Pro's Choice: Tim Tadder Brings Sports To Life: Direction, Lighting & Imagination

“I have a mantra that I live by,” states San Diego-based Tim Tadder. “I believe that I work with the best clients in the world, and that they demand the best out of me. If the job calls for equipment I don’t have, I’ll make sure that I have it available so that I’m delivering the best product I can.”

 

Client: Xterra Wetsuits
To focus attention on the wetsuit, Tim Tadder threw four small hard lights at it, after first lubricating the garment to add even more specularity. To ensure the swimmer would be in position for the shot, Tadder directed him to run toward a marked spot in the water. The lighting came from a Profoto 7a (powered by a portable generator) and battery-driven 7b strobes. He shot this at Mission Bay, near San Diego, before sunrise. “We’d scouted the location and knew what we were getting into. We got lucky because the sky was dramatic.” Tadder made this shot with a Phase One and 55mm lens while lying in several inches of water, with the camera draped in plastic, but with the lens exposed. (Agency: Cuker Interactive; Creative Director: Aaron Cuker.)
All Photos © Tim Tadder

Tadder did not arrive at this philosophy overnight. The son of a commercial and sports photographer in Baltimore, Maryland, he learned the fundamentals of working with a camera and darkroom at an early age. “But it wasn’t till I was 27 that I really took an active interest in photography.”

Tadder started with a Nikon FM2 that his father gave him. “I would shoot skateboarding with it, on Kodak Tri-X. When I turned 27, my dad gave me a Nikon N70.” An educator at the time, he took that camera mountaineering in Ecuador. “That’s where my passion for photography truly developed and grew. And that was also when I decided to leave teaching and become a photographer full-time.”

Client: TYR
This shot is a composite. Tadder worked submerged with a Canon 5D in an underwater housing, and on the pool deck with a Phase One. He first shot all the divers together to establish relative scale, then photographed them individually diving in the same lane, which simplified the lighting setup that involved six strobes. Some retouching was done to draw more attention onto the diver in the foreground. “I didn’t know who was going to be in front when shooting the individual shots, which was another reason to keep the lighting constant.” (Creative Director: Job Hall.)

Several jobs later, including what he refers to as an exciting, demanding, and challenging experience shooting for Maryland tourism, he’d decided to hone his craft with a master’s degree from Ohio University. “At this time, I was working as a photojournalist for local newspapers, but I always came back to my first love. That road led to an internship as a sports photographer at the Colorado Springs Gazette.” And that paved the way for a move to San Diego and working for the Associated Press and different newspapers, again photographing sports.

Client: Powerade
Proprietary restraints meant Tadder could not use recognizable team names, players, logos—or even the location—to promote a sports drink. So he started from scratch, hiring experienced athletes, ordered uniforms with fake team logos, and entirely fabricated the backdrop from composited elements. And then he shot the players, directing who would do what and where on the court, and composited the action sequence into the final shot. “I had lots of lights throughout the gym. This is a situation where the lights have to be far away from the action in order to cover a large area. I positioned myself underneath the hoop, with the Phase One with 55mm lens on a tripod.” (Agency: Arc Worldwide; Creative Director: Jay Paonessa; Art Buyer: Rex Carr.)

The Path To Digital
Experience with computers and technology made the transition to digital photography and a Nikon D1 a natural one, back in 1999, when Tadder formally began his independent commercial career. Pursuant to his mantra, Tadder eventually found that the small sensor did not meet client needs, and he soon segued to a Phase One, with the P 65+ currently his mainstay, along with Schneider leaf-shutter lenses. He hasn’t entirely abandoned the smaller format, as he also owns Nikon and Canon full-size-sensor systems, taking advantage of the strengths of each. Specifically, the smaller format comes to the fore when he needs to work with fast sync times and very wide optics, something unavailable to his Phase One gear.

Further explaining his preference for medium format, Tadder continues: “I do lots of billboards. It’s true that you don’t need high resolution for billboards: they print it at such low dpi that it doesn’t matter. But if a client wants to use that same image as a bus poster or some other signage that’s seen at relatively close distances (compared to a billboard), then, yes, you do need all those pixels.”

Client: Corbis
Corbis wanted to promote the part of their stock image library that focused on competitive swimming, in anticipation of the upcoming Summer Olympics. “Three athletes swimming together in unison says ‘competing,’ and our goal was to say exactly that.” Tadder arranged for three experienced swimmers to coordinate their efforts in the water, each pushing off the wall at the same time under Tadder’s direction to create the impression of a real race. “I’m floating underwater with the Canon 5D. Everything was lit from above with high-power strobes, except that I had an on-camera flash bouncing off the wall behind them.”

Medium Format And Sports
You’d think that medium format was not ideal for action photography, which we often associate with shooting at high frame rates. Not true. “My strength has always been in capturing a moment and capturing it epically,” Tadder proclaims. That means not shooting at high burst rates. “I like to anticipate the moment. When you see the moment (in the viewfinder), you’ve missed it.”

He goes on: “I use the medium format for the majority of my commercial shoots. I pre-focus and have people hit a mark. Since I light everything, it’s highly controlled.” Whether he shoots handheld or with a tripod depends on what the job calls for, not which camera format he uses. When a tripod is needed, he uses a Gitzo carbon fiber with a Foba head.

Client: Full Throttle Energy Drink
“We hired real weightlifters who brought their own gear to simulate an Ironman competition. The location is the same warehouse where they shot the movie ‘Million Dollar Baby.’” Tadder shot this with the Canon 5D, working with available light and an Arri hot light, using this lighting and a high ISO to capture a gritty cinematic feel. (Agency: Mother; Creative Director: Lawrence Melilli; Art Buyer Helen O’Neill.)

“Where remote camera triggering is required, I use the Universal Photo Timer laser and sound triggering mechanisms (www.universaltimer.com). (Author’s note: IR triggering also available.) The challenge, when working with two different cameras at the same time, is syncing them. Shutter lag may be different. If you’re working with strobes, determining shutter lag is a tedious and complex process. But once you figure it out, you mark it on the camera and you’re good to go.” To trigger his studio strobes, Tadder uses the PocketWizard MultiMAX, which can be plugged into the Universal Photo Timer.

“I have a whole Profoto system, but lately I’ve been using Paul C. Buff’s Einstein monolights. In fact, the Einstein system has changed the way I approach sports photography. The flash duration is extremely short, and eminently suited to action. Of equal importance, you want a short flash duration—but with a short latency so the light doesn’t form a tail that bleeds into the image. That bleed would give you ‘edge blurs.’ You need an immediate cutoff in the light.”

Client: Reader’s Digest
“I received the assignment on short notice, but still with enough time to do my research. That research helped me form an idea of how I wanted to do the shot.” Tadder photographed world-class boxer Manny Pacquiao at his hotel, shooting several poses with the Canon 5D and 85mm f/1.4 lens (for the small magazine format), this one for the cover shot. For his lighting, Tadder employed two Profotos with large softboxes embracing the boxer from behind, plus a hard light on his face and a softbox underneath for fill. (Photo Editor: David Ross.)

Tadder further explains: “With the Einsteins, I shoot at quarter-power and use two, three, or four heads or more, each with light modifiers to achieve the required volume of action-stopping light power.” These light modifiers can be “whatever, to suit the look I need: hard or soft. Every job is different, with unique subtleties that require a tailored approach.” They cover the gamut from softboxes, strip lights, and octabanks to grids, beauty dishes, and Magnum and parabolic reflectors. “I’m constantly shaping my light so that one light doesn’t bleed into another.”

Client: Gillette
Tadder photographed renowned Olympic and World Champion cyclist Chris Hoy with a Phase One and Profoto lighting, in Manchester, England. He positioned a strip light to Hoy’s left, adding a black card on his right to absorb some light, with edge lighting behind him. Shooting in a studio against a nondescript gray wall, Tadder later composited in the Union Jack. (Agency: Integer; Art Director: Jonathan Tenkely; Art Buyer: Brooke Warren.)

Defining his use of light, “I approach lighting with an organic feel,” Tadder asserts. “I try to see the light and feel the light, as opposed to coming into a shot with a preconceived notion of using a specific lighting setup. I come in saying, this feels like it needs this. As I’m shooting, if I feel like I’m not hitting my vision, I’ll modify the setup. My goal is that the last frame that I get is the most perfect frame. I’m letting the creative process evolve.”

Personal
The idea behind this image was to show the direction various sporting events might take in the future. Working together with CGI artist Mike Campau (www.mikecampau.com) to build the bridge that would later be composited into the shot (but which also provided direction for the lighting), Tadder then photographed the cyclist on a Phase One, against a neutral studio backdrop. The bike is supported on rollers (light streaks are CGI’d), on a plexiglas stage 3 feet off the ground. In all, there are eight or nine lights, including a rim light from behind and one from underneath (“so that everything glows”). The cyclist is Felipe Lorenzo, a professional triathlete.

To see more of Tim Tadder’s work, visit www.timtadder.com.

COMMENTS
shumicpi's picture

I am big fan of Tim Tadder photography. He is just brilliant in a word.

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