John & Teresa Chandler
John and Teresa Chandler were both U.S. Marines. They met in
Japan
and were married 31 years ago in
Hawaii
.
Teresa was a budding professional artist. John was into scuba and
as a side job became an underwater photographer. He published
three books, one of which is called A Divers Scrapbook - The Underworld World Of
Okinawa
which
is actively
selling.
He is published in many magazines, had his own TV show, and had a
weekly article on underwater photography in a Japanese newspaper.
John also spent a great deal of time in the base photo lab and learned
from the resident photo pro. This is where he began learning
portrait photography, from outstanding masters in
Japan
. Teresa did portrait oils that made her very popular in the area as well.
The
Chandlers
retired but chose to remain in
Okinawa
until September11th where they began to get homesick for their kids and moved back to
North Carolina
to live in an 108 year old home. Suddenly, they had very little
to do, so they came up with the idea of opening a portrait studio in
their little town of
Richlands
,
North Carolina
.
The population of Richlands is only 950 but there are 150,000 in the
surrounding areas. They chose to remodel a 2400 sq foot tobacco
pack house (tobacco warehouse) in their back yard and turn it into a
portrait studio. Starting with weddings, they officially opened their
portrait studio in March 2003.
Teresa set down her
brushes to become the official poser and John took care of the
technical side and shot each photograph. The
Chandlers
quickly learned something critical to their future in professional
photography. They came to realize that their real competition was
not only other photographers, but also the general public. Their
potential customers were quickly becoming their competition because
they were taking their own portraits. The
Chandlers
realized that they absolutely had to do something different or not
survive. Since everyone has canvas and muslin backgrounds,
including many amateurs, and since amateurs had as much right to
photograph in the parks as they did, the
Chandlers
decided to look for ways to leap far ahead of other photographers and the public.
They discovered the Scene Machine Virtual Backgrounds system and
decided that it was clearly the way to go if they were to separate
their work from that of other photographers and definitely from the
amateurs. Their goal was to be significantly different!
John states, “When you buy a Scene Machine, you commit to a higher
standard of photography. When you buy a canvas background, you
commit to just spending more money, and you are just being
static. Everyone has canvas and muslin backgrounds. Canvas
just hangs there and does nothing. The Scene Machine is dynamic.”
The
Chandlers
drove to
San Marcos
,
Texas
not only to pick up their Virtual Backgrounds system but also to attend
a 5 day Joseph and Louise Simone class. The Simone class was way
beyond their expectations, and it taught them how to take their
portrait work to a much higher level through classic lighting, posing
and the use of the Scene Machine. In a way, John sees himself
playing the role of Joseph Simone, and Teresa pretty much plays the
role of Louise. They nearly always work together in their
studio. John feels that the Simones have been their guiding light.
“You can do so much with Virtual Backgrounds, if you want to. It
doesn’t just roll down. It isn’t green screen with all its
limitations. Our customers love Virtual Backgrounds; they love
getting involved in the creativity of the portraiture. That is a
key item that has increased our sales. We involve the customer in
every background selection. They are right there to view their
results. VB really helps to bring in the customer and their
family. They all love it and really get a kick out of it!”
John continues by stating, “I don’t understand photographers who aren’t
interested in Virtual Backgrounds. They just don’t get it.
I put them in the same category as all those photographers who would
not look at digital cameras for the longest time. When a
photographer invests in more canvas, he is investing in
antiquity. It just hangs there. It’s not going to
change. It takes up room. I have over 80 backgrounds and 2
Simone Collections and they are all in a little notebook!"
“There are some photographers who see the Scene Machine as a bridge too
far. I think that is wrong. It really narrows the gap and
it provides the photographer with infinity.”
When we asked John Chandler how the perfect storm is affecting the
Chandler Studio, John responds, “It isn’t affecting us because we
understand it. If we didn’t understand it, we would not be in
business. We have to do something the moms can’t do. That
is what the Scene Machine does for us. If I were not doing things
different, I would not be in business.”
John also has very strong feelings about having a formal dedicated
studio. “Moms don’t have studios; they shoot outdoors in the same
places many professionals shoot. I have to be different and
the Scene Machine and the studio set me apart.”
“You guys have raised the level of our studio. Conservatively
speaking, you have tripled our income. One last thing I want to
say - some of the best stuff you guys have is your customer
service. Carolyn and Jim are so helpful; I enjoy working with
professionals. It’s comforting.”
Virtual Backgrounds exists because of customers like John and
Teresa. They take our product and build their studio and bottom
line around it. They gladly share their feelings with other
photographers. Virtual Backgrounds salutes the
Chandlers
!
Click here to see many more of the Chandler's images all captured using their Scene Machine Virtual Backgrounds System!!
Click here to be directed to John & Teresa Chandler's Portrait Studio Web site!
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