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Revision as of 00:29, 10 January 2015
Fire photography is the act of taking photographs of firefighting operations. Individuals that practise this form of photography are called fire photographers.
Since fire photography involves being close to dangerous situations, fire photographers must have special skills and knowledge about emergency incident scenes, operations, health and safety.[1] Fire photographers are often required to wear firefighter protective equipment.[2]
Uses of fire photography
The work of fire photographers encompasses multiple applications. These include:
- Investigation
- Training
- Fire prevention
- Occupational health and safety
- Post-incident analysis
- Improvement of the public's view on emergency work
- Strengthening of sense of belonging for firefighters
Involvement with fire departments
In general, fire photographers are not directly employed by fire departments.[3] They provide a specialized photography service which may involve a fee per-photograph. Access to safety perimeters can be an issue for fire photographers, thus they usually develop good relationships with their local fire department to improve access to fire scenes. Such access may, at the fire department's discretion, require additional training or other arrangements.[4]
Certification
A formal fire photographer certification process is being drafted by the International Organization of Fire Photography (IOFP). The intent of this certification is to attest that an individual has sufficient training, skills and knowledge in relevant areas (health & safety, firefighting operations, etc.) to operate within a safety perimeter of an emergency incident scene.
See also
References
- ^ Phillips, Chris, Fire Photography, retrieved 2008-02-26
- ^ Nicolas, Landry, Fire photographers in action, Journal Le Reflet, retrieved 2008-02-26
- ^ Goldberg, Michael. "Volunteer firefighter doubles as emergency scene photographer". The Reporter. Retrieved 23 February 2014.
- ^ Beattie, Chris. "Next on scene: First-response photographer's pictures attract widespread attention". McKinney Courier-Gazette. Retrieved 23 February 2014.
External links
- International Fire Photographers Association
- International Organization of Fire Photography
- Wisconsin Public Safety Photography
- Quebec Fire Photographers Association
- New Jersey Metro Fire Photographers Association
- Emergency Photographers Network of Southern California
- Connecticut Fire Photographers Association