Pickleball for All // Tallahassee Magazine
Pickleball for All // Tallahassee Magazine
The feature in Tallahassee Magazine and Physicians and Medical Resource Guide
A Big-Hearted Passion for People // Tallahassee Magazine
A Big-Hearted Passion for People // Tallahassee Magazine
The feature in Tallahassee Magazine and Physicians and Medical Resource Guide
Time Travels // Tallahassee Magazine
The Workmans photographed 92-year-old memoirist Ann Camp at her historic Tallahassee home for Tallahassee Magazine's feature on her life and writing.
Time Travels // Tallahassee Magazine
Tallahassee Magazine assigned us to photograph Ann Camp for a feature in their September/October 2022 "Senior Living" section. The story, written by Emma Witmer, profiled the 92-year-old memoirist and her writing process, and our assignment took us to Camp's historic home in Tallahassee for an environmental portrait session.
Photographing someone in their nineties in their own home requires a particular kind of care. You're working with a subject who may move more slowly, who may be more sensitive to bright lighting, and whose comfort in the space matters more than any creative concept you brought with you. The session needs to work around the subject, not the other way around. As Tallahassee photographers, we've photographed people across a wide range of ages for editorial assignments, and sessions with older subjects are some of the most rewarding because the images tend to carry a weight and a presence that younger subjects don't always bring to the frame.
Camp's home is a historic property in Tallahassee, and the article describes a warm living room where the interview took place. Historic homes give you rich visual material to work with: architectural details, natural light filtered through older windows, and interiors that have been shaped by decades of living. The challenge is being respectful of a space that's clearly been curated over a lifetime while still finding the compositions that work for a magazine layout. We worked with our Canon mirrorless system and chose lenses that let us frame Camp within her home environment without needing to rearrange or disrupt the space.
For the portrait work, we kept the setup minimal. Not every session benefits from bringing in a full lighting setup, and a home environment with an older subject is one of those cases where working with the available light and supplementing gently, if at all, often produces the most natural and comfortable results. The goal was images that felt like you were sitting in the room with Camp, not images that looked like a magazine crew had taken over her living room.
Environmental portrait photography like this is about patience and presence. You spend time with the subject, you let them settle into the session, and you wait for the moments where their personality comes through naturally. That's when the best frames happen. Features like this one for Tallahassee Magazine remind us that some of the most compelling photography in Tallahassee comes from simply sitting with someone and letting their story show up in the photographs.
This feature was photographed by The Workmans for Tallahassee Magazine and appeared in the September/October 2022 issue and was written by Emma Witmer. The Workmans are a husband-and-wife photography team based in Tallahassee, Florida, and we work with publications across the state of Florida, in Washington D.C. and around the United States. You can explore more of our editorial photography in the archive, see more of our work across our website and connect with us on how we can best serve you!
The Class of 2021 - Pinnacle Awards // 850 Business Magazine
The Class of 2021 - Pinnacle Awards // 850 Business Magazine
We teamed up with Rowland Publishing for the feature in 850 Business Magazine. This can also be found in Emerald Coast Magazine and Tallahassee Magazine.
Dog's Best Friend // Tallahassee Magazine
Dog's Best Friend // Tallahassee Magazine
I (Alex) had the opportunity to spend the morning with Dr. Kevin Drygas and his family. As a father and business owner, being present with my kids is one of the most important things in the world to me. It was amazing getting to be a “fly on the wall” as Dr. Drygas put the scrubs away and exchanged it for a skateboard. He shared about their journey to Tallahassee and building a business here. He and his practice makes Tallahassee a better place for all the pet owners in out community. We were grateful for Tallahassee Magazine sharing these images!
Agonizing and Joyful // Tallahassee Magazine
The Workmans photographed author Jay Revell at Capital City Country Club in Tallahassee for this Tallahassee Magazine feature on his book, The Nine Virtues of Golf.
Agonizing and Joyful // Tallahassee Magazine
Tallahassee Magazine asked us to photograph Jay Revell for a feature in their May/June 2021 issue tied to his book, The Nine Virtues of Golf. The story, written by Steve Bornhoft, explores Revell's lifelong relationship with the game, and the assignment took us to Capital City Country Club in Tallahassee to capture portraits of Jay in the environment where so much of that relationship plays out.
Capital City Country Club is one of those locations that looks effortless in photographs but requires some thought to photograph well. The course is lined with Spanish oaks and full of rolling terrain, which gives you beautiful depth and framing options. But a golf course is also wide open, and depending on the time of day, you're managing strong directional light with very little shade to work with. As Tallahassee photographers, we've been on this course before for other assignments, so we had a sense of which spots would give us the best combination of background interest and workable light.
For an environmental portrait like this, the goal is to put the subject in a setting that tells part of their story without needing a caption. Revell on the course, with his clubs, surrounded by the landscape he writes about with so much affection; that's the photograph doing narrative work alongside the article. We brought our Canon mirrorless system and worked with a range of focal lengths to balance Revell against the scale of the course. Some frames pulled in tight on him, while others let the fairways and oaks fill the background to give the spread some variety for the magazine's layout.
What makes editorial photography like this rewarding is that the subject brings something to the table before you ever press the shutter. Revell has a connection to the game that comes through in how he carries himself on the course. Our job was to find the frames where that connection reads naturally, without overexposing or forcing a moment that wasn't there. The best environmental portraits happen when the subject feels at home, and Revell was about as at home as you can get.
This feature was photographed by The Workmans for Tallahassee Magazine and appeared in the May/June 2021 issue and was written by Steve Bornhoft. The Workmans are a husband-and-wife photography team based in Tallahassee, Florida, and we work with publications across the state of Florida, in Washington D.C. and around the United States. You can explore more of our editorial photography in the archive, see more of our work across our website and connect with us on how we can best serve you!