Yellowknife pupil comes second at nationwide Skills Canada images competitors

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Luna Langlois says she’s cherished images since she was younger, and it’s a ardour that’s grown into greater than a passion. Now, she has a silver medal for her images from the nationwide Skills Canada competitors to point out for it.

It was the second time the soon-to-be École Sir John Franklin High School graduate competed on the nationwide stage in images. The yr earlier than, her consequence wasn’t so glowing.

The first time, she mentioned she’d gone in with a really particular mindset: “I’m going to learn, and I’m going to have fun.”

“I really wanted to understand the competition more,” Langlois mentioned in an interview with CBC’s The Trailbreaker, saying she wished to enhance her expertise and be taught from the opposite rivals.

After she acquired her leads to 2025 — she doesn’t recall the place she positioned — she wasn’t upset. “I kind of knew it wouldn’t be that high.”

When she returned to Yellowknife, she set to work in the direction of the purpose.

“I saw what I did wrong,” she said. “For the year after, I just practiced over and over.”

The second time round, she was prepared. From May 28 to 29, Langlois and rivals from different provinces created and completed quite a few tasks that may be scored by judges.

“Overall, it’s the portfolio at the end, with all the photos you took during the two days of competition,” Langlois mentioned. 

Once it was over, she had 9 items within the portfolio from assignments together with photographing thriller objects, staging a studio photograph shoot, designing {a magazine} cowl, and making a composite picture.

The day after the competitors, she discovered she’d positioned second on the medal ceremony.

“I was just in shock, I thought ‘There’s no way!’,” she mentioned.

Luna Langlois poses with her silver medal from the Skills Canada photography competition, alongside teacher Nikita Morozov.
Luna Langlois poses together with her silver medal from the Skills Canada images competitors, alongside instructor Nikita Morozov. (Submitted by Luna Langlois)

First time for N.W.T.

For Lee Sacrey, Langlois’ consequence marked a milestone for the Northwest Territories on the nationwide Skills Canada stage, though he discovered in regards to the consequence sooner than she did.

Sacrey is the technical chair of the Skills Canada Northwest Territories Photography Competition and is on the National Skills Canada Technical Committee for Photography. He mentioned he was monitoring the competitors and the judging.

“I knew roughly that it seemed to be going fairly well for Luna, but I couldn’t tell for sure,” Sacrey mentioned.

After the competitors ended, his colleague tallied the scores, and gave the ultimate outcomes to Sacrey that night.

“He made me read the secondary placements in front of our group knowing I would just be a mess,” Sacrey mentioned.

Sacrey has been concerned with images at Skills Canada because it was added as a contest in 2011.

Lee Sacrey in an undated image.
Lee Sacrey is the Technical Chair of Skills Canada Northwest Territories Photography Competition and is on the National Skills Canada Technical Committee for Photography. (Submitted by Lee Sacrey)

In the previous, the very best an N.W.T. competitor had positioned was fourth or fifth.

“I was amazed those years that we got that close,” Sacrey said. “I was completely out of myself when I saw that silver medal position. It was a couple of days before I could talk about it.”

He mentioned the variations between jurisdictions on the nationwide stage are stark. Most different provinces have higher entry to amenities, gear and know-how that contributors from the N.W.T. typically don’t.

“I spent the better part of the first seven or eight years really modifying everything that we did, trying to give the N.W.T. as much of an advantage to be competitive as we could,” Sacrey mentioned. “Knowing that some of the bigger provinces have available to them for coaching and resources and equipment.”

For Langlois, she doesn’t have an official coach, however she has mentors. Nikita Morozov and Brent Currie at her college, and her uncle Stephen Verhaeghe, who lives in Yellowknife, inspired her curiosity in images early on.

He gave Langlois his previous digicam for Christmas in 2020, a Nikon with two lenses.

“It was amazing, now I actually had equipment to start doing my photography,” Langlois mentioned. For two years, she mentioned she labored with that digicam.

“I learned that camera all by myself, I did a lot of mistakes, messed up a lot of settings. But I’d just call him, he always helped me out.”

Two years later, she moved from Quebec to Yellowknife, and lived together with her aunt and uncle. Over the yr she lived with them, Verhaeghe continued sharing his images data together with her.

For her second nationwide competitors, she had extra at her disposal, and never simply the talents she’d practiced all year long. Her uncle and Sacrey each lent her gear.

“To be fair, I felt that Luna was really in it this year, and really wanted to stand on the podium,” Sacrey mentioned. “That’s the vibe I got from when we were at territorials, just watching her new level of work I felt she was really in it to do amazing work.”

Photography will probably be a serious a part of Langlois’ life going ahead. She’s majoring in journalism and communications at Holland College in P.E.I. She had utilized (and been accepted) into images as effectively, however selected the previous, so she will attain one other purpose.

“Since I was a kid what I always wanted to do was travel around the world and share information.”

PHOTOS | Luna Langlois’ Skills Canada nationwide competitors portfolio:


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