I was able to get in an hour of additional work on the first hairpiece. Here’s a fresh update!
More to come!!
Steven
I was able to get in an hour of additional work on the first hairpiece. Here’s a fresh update!
More to come!!
Steven
Here we are so far! Just been focusing on creating a solid foundation for the first piece that will mimic in the following pieces. I got to a point where I could start adding texture!
Tools:
To be continued….How are you liking? Not liking?!
Steven
Why hello! It’s been nearly 9 months since my last blog post. And boy do I apologize. Let me tell you though….it is a very difficult process to grow a salon business and clientel PLUS pursue artistic endeavors. So this past year, I chose to grow my business, in hopes to create a larger cash flow for artistic expression.
Let me preface this whole blog post with this…art is a desire I constantly crave. And when I’m not creating my photographic projects, I’m quite depressed. These days digital art is becoming quite prominent. Which is GREAT! Digital art opens up a whole new outlet of artistic expression. I’m a definite fan of having outlets!! However, the cleanliness and realness possible in the digital art world is clouding what people spend days and months creating with their own hands.
With numerous hairdressing competitions and thousands of marketing ads, digital photography is always stated as ‘neither encouraged nor discouraged’. Great. But what these collection people aren’t telling you is what is what EXACTLY! I’m not discrediting anyones portfolio, merely bringing to light that if the photos are not shot by film, you really have no idea what is real and what has been digitally manipulated.
With me revisiting my roots of creative avant garde hairdressing and story-telling photo series, I’m going to be creating a new collection, inspired by my avant garde past and influenced with photographic digital manipulation. It is my goal to show you ‘realistic’ photos that have indeed been built by me, developed by me, with the addition of technology to step up the ‘unrealness’ of the collection.
I would love ANY and ALL comments along the way. Comments about digital manipulation, thoughts of the progression/digression of hairdressing in the world of consumers, ads and manufacturing companies, photo competitions….etc. Your thoughts are what I want to discuss!
So I bring you Day 1 of the building process. . . . .
Over shooting a previous concept, Jake Garn and myself were discussing the likes of a new shoot. I tend to like most of my studio projects to have some sort of creepy, disturbing underlying feel! Pretty sure we outdid that creepiness this time around. The Blank Series. All pieces were built 3 hours prior to the shoot. With the greatest help from my assistant Liz Schroener, she ran to the second-hand shop, purchased 2 lamp shades, 1 mixing bowl and 6 bags of synthetic hair to create these three beauties! What’d ya think?!
Credits:
Photographer: Jake Garn
Hair: Steven Robertson assisted by Liz Schroener
Make Up: Completely unneccesary ![]()
Salt Lake City – Best Artistic Hair Design - Arty Awards 2010
I recently had the opportunity of visiting New York City to style hair for the runways of Spring Fashion Week 2010 along side the Sebastian Core and Design teams! What a great experience! Janae Johnson and I spent 3 days (4 including the night in the airport cause we missed our silly flight!) styling hair for shows like Walter Baker, Indashio and Sachika. I can’t wait to go back for Fall Fashion Week 2011!!! Here are some of the show photos below! Click thumbnail to enlarge. Photos courtesy of Elle.com.
Walter Baker
Indashio
Sachika
We even ate our first NY street hot dog!
Hope to share many more fashion week experiences with ya!
-Steven
One of the major differences between talented people, and the not so well skilled, is the willingness to spend countless hours on practice. Practice developing the foundation of skills that later on give them the ability to create such great art. I read in the brilliant book Outliers by Malcolm Gladwell that people considered to be experts or masters in any particular area by their peers is roughly 10,000 hours of practice. Now Gladwell isn’t talking about thoughtless practice, where you’re completely mindless and not even processing what you’re doing, meaning just going through the routines. He’s talking about progressive, present-focused thinking about what you’re doing, the outcome, the process, and what could be done better, faster and more efficient.
Those interested in photographic styling will need to practice there technique and cleanliness more and more during the next coming years as it will separate those who deserve success and from those who cheat it. The art of digital photography allows you to create images that are unlike any other art created in the past, due to the ability to manipulate, create, draw, fill in, expand, shrink, erase any and every little detail that does not fit. Is this a bad thing? Certainly not! It allows you to create the most beautiful images imaginable, with minimal effort. You can build sets and backgrounds that would normally cost thousands, adjust lighting, highlight and shadow to create drama. Endless opportunity is possible with digital photography. That’s it’s fame
But the downside therein is found in the technical ability required by the team creating the photograph. I have witnessed, and participated in having the option to erase those fly-aways, to slack off in make up application, to change the silhouette entirely, to shadow texture that is unpleasant. Having seen poor effort in preparation and application early on in my career, I turned my attention to practicing the foundation of our craft. The classic techniques. Fingerwaves, pin curls, marcel-work, clean blow-outs, clean sections, precise cutting, smoothing, controlling, etc. There is a HUGE difference in the high quality original, than the altered final image.
Judges won’t care. Peers won’t care. Your employers won’t care. Cause if manipulated well, you can’t tell a difference. Only you and the photographer will know. What false personna are you creating for yourself and peers if you continue to alter to fix poorly done work? And let me say that this is of no negative attack to digital photographers. If they’ve mastered the craft of photo manipulation, then great! It’s a talent. But they should be able to focus on the photography, and not waste time fixing skin blemishes and correcting hair and clothing. You either respect your craft, or don’t participate.
I have to hand it to Jake Garn, the photographer of a great portion of my portfolio. Jake is a digital photographer, and a very talented one at that. He’s is a genius at creating scene setting backgrounds, insane digital overlays over skin to create awesome texture, and also believes in creating strong work during preparation from his team. I’ve worked on shoot with him before where I’m creating a big, textured shape and it’s not working the way I want it to. So to give in, I would ask Jake, “can you just adjust this corner?” He responds with a big ‘ole NO! Is the make up not looking so pretty? He asks you to fix it. Jake is one who wants to spend time creating his art on the photo, and not wasting time with something I should have been correct in the beginning. Fly-aways? Fix them. Hair in the face. Get it out. No mouse clicking to fix it.
Antoinette Beenders, Vice President of Creative for Aveda, recently said in an interview that if you want to see the purity of your work, and test the strength of your technique, then shoot with film or polaroids. Neither can be digitally altered. Wanna see what you would change; look at a polaroid. Wanna get better; see what you can do on film, as you can not see how anything looks until it’s processed to prints. Here are some recent photographs I did with Ryan Muirhead, a film photographer in Utah, who is great with natural lighting and a photographer that is currently dedicating his 10,000 hours of practice to film photography.
The photographs with the black outlining are simply scanned polaroids. I’m happy to say that I’m very proud of the outcome of these photos. They’re clean, interesting, clean make up (by Danielle Carlsen), clean hair, and great lighting from Ryan Muirhead, all taken on the back porch of the photographers apartment against the white wall of the building.
I continuously take charge of mastering my craft in different areas, and please encourage all of you to do the same, as it’s the only way to ensure the growth of the hairdressing craft, and maintain the respect to ourselves and of our peers for putting in hard, quality work!
Best,
Steven
Now I rarely get the opportunity to celebrate the fire burning feeling of winning any sort of award resulting from a competition entry. I find it, in fact, quite simple to become a finalist. But what does it even mean to us to become finalists? I believe it is simply a teaser, marketing ploy in fact, that finalist positions are even available to be placed in. What better way to generate excitement on all party’s behalves than to have everyone visit the sponsors site, submit work viewable by a mass audience, gain repeat site visits by allowing the public to vote on the photos, select an alloted amount of finalists, draw out the competition even longer to select the finalist, select finalist and have all legal documents signed to accept the winning, and then finally announce it. How much money do you think is made from this process??
Well thankfully, this time, that process ended up dwindling down in my favor allowing Janae Johnson and myself to snag the exciting recognition and press of the What’s Next Awards winner for the volume catagory!!! Wahh HOOO!!!!!
What did we win?? First off, it was a pleasure to get nominated with some of my mentors Jake Thompson and Steve Elias, Elias being one who snagged a NAHA award this year for Editorial Stylist of the Year
Second, we won a trip to New York City to style the runways for Fashion Week this September alongside the Sebastian creative team! OHHH how exciting!! Third, we will have a featured interview in the September issue of Blackbook magazine!!
Special SPECIAL thanks to Janae for creating the direction of this whole doll collection
Click here to see the winning feature!
With pure excitement,
Steven
Credits
Hair: Steven Robertson and Janae Johnson
Make Up: Paula J. Dahlberg
Wardrobe: Michelle Boucher
Photography: Jake Garn
Live Shoot at Trolley Square Mall
I’m constantly amazed by the surrounding talent in my area. Specifically 7 talents, whom I’ve talked about before; Janae Johnson, Brittney Wiseman, Chad Seale, Sherri Curtis, Paula Dahlberg, Michelle Boucher, and Rachel Domingo! On top of that, we have been honored enough to shoot with Jake Garn. Now aside from Jake’s AMAZING photographic skills, he also has a magnetic way of bringing multiple talents in the area together, to produce such amazing work for the surrounding community; the first being our team shoot at The Hive Gallery at Trolley Square in Salt Lake City.
Now, Salt Lake City is no fashion capital of the world. It has no exposure such as NY, LA, Prague, Milan, London, Paris, Singapore and many other recognized cities; however, Salt Lake City does house the most talented, disciplined and collective group of artistic individuals in the entire country, with a minimal market to supply financial benefits of each. Artistic in any area whether it be music, hair, dance, instrumental, hair, visual art, sculpture, makeup. . .the works. It is such a sad event to hear of all the AMAZINGLY talented individuals leave to pursue their careers. If only we could such sustain such a talent in SLC, we could allow talent to remain home grown.
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Jake Garn is a great sustainer of such talent, as he provides many artistic avenues (both financially and artistically benefiting) to the community and art talent. Recently we were able to shoot a live production at Trolley Square, open to all the public, to see 3 styling teams put together 6 models from head to toe, and watch a full, live photo shoot of each model from beginning to end. What a great success it was. We had many people from industry observers, to the elderly, to common guests of the mall to observe. Watch the video below to view the creative process of all, shot by Jake Garn and video by John Paul.
Do enjoy
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Steven
It’s interesting how life progresses. And really, it’s entirely up to you on how it goes. Not anyone else. You. I’ve had hundreds of set backs, bad times, bad events happen in my life; but guess what? That is no more, or less, than you or anyone else. Simply different. I was born, grew up, and figured things out just as everyone else does only with different good and bad situations. My mother did the best she knew how to do, just like everyone elses parents do. Are you catching the pattern here?
All children are born without any previous experience, knowledge of the world, or how to do anything. But guess what? They figured it out. And the more effort put in to figuring out life, the more opportunities for you to learn more will arise.
Upon the passing away of my mother at age 8, me and my two sisters became grateful for one gift. My grandmother and grandfather. These two individuals are hands down the biggest reason of my success today. These two taught me how to figure situations out. If I had a challenge, they gave me options; not an answer. If I wanted to learn something, they gave me suggestions on how to go about it; they didn’t do it for me or hand me the book of answers. And with that, they didn’t tell me no or try to talk me out of it; they simply supported me.
What would it mean to you to pursue any dream (or task, relationship, passion, talent, craft, lifestyle and the list could continue forever) you had, without the overpowering influence of another individual to sway your decision? How valuable is that?
It’s been a pleasure of mine to work alongside the Paul Mitchell family of companies, whether it be Paul Mitchell Schools, John Paul Mitchell Systems, or Lunatic Fringe Salons. That being said, I’ve been provided a handful of opportunites. I mean really, a HUGE handful. I’ve been given the opportunity to become a salon hairdresser, educator, financial aid leader, artistic team leader, assistant, cutting specialist, texture specialist, make up artist, salon owner, contributer to curriculum development, marketing developer, session stylist, platform artist, business owner, hair industry contributer, and the list can continue. This overwhelming list could cause stress to most, so how do you sort through it? By figuring it out. What are you willing to learn? Nobody gave me these positions, I asked for them. And because I was able to figure out how to learn things, without the physical aid of another individual walking me through every step, I was able to create new positions for myself.
I get endless amounts of emails, facebook messages (social media promotion is very important these days, FYI), and verbal questions stating, “I want to do what you do.” I used to give many responses like, “I didn’t miss much school”, “I watched many educational DVDs”, “I worked seven days a week”, “I worked on mannequin heads a lot”, blah blah blah. Which yes, those did contribute to success. But they are only physical tasks that took place. WHY and HOW would be a more beneficial question. What was your thought process and approach would be more beneficial. Why? Because I have big dreams! How? Because I figured it out and took the initiative to surround myself with the right people, educational workshops, tools, and worked on my technical ability. NOT because someone made me work seven days a week. NOT because I was given a thousand mannequin heads and the premonition of future success in hairdressing. And NOT because someone said staying in school is cool.
I wanted to accomplish something and I did because I was able to figure out what I needed to do, who I needed to talk to, and learn what was needed to create what I wanted to. Not because I was given the exact steps to success, and every individual to talk to, and book of everything I needed to learn.
I would like to stress that I did not do this alone. There are many great contributers to my success. Shawn Trujillo, Angie Katsanevas, Bekah Nash, Janae Johnson, Jake Garn, Paula Dahlberg, Jenner Feroah, the Lunatic Fringe Artistic Team, Dave Holland, Andrew Carruthers, Teri Edmunds, my family, friends. It is these people that have pushed me forward, however, without my wanting to do what was needed to surround myself with these individuals, they would not have been able to create the opportunites I have enjoyed.
You can not be successful alone. It must be elevated by other individuals. It is only internal motivation that will connect you to the right individuals who support your goals that you create and pursue. Guide yourself forward.
With your successes in mind,
Steven