09
Oct 12

Paper Cutter Portrait

This was a really fun concept! The artist is a paper cutter. I wanted to show some of her work and tools as if they are ideas floating around her head. I could have just photographed all the individual items, her, and the sky and assembled it in photoshop, but I wanted to get it all in the camera.

The two photos below show the entire set up. We set up outside with the camera pointing up toward the sky, almost directly at the sun. I set up a large piece of glass (one panel of a sliding patio door, thank you Mary Anne!) on saw horses. All the paper cutting tools and art pieces are laid on top of the glass with the camera position under the glass. There could be no reflections on the underneath side of the glass so it was wrapped in black cloth to disable any light getting under and onto the glass.

This photo is lit as follows: The sun is coming through the clouds and offers some ambient light. There are three additional strobes highlighting the subject. A large gridded 750 watt-second octobank at full power is the main light for the subject. (at right in the photo below) Two additional speedlights provide rim light and hair light. (at left in the photo below)

Here you can see a different angle of all three lights and some of the paper cutting items starting to find their place on the glass. The large gridded octobank is on the right. On the left is one of the speedlights for rim light at about eye level and in the distance is a speedlight for a hair light on the model.

The photo below shows the photographer “in action”. I determined the parameters of the frame through the camera and then we started to build the shape of the model and her related tools and paper cuttings within that area. By the time we had decided on a composition I had determined my exposure for the clouds and then dialed in the amount of strobe needed to light the model to make the image.

Here is a photo of the photographer (me) and the Paper Cutting Artist on the set.

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03
Oct 12

Seventy Five Images

Photomerge of 75 individual images:

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02
Oct 12

Portrait of the Painter

 

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25
Sep 12

Happy in the Sky

HOW TO:

First, find some sky. Are you still with me? Ok.
Then, get a model, a ladder and a light.

The most important aspect of this photograph,
is making sure the ear rings are perfect.

Here is a photo of the sky and the model with no additional lighting.
The sun is providing a hairlight/rim light.

Here is a lighting set up photo.

 

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04
Sep 12

Portrait of Searching

Searching

Searching. Everybody’s looking for something.

This portrait involves the mufti-pronged concept of searching, and a composite of 6 individual images.

Before the model and lighting were added; this photo shows the background scene from the camera angle.

The photograph is lit by a combination of ambient sunlight and a studio strobe. The color temperature of the strobe is warmed with a .25 CTO gel and modified with a 64 inch parabolic (bounce) umbrella.

This is a view of the camera, model and light.

The camera position does not change. The model and flash move around the scene to achieve 5 different concepts of searching.

Here I could not resist including myself in one of the light tests while the model changed wardrobe.

The photographer is a giant…

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30
Aug 12

The Secret Life of Beets

Beets have secrets.

Only some are revealed… ever. Tucked quietly in their garden beds, they while away seemingly idle time by composing the stories of all that is. This unassuming root vegetable knows all knowing-ness and is here to testify in delicious dissertation. We hang in this delicate balance between late summer and early autumn with the history and future of every now, explained to us in luscious red fiber. From its big heart shaped leaves to the tip of its tiny exploratory roots; beta vulgaris is the ultimate minister of information.

You have to listen closely and look carefully to decode the message. Is this the future now? Here a Grey Alien is clearly shown stepping though a door way:

Is this the Vulcan God of Fire on a very happy day?

Have beets told us the tale of the 70′s rock hair guy or maybe Billy Preston?

I think these are simple maps to the entire universe and I just don’t know how to read them:

Pure undetermined energy at the atomic level enlarged for viewing by the naked eye:

Evil with a goatee emerging from a vulva?

Sacred ancient geometry:

The ancient Romans considered beets an important health food and an aphrodisiac.

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23
Jul 12

Rare Family Portrait

Mom and sister visiting from out of the country. A rare meeting face to face. It’s time to make a photograph.

They bought similar aprons at the farmers market.

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17
Jul 12

I have taken a series of Peas

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16
Jul 12

Washington State Native Blackberry

YUMMY Berries!

 

A plastic white jug is re-purposed as a light modifier.

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08
Jul 12

Mid Summer Organic Garden in the Pacific Northwest.

We’ve been enjoying the fruits… or vegetables rather… of our labor. This weekend we have pulled carrots, dug potatoes and popped peas from our garden.

This photograph is a combination of 90 individual photographs assembled using photomerge.

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03
Jul 12

Pacific Northwest Carrot

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08
Jun 12

Columbine Bloom by William Alan Photo

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21
May 12

Wagashi by Tokara, Pottery by Studio M

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17
May 12

Columbine

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15
May 12

Chive Blooming by William Alan Photo

Many others on my website, click the photo.

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10
May 12

Boardwalk at Long Beach, Washington, USA

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09
May 12

Little Birdie in Lord Hill Park.

 

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26
Apr 12

11 close up views of Apple Blossoms by William Alan Photo

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26
Apr 12

Apple Tree in Bloom HDR by William Alan Photo

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24
Apr 12

Black and White Tree Studies

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17
Apr 12

Magnolia Leaf Lace

 

 

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21
Mar 12

The Darker The Further

Some photographs need to be large prints.

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28
Feb 12

Chocolate Lips

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22
Feb 12

Dried Bamboo leaves by William Alan Photo

Print available.

Print available.

Print Available.

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25
Jan 12

Woodinville Whiskey Product Photo

Woodinville Whiskey by William Alan Photo

Set Up photo for Woodinville Whiskey by William Alan Photo:

Set up photo for Woodinville Whiskey by William Alan Photo

1. Camera position
2. Product position
3. Speedlight bounced into an umbrella on the background only
4. Speedlight snooted and gridded to light the label
5. Speedlight snooted aimed at diffusion panel to fill label reflective letters
6. Small white reflector to fill reflective label on right side

The photo below shows the effect of light number 3 in the set up diagram above. No direct light is hitting the product. The light is bouncing from the background through the liquid and glass toward the camera.

#3 Background light only

The photo below shows the effect of light number 4 in the set up diagram above. The light source has both a snoot and a grid to pull the light into a small area, mostly on the label (and some on the cork).

#4 Snooted and gridded light on the label

The photo below shows the effect of light number 5 in the set up diagram above. A snooted light source lights up the translucent panel in a controlled way. This keeps the size of the apparant light source appropriate to the area being lit. In this case it is offering light to the reflective lettering on the bottle that is not lit by light number 4. Likewise the reflector (number 6) lights up the right side of the bottles reflective lettering.

#5 Snooted light through diffusion material to fill reflective portions of the label.
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