i don't know that i would use the word "opportunity," but sometimes old naked guys come up and start yelling at me when i'm changing in the locker room.
usually something along the lines of "when the hell are you going to fix this broken thing that nobody reported was broken."
Oh no, no, no. Even if i could get away with it, i wouldn't. I'm like one of the only guys there. And most of the women there, i don't care much for.
I do, and have for 20+ years. My major works in landscape photography take place in the southern Hemisphere Spring and Summer, and mostly I do that nude. Beaches, forests, mountains, rivers... wherever it is, it's work. On return to the studio all activity is also nude. I do get away with it. I am the owner of the house!!
This sounds great, you are one of the few guys who really can work nude if they like. I wonder if you you really do earn enough money by landscape photographing to live your life? I guess this must be extraordinary photos then ;-) All the prof photographers I know are either doing commercial photography or people/event photography (like weddings, congress etc.) and I guess none of them would ever have a chance to work unclothed. But maybe at a nudist wedding at least ;-)
Hello, I've tried working nude in the office on multiple times, but my coworkers were constantly complaining about the amount of pubic hair that I kept on shedding. They also mentioned something about "skid marks" on the conference room furniture. I'm not sure about that. Anyhow, they later fired me for something completely unrelated. Some sort of bogus sexual harassment and stalking claims.
@*pixy* No, income is supplemented by consultancy and sessional facilitation at university along with privately-run "metering for analogue" workshops. For the consultancy etc., I have to slip into a collar and tie and it is absolutely STIFLING in summer! My work is produced in analogue ===> film. Very much a specialist niche occupation and market; I do not own a digital camera. Images are shot on film, but produced digitally as colour darkroom practice has gone out of fashion a long time ago now (at least 17 years back). This pic was produced in the nude last December. It was a very, very hot day. The colour on the horizon is earth's shadow and the rise of the Belt of Venus. It is a legal nudist haunt, but not one that usually attracts photographers -- except those prepared to wander around seeking out opportunities in the landscape! I was hoping for absolutely calm condition to give a symmetrical reflection of the curious tree's shape in the water, but being summer at the time, a persistent breeze just would not let go, so it was "shoot and be damned", and cropped to square to eliminate distracting peripheral bits. At the nudist resort I was a member of from 1995 to 2009, I was the photographer there for photographing weddings, renewal of vows and even divorce ceremonies -- which often resulted in people from opposing families coming to blows -- pulling and tugging, slapping and banging, all in for young and old, then we kicked them out -- after collecting the money for the ceremony and the amount of trouble they caused for good measure.