with this judging, meaning to be fair and giving all images a chance, especially the ones I wasn't that fond of.

For this reason I have put together 21 criteria, which are separated into 4 main sections: the Wow factors with 5 criteria, the message factors with 5 criteria, the content factors with 6 criteria, and the technical factors with 5 criteria. Each one measured on a scale from 1 to 10, with 10 being the best mark.

If an image had no outstanding distinguishing aspect to it, it would get the neutral middle mark which is 5 and just under the qualifying mark of 6 to be accepted. So the cutting edge is mark 6, which means an average of 6 will get your image into acceptance.

Here are the criteria for your own testing. Please let me know, should you find some more. That would be very much appreciated. In case you publicly use this scheme or part of it somewhere, please credit the usage with © Maja Moritz Photography Workshops. Thank you!







After having finished judging using the criteria, I had another look and made a last "gut" run over all images, and that  brought up some changes. I looked at all images again just under 2 main overall criteria:

Is it an exceptional shot in any way which makes it relevant for a competition?

How much influence had the photographer into making a good picture, a better one opposed to an image which only lives of showing something, which is just mainly plainly depicted?

For all of us, different aspects matter in different ways, but those aspects which matter for all of us are the ones which deserve more attention and they ultimately define what is considered exceptional! Exceptionality always will be something which has to be agreed on by the majority of people involved.

While judging an overall observation was that message & meaning fall short to content & technique.
A very important question in this context, which I asked myself over and over again, can also help you to gain more clarity about this: "What is this image actually telling me?"


View the judging results
February Competition Results

View the CPS website
CPS Christchurch Photographic Society


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Wednesday, February 6, 2013

Photography Challenge "The Decisive Moment"








When I was waiting for Miss Dragonfly to sit down and stay for a bit and grant me a chance to photograph her, I was ready to be patient but felt impatient at the same time. People were walking the path where I was waiting for her, and as long as there was this sort of traffic there seemed to be too much noise and movement for a quiet and intimate encounter with this beautiful insect.

I didn't know whether this human traffic would stop long enough at some stage, also my friends were waiting at the car park, the sun was burning down in the middle of the day, I could feel the stinging on my forehead and the dragonfly hadn't sat anywhere longer than maybe about 5 seconds, so I was pondering whether I was actually wasting my time and energy here.

What I want to point out is that the famous "decisive moment" in this case happened long before the photo was taken! My abeyance was hovering between waiting or leaving……the decision to stay suddenly happened and that felt like the decisive moment! While watching the dragonfly doing her turns over the area she had chosen to cruise, sudden clarity was there. It felt that the watching not only was happening one way, she was watching me as well! Silently while waiting and watching I had asked her for permission to photograph her beauty. The clarity which suddenly came about told me that she had agreed to be photographed. I now knew I was no longer waiting for a chance which seemed elusive before, I was waiting for my granted chance to happen. And sure enough it didn't take much longer before she settled on a flax leave and stayed……stayed for minutes which seemed like eternity! She allowed me to come close, very close, it felt like she trusted me. Time stood still for me during these precious minutes. I was so captured and in awe about this magic situation and her beauty that I couldn't think straight.  Focus, aperture, speed and ISO became abstract functions, although it felt that I had all the time in the world to make up my mind how to photograph this beautiful being, the technical side of photography now felt elusive. The intimacy between us two beings in this moment was kind of overwhelming, the agreement between us to connect for the opportunity of a photograph, which enables others to see her beauty too and thus become intimate with the dragonfly as well……She allowed me to take over 40 images, and there were gaps when I did nothing and tried to think how to enhance the quality of what I was doing, but instead just marveled at her beauty and perfection in a mesmerized state of mind. She didn't move much during these divine moments, just cautiously and slowly bringing her left front leg towards her head. Magically during these precious minutes no one walked our path. It was as if everything had stopped. It felt as if the intelligence of creation had become tangible for a very short time. The "decisive moment" might be an integral part of this all pervasive force, when we are in tune it happens with perfection and ease as if there is nothing more natural in existence. When the dragonfly finally took off, I knew that this was it, that I wouldn't get another chance. I walked off too, feeling deeply grateful for this opportunity, also knowing that my technical blackout wouldn't matter, because this gift was perfect the way it was.


Read more about "The Decisive Moment"
Timeless Wisdom about Photography - Best Quotes

View my images
New Zealand Wilderness


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