Tag: LARP

  • We need to talk about sharing images.

    We need to talk about sharing images.

    I know, I know. I have this reputation for being a bit uptight. And to be honest, sometimes it’s true. Especially when it comes to my photography.

    Lots of photographers have a difficult relationship with Tumblr. The problem is, it’s a platform that encourages you to be pretty unethical. You see, if you want to add content to your Tumblr blog all you have to do is click the ‘reblog’ button (or whatever it’s called) and it just regurgitates it wholesale onto your own page. You don’t have to think about who created the original piece or if they had permission to upload those images and the content, you just click reblog, and it magically populates your own stream with interesting things.

    I try to get around this to an extent by automatically reposting my blog posts both here and on LARP.GUIDE to their own Tumblr feeds, hoping that people will reblog content from those feeds rather than pinching the images from somewhere else and then letting them out into the world without any effort at credits.

    I repost content myself on my blog all the time, but I make the effort to make it relevant to what I’m writing. For instance I wouldn’t just pinch someone else’s picture and post it with no explanation on my blog just because I liked it. I also wouldn’t just pinch someone else’s picture to use as illustration without asking them first. Especially if it had nothing really to do with the content of that blog itself. So, for example, if you’re writing a post on something random about LARP and you want to put a picture in – find one that is somehow relevant to your content and then ask the photographer if that’s ok. Don’t just think ‘I’m writing a post about making foam weapons, so any picture featuring a foam weapon is fair game’ because that’s not cool.

    If you want to use a picture by someone else to illustrate an article (or a YouTube video, a quote from someone, anything really) then try to add something to the thing you are using for illustration. Discuss the point made in a video. Talk about how the photograph represents what you’re writing about. Comment on the quote you use or contrast it with a quote that someone else made. We learn to do these things while we’re learning to write essays at school – don’t abandon those lessons!

    I photograph LARP because I love photographing LARP. I photograph it because I like the friends I have made and I have aspirations about shooting for film and TV one day. But I also photograph LARP because I feel that there’s a really strong community underlying the hobby and I like to help build up the community.

    So you might be wondering why I have a problem with people sharing my images of LARP if I like the idea of fostering a community. The honest answer is, that pinching and using an image on your own blog without taking the time to chat to me first isn’t building a community. It’s just taking something that I made and using it without asking. Part of building a community is talking and having conversations – so have a conversation with me and tell me what you’re up to. Involve me to make the community ties stronger. If you don’t want to have a conversation with me then don’t bother using my images – it’s not a compliment if you don’t like me enough to engage with me on any level, especially when you’ve not even bothered to tell me where I can find my images online. I might just want to take a screenshot of your use of my images for my own records, so that I can look back and smile when I see that people have loved my images enough to use them. (As you can see from my writing portfolio, I love keeping track of where my work has ended up!)

    A few people have suggested in the past that it doesn’t matter if someone takes my images down and puts them somewhere else, because I put my watermark on them anyway. Well, as I said above, firstly I like to see where they have ended up. That means something to me. But secondly, if people didn’t just pinch them and put them on their own Facebooks, their own Tumblrs, their own blogs, etc, without permission, then I wouldn’t have to watermark them in the first place. I watermark work primarily because I cannot trust the general public to not use my images without crediting them. I don’t ask for money for my pictures, I just ask for people to let me know that they love my work. And I don’t know what you love my work if you don’t tell me!

    So please guys, if you want to use my work on your blog, don’t just assume I’m ok with that. Just reach out, send me a message and start a conversation. And lets see how we can help each other out. (And as it says on the side of this blog above the Patreon logo – if you like my work and you feel you got something out of it, please consider buying me a coffee. It takes alot of time, effort, love and money to make great photos of LARP. Don’t be afraid to say thanks.)

  • The Moshchevaya Balka Kaftan

    The Moshchevaya Balka Kaftan

    So we went to the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York. And we saw this piece. And Adam said something along the lines of ‘that would be awesome for Carthage’. So here we have it, this would be awesome for Carthage.

    It’s really great finding pieces in a good museum to use as a basis for costume because there can often be a fair bit of information about the piece. You especially know that you’re onto a good thing when it’s displayed in it’s own case in the middle of the gallery space, like this kaftan is.

    Looking it up on the Metropolitan Museum website gives me this page. And there’s just so much info there to be had. Starting off with a fantastic picture – click to get the high resolution image and examine the garment in real detail. Far better than my rubbish phone camera shots – although my rubbish phone camera shots do serve a purpose. They let me see the back and they let me remember details that struck me at the time.

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    The pinky-red fabric is all modern conservation, the beige fabric and gorgeous patterned trim is all the original bits of this amazing 9th – 11th century kaftan from somewhere near what is modern Turkey.

    Except it wouldn’t have originally have been beige. The Met are helpful enough to have provided information about the garment to help us understand what it might have looked like when it was made. The ‘white card’ description says:

    The original linen coat (caftan), preserved in part from the neck to the bottom of the hem, is made of finely woven linen. A decorative strip of large-patterned silk is sewn along the exterior and interior edges of the caftan. A minute fragment of lambskin preserved as the caftan’s interior attests to its fur lining. The woven patterns on the silk borders of the caftan include motifs such as the rosettes and stylized animal patterns enclosed within beaded roundels, which were widespread in Iranian and Central Asian textiles of the sixth to ninth century. The colors used in the textile include a now-faded dark blue, yellow, red, and white on a dark brown ground. The decorated silk fabrics are a compound twill weave (samite in modern classification) and the body of the garment is plain-weave linen. Two slits running up the back of the caftan make it particularly suitable as a riding costume.

    Did you know that apparently in many galleries and museums the white cards next to exhibits have to have be the same standard as the national reading age – which is about 12 in the UK. These were only ever intended as basic info. So far from this description I know that:

    • It’s made of finely woven plain-weave linen.
    • It has patterned twill silk for decoration.
    • It had fur lining.
    • The silk has stylised animals and beaded roundels which were common to Iranian and Central Asia at this time.
    • The kaftan used to be dark blue, yellow, red and white on a dark brown background.
    • It would have been suitable for riding in.

    But we need more!

    Linked to the page on the Met’s website there are three journal articles written about the Kaftan and it’s matching leggings. The first is an introduction, the second is a genealogy study and the last is the conservators report on the piece. This last one is where the gold-dust lies. These three journal articles can tell us huge amounts about the garment beyond what the white card does.

    Here are notes from the journal articles, with my own speculations:

    • Other pieces of identical silk have been found – meaning that this was not an extraordinarily unusual design. It would most likely not have been for someone extremely important (like royalty or ruling class) because they would most likely have used more unique fabrics for their garments.
    • The piece is most likely from Moshchevaya Balka, a burial complex that has had to contend with serious amounts of looting over the years during its excavation (which probably explains why this piece came on the art market in the mid-90s).
    • The climate of the Near East means that textiles and whole garments are almost never recovered. They almost always perish because the conditions aren’t conducive to the preservation of organic materials. This means that this is one example of only a handful ever found – you can’t make assumptions that ‘all people from this area wore this kind of garment’ without other supporting evidence. But it certainly is a garment that someone in this place, at this time wore.
    • Moshchevaya Balka was on historical trade routes that linked Central Asia, the Near East, southern Russia and the Black Sea. The garment could have been influenced by any of those places, or could have been worn by someone who was just passing through.
    • It was made for a horseman. This is a more substantial statement than ‘would have been alright for riding horses in’. Perhaps it could have been made for a trader who would have ridden between places? Or maybe a soldier?
    • We’re pretty sure they came from a burial site. People tend to be buried in their good clothes, so perhaps these were finery rather than everyday clothes?
    • The survival of the silk is described as ‘miraculous’, again highlighting the fact that not many examples exist – certainly not in this kind of condition.
    • The staining of the fabric is most likely due to the acidic material produced when the body breaks down. It wouldn’t have been some funky ancient tie-dye. Thankfully the fur lining seems to have protected much of the outer layer of fabric.
    • The alkaline chemicals produced by the decomposition of the body changed the colour of the fabric. The safflower red dye (a pretty bright pinky red) turned to beige, and the indigotin blue (similar to modern indigo) turned to a grey-brown. However the brown bits have kept a reasonably true colour since they are acid sensitive rather than alkaline sensitive. This doesn’t seem important, except it potentially helps us look at other examples of textiles. Now each time we come across drab, beige colours in ancient garments we can make educated guesses at what they might have looked like before they were put in the ground for a few centuries.
    • Cotton is noticeably absent from the finds in this region, indicating that this area might not have had access to it yet. Seems crazy to us today when cotton is cheap and in use everywhere, but it wasn’t always that way. If you’re trying to be authentic then cotton would not be the way forward. Linen and silk to stay authentic. Of course for LARP it’s generally about what looks cool, but you might want to stick close if you’re going for a particular look. (And this does make me want to research into what kinds of textiles would have been available in North Africa for the Carthage outfit).
    • The staining on other garments examined by the conservators that were suspected to also be from Moshchevaya Balka suggest that they could be from the same body. This gives us a lead on possible under-garments for the kaftan. Here it is:Screen Shot 2015-02-04 at 14.41.43
    • That the conservators had several options when reattaching the fragments of materials onto backing cloth. They chose the style of garment that they felt was most likely, but still without a whole garment we don’t know if this was exactly how they would have been made.
    • The kaftan would most likely have reached mid-calf on the wearer. Perfect for a fighting garment for a bloodthirsty well-mannered Carthaginian.
    • Other representations in art of the steppe people suggest that this Kaftan could have been worn with a plain linen version underneath and a sheer but decorated kaftan over the top. When it was cold there could have also been a fur kaftan outer layer, along with accessories like belts and mitts. And boots. I love boots. But apparently layering was cool way back when and we weren’t the first to invent it.
    • The triangular side pieces on the front cause the side seams to push to the back, consequently narrowing it in at the waist and essentially making it a fitted garment. This causes the sleeves to look like ‘wings’ on the back, but they give huge amounts of movement in the upper body – suitable for a rider.8dd5806e12af5e205cc022ceb8f5fe4d
    • The sleeves had narrow wrists, probably to retain heat. Which is good for a Carthaginian in modern England.
    • There are two long slits in the Kaftan below the hip line to enable movement in the lower body. While standing they would reveal the leggings a little, but while sitting on a horse or crouching they would reveal all of the decorated legging. This needs fixing and turning coolthentic rather than authentic – the Carthaginian will be wearing leather trousers under it. But I have a plan.
    • It used a triple button and loop fastening – picture in my camera phone pictures above.
    • The fact that the fabric was found to be cut from a pre-woven bolt, cut with immense skill and then sewn together finely indicates that this region was above average in it’s textile culture. Perhaps it would be erroneous to take this as an example of garments from the wider area at this time.
    • The linen making up the majority of the garment was white – as can be seen on the back shot above.
    • The large, decorative borders of fabric have been used in a previous garment. This could indicate either some sentimentality, or perhaps a thrifty owner who had the clothes remade into a newer and more suitable or fashionable style. It’s therefore unlikely that this would have been owned by someone very high status.
    • Collar and cuffs are unknown. They could possibly have been in existence, they could possibly have been made from the same fur as the lining.
    • The warp of the linen travels vertically downwards on all pieces when the kaftan is laid out flat with the arms outstretched. Including the lower arms. This may not have been an effective use of materials, which indicates some wealth.
    • There’s no seam along the top of the wrist to shoulder line. The fabric was cut on a fold here.
    • The seams were mostly flat felled seams, stitched towards the centre units.
    • And then of course we get the really precious part of the journal article for making a replicaish. An actual diagram of the pieces that made up the reconstruction on show in the museum:Screen Shot 2015-02-04 at 15.17.53
    • It was likely to have been constructed by piecing together the top half of the garment and then following that by attaching the bottom half at the waistline..
    • There are notes about how the front panel was put together. It was slit up the front and a neckline cut out, then extra panels were attached (2 and 3 in the diagram above) to make it double breasted.
    • The side pieces – 4 and 5 above – are the aforementioned gores that push the side seams to the back. Take note here – the length of the side seam on the back part of piece 1 must be the same as the length of the front of piece 1 including pieces 4/5. That means the front of the garment could be shorter than the back – this requires a calculator and some Pythagoras. Presumably this is made up for by the fact that 10/11 are likely to be longer than piece 12, but it will look strange to modern eyes as we would expect the waist seam to fall consistently all around the body rather than being lower at the back.
    • The sleeves are two separate pieces which might give the opportunity to insert decorative fabric or embroidery or something. On the original it is most likely that the lower sleeve portions would have been pieced from various offcuts. Thankfully fabric isn’t that scarce now since it’s all made by machine and I won’t be doing this.
    • There are instructions for sewing on the lapel within the journal. Basically sew the piece to the outer edge of the garment, fold it back, turn the edge under and sew it to the centreish of the garment.
    • It’s unknown if there would have been a decorative neckline.
    • The two front panels extend around the body by 7cm due to the extra inserted panel. This indicates that this garment would have been reasonably close fitting rather than baggy. The ability to move comes from the extra space generated in the back due to the inserts and the splits in the side seams for leg movement.
    • The front panels were seamed to the back panels down to the hip line (might want to make it waist line if I make a version for myself).
    • One fastening inside on the right, one outside on the left and one on the breast on the left.
    • Because the fur lining didn’t extend to where the silk decoration was continued inside the kaftan, a layer of wool wadding was inserted here to maintain the thickness and drape. Worth considering if I make a thicker, lined version.
    • The dyes were poor quality in nature, perhaps indicating that the silk was at the cheaper end of the scale for what it was.
    • It also appears that the weavers were in a hurry (due to tension differences in the material) which again indicates that this could be a cheaper silk than average.
    • Female garments found in this area seem to take inspiration from Eastern Mediterranean culture, while male garments are often based on Eastern or Persian culture.
    • Here’s an example of how it would have been worn – especially around the neck area.Screen Shot 2015-02-04 at 16.03.43

    So then I finished off by taking a quick look through the Vecellio book of costume (from the 16th Century and before) and there’s a remarkably similar garment in the Persian section, illustrating a soldier. Unfortunately Vecellio doesn’t make any comments about the kaftan, only the armour and the horses tack that he would wear. But it does reinforce the idea of kaftans as riding garments. I also really like the way that the front flap is fastened up to the belt. That might have to happen for fighting and stabbing.

    There are also similar garments in the Hungarian and African sections of the book, although they tend to not be asymmetrical closures like this one.

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    So what have we learnt…

    • That we have evidence for this kind of garment in the 9th-11th century, the 16th century and in relatively modern times. It’s entirely possible that it extended out way before the 9th century too, making it almost certainly suitable for Odyssey. While I’m adapting this for the Cartheginians it would also be really good for the Persians.
    • That it would have been made for someone who was a rider. Could be a trader or a soldier. The amount of movement makes it quite likely it was a soldier.
    • That it could potentially appear anywhere along the trade route from East to West, but it most likely was a garment that originated in the Near East.
    • It wasn’t an overly high cost garment. It was nicer than ‘basic’, but not extravagant.

    So there we have it. Time to make the pattern pieces!

  • Qualifications in LARP photography

    Qualifications in LARP photography

    A somewhat misleading title. You can’t get qualifications in LARP photography and I’m not about to start my own school proclaiming that you can. (Unless you want to send me a few hundred quid and I’ll print you a certificate out on this fancy paper I have tucked away.)

    However you can get some qualifications in photography.

    Allow me to insert a brief interlude here. This blog is not interested in the debating the differences between qualifications and awards, or the value/worth of letters awarded by societies based on submitted panels of work. Comments to that effect may well get deleted if they’re not very constructive.

    Since I write for an organisation that awards qualifications based on panels of work I’ve been toying for a while if perhaps I should work my way through the process of putting together a panel and submitting to see what happens. It’s not the cheapest side project I could do, but it seems worthwhile.

    However the subject then comes up of what exactly I should submit. I’d always thought that I’d like to submit a portfolio of nudes featuring men, but I’ve never quite managed to get that project off the ground and if the truth is told, I’m just not as interested in that as I used to be.

    Odyssey IX - The Dweller in the Deeps

    Recently I’ve been thinking a lot about if LARP is art. Tied into that are considerations about if photography of LARP can be art. Which I think is also kind of interesting. But then I find all sorts of strange things quite interesting. It struck me that perhaps I should work towards my photographic qualifications by submitting panels of LARP photography (or my ‘funny friends’ as my editor likes to put it).

    I am certainly of the opinion that photographs of LARP can be good enough to submit to an organisation as part of a panel of this kind. The entry guidelines are as follows:

    We are looking for images that show the applicant is in full control of the medium. The images should show correct camera technique, full control of the lighting and the final production of the finished image. Many images fail at the last hurdle because the final digital file or print quality is poor, showing banding from ink jet prints, blemishes that should have been retouched or poor presentation. Very often colour balance is wrong. We expect to see that the photographer is in control of the subjects portrayed and in the case of people, that they are posed in an attractive manner and good expressions obtained.

     

    A submission of twenty prints is required at 20×16” of a uniform size and flush mounted.

     

    In the case of all other submission your application should be in a singular discipline i.e. landscapes, pictorial, illustrative, commercial etc.

    It doesn’t seem too difficult. A panel of twenty images that show correct camera technique, control of lighting and good final production to print.

    I can manage that, right?

  • Tactical Gear

    Tactical Gear

     

    This is what happened when I tried on the bits of outfit that I have so far for Shadow Wars.

    I also realised that my old zoom lens is fucked from being dropped one too many times and no longer focusses.

     

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  • St. Birgitta’s Cap

    St. Birgitta’s Cap

    320657d2e8ecc7d1107e75ef838b7f53St. Birgitta was a Swedish Saint from the fourteenth century. One of the surviving relics that we have from her is a cap or coif (shown here ->). This style of cap comes up reasonably often in artwork of medieval peasants from Europe and having now made one, I’m not surprised that it does! It was so simple to put together and if I’d not been chatting online would have only taken about two hours in total. It also uses hardly any material and so wouldn’t have been prohibitively expensive (although, if you had fine tastes…).

    I’m quickly learning, with my dreadlocks, that covering your hair is practical. I don’t really know why we don’t do it so much anymore, I guess because we have nice modern bathing facilities in our houses that mean we can wash more readily. But since having long dreadlocks in my hair I seem to spend the vast majority of the time with them covered up. Hats are awesome, more people should wear hats. They look great.

    capSo here it is, the St. Birgitta Cap. It’s dead simple, just a square of fabric rounded off with a dinner plate. Then you can either sew the two pieces together normally or insert a decorative seam like I did here. I actually did the entire thing by hand because I wanted to see how good my hand sewing was.

    The answer was that my hand sewing is bloody good for someone that’s not done it since they were about ten. There’s no evidence – inside or out – of the stitches unless you look really, really closely. The herringbone stitch I used for the decorative seam is simple but effective. I might go back and add in more work to make an interlaced herringbone, but right now it’s got structural integrity and seems to look simple but nice.

    The entire thing cost me nothing, I took it all from my stash. But it’s made from Ikea muslin, herringbone twill tape and some cheap embroidery floss, which would come to less than £3 if you went out and bought them all. Not bad at all.

    Sitting in front of CSI I stitched it up while chatting to friends. It took me an evenings work, but if I was concentrating and not chatting to friends it most likely would have only taken about two hours.

    Now just to make a few more. One in a dark brown for my Minoan at Odyssey LARP. One in black for wearing day to day. And one that is knackered and distressed to wear to Shadow Wars. Nothing like bringing medieval clothes, kicking and screaming, into the modern age.

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    Also – cute photos, huh? Taken in the new studio space. I love my new studio.

  • Empire LRP Best Photos

    Empire LRP Best Photos

    Before I transfer my website to a new provider, I thought I’d just leave here a selection of my ‘front page’ photos from Profound Decisions events.

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    Empire LRP - E4 2014 - www.charlottemoss.co.uk

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    Empire LRP - E4 2014 - www.charlottemoss.co.uk

    Empire LRP - E4 2014 - www.charlottemoss.co.uk

  • Empire LRP Architecture

    Empire LRP Architecture

    Just a few shots that I’m putting here for… reasons.

    Kudos to Bill Thomas and the Empire Set Dressing Crew.

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  • Empire LARP Vanitas

    Empire LARP Vanitas

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    Just a quick desktop background upload from a vanitas still life I put together this week as a test… some Empire roleplayers might recognise the props. Click the Patreon link to get the download.

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  • Shooting backstage at LRP

    Shooting backstage at LRP

    On Monday I met the inimitable Mr Brind for coffee with the beautiful backdrop of Somerset House in London. Mostly we discussed Nordic LRP and such things, but we also discussed the idea of crewing an event and never making it to ‘the other side of the hedge’ and into the playing space.

    I’ve been thinking for a while how interesting it would be as an exercise to only ever shoot the backstage area and the crew of an event. Indeed many of my favourite shots are taken on the days during setup where I’m amongst my friends and everyone is working together (more or less) with a common goal.

    10612634_795220810528430_2049074645505184585_nI really enjoy capturing the little spontaneous moments that occour in the crew. Like the shot above of Simon the day before Odyssey. I’ve been working on a whole series of shots taken on my Grandfathers old Yashica TLR camera that just feature the crew. They don’t often come out very well because I’m not an experienced film photographer (and I don’t do it enough to become experienced) but I enjoy that whole zen-like experience of using a camera that requires so much effort to work.

    And that’s part of what I enjoy about shooting the crew really. There’s no expectation of pictures being produced for them. I rarely get asked if they can see them afterwards, even when I’m shooting on digital. People wait sometimes months for me to get my films developed and then it’s like a little surprise if I’ve captured them in the four or five shots that I put online. Always just on my Facebook – it’s very rare for me to post them publicly.

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    But there’s also the little personal moments that I enjoy too. Like documenting the fun that I had with some friends playing with fire at the last Empire on the Thursday night.

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    Or just shooting people putting tents up.

    _MG_1773And then there’s the little things that I dig my camera and Hipstamatic out to shoot and send off to Facebook. Like the first time I ever got a radio with my name on it. Mine for the whole event.

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    So are there any organisers there who would like me to shoot their event from backstage? Perhaps you don’t have the best venue or costume standards in the world, but you do have a bustling and exciting monster room and plot desk. Or you’re a huge organisation who already have photographers out there on the field.

    I’ve already been really inspired by the images of fashion models backstage at big shows and of theatre production shots. I’d love to try and apply this style of shooting to LRP. Here’s some images (not by me) to whet your appetite…

  • How much technology should there be in a Larp?

    How much technology should there be in a Larp?

     

    While drinking my morning coffee I clicked through to a few blogs I look at every now and again and was met with a post about photography at Empire LRP. Unfortunately I couldn’t comment on Jeremy’s post, so I figured I’d have a muse about it here. Interaction and replies on social media – whatever next!

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    For those who don’t know, I run the photography at Empire (and that’s me above, in my cool Empire outfit). I’m kidding of course, y’all know who I am, right? Right? You must do, otherwise you wouldn’t be here reading what I write about LRP. If you don’t know who I am, I’m just some crazy chick blogging about taking pictures of people who dress up in costumes and get muddy in a field. And that would be… weird. Anyway.

    Lets indulge. WAR RHINO.

    Empire LRP - E4 2014 - www.charlottemoss.co.ukRight, now that’s over with (apparently everything you write about Empire at the moment must mention the War Rhino) we can get on with the intelligent stuff. Semi-intelligent. I write about photography, I’m not sure it’s that intelligent.

    My presence wasn’t universally welcomed at PD and Empire. I put an awful lot of noses out of joint when I said to MattP ‘we can make this better’. I remember the conversation really clearly. There was an epic battle at the first ever Empire LRP and a moment at the end where the hero’s were trudging back to the Sentinel Gate. I crouched down, lined up a shot and realised that there were about seven or eight other photographers in my picture. I didn’t take the picture. It was a waste of good memory space. So I said to him ‘we can make this better’ at which point MattP explained something about immersion and stuff.

    I’m don’t play LRP myself, so perhaps I don’t really get it. But I’ve crewed now with PD for two years and I think I’m starting to figure it out. I would always rather that people came to PD games to play them rather than photographing them. I believe that we have such a great game that no one should want to take time out to photograph it because they’d much rather be playing it. I don’t want six players taking pictures during a battle, I want them to get so much enjoyment out of being a great big god damn fucking hero that they don’t even think about retrieving their camera kit from their car. I want them to feel the electric buzz as they face off against hundreds of Orcs and A FUCKING WAR RHINO!

    Empire LRP - E4 2014 - www.charlottemoss.co.uk

    Sorry, the War Rhino slipped in again.

    I know that playing the game is one of the highest compliments and measures of good feedback available to the writers and game designers too. If you’re playing it then you’re enjoying it and we’ve all achieved what we set out to do which is make a fantastic game that people WANT to play.

    There’s additional considerations in this world of social media and the interwebz. At Empire LRP have a multi-million word wiki that requires quite serious amounts of imagery to prevent it from just being solid walls of texts. I think when I worked on the wiki this summer we had something like a thousand images displayed on it’s pages. With over a thousand players attending events (and a crew that is several hundred strong) you have to communicate how your world looks. Images are much more effective than words at this task.

    Added to that, social media is an exceptionally powerful tool. According to my stats on Facebook, my pictures have sometimes been seen by around 50k people after an event. We don’t have more than 2k attendees so that’s a huge amount of people who are being exposed to LRP through photographs of an event.

    Remember what MattP said before?

    No words can convince a person that LARP is more than just a bunch of sweaty nerds in cheap costume waving toy swords around quite as effectively as a picture of neat Roman battle lines squaring off against a horde of Carthaginians.

    Great pictures can make a huge difference. Other pictures – as was highlighted in the blog post that inspired this – occasionally don’t show the hobby in such a good light. As a crew we want to present the best image of our game that we can to players and potential players. That includes customer service, management, the game world and – of course – photographs.

    Empire LRP - E4 2014 - www.charlottemoss.co.uk

    Jeremy is right though about his observation of players using camera phones and GoPros more and more. During Odyssey we caught a player who had fallen in the arena filming the battle as it happened and a fellow photographer at Empire had to bin a shot of a dramatic execution with awesome roleplaying because another player was shooting the action on his phone. Monsters taking cameras to battle and recording the action has started to become a problem that the ref crew have noticed and we’re going to knuckle down and do something about this next year.

    I’d love to ban recording devices from every part of the IC field with the exception of a very limited amount of photographers. However this wouldn’t be a popular decision – there was quite a bit of unhappiness when I put my foot down and limited the number of photographers that could shoot battles. As far as I know we’re the only system who actively put a limit on and polices photographers – but I’d love to hear about any others that do. We just want people to play the game. And we want to make the system as immersive as possible for those who love playing it. That means less camera phones, less GoPros and less photographers.

    Empire LRP - E4 2014 - www.charlottemoss.co.uk

    So a friend went to a different LRP earlier on in the year and I asked him how it went. ‘It was ok’ he said. ‘I liked the game and the setting, but there were way too many photographers’. On further discussion one of the things he brought up was the fact that a photographer had even used a tripod right in the middle of the road in front of the players in order to capture a shot. The photographers at the event had got in the way of the immersion and experience – and that’s not a good thing with LRP, right?

    I admit, I take tripods onto the IC field. And I refuse to dress it up with fabric covered legs and scarves because ultimately these things just make you look like you’ve got a tripod covered in fabric and scarves. I prefer to carry my camera and tripod unadulterated because it means that I can be in and out faster, quicker and more safely. But I only use it in situations where I’m not going to draw attention to myself. Like the shot above, taken well after dark as you can see. The only light was the fire and so it was a long exposure on a tripod all the way in order to capture anything. However I got a lovely comment afterwards from my gorgeous fella in the middle breathing fire. He said ‘I didn’t think you took any photos of it. I looked for you and you weren’t there’. In reality I was sitting right in the front row, as you can see. He even stood in front of me at one point and still didn’t see me. I feel from comments like his that I’m getting something right with this LRP photography malarky. Either that or he’s unobservant. The jury is perhaps out.

    But some other technology can be jarring in game too, and like the occasional photographer we accept it because it’s for the greater good.

    Empire LRP - E4 2014 - www.charlottemoss.co.uk

    Two of my most favourite refs looking extraordinarily pleased at the pyros they’re setting off. Our Empire ref’s are the best – you give them something that goes BANG or produces smoke and they’ll be happy for hours.

    Radio sets are one of those necessary evils required for such a huge game to run. Dozens of them are handed out at the start of an event for everyone from Refs and SFX crew to Egregors. There’s no way to get around the immersion breaking that they cause. ultimately you still usually have a radio hanging off your belt and some kind of black plastic or covert ear piece.

    Lots of the crew who wear them in character do an exceptional job at hiding them in their kit. Sometimes with awesome beards.

    Empire LRP - E4 2014 - www.charlottemoss.co.ukBut is this not a bit like the cameras thing? We don’t want to completely ban cameras from the IC field because they do – in policed circumstances – provide benefits to the organisers and players.

    I had a sweet new photographer with me last event who had not really been to LRP before. One of the parting instructions I left was ‘if you ever need help, just find someone who is wearing a radio’. Radios are obvious. They identify you in the field as being a member of crew who can help you. They’re a great security blanket to have in the game. Sure the radio unit itself really needs to be slipped into a bag or whatever, but having that earpiece provides an easy way to pick out someone who is crew.

    There’s always ups and downs to every piece of technology included in the game. I could go on and mention the bar with it’s nice modern cellar technology… but I think I’d be hounded out of the hobby if I suggested that went!