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Richard Etienne

London, London

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About

Showreel: https://vimeo.com/197930091
I am a self-taught filmmaker & Director of Photography. At the heart of my work lies my passion for creating video content that drives positive social change and makes the world a better place. I have has the fortune of working internationally on projects in the USA, Caribbean, South East Asia, Europe, and Africa for clients such as The British Army, University of Roehampton, and the NHS.

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Reviews (1)

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5/5

1 customer review

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1 August 2017

The footage Richard provided was well beyond our expectations.I appreciated how communicative Richard was from our very first conversation and I continued to feel supported throughout the project.

Q&As

1. Get physically close. George almost never uses a zoom lens. He violates personal space with his warmth and enthusiasm. Often, he holds the hand of people he’s shooting. This can seem hard at first, but most people like to be photographed if they perceive it as warm, genuine personal attention.
2. Shoot the moment, not the subject. George feels photographers spend too much time composing and arranging shots, not enough feeling what’s going on and flowing along with it. Life is a series of moments, not images. He shoots in-between moments as well as moments that, as with this vacation shot from a European bathroom, will be a mystery to anyone who wasn’t there.

3. Move around a lot. A big mistake photographers make is to think they have the right shot and then basically take the same picture over and over again, with tiny variations. George is like a sand flee, hopping around, moving high, getting low, going back, returning to front, shooting up, shooting down. For this shot, he walked out of Stumptown coffee to shoot his brother and son within.

4. Get down to the eye level of your subject. If you’re shooting babies or toddler or even chickens, get low. Get your knees dirty. They eye-to-eye vantage is powerful, while the looking-down view is often distancing.

5. Notice the details. Details tell stories. They trigger intimate memories. After you’ve shot the people in a room at a birthday party, or everyone at a vacation house, take time to look around for the details.

6. Play with props. Everyday things like chairs, ladders, empty boxes, baby seats: all of these serve to trigger emotions, illustrate scale or vintage, frame people in fun ways. Here, George and Steph used chocolate letters from a chocolate maker in Brussels to celebrate her second pregnancy.

7. Know the light in your house. As you wander your house with a morning coffee or after dinner or in the middle of the day, notice when and where the light is most beautiful. You can move subjects into the light, or just return to a special place and hope something is going on, as it was in this attic bathroom.

8. Get people away from bright, direct light. Often it’s as simple as taking a person around the side of a summer house, for example, where indirect light is much softer and more beautiful — as with this Jersey Shore shot.

9. Shoot everywhere, always. This serene shot of George’s son Jackson was taken while Jackson was getting some medical tests (he’s fine). “One morning, when I had stayed over with him,” George told me, “we woke up so he could watch the sun rise over the parking lot.” The picture captures a moment, a feeling, and beauty in a place where you least expect it.

10. Shoot lots. Digital “film” is virtually free, and you never really know when you’re getting a good shot: the little screen on the camera — even on the iPhone — can’t always tell in the moment. Expressions vary, heads tilt, eyes look away or into the camera: and then suddenly you have the perfect picture - -in this case a totally natural, candid shot.

1. What is the purpose, objective or goal for the project?
What is the purpose of the project and what does your client wish to achieve from the work that you are to do for them? Knowing the expectations of your client before hand is probably the most important step towards a successful project both for you and for the client. Such a question will also instill confidence in the client by showing that you are enthusiastic about the work and willing to go the extra mile in achieving the goal.

The answers to this question will also assist you and your team to remain focused on precise goals that are important. They will also ensure that you devise effective strategies to meet those goals as per the requirements of the client.

2. What time frame is provided and what’s the scope of the project?
Ask this question and ask it again so that you will know how much time, depending on the scope, you have to complete the project. The time, cost and scope of any project form an iron triangle which illustrates these three as the constraints of managing a project. The client’s answer should also help you establish milestones and a deadline for yourself and for your team which is very important and more so when your team is remote.

There are times when you can negotiate on the time frame depending on your abilities or availability for that project. Other times it would be impossible to change that time because the client has a fixed time frame for one reason or another. The answer to this question should essentially let you determine if you can handle the project or not under the provided time.

3. Who is the primary contact person for the project?
Your client may be an individual and therefore the person whom you will be in contact with throughout the project. Then again your new client may be part of a company and thus not necessarily the only one in charge of the project’s progress. It’s good to know who to contact or go to with questions and other clarifications about things to do with the project.

The answer to this question also eliminates the risk of having too many people steering the project from the client’s side which is not healthy, or having none at all which is just bad.

4. What will be the measure of completion?
This is more like asking the client to paint a picture of how they envision the project will be when done. It is important to know from their point of view, the kind of stick that will be used to measure the end result for the project. If it is a website that you are building for the client for instance, let them tell you if the website will be done once it has been completed and launched or after several weeks of operation and testing.

Payment for a project is essentially done when the work is completed. If you never had a prescribed measure of completeness, you might find yourself in the hands of a goal shifting client who may want you to do more work than you had agreed on with the pretext that your work is not yet complete.

5. Will there be a continuing assessment of the project?
Some projects require continuous assessment while others don’t. As a project manager, you know the differences well and therefore you should ask this question so as to foresee any chance for problems with the progression of the project.

This question will also give you an insight on how your new client operates; whether they are the kind of people who like to micro manage projects or not. Such insights should prepare you for situations that will probably come about as a result of your client’s character.

6. Which are the preferred channels and modes of communication about the project?
Constant communication between you and the client is essential and therefore be sure to ask this question. There are many channels of communication and not all can suit every project. From your own experience and expertise in the work that you do, you can always suggest the best modes of communication if the client has no preference.

Communication can be through email, phone, instant messaging, video chat and whatever else you’ve got going. Project management software normally contains communication mediums that would generally provide efficient channels of contact between you and the client even as you use it to manage the project.

7. What is expected after the completion of the project?
This question can mean a lot for the future of your business with that client, so ask it. Ask whether the client expects some follow up on the project after completion or whether they would want you to do some other work for them. If the client indicates that they would be interested in further engagements with you then do your best towards that goal.

Project follow up is an extremely important phase of project management. If the client tells you that a follow up on the completed project will be required, then you will know how to factor that in your costing for the whole project.

Meeting new people and telling their story in a unique and engaging way.

My burning desire to explore my full potential. I had been employed for few years till one day I realised that the only thing I was doing was actually building others' dreams. I had a steady fixed income each month, that's great when you start a career, but I'm a dreamer and a visionary myself and I always knew I was destined for something great. I halted for a second to understand how the world works and it was time for reversing the equation. In the Real World, you either be an entrepreneur, or you work for one. On that day I decided to wear multiple of hats till I let the world build my own dream.

Because I take pride in my work, have over 15 years worth of video production experience and I am a great listener. Plus I have tons of camera gear.

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