Newfoundland photographer, journalist and media producer Greg Locke in St Johns, Newfoundland. Canada.
Greg Locke, Newfoundland photographer, journalist, media producer
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Welcome to the weblog at GREGLOCKE.COM. Greg Locke is a professional photographer, journalist, media producer and IT junkie based in St. John's, Newfoundland. Here you will find his latest work and news from the photo, journalism and tech world. Visit his main site for a portfolio of his photography work. All Rights reserved. © 2009 GREG LOCKE.
View Article  First line up for Sound Symposium XV


YEAH!! ...It's a Sound Symposium year and the organizers have released the first look at their lineup of artists for the coming event July 2 - 10 in St. John's Newfoundland. Check out their new website for updates. This is a stunning 10 day event that brings the highest caliber international artists to city for concerts, workshops, exhibitions and collaborative experience. What makes this unlike other festivals is that the general public are invited to participate, meet and interact with the visiting artists. It's far beyond the usual "festivals" which are little more than a series of stage performances.

So, this year book your dates and BE A PART of the festival. Discover the world of sound.
I've been doing it since 1990!

Through Stray Light Pictures and in collaboration with media and technology partners, NL Press and Fusix, we're proud to have contributed to the visual aspects of the new website and designed the user interface.
View Article  1986 NAPE Strike
30 Years of Photojournalism: The 1986 NAPE Strike was particularly acrimonious even for a Newfoundland government workers strike. Police started dragging strikers away when they blocked the west wing of the Confederation Building. It was also the first time that union leaders were charged and convicted by the government.

This was a bonus assignment while back home in St. John's to cover a trans Atlantic balloon crossing and the start of Rick Hansen's cross Canada leg of his Man in Motion around the world wheelchair journey.

I think that is it for the black & white print box. Photos added to the project folder. ...over there in the left side column.

Considering the news out of Haiti I'll dive into my Haiti file next. I have made a couple of trips to Haiti. The last time was in the summer of 1996 with Canada's Royal 22nd Regiment during their UN mission.
View Article  Frank Duff Moores

30 Years of Photojournalism: Former Premier of Newfoundland, Frank Duff Moores  in a hospitality suite at the 1991 Newfoundland Progressive Conservative Party leadership convention in St. John's, Newfoundland.

Moores was the second premier of Newfoundland (1972-1979) and the man who knocked off Liberal premier Joey Smallwood who brought Newfoundland into the Canadian confederation in 1949. Moores died July 10, 2005 in Perth, Ontario

Photo by Greg Locke © 2009

View Article  30 years of Photojournalism

Pope John Paul II in St. John's, Newfoundland during his 1984 tour of Canada. Photo by Greg Locke © 2009

A few events collided this week to make me finally get around to a time sucking chore I have been trying to ignore like a cheque presentation news conference. It's winter, my traditional time to clean up the previous years work, do a final edit and get the the stuff archived and indexed, and I am surrounded by boxes of old slides and negatives ...that stuff we used to make photos on before these new fangled digital thingies. Also, someone pointed out I have been doing photojournalism and documentary photography in Newfoundland and internationally for 30 years now and suggested that, just maybe, I should be assembling a retrospective exhibition.
...great, just great...

So, the task has begun. The scanning of more than 30 years of 35mm slides, negatives and prints where the original negs have been lost. Indeed, a darkroom fire in 1986 destroyed a lot of personal work from the late 1970's through 1982. Thankfully, the valuable stuff was on file with the agencies I worked with. ...that reminds me, I need to do my offsite backup of my digital files.

I can't remember not having a camera so I can't say when I first started making photos, certainly my pre-teen years and I was the geek who worked on school yearbooks in Jr. High and high school. The camera was another tool in some obsessive need to document the people around me, their culture and tell their stories. I eventually got evolved with the student newspaper, The Muse, (now online but then hot wax halftones and paste up) at Memorial University. While at university I turned "Pro" doing piece work for United Press International (UPI), The Newfoundland Herald, The Evening Telegram and anyone willing to pay ...fun yes, but always a business first.

But the 1984 Papal Tour of Canada by Pope John Paul II was what I consider the big turning point in deciding to move from writing and documentary film to photojournalism and documentary photography solely. It was my first major international news event and I got to see how the serious pros worked. ...when not getting the picture was not a option. Which can't be said without giving heaps of thanks to legendary photo editor Bob Carroll and his team at UPC/UPI in the 1980's for letting me into their world and passing along the skills (Thank, Bob ...and Andy! ...if you're reading)

With the late 80's financial problems of UPI and the closure of its Canadian offices this team would be picked up by Reuters when they built their international news picture division.

It's just a coincidence that this photo of Pope John Paul II came out of the box first.
As stuff gets scanned I'll add it to the 30 Years of Photojournalism folder over there in the left side column. It won't be in any particular order, just my favourites as they come out of the boxes and binders.  ....maybe my favourite photo of Frank Moores will be next.

...hmmm, I wonder if I can train my 9 year old to run the scanners?

I worked pretty exclusively with 35mm slide film. Fujichrome 100, 400,  Ektachrome 64 and Kodachrome 25, 64, 200, for magazine work. The early days of the wire services it was Kodak Tri-X and Ilford HP5. In the mid 1980's colour neg was the standard for newspapers and wire services. It's sad that the young photographers today never got to use and know these films and their different characteristics. The decision of which film to use on a magazine assignment was a critial decision and could decide the tone and feel of the final published work.

For this project we'll be using a Canon film scanner and an Agfa flatbed scanner for fine work. For bulk scanning we have welding some old and new technologies. We will be coupling a Nikon D2x to an old school Bessler slide duplicator!!

Camera RAW files will be processed with Adobe Raw. Processing software will be Adobe Photoshop PS3 with Bridge handling the IPTC, captioning and archiving. A bunch of plug-ins, utilities and scripts/actions to speed up the agonizing process, yet ensure best quality.

So, let's begin with a Pope!

(NOTE: These photos will be available for purchase and licensing through NL Press.)


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