This episode is a panel discussion with the three creators of Up In The Airlock - Nat Flamsteed and Nat Sim of Method To My Madness Film and Ian Haug from Powderfinger and The Church, also the owner of Airlock Studios.
In this episode, Nat, Alex and Ian speak about Up In The Airlock, a live performance video series filmed at Airlock Studios and the funding available to creatives to launch projects like this.
Download wherever you listen to podcasts or watch on YouTube!
Links
MTMM Film
Airlock Studios
Up In The Airlock (Season 1)
Episode 24: Tour learnings and how to narrow down similar photos
Episode 23: A quick update
Episode 22: 35mm vs 50mm - Which is better for you?
Episode 21: Beating photography block, starter cameras and action shots in music
Episode 20: Instagram photography problems: How to increase your reach on Instagram
Ep 19: Music photography gear
Ep 18: The role of music in photography, photogenic people and would you delete a photo if asked?
Ep 17: Michelle Grace Hunder on the power of positive client relationships in photography
Ep 16: Luke Henery of Violent Soho talks his second passion, film photography
Ep 15: How much should photographers charge and how to book bigger photography jobs
Ep 14: Photo blocks, Reddit's advice for beginner photographers and more
Ep 13: Black and white photography tips
Ep 12: Film photography, being drunk, and my photography gear choices
Ep 11: Prime lenses, time to edit, and where to find inspiration outside photography
Ep 10: How I got started with music photography
Ep 9: Concert photography jobs
Ep 8: Social anxiety, capturing energy in photos, and photography contracts
Ep 7: Finding and protecting your work from copyright infringement (Part 2)
Ep 6: Finding and protecting your work from copyright infringement (Part 1)
Ep 5: What you should know about music photography
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
Spider-Man Crawlspace Podcast
The Week in Art
Art Sense
The Story of Mankind
The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn
The Art Angle
Harlem Is Everywhere: The Harlem Renaissance and Transatlantic Modernism