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On The Waterfront; AJ Neste’s Pro Surf Shot Strategies:
In Tahiti the USA Surf Team took second place and everyone was clamoring for photos. “The year before the USA team had been beaten by Switzerland, a country that doesn’t even have an ocean. So second place was big deal and I was one of the few photographers there, so all the magazines started asking for photos.”
Which made Mike Gerard realize how important it was to have a photographer
with the team. He asked AJ to be the team’s staff photographer. AJ accepted
and it’s the job he holds today. “I’m on retainer as staff
photographer, and I travel with the team and go to all the competitions. I can
also submit my photos to magazines. It’s a dream come true. I’ve
been to Tahiti, Portugal, Brazil…and I’m going to France in May.”
By getting to know the surfers, AJ has the opportunity to work with them over
a period of time, and that pays off in the photographs. “When I see them
about to catch a wave I know what they’re going to do with it,”
he says. And that’s an important edge, because the results of surf photography
are largely in the hands of the nature gods and the waves and light they serve
up. “The conditions are never the same,” AJ says, “so the
surfers are what you know and what you focus on.” AJ shoots mostly from the beach, where he’s known as “the guy
with the monopod,” though he recently went into the water and swam out
to shoot with his camera in a waterproof housing. He’s also shot from
a boat on occasion. And what about his love of surfing? “These days,” he says with a laugh, “I get to surf only when the lighting gets bad.” To see more of AJ’s photos, visit his website at www.ajneste.com.
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