Stuck In A Pipe
Applying the first coat of a chemical adhesive that will bond the rubber lining to this custom pipe.

Applying the first coat of a chemical adhesive that will bond the rubber lining to this custom pipe.

Another stage in refining more Gold from the tailings left over from previous gold mines. Most of the images I have created for this company have been used in their Investors brochure and website.
“Mr. Jochen Schäfer ist absolutely impressed with your work and sends many thanks for your great work. So thank you very much for your work. Kind regards Martina Davis United Commodity AG”

Note: this is not the magazine website. Well another one of my images made the cover of the latest Mining Life & Exploration News Magazine. This photo is of Xstrata’s Nickel Rim (which is now Glencore Xstrata)
That I captured during one of my aerial adventures.

Here is the original uncropped photo

James Hodgins is a Sudbury Ontario based Mining Industrial Photographer.
I recently received an email inquiring the use of some of my images for a companies marketing materials and within the email was a common sentence I usually see “We have done an exhaustive search of the stock photo sights and are coming up short”. I know that stock photography is readily available and it could be useful when in a tight deadline (unless you create your marketing material a year in a advance) but why would a company want another companies image on their marketing material? On several occasions walking through industry trade shows I have seen the same image on several different booths. Shouldn’t the images in your marketing material be of your company? Your employees? Your products and services? The cost of stock photography to cover the companies branding usually ends up costing more than hiring a professional photographer to create custom images of the company. Your company! I always wondered if the people working the trade show booth get embarrassed when someone asks them who the person is in the picture and they reply “Oh. That’s just a stock photo”. Now I know not all marketing material requires custom images and most of the time advertising companies are on a tight deadline and need something fast, but, if time is available I do encourage to seek out a professional photographer for their photography needs.
I would like to hear other sides of this from other photographers, advertising agencies and companies in regards to this so please comment.

I guess I would consider myself a fabricator of images. Just like all the things mining industrial I photograph there is no quick and easy. I simply don’t pull the images out of my magic camera but carefully plan and execute my “formula” for a creative image. I piece together several components including subject matter, composition, lighting, exposure and post production to create or fabricate my final image. I might seem slower than most photographers but in the end it’s what the client ultimately wants. Quality over quantity….I hope.

Getting ready to sandblast this customized pipe before it heads of to be lined with rubber and then finished off in the spray booth.

Sparks fly everywhere while welders brand their weapon of choice. It’s around the clock process in this Industrial Shop in order to keep up with the supply demand.

Today I found myself back at Fuller Industrial updating their photo archive of the company. I was last there in 2010 and much has changed since my last visit (I do recommend updating your marketing images at least every 1 to 3 years). This time I got to photograph the company’s process from start to finish. It always amazes me how we look at so many things but don’t consider the many steps it takes to get the final product.
For more information on Fuller Industrial check out their website
A Atlas Copco Exploration rep discusses the different products available to the on looking Drill company members.

Stay tuned for more Northern Ontario Exploration Drilling posts
Along with Gold, Silver, Nickle, Oil & Gas I also get to photograph Diamonds. No they are not in beautiful little box, nor are they behind glass display case, but straight from the mines they were found in. I was lucky enough to watch (and photograph) some of the procedures to creating that exquisite sparkle diamond from a piece of rock that looked rather…….well…………bland at the Crossworks Manufacturing facility.

If you wish to start a dialogue and discuss your project simply contact me via phone, email or my contact form.