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S+D Web About S+D Contact Demographics Industry Buzz Ad Closings Audience Profile Media Kit Rates Requirements Specs Archives Editorial Calendar Multimedia Next Issue Purchase Copies Reprints Subscribe Datebook Industry News Resource Directory Trade Associations Product Piques Hot Shots | photographers of design >>> Karl Neumann | Bozeman, Montana When we recently caught up with Bozeman, Montana photographer Karl Neumann, he’d just come back to his studio from shooting some exterior locations. “Today, I went through thigh-deep snow on snowshoes to get a shot,” he explains of his efforts to capture a wintery architectural scene in this mountainous community. “I like cold weather. Some of my best shots have been in below-zero temperatures.” A residence at Yellowstone Club. Neumann’s professional hardiness comes naturally. A native of Marquette, Michigan, he skis, plays hockey and likes to sailboard, amongst other sports, so toting photography equipment through inclement weather is a relative breeze. His photographic stamina has helped build his reputation for crafting warm, approachable images of Montana’s spectacularly rustic mountain resort homes, making viewers want to curl up next to stone fireplaces or relax on patios plunked in the midst of alpine meadows. His clients include architects, interior designers, builders and developers.

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S+D Web About S+D

ContactDemographicsIndustry BuzzAd ClosingsAudience ProfileMedia KitRatesRequirementsSpecsArchivesEditorial CalendarMultimediaNext IssuePurchase CopiesReprintsSubscribeDatebookIndustry NewsResource DirectoryTrade AssociationsProduct Piques

Hot Shots | photographers of design

>>> Karl Neumann | Bozeman, Montana

When we recently caught up with Bozeman, Montana

photographer Karl Neumann, he’d just come back to

his studio from shooting some exterior locations.

“Today, I went through thigh-deep snow on

snowshoes to get a shot,” he explains of his efforts to

capture a wintery architectural scene in this

mountainous community. “I like cold weather. Some

of my best shots have been in be low-zero

temperatures.”

A residence at Yellowstone Club.

Neumann’s professional hardiness comes naturally. A native of Marquette, Michigan, he skis, plays hockey and likes to sailboard, amongst other sports, so toting photography equipment through inclement weather is a relative breeze.

His photographic stamina has helped build his reputation for crafting warm, approachable images of Montana’s spectacularly rustic mountain resort homes, making viewers want to curl up next to stone fireplaces or relax on patios plunked in the midst of alpine meadows. His clients include architects, interior designers, builders and developers.

Montana residences by SBC of Bozeman, Montana.

Neumann admits that although an interest in photography has been a constant in his life, his career path has been circuitous. Armed with an economics degree from the University of Michigan, he left the Midwest in the early 1980s with the idea of going to San Francisco to “find a real job.” Along the way, he stopped in Vail, Colorado to ski and wound up staying for 16 years, doing everything from coaching skiing to bartending.

It was there that Neumann rekindled his interest in photography by interning with a commercial photographer after blowing out his knee in a ski accident. “I actually learned the ropes of the business from two photographers in Colorado,” Neumann says. “They mentored me, and I learned to shoot everything from ski action shots to architecture. When you work in a small town, you have to diversify.”

Marriage, family and a desire to try something different brought him to Bozeman in 2000, where he went to work selling real estate for the Yellowstone Club, an exclusive ski and golf development. “I wound up doing photography there, and realized I still had a passion for it.” He opted to launch his own photography business two years later, helped by the contacts he’d made while working at the development.

Often working with an assistant, Neumann shoots residential and commercial projects

primarily for clients who use the images for marketing and portfolio purposes. With his

wife, Lisa Neumann, handling marketing, his work has been seen far beyond Montana. His

images have been published in the Wall Street Journal, Log Home Living, Cowboys &

Indians and the Robb Report, and seen on the ABC program “20/20.”

One of his most recent projects has been the acquisition of a 1,300-square-foot studio in

Bozeman. “Even though I’m a location photographer, I’ve always been interested in

shooting people,” he says. “Having a studio lets me explore that. Lately, I’ve been

shooting body builders and athletes. I also did a fundraising calendar for a hockey team.”

The studio, it seems, allows Neumann to thaw out in between those snowshoe-and-sub-

zero-temperature shoots.

K a r l N e u m a n n P h o t o g r a p h y , B o z e m a n , M T ; ( 4 0 6 ) 5 3 9 - 0 0 3 0 o r

www.karlneumannphoto.com.

back to top

Advertising Information | Archives | Contact | Editorial Calendar | Home | Subscribe

Copyright © 2010 Sources + Design. All rights reserved.

S+D Web About S+D

ContactDemographicsIndustry BuzzAd ClosingsAudience ProfileMedia KitRatesRequirementsSpecsArchivesEditorial CalendarMultimediaNext IssuePurchase CopiesReprintsSubscribeDatebookIndustry NewsResource DirectoryTrade AssociationsProduct Piques

Hot Shots | photographers of design

>>> Karl Neumann | Bozeman, Montana

When we recently caught up with Bozeman, Montana

photographer Karl Neumann, he’d just come back to

his studio from shooting some exterior locations.

“Today, I went through thigh-deep snow on

snowshoes to get a shot,” he explains of his efforts to

capture a wintery architectural scene in this

mountainous community. “I like cold weather. Some

of my best shots have been in be low-zero

temperatures.”

A residence at Yellowstone Club.

Neumann’s professional hardiness comes naturally. A native of Marquette, Michigan, he skis, plays hockey and likes to sailboard, amongst other sports, so toting photography equipment through inclement weather is a relative breeze.

His photographic stamina has helped build his reputation for crafting warm, approachable images of Montana’s spectacularly rustic mountain resort homes, making viewers want to curl up next to stone fireplaces or relax on patios plunked in the midst of alpine meadows. His clients include architects, interior designers, builders and developers.

Montana residences by SBC of Bozeman, Montana.

Neumann admits that although an interest in photography has been a constant in his life, his career path has been circuitous. Armed with an economics degree from the University of Michigan, he left the Midwest in the early 1980s with the idea of going to San Francisco to “find a real job.” Along the way, he stopped in Vail, Colorado to ski and wound up staying for 16 years, doing everything from coaching skiing to bartending.

It was there that Neumann rekindled his interest in photography by interning with a commercial photographer after blowing out his knee in a ski accident. “I actually learned the ropes of the business from two photographers in Colorado,” Neumann says. “They mentored me, and I learned to shoot everything from ski action shots to architecture. When you work in a small town, you have to diversify.”

Marriage, family and a desire to try something different brought him to Bozeman in 2000, where he went to work selling real estate for the Yellowstone Club, an exclusive ski and golf development. “I wound up doing photography there, and realized I still had a passion for it.” He opted to launch his own photography business two years later, helped by the contacts he’d made while working at the development.

Often working with an assistant, Neumann shoots residential and commercial projects

primarily for clients who use the images for marketing and portfolio purposes. With his

wife, Lisa Neumann, handling marketing, his work has been seen far beyond Montana. His

images have been published in the Wall Street Journal, Log Home Living, Cowboys &

Indians and the Robb Report, and seen on the ABC program “20/20.”

One of his most recent projects has been the acquisition of a 1,300-square-foot studio in

Bozeman. “Even though I’m a location photographer, I’ve always been interested in

shooting people,” he says. “Having a studio lets me explore that. Lately, I’ve been

shooting body builders and athletes. I also did a fundraising calendar for a hockey team.”

The studio, it seems, allows Neumann to thaw out in between those snowshoe-and-sub-

zero-temperature shoots.

K a r l N e u m a n n P h o t o g r a p h y , B o z e m a n , M T ; ( 4 0 6 ) 5 3 9 - 0 0 3 0 o r

www.karlneumannphoto.com.

back to top

Advertising Information | Archives | Contact | Editorial Calendar | Home | Subscribe

Copyright © 2010 Sources + Design. All rights reserved.