Proscenium Fifth Anniversary Party
Proscenium Fifth Anniversary Party - Cheers to 5 years
Ben Hider - Event, Food and Portrait Photographer based in New York City and Westchester
Stone Barns Center for Food and Agriculture Portraits
Bluestone Lane Astor Place
Bluestone Lane Astor Place - Australian Coffee
NYBG Glimmerglass Opera
City Harvest at Burger and Lobster
File size vs Image resolution FAQ
"I've downloaded the photos, but the images are only 600KB each. Can I get them bigger?" It's understandable that people think the size of the file must correlate with the quality of the photo, and while this could be a soft rule to follow, often it's not necessarily true. Most of my files are resized to 3000 on the longest side, sometimes 4000 on the longest side, and then compressed to large jpegs. This one time compression doesn't lose any quality in the actual image, but makes it easier to download, upload and generally handle online. The resolution of a jpeg is really in the pixel count eg. 2000x3000 pixels.
"I need the files at 300dpi"
Dots per inch, or dpi, is a way of measuring how many pixels are in each inch of an image. This count is important if you're making prints and there is a specified print size and resolution. For example you wouldn't want to print with a resolution much below 150dpi (most printers can't handle much more than that anyway). If the resolution of an image is looked at as pixel count, then the print size and dpi are irrelevant. 3000x2000 can be seen as many different dpi and print sizes. It could be 72 dpi at 42.6" x 27.7" or 300 dpi at 10" x 6.6". None of these dpi and print sizes matter as the file remains at 3000x2000. Most professional print shops or graphic designers should make those adjustments for the final image use.
Can you provide me with the untouched Raw files?
Normally I do not provide clients with the untouched CR2 Raw files that come straight out of the camera. This would be like handing someone unfinished work. If untouched files are required a "full buyout" can be requested at an additional rate.
9/11 Memorial & Museum - Andrea Booher
9/11 Memorial & Museum - Andrea Booher
Ben Hider - Event, Food and Portrait Photographer based in New York City and Westchester
Andrea Booher, film producer and photojournalist has worked as a documentarian for twenty-six years. Based in Colorado, her assignments have taken her to East Africa, Latin America, Micronesia, India, Antarctica, Australia, Myanmar, Somalia, Mexico and Haiti.
In the last two decades she has photo-documented every major disaster in the United States, Trust Territories and Sovereign Nations for the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA). Her documentary work resides in several permanent collections, including the National Archives and the Smithsonian. In 2001, she spent 10 weeks working at Ground Zero in the immediate aftermath of the World Trade Center attack. She was one of two photographers working for FEMA with unlimited access. Her work from 9-11 has been published in magazines, newspapers and documentaries worldwide. She was personally profiled on A&E , The History Channel, CNN, Camera Arts, NPR and Photo District News.
Booher’s work has appeared in National Geographic, Time, Newsweek, LIFE, Traveler, GEO, Outside, Sports Illustrated for Women, Smithsonian, Stern, The Atlantic Monthly, World Press and numerous other books and periodicals worldwide. In addition to her disaster work and news photos, her travel and environmental portrait photography are represented by Getty Images.
Fox Upfronts 2016
Actress Kristen Schaal arrives at the Fox 2016 Programming Presentation party on Monday, May 16 at Wollman Rink in Central Park, NY. (Photo by Ben Hider/FOX)
Ben Hider - Event, Food and Portrait Photographer based in New York City and Westchester
The New York Botanical Gardens "Impressionism: American Gardens on Canvas"
The New York Botanical Gardens "Impressionism: American Gardens on Canvas"
It was fantastic to photograph the opening weekend of the new show at the botanical gardens and it was such a great success.
Ben Hider - Event, Food and Portrait Photographer based in New York City and Westchester
American Impressionism, a prominent artistic style that flourished at the turn of the 20th century, comes to life in a captivating Garden-wide exhibition. In the Conservatory, stroll through an American Impressionist garden, a stunning interpretation by Francisca Coelho, NYBG's renowned curator and designer, of the alluring gardens that influenced iconic artists such as Childe Hassam and John Singer Sargent. In the Art Gallery, view a beautiful complementary display of more than 20 paintings and sculptures by these famed artists and their contemporaries that capture the colors, shadows, and ephemeral quality of light they observed in the natural world and infused in their distinctive imagery; the collection has been assembled by Guest Curator Linda S. Ferber, Ph.D., Director Emerita and Senior Art Historian of the New-York Historical Society.





















