Showing posts with label photography. Show all posts
Showing posts with label photography. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 2, 2016

6:12 Road Trip: Travel Photography --- Preview

   Photographer, Eric McKinney of 6:12 Photography and makeup artist Missy Young took the opportunity to travel across the country, from Tennessee to California in January 2016. Our sights and stops along the way included Dallas, Amarillo and northern Texas; Monument Valley, Arches National Park and Zion National Park in Utah; Las Vegas, Nevada; Los Angeles, Huntington Beach, San Diego, the Mojave Desert and Joshua Tree National Park in California; Grand Canyon National Park and historic Route 66 in Arizona.
   Since travel photography was how I originally fell in love with the art of photography, this trip across the U.S. was very special. Missy and I both agreed that we were able to see some incredible sights and cram a lot of traveling into what seemed like a short ten days on the road.
   Here's a sneak peek at our #612roadtrip.

Monument Valley, Utah
Rodeo Drive in Beverly Hills in Los Angeles, California

Cadillac Ranch on Route 66 in Amarillo, Texas

Arches National Park, Utah

Downtown Dallas, Texas

Las Vegas Strip in Las Vegas, Nevada

Santa Monica, California

The South Rim of the Grand Canyon National Park

For more photos by 6:12 Photography, check out my Facebook page at www.facebook.com/photographybyericmckinney and give it a "like."
You can also follow the #612roadtrip on Instagram by following @mannequin612 and @muabymissy.

Thursday, December 31, 2015

Year in Review: Top Photo Shoots of 2015

2015 has been a strong year for 6:12 Photography and photographer, Eric McKinney. It's the second year that I've been blessed to be able to call photography my full-time job, and I've enjoyed each and every opportunity to be behind the lens.
   One of the highlights of this year was teaming up with the talented makeup artist, Missy Young to take on new and even more creative concepts for our photo shoots. In addition to working together on photo shoots, Missy asked me to partner with her in creating a high fashion runway event in our local community --- "WERK the RUNWAY." After two successful cycles of the event, we've managed to involve designers from all over, including Charles Josef in Asheville, Victoria Wilmoth in Atlanta, Marian Gibson in Charleston, and Paulie Gibson from St. Louis who has been featured on hit tv series America's Next Top Model Cycle 20 and in Los Angeles Fashion Week.
   As well as partnering together for WERK the RUNWAY, Missy and I decided to open up our own modeling agency, 6:12 Model Management so that we could continue to focus on managing and developing the models that we work with so frequently.
   2015 was filled with travel and opportunity. I've worked with models in cities all over the country, including Asheville, Cincinnati, New York City and Miami. I've connected with agencies like Silver Model Management (the leading fitness model agency in the country) and NEXT Models (the leading modeling agency in the world).
 
   Here's a look back at some of the Top Photos and photo shoots from 2015, chosen by the fans and followers of 6:12...

Jonathan C. with 6:12 Model Management

The "Once Upon A Time" Collection with MUA Missy Young
Model: Eryn C.

Austin W. with 6:12 Model Management

Audrey R. with 6:12 Model Management

Haley B. with 6:12 Model Management


The Couples Portrait Shoot-Out with MUA Missy Young
Models: Taylor M., Jonathan C., Daniel D., Kristen C., Kelsea L. & Tanner B.

Darian H. 

The American Horror Story-inspired Halloween Shoot with MUA Missy Young
Models: Michael Y. & Haley B. with 6:12 Model Management

 Taylor M. with 6:12 Model Management

Josh Y.

Kristen C. with 6:12 Model Management
 

Kegan W.

Dave W. with Silver Model Management

Frankie B. with Silver Model Management

Ryszard C. with Silver Model Management

Meghan S. & Justin H. with Silver Model Management

"The Return of the Hood"
Robert T. with Silver Model Management 

Bryan B. with Silver Model Management

Michael J. with Silver Model Management

The Charles Josef Bridal/Menswear Collection
with designer Charles Josef and models, Haley B. & Michael Y. 

Zack H. with Silver Model Management

Dustin M. with NEXT Models Miami
from America's Next Top Model Cycle 22

 Eric C.

Claudia L. with NEXT Models Miami

Lori C.
"Watching through windows, you're wondering if I'm okay..."

WERK the RUNWAY: Cycle 2
hosted by MUA Missy Young & 6:12 Photography
"7 Deadly Sins: Kicked Out of Eden" Finale
Models: Eryn C. & Tanner B.

Kelsi A. & Derek P. with Silver Model Management

 Michael Y. with 6:12 Model Management

Jon S. with 6:12 Model Management

Happy New Year from 6:12Photography, 

wishing you a blessed 2016 full of hope, promise and new photos to be made!!!

   For more 6:12 photos, visit facebook.com/photographybyericmckinney. If you enjoy my work, take a moment to click "like" on my page.
   Interested in booking a photo session with 6:12 Photography? Contact Eric McKinney at emckinney612@gmail.com to schedule a shoot.

Thursday, June 25, 2015

Interview with 6:12 Photography by Author Jacqueline Anne

From the Blog of Author Jacqueline Anne, posted September 2014.

****

I am so excited to have the talented photographer, Eric McKinney of 6:12 Photography, featured today.  I have been following his work for awhile now.  His creative eye and artistic diversity is absolutely amazing!  Be sure to check out his interview, work, and links below!
    TylerG5845yell    AssadL1540l
JA – Q: How long have you been taking photos?
Eric – A: I’ve basically had a camera in my hands since a very young age. Even in Elementary School, over the summers visiting my grandparents or going over to friends’ houses, I would take a little wind-up disposable camera to snap photos that I could keep for memories.

JA – Q: What made you decide to become a photographer? Tell me about that journey.
Eric – A: During college at Carson-Newman University, I spent my summers abroad traveling around Europe, China, Japan, Egypt and Southern Africa, and travel photography became a serious interest. I would return home from my trips with thousands of photos, print them out, and put them in albums, and then share them with my family, friends and coworkers. They would always say things like “Eric, you are so good at taking photos, you should do this for a living,” but at that time, I always smiled and laughed. I never really thought of photography as a full-time career, just a hobby. After college, while working full-time in the fields of marketing and psychology, I started doing photography on the weekends, as some extra income. I started out shooting things like senior portraits, engagement sessions, and weddings. Eventually, I found myself with an opportunity to shoot the runway at the local Fashion Week in 2013, which introduced me to the world of fashion designers and models. Since that time, photography has become by full-time career.

JA – Q: What inspires you?
Eric – A: The things that inspire me most would be people, music, and words. The support of friends, family and clients has been a huge motivation in allowing photography to become more than just a hobby. And the inspiration behind my photography ideas and concepts typically comes from music and words. I make a new playlist for almost every shoot, and my goal with each shoot is to create photos that tell a story.

JA – Q: Tell us about a typical photo shoot.
Eric – A: A typical shoot begins way before the actual day of the shoot. I like to do a lot of preparation. I think that the more we prepare the stronger the photos will be that we create. Typically, even weeks before a shoot, I’m bouncing around ideas for concepts and outfits with the model. If it’s a shoot with a designer, then we would normally begin prepping for shoot months in advance. When the day of the shoot arrives, I usually focus on three to five looks for the model. Sometimes I shoot inside the studio, sometimes outdoor using natural light, but most often, it’s a mix of both. I try to provide as much direction as the model wants, giving tips on posing, expression, angles, and most importantly the eyes.
ErynC5451l        AndrewH0992sl        McKSnow2033l
JA – Q: What is the strangest scenario you have ever been in during a photo shoot?
Eric – A: Ummm… the strangest would probably be last Halloween. I did a collaboration with a talented local makeup artist Missy Young, and I arrived early to mix up about 4 gallons of fake blood using corn syrup, cocoa, and red food coloring. The results were literally a “blood bath” of amazing photos. I’ve always been pretty squeamish at the sight of blood, so that shoot was one of my strangest.

JA – Q: What is the best part of your job?
Eric – A: I think the best part of my job would be working with the models, especially the models who have never stepped foot in front of a camera lens before. It’s really a rewarding experience to work with someone for the first time, provide some instruction and direction, and then show them the photos and see their excitement. When someone can walk away from a shoot with me feeling attractive and beautiful (or handsome/hot) in their own skin, then that’s what I call success.

JA – Q: I’m sure you get asked this a lot, but where do you find your models?
Eric – A: It’s a combination of ways really. Obviously, social media plays a huge part in finding and coming into contact with models. If I see someone who has a look that interests me or that I feel is a “strong” look, then I’ve gotten pretty bold about just shooting them a private message and asking if they would have any interest in doing a shoot. Sometimes, the models find me through social media, word of mouth, or mutual friends. I’ve made some friends and connections with local agencies and also an agency in NYC. And then I guess one other way that I’ve met models is just from encountering them out in public – at a restaurant, walking around downtown, or out at a bar.

JA – Q: So it sounds like you’re not afraid to approach a stranger about modeling?
Eric – A: Well, I have to admit that when I spot someone out in public that I think would make a nice model, I’m usually pretty timid and shy about just walking up and asking. So if I’m out with my friends, they usually end up being the guinea pig or the messenger to approach some of the models. I can sometimes be the person who knows exactly what I’m going to say when I approach someone, but the moment I’m standing in front of them and have their attention, I forget all of it and start rambling. So that’s why I usually make my friends do the dirty work of approaching new models in public.
ChandlerR8865l        MattP7695l
JA – Q: What accomplishment are you the most proud of so far?
Eric – A: I think honestly what I’m the most proud of is that people are finally noticing my work. I’ve always been one of those “it’s the little things that count” kind of people, so just the compliments and kind words that I’ve been receiving lately about my photos have really given me something to be proud of. And hearing people comment or talk about “6:12″ really makes my face light up, because that means that people are starting to recognize my work and know that it’s “a 6:12 photo.”

JA – Q: That brings me to my last question, what’s the story behind 6:12. Where did that name come from?
Eric – A: Short answer, it’s my birthday, June 12th. I wanted a name for my business that would stand out as different and unique, and I also wanted it’s meaning to be important to me. So even aside from being my birthday, the number 612 has always been special to me, kind of like a good luck charm. I’ve stopped for breakfast on the way to work before, and the total comes to $6.12, or I’ll happen to notice the time 6:12 on the clock while I’m driving. So I wanted to make that number a part of my photography business.

JA – Q: So, if someone wants to check out your photography, where can they find it online?
Eric – A: 
Facebook page (which is updated pretty much daily): www.facebook.com/photographybyericmckinney
Instagram: @mannequin612
Website: www.612photog.com.
Also, if there are any authors reading this who are looking for cover models or cover artwork for upcoming publications, I have a special group on Facebook called “Cover’d by 6:12″ which they can join and take advantage of some discounts and special offers on cover images.
Jonathan8140l    WillS8970l2

Monday, February 16, 2015

Interview with 6:12 Photography by Author Susan Fisher-Davis

Just in case any of you 6:12 fans missed out on the chance to read the interview that I did with author Susan Fisher-Davis for her blog, I wanted to re-post the interview here. 

INTERVIEW with ERIC MCKINNEY of 6:12 PHOTOGRAPHY
Please join me in welcoming Eric McKinney of 6:12 Photography By Eric McKinney to my blog.
Welcome Eric, and may I say, thank you for joining me! It's an absolute delight to have you with us today, and thank you for taking time out of your busy and most exciting day to join us. Perhaps you'd like to tell us a little bit about yourself for those who don't know you yet. 

Well first of all, thanks for inviting me to be part of your blog, Susan. As for a little bit about myself...I’m the man behind the lens of 6:12 Photography, a portrait photographer located in the Knoxville area of East Tennessee. My favorite things to shoot are fitness and fashion, and I've recently started doing cover model photography as well, providing cover images for authors scattered all over the country and even one over in Ireland. 

What inspired you to become a photographer? 

I think that my interest in photography stems from its ability to capture a moment in time---a person, a place, a feeling, a memory. As a kid, I was the boy who was constantly carrying a camera. First, it was those wind-up disposable cameras at friends’ houses and parties in elementary school and on trips to visit my grandparents. By middle school, I had my own camera in my backpack pretty much every day of school---I knew it was there if I needed it. I have so many photos of myself with friends and group shots with classmates, because for me, it was all about the memories and making sure that I never forgot those times or those people. Growing up, I had several close friends who moved away to different states because their parents took a new job or their family relocated and such. As a child/teenager, your friends are some of the most important people in your lives, and saying goodbye and knowing they won’t be around anymore is tough. So I think taking photos with friends and classmates was my way of making sure that I captured the good times and had something to remember them by. Later, in college, traveling abroad was a major inspiration for my interest in photography.


What was the first image you took and had published?

I’m going to answer this one in two parts, one for the humor and the other is pretty interesting. The first image that I ever took was with my parents’ polaroid camera when I was somewhere between 5  and 7 years old. I was fascinated with the concept of how the polaroids were created. So I swiped the polaroid, headed to my room and starting posing my He-Man action figures and snapping away. Now, the first image that I had published was during my sophomore year of college when I had the opportunity to travel abroad and two weeks exploring the highlights of China. When I returned home with thousands of images---at the time, I was using film and the photos were digitally stored on CD’s---the Knoxville News Sentinel contacted me to interview me about my trip and they ended up featuring some of my photography, including a photo of the Great Wall just outside Beijing and a snapshot during a performance at the Tang Dynasty Theater in Xi’an. 



What else do you have in the works?

Well, I have a lot in the works actually. Doing photography full-time has really opened up the door to travel a lot more, so another trip to New York City, shooting in Tampa, FL and Wilmington, NC, and a road trip of photo shoots from here to Los Angeles are all in the works. Travel and photography are two of my favorite things in life, so the opportunity to combine them makes me one happy guy! I’ve also been selling lots of cover photos lately, so you can expect to see 6:12 Photography showing up on a lot of covers in the months ahead, including authors Kaylee Ryan, A. M. Madden, and Ava O’Shay to name a few. 

 Who was your first book cover model? 

One of my first book covers was a couples shoot with models Kelsea Lawson and Matt Palumbo for The Enmortals Series by author K. J. Coakley. Matt is a fitness model with Silver Model Management, one of the leading fitness model agencies in the country, and Kelsea was a local college student at East Tennessee State University who just happened to be the daughter of a former boss of mine. So when K. J. Coakley contacted me with the idea to shoot them together, a few weeks later, Kelsea and Matt were working their magic chemistry in front of the 6:12 lens at the High Line park in NYC. Two incredible models made it a very memorable shoot, and it’s a pretty overwhelming feeling the first time you see your photo on the cover of someone’s book. 




What is the most embarrassing thing to happen to you?  

I think my most embarrassing story is probably leaving my camera bag sitting in the floor at the dining area inside of NYC’s Grand Central Station. I was waiting to meet with another model for my next shoot there in the City, and I was trying to find a spot to plug in my Iphone and let it charge while I waited. So all I had on my mind was finding an electric outlet, I stood up, wondered around the station, upstairs, downstairs, found a plug, charged my phone, headed back to the same table to finish waiting for the model to arrive. When I got back to the table, there was my camera bag---with all of my equipment, camera, lenses, flashes, everything---just hanging out in the floor by the chair where I had been sitting earlier. Talk about an emotional moment when I realized what I had done and then discovering it right where I had left it. More proof that God has a very interesting sense of humor.  


He certainly does! My last question for you and my personal favorite:  If you could work with anyone of your choosing, who would it be and why?

Well, my first thought was Marilyn Monroe, but I’ll keep it in the realm of a shoot that could actually happen and say that it’s a toss-up between Sophia Bush and Blake Lively. I’m going to guess that answer might have thrown you for a bit of a curve ball, but truthfully, I think both of them are gorgeous girls, they’ve made some incredible editorial and fashion shots, and I would love to have them in front of the 6:12 lens. And I bet you’re asking so you can make this dream shoot a reality. Right, Susan? 

Of course I can! Eric, thank you so very much for joining us today, it’s been a lot of fun. 
You can check Eric's amazing photos posted below and for more, check out his links.
Authors, please visit Eric's page for his private author group. I'm a member and it's a great way to check out his models for your book covers.

https://www.facebook.com/groups/coverdby612/.

FACEBOOK: www.facebook.com/photographybyericmckinney

INSTAGRAM: www.instagram.com/mannequin612

BLOG: 612photography.blogspot.com

WEBSITE: 
www.612photog.com

Wednesday, June 12, 2013

The Story Behind 6:12

Back in September, when I decided to give my photography services an official name and dive into the adventure of freelance photography, I was faced with an important question--- what do I call it?

I knew that I wanted my photography’s name to include my own name, but I also wanted it to have something more, something special, something interesting. 

That’s when I decided to call it 6:12 Photography. 


Since that time, I have had many clients, friends and followers of my work ask me this question: “What does the 6:12 mean?” 

The numbers 6:12 have always had a special meaning for me.
First and foremost, they represent my birthday - June 12th. 
They have also appeared on my first license plate and as the last three digits of my cell phone number. 
More recently, around my last year of college, the numbers started showing up more randomly, as the total on fast food receipts or the numbers on the back of a Chinese fortune cookie message. I would wake up early before the alarm clock, roll over and find myself staring at 6:12am on the clock, or be driving in the evening and glance down only to notice that it was 6:12pm. 

So 6:12 eventually became my lucky number. 


By including my birthday and a special number in the name, 6:12 Photography provides an opportunity for me to share my own personal story. Ultimately, it’s a reflection of what I want my photography to do. I want my photographs to do more than just capture a single still image; I want them to tell a story. Whether it’s a ballet student who lives and breathes dance, a soon-to-be bride basking in the beauty of her dress and the excitement of her forthcoming marriage, or a handsome young man full of southern charm who’s making a name for himself as an actor and a model, I hope that my portraits are telling stories.


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