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Nick Fancher

Editorial, Music, and Commercial Photographer
  • Portfolio
    • Portraits
    • MUSIC
    • Editorial
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    • Projector Portraits
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P2JW170000-4-C00100-1--------XA copy.jpg

Conceptual Photo Shoot on Vision for The Wall Street Journal

June 21, 2021

In today’s edition of the @wsj there’s an incredible article written by Susan R. Barry about eyesight. The piece focuses on Liam McCoy who, at the age of 15, underwent corrective surgery to give him the ability to see. As Barry articulates in the essay, when a blind person gains the ability to see later in life “the improvements [are] discombobulating. Surgery plunged Liam into a world of sharp lines and edges. While we all see lines at the boundaries of objects or shadows, we know where these lines belong. We recognize an object immediately—all of its parts combine together, instantly and effortlessly, into a single unit. But after a childhood of near-blindness, Liam did not recognize the lines as boundaries of known objects. Instead, he saw a tangled, fragmented world.”

This is where I enter the equation…

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Tags the boy who learned to see, wall street journal, nick fancher, conceptual photography, vision, in camera techniques, editorial photographer, los angeles editorial photographer, new york city editorial photographer, columbus editorial photographer, color theory, colorful shadows, shallow depth of field, coconut oil, oil on lens, foreground obstruction, out of focus, assigment, liam mccoy, susan r. barry, how do we see
2 Comments
Screen Shot 2019-12-17 at 1.00.12 PM.png

True Blue

December 23, 2019

This was my first time shooting with Hakim, an illustrator and painter from Columbus. When he showed up at me studio I thought it’d be helpful for us to sit down and chat for a bit in an effort to get to know each other and get more comfortable…

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Tags one mans trash, single use plastic, nick fancher, hakim art, black artist, columbus, blue, multiple shadow, colorful shadows, photography, chroma, experimental, creative portraiture, photo studio, photo blog, photo series, lighting, shutter drag, slow shutter
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