Showing posts with label Fortnightly Picture Projects. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fortnightly Picture Projects. Show all posts

Picture Project- Treasure




Due on Flikr by midnight on 14th December ready for group tutorial



The latest theme we were given was treasure, i was very excited about this as straight away i had a lot of ideas.



The obvious thing that comes to mind would be something like Gold, or jewellery, like pirates treasure, but i didnt want to do something obvious.



I thought about treasuring a moment or a person, and thought maybe a mother holding their child, treasuring the moment with them, this lead me to think about treasuring a moment in time and preserving a moment in time, i remembered the old photographs that my dad has and the war medals, that have been passed down to him, this to me is family treasure.



The beautifully preserved medals and original boxes that they were posted in and still with the postal stamps intact on the letters to loved ones.



I wanted to convey some kind of rhetoric here and also create a feeling of nostalgia when looking at the photograph.



Firstly i tried out a few macro shots as i was in the studio doing my other Macro work so thought i would experiment with this firstly.







I like this shot as it clearly shows the stamps and the date stamp also which is quite important. I dont think this shows enough though to be used for the final image, i want it to be more personal and tell a story.



I had the items on a product table in the studio and used two Bowen flash heads, one on either side of the table, i used the diffuse umbrella with both lights (the white part of the umbrella after taking off the black and sliver outer part), the lights were pointing up at the ceiling. I used this lighting setup as i wanted an even wash of light, i had learned when photographing my glass bottle that this setup was not only good for giving an even light and useful for glass- such as perfume bottles, but also because the light is being diffused through the white material and being bounced off the ceiling, it creates a very even light.



I placed the items together on the table, tags, medal, badge, the original box that the medal was sent to the soldiers home address in and the letter home and envelope. The letter began.. My own darling, i have been thinking how rotten it was leaving you. When i first read it, it brought a tear to my eye, a letter from my great grandfather to his beloved, whom he was seperated from by war.







As you can see this is on the white product table, which doesnt really suit the items here. It would be adequate for a documentary photograph but doesnt create the atmosphere that i want.








The black background is much better but i felt this still wasnt quite personal enough. I found a card saying in loving  memory of... and decided to use this in the photo to add to the story and also found an old photograph of my great grandfather and great grandmother.




This is the final image that i used:





Project- Reflection



Due in 10th November for Group Tutorial



A few weeks ago were given the theme for our first 2 weekly picture project, it was reflection.
We weren't given any other information apart from- it had to be uploaded on Flikr in the group pool by midnight on the 9th November ready for the tutorial with our group the following day.



When i got this theme i had a lot of ideas and wanted to do something a bit deeper than the obvious responses to the theme. One of the ideas i had was quite sinister and fitted with the time of year- Haloween! I planned to do this next weeked as i needed a particular location and model for it so it would take a bit of planning.



I the mean time i went to Fleetwood and Blackpool for the day, i kept an eye out for reflections and considered this part of my research.



On the way to Fleetwood i passed a glass blowers and noticed some glass sculptures outside, they looked amazing so with the project in mind i took some photos:





F32, 1/40 Sec, ISO 200, Handheld, Un-edited.



F25, 1/60 Sec, ISO 400, handheld, un-edited.

Here are examples of the above images after editing in Photoshop- mainly to show what a difference editing can make...






I went to fleetwood next, it was starting to rain but i had time for a quick walk on the beach and took this:

F14, 1/60 Sec, ISO 200, Handheld, edited using vignettes in LR.

I think this image shows another type of reflection, the editing was just experimental really, i was trying out the vignettes in LR and ended up with this although if i was to use this shot for anything i would probably make it more subtle than this.

I went to Blackpool and walked around until it went dark and the illuminations came on, i did take some shots of the illuminations but i wont put them on this post, here are a couple that i thought i might use for the reflections project:

F5.6, 1/4 Sec, ISO 1000, Handheld and resting on railings as used slow
shutter, cropped slightly in Lightroom.




F5.6, 1/2 Sec, ISO 1000, Handheld and resting on railings as used slow shutter, un-edited.



On the way home i stopped at the glass blowers to take a few test shots of the glass sculptures in the dark, we had noticed during the day that there were lights in and around them so wanted to see them lit up at night. I had to climb over a fence and trudge through a muddy field to get to the sculptures! here is one of them:

F5.6, 1/8 Sec, ISO 400, Handheld, un-edited.

It didn't look how imagined it would when it was lit up.

I saw another reflection when i was on my way home and stopped at the side of the road to take them, it was so windy i nearly blew away, this made it difficult to hold the camera still, i was standing on a bridge over the water and had to rest the camera on the railings and push down on the camera to keep it still, even a tripod wouldnt have helped in this situation!

F5.6, 1/5 Sec, ISO 500, resting on the railings, Un-edited.

This was one of the first shots i took, as it is on quite a fast shutter speed it hasn't really captured the essence of what was in front of me.

F5.6, 4 Sec, ISO 125, resting on the railings, un-edited.

This image after using a slower shutter speed is much better, i wanted to use a slower shutter speed to blur the water a little and create a more dreamy effect, i do think it appears a little creepy almost like a haunted house.

Perhaps inspired by halloween i wanted to do something quite sinister, i originally had the idea of a man looking at his hands in shock with fake blood on them, this wouldnt have been a literal reflection but somethinng a bit deeper which is what i was aiming for.

I got my model and decided to use a garden shed/summer house as my location as it was scruffy and downbeat, similar to the locations we sometimes see in horror movies.

I wanted to try out a few things as usually when doing a photo shoot, the images that you imagine in your head are quite different to the ones you actually create.



F5.6, 1/15 Sec, ISO 400, Handheld, un-edited.

I like the effect of this photo, although technically it is a bad photograph, underexposed and seemingly out of focus it is almost cartoon like.



F5.6, 1/13 Sec, ISO 640, handheld, un-edited.



F5, 1/13 Sec, ISO 640, handheld, un-edited.

Looking at this shot it reminds me a little of Gregory Crewdsons work, the mixed lighting and the tension. I used a torch to illuminate the knife and i had a spotlight in front of the subject as i wanted a direct source of light that was unflattering.

Photograph By Gregory Crewdson

Photograph By Gregory Crewdson

The name of this photo is actually quite apt- it is called Reflection.





F4.5, 1/13 Sec, ISO 640, handheld, un-edited.


F4.5, 1/3 Sec, ISO 640, handheld, un-edited.


F4.5, 1/3 Sec, ISO 640, handheld, un-edited.


F5.6, 0.6 Sec, ISO 640, handheld, un-edited.






F4, 1/25 Sec, ISO 640, handheld, un-edited.



F4.5, 1/25 Sec, ISO 640, handheld, un-edited.

I wanted to do a bit of research into Photographers that have a similar style- horror photography, i realise that i perhaps did this the wrong way around as usually it would be something you do first as it becomes something that you can draw inspiration from. I had quite a clear idea of what i wanted to do so it didnt occur to me at that point to look at the work of other people. I have since found these photos from a photographer who specialises in Horror photography



Photograph By Joshua Hoffine


Photograph By Joshua Hoffine

This is the final image, it was edited in lightroom to give it a more sinister feel i applied a preset and increased the blacks to darken the shadows.

I remember reading Geoff Dyer's the Ongoing Moment and he said something like; the power of a photograph isnt in what we can see, but in what we cant see. By increasing the shadows it adds mystery as there are parts that are left to the imagination and when i was thinking about this it reminded me of what Geoff Dyer said.



Click the link to see the comments i received from others in my group

http://www.flickr.com/photos/kathrynjefferson/4086908902/