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Painting With Light

Painting With Light by Richboxfrenzy

Somewhere, deep underground is a long railway tunnel. Where trains once steamed through the dark, today it is abandoned, the track lifted, the portals blocked off. The tunnel is litter strewn and empty, save for two people who are making their way through the darkness.

painting-with-light-1

I am one of those people, and often find myself squeezing into the pitch black mouth of the tunnel, carrying with me equipment to take photographs of the forgotten remains or our great railway heritage.

These tunnels are not silent. Water frequently drips from the curved brick lined roof, or occasionally pours in a torrent from airshafts.

The hazards are everywhere, falling masonry, open drains and the increasing possibility that one day, something will give and the whole structure will buckle and collapse. However, in the meantime there are shots to be had.

painting-with-light-2 Taking pictures here is not as easy as it looks.

This is not the place for flash, as the darkness eats it up.

You need the right equipment to get interesting pictures. A tripod, without doubt is essential. So is the right lighting. I have a big search blaster (a torch!) that I use for light painting these places, plus a couple of other torches to light the way and back-up etc.

Search blasters are fine at doing their job, but have a very short battery life, often little more than 20 minutes.  Search blasters use a tungsten bulb, which provide a warm light. LED torches can be colder, and often turn blue when a long exposure is done.

painting-with-light-4 Settings are different down here. Different tunnels, due to their circumstances, light up very differently.

The orange iron ore and the white calcites that leach through the walls create wonderful colours, and flooded tunnels reflect the light off the water.

It’s worth experimenting with exposure times too. I always aim for the lowest iso possible to avoid noise, and often expose for 30 seconds between f7.1 and f9.  Obviously, the larger the aperture, the more light gets in, so play around and see what works best.

painting-with-light-3 Lining up shots is very important.  I tend to use the flash for this.

This shot [left] is actually two pictures.  The image on the left is the final version, on the right it the one lit by flash to line it up.  Once lined up, the shot is then taken.  During the time the shutter is open I use the searchblaster to light up the tunnel. “Paint” the walls, the roof and the floor as evenly as possibly to avoid areas being left dark, or burned out.

I’m aiming to get an even spread of light, remembering that areas further away will need more light than those close by.

painting-with-light-6 These places aren’t always easy to get to, and conditions may be poor.  I recommend spending the time getting all of the shots you want, and then some.

Don’t forget to look for other things worthy of capturing too.  One of the shots above shows an old airshaft, now capped on the surface.  Other features may include signs, old graffiti, track, or markings. It is always worth varying what you are doing too.

Different heights or angles add interest to the photograph. The photograph (above) shows the light source from further away from the camera, creating different shadows and greater contrast.

painting-with-light-7
Disclaimer: ‘exploration photography’ of this nature can be dangerous, and should be attempted at your own risk!

Click here to view Richboxfrenzy’s Flickr page

why you should shoot in RAW

Almost all entry-level, ‘prosumer’ and bridge cameras give you the option capture the RAW as well as (or instead of) the jpeg (.jpg).

There’s a good explanation of what RAW is here – but in short it is all the data your camera captures, uncompressed and unchanged.

Straight from the camera a RAW image might look ‘flatter’ and duller compared to a jpeg but as there is a lot more ‘data’ stored in the file about the image, there is greater scope for creating a pleasing image than working directly with a jpg.

White-balance

The first massive benefit of using RAW is being able to change the white balance after the photo has been taken.  For example, in the image below the white balance was way off due to the tungsten lighting in the church, but this was easily fixed by altering the white balance in post-processing:

Before: bad white balance

Changing the temperature / tint of the white balance is easy, and any popular editing applications (Photoshop, Paint Shop, Lightroom etc) can change this and rescue a badly lit image:

After: white balance fixed

Exposure

Another great thing about RAW is that any data in  ’blown’ or ‘clipped’ areas of an image, that would be lost during jpeg compression are often still there meaning you can have more scope to rescue a highly over or under exposed image.

Below, an example of a photograph which was accidentally over-exposed and was fixed during post processing – notice the detail still remains in the gentleman’s heads, and also some of the cloud detail in the sky was brought back:

Before: Over-exposed

After: Exposure reduced. Fixed

Any down-sides?

There are no real reasons why you shouldn’t shoot in RAW (as well as, or instead of) jpeg.  In the past one could argue that you are compromising on file-sizes, and you will run out of memory card space quicker; but as the price of memory cards go down and their capacity go up all the time I don’t think it’s any reason not to shoot in RAW.

quick guide on how to order photos


(Click the play button below)

  • Click on the collection
    below you would like to see.
  • Then click on the thumbnail
    of the image you are interested in to see a bigger
    version.  If you want to buy a print click ‘order’.
  • Select the size
    and quantity
  • Click ‘print
    option
    s’ if you want to selct matte/gloss finsish
  • Click ‘order
    to add that image to your
    basket
    .
  • Keep browsing the images or click on the shopping basket to
    pay and finish.

great photoshop tutorial videos

You Suck At Photoshop is a series of online Photoshop tutorials with adult-themed humor designed by Matt Bledsoe and Troy Hitch of the Big Fat Institute for Advanced Interactive Design and hosted at My Damn Channel. The show started as a one-off parody of instructional videos and became popular almost overnight; since its debut in December 2007, the first episode alone has received over 2.1 million views on YouTube, over 600,000 on My Damn Channel channel, and garnered national attention in Time Magazine.

- (quoted from Wikipedia article)

http://www.mydamnchannel.com/Big_Fat_Brain/You_Suck_at_Photoshop/YouSuckatPhotoshop1_398.aspx

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