Top Fashion & Beauty Secrets Revealed!
Saatchi & Saatchi Creative Director Amie Valentine--who's worked on Target, Kohl's and JCPenney--talks about how to get the most out of a fashion shoot.
Adding Emotion and Relevance is the Key to Fashion Advertising What is it that you look for when you’re working with a director? Obviously they have to demonstrate experience in the category, but what else sells you on a director’s vision? I think in this category there’s a unique challenge for directors, which is casting models. You have to go with those who are going to look good in the clothes. Even when you give strict parameters to the casting agency, you can still get actresses coming in thinking they have a model’s body and they don’t, or models who think they can act and they can’t. But you need that combination, and it’s hard to find. You want models that look good in clothes, but you also want them to be able to emote. And directors need to know that they can take direction. You also want a sense of the type of person they are off screen so you can get that in their performance. Every director approaches it differently. You can get some pretty girls who look fantastic in a print shot, but when they try and move or interact with other models, they're stiff. On the flip side, some models can really project the fact that they're interesting people, too - the goal is to convey that dimension of them on the set. This is not like a catalogue shot, where you’re just presenting merchandise. You need to have a little bit of a storyline, too.
What is the main area of visual and creative influence for fashion advertising these days? Is it still the editorial layouts in the fashion magazines, places like that? My first thought is that it’s anyone who shoots a Lady Gaga or Christina Aguilera video (laughs). Do you feel that music videos still have an influence on fashion advertising? Well, my whole source for information and video these days is the Huffington Post (laughs). I use that site as a topline culture filter, but I wish I had more time to see films. I think they’re a great source of inspiration. If I could do my dream shoot, it would be with a woman named Miranda July. She’s a performance artist and a writer, and she directed my favorite movie in the last five years, “Me and You and Everyone We Know.” To put her with a great DP would be an interesting directorial approach—I know what it would look like but I don’t know what I would get, and I like that element of surprise. My dream team would be Chris Soos as the DP and Miranda as director. I’d love to discover someone like that and give them their first commercial experience. When you’re talking about music videos as an influence, there can be a lot of beauty and glamour in that genre, depending on who the artist is. A director like Francis Lawrence (who's with DNA) probably gets a lot of beauty and fashion work because of his videos. I think a potential pitfall, tho, is looking ‘too cool for school’ when you go from the music video world to advertising; you need to add some humanity to it. One of my personal things is to have people touching or kissing in a spot—just to give it an element of life. Even though you’re adding the universe of fashion and style all around it, you need to put some real emotion in there. I think that connects you to a brand more. You want your message to be more than just ‘Oh, Target’s cool now, or JCPenney’s cool.’ you want to feel a deeper affinity for the brand. You mention Chris Soos. Let’s talk about the role of the DP in fashion advertising.
Basically to generate a distressed look? Yeah, it’s kind of charming and lo-tech and interesting. When Joe was using the Canon for one of our JCPenney Academy Awards spots, that’s the feeling I got from it. Then he brought in a great editor that he likes working with, Tim Thornton-Allen of Marshall Street. Some of my favorite editors are Tina Mintus of Cut + Run, Sloane Klevin of Union and Brett Astor of Channel Z in Minneapolis. Brett had a lot to do with the look of Target editorially, she was really inventive. Editing is so surgical in this genre. An editor has to know things like how the clothes are draping, frame by frame, or when the hair falls into the face and it's not pretty anymore. It really is often just a matter of shaving frames here and there to get it to look right. We’re consistently doing that, and it’s all for aesthetics. Another area that plays a huge branding role in fashion work is music. If you take the same cut and put different tracks against it, that changes things dramatically. A lot of clients want to sign off on the music track before the shoot, but I think it’s nice to be flexible. Your performances can change, the energy of the shoot can change from what you've boarded and if you’re not locked in to a track it kind of lets you go with it. My favorite music house, hands down, is Hest + Kramer in Minneapolis and L.A. They have the amazing ability to make you feel you've heard the essence of an entire song in thirty seconds. It’s hard to do but Jim Weber and Steve Kramer there always pull it off. Steve was like this punk accordion player back when I was going to clubs in Minneapolis. How about the role of the stylist?
What about shooting fashion for the web? Do you feel you can get away with a different level of production value here? I think brands like JCPenney want to be very engaging with what they’re doing on the web. The concept and production value should both be there. For me, it comes down to the practical factor—if you click on a site and there's a video playing at full frame, then it’s gotta look as good as it would on TV. If it’s not full frame, and you have more of a TV show content mentality around it, then you can get away with shooting RED or some digital system. But if it’s eye candy, then the bar is raised. Digital's definitely the final frontier. |