Adelaide Brand Photographer: Chamonix Brand Shoot

Lot Fourteen functions less like a single workspace and more like a connected system β€” teams, research groups, and companies operating in close proximity across shared architecture. There is a steady sense of movement through the precinct, even when individual rooms are still.

This made it a fitting environment for a half-day brand shoot with Chamonix IT Solutions, an established Adelaide technology company working across digital infrastructure and enterprise systems.

Rather than focusing on a single static team or interrupting one workflow, the shoot moved across multiple Chamonix touchpoints within the precinct. Different teams were photographed in situ, allowing the final body of work to reflect the organisation as a broader ecosystem rather than a contained office environment.

Project Facts

Client: Chamonix IT Solutions
Industry: Technology / IT Services
Location: Lot Fourteen, Adelaide
Shoot Type: Corporate brand photography
Duration: Half-day production
Crew: 2 (Lewis Whittenbury - lead photographer + Frankie Whittenbury - lighting assistant)
Objective: Capture organisational culture across multiple teams and environments
Approach: Multi-location, observational brand documentation across precinct
Lighting: Natural light supplemented with controlled flash (Godox AD1200Pro system)
Deliverables: Curated brand photography library for digital, PR, recruitment, and internal communications
Usage: Corporate marketing, web presence, internal storytelling

Method

Frankie The Creative’s approach to corporate brand photography combines documentary observation with controlled lighting, designed to reflect how organisations actually operate rather than how they are staged.

Working with a small two-person crew, the shoot was designed to remain mobile across Lot Fourteen. Instead of holding a single team in place or interrupting extended workflows, multiple groups were photographed across different areas of the precinct, building a more complete visual understanding of how Chamonix functions within its environment.

A consistent lighting approach was used throughout. The Godox AD1200Pro system was deployed across both interior and exterior setups to maintain continuity of skin tone and exposure as the team moved between changing light conditions. This ensured a unified visual language across the final gallery despite the variation in architectural and natural light sources.

Approach

The production was structured around movement rather than staging.

Chamonix teams were photographed during ongoing collaboration rather than isolated performance. Conversations continued around screens, moved through shared workspaces, and extended into adjacent areas of the precinct. This allowed the imagery to reflect how work actually unfolds in a technology environment where discussion and execution are continuous rather than linear.

Lot Fourteen itself contributed to the visual structure of the shoot. Glass, concrete, and open corridors created a layered environment where movement became a natural part of the composition. The shoot followed these transitions rather than resisting them.

Rather than directing heavily posed scenarios, the focus remained on capturing real interaction as it occurred across multiple teams and spaces.

Production Notes

This was a half-day location-based production executed with a two-person crew.

A hybrid lighting approach was used throughout, with natural light forming the base exposure and controlled flash (Godox AD1200Pro system) applied where necessary to maintain consistency across faces and environments.

Working across multiple teams within the precinct required a flexible shooting structure, prioritising responsiveness and movement over fixed setups or repeated staging.

Outcome

The final image library presents Chamonix IT Solutions as a connected organisation operating across a shared innovation precinct rather than a single isolated workspace.

The imagery is designed for use across digital platforms, corporate communications, recruitment, and internal storytelling, providing a consistent visual system that reflects both the people and the environment in which they operate.

The result is a flexible brand asset library that supports ongoing communication needs while maintaining a cohesive visual identity across varied contexts.

Closing

Frankie The Creative works with corporate and brand teams across Adelaide to produce photography grounded in real environments, shaped by natural interaction, and supported by controlled production techniques where required.

Enquiries for corporate brand photography projects are welcome.

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