University Photographer Jonathan Cohen offers a full range of photographic services in support of the University's communications and marketing efforts.
He produces original photographs that tell °®¶¹´«Ã½ stories and appear in University publications and on our website. He also maintains an extensive image library, a for use and provides °®¶¹´«Ã½'s Daily Photo.
Learn more about:
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Requesting photography services
What we shoot
- The University photographer will shoot major °®¶¹´«Ã½ events and activities.
- We cannot support department, office, club or organization celebrations and parties due to limited resources and time constraints.
- Headshots and group shots will only be photographed for University Communications and Marketing.
- Studio/outdoor portraits will only be photographed for editorial purposes; each request will be reviewed.
- If your request is for a project being coordinated or managed by the Office of Communications and Marketing, tell your C&M contact you are requesting new photography and that person will work directly with the University photographer.
To submit a request for review
- If you believe your request requires the services of the University's photographer,
and you are a faculty/staff member or a student representing a particular college or
school, please contact your college or school's Communication Manager:
- Harpur College of Arts and Sciences
Jennifer Micale, jmicale@binghamton.edu - Thomas J. Watson College of Engineering and Applied Sciences
Chris Kocher, ckocher@binghamton.edu - School of Management
Anthony Borrelli, borrelli@binghamton.edu - Decker College of Nursing and Health Sciences
Natalie Blando-George, ngeorge@binghamton.edu - College of Community and Public Affairs
Allen Wengert, awengert@binghamton.edu - School of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences
Katie Ellis, kellis@binghamton.edu
- Harpur College of Arts and Sciences
- Other inquiries can be sent to Jonathan Cohen, jcohen@binghamton.edu
- If you are requesting an 8 by 10-inch headshot, please send your request to Kim Spaulding, kspauldi@binghamton.edu. Headshots may be used for °®¶¹´«Ã½ purposes only.
- Requests must be made at least 2 weeks in advance, and even earlier if the photo shoot falls on a weekend or in the evening; we will review your request.
If we cannot fulfill your request
- See the tips below on shooting your own photos.
- Ask us for suggestions on freelance photographers/student photographers (Communications and Marketing is not responsible for any charges billed by these photographers).
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Freelance photographers and stock images
- Use of Communications and Marketing stock photography and the work of the University photographer is allowed at no charge for on-campus clients.
- Communications and Marketing is not responsible for any charges billed by off-campus photographers for the use of their photographs/services or for charges for any stock photography requested by our clients.
- If you use an outside photographer's work, copyrighted photographs or other copyrighted art in your publication or on your website, you (as the client) are obliged to pay for it.
- If you use stock photography for your website or publication, it is your responsibility to secure the usage rights for those images.
- You cannot pull an image off another website and post it to your site.
- Communications and Marketing is not responsible for any charges incurred for the use of images provided to us by our clients without proper permission.
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Requesting a digital photo from the archive
- Traditional print photographs are no longer available.
- Submit requests for digital images to Kim Spaulding at kspaulding@binghamton.edu; be sure to state how and where the image is to be used. We will review your request.
- Requests are limited to 5 images per person, per semester.
- Images taken to illustrate a specific article in a publication will not be released until after the article is published.
- Images of varsity athletes currently playing under NCAA regulations will not be honored; direct those requests to Communications and Sports Information in the Intercollegiate Athletics Department.
- If you are a member of the media seeking permission to use a University image, contact Ryan Yarosh at ryarosh@binghamton.edu. Note that requests may take up to 2 weeks to be processed.
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Use of University photos
- All photographs taken by University photographers and those appearing on binghamton.edu are copyrighted and intended for the promotion and marketing of °®¶¹´«Ã½.
- Photographs are not intended for commercial reproduction or personal use, and should not be used out of the context of their intended use or altered beyond basic cropping and resizing.
- Questions regarding image copyright or the use of a photograph for °®¶¹´«Ã½ materials, as well as requests from external organizations wishing to purchase University photographs, should be directed to Greg Delviscio, vice president, University Communications and Marketing, at gregdelv@binghamton.edu.
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Tips for taking headshots and group photos
Headshots
- Individual portraits (headshots) are most easily done outside in the shade, rather than indoors or in direct sun.
- Use a camera with a zoom lens set to its longest telephoto setting. This will blur the background to keep distracting details to a minimum.
- Use a tripod or, if that is not possible, hold the camera very steady. Camera-shake is the primary reason for blurry photos.
- Crop the photos tightly. If you want to show a person's face, do not include a huge blank wall behind your subject.
Group shots
- Avoid lining everyone up against a wall; instead, try shooting from a high angle with the group looking up at the camera or arrange the group around a couch or chairs, with some sitting and some standing.
- Take several shots.
- Shoot at an angle to walls, rather than straight on.
- Shoot your images at the highest/largest resolution; check the settings on your camera before taking photos.
- Note: The University photographer is not available to edit/digitally enhance your photos.
Directions to Photo/Video Studio
Photo/Video Studio: Lecture Hall basement (LH B90)
Enter the Lecture Hall via the western entrance (across from Glenn G. Bartle Library) and take a left. Look for the stairwell closest to Lecture Halls 1 and 2 and a red curved wall. Take the stairs down and proceed straight ahead through two doorways until you reach a new hallway. Turn left. The studio will be the next room on your left with double doors labeled for Room B90.