Never work with animals

Monday was quite a  demanding day on the photography front. I had to photograph a Chameleon, spider and snake. The old adage ‘never work with animals’ is so true! There is always an element of unpredictability and  a lot of patience is needed to get what you want. My experience  of photographing animals in a controlled lighting environment goes back a few years, when I photographed a variety of ‘creatures’ for a major advertising campaign . Therefore, I had a good idea of  what to expect. We started with a male Panther Chameleon, who was very tame and manageable. The only downside was he did not display his best colours, I guess under the pressure of being in a very different environment he was a bit ‘camera shy’. As we were trying to create a virtual tour of each animal, the shots composed of various close ups and details. Later we would change the lighting to photograph the animals from underneath. The lighting was an honeycomb from the left hand side, a strip light from above and a another strip light to the right. Also, used a ring flash for the ultra close ups.The Chameleon was an easy subject, it settled happily on a small branch and moved slowly enough to keep focus. Most of the time I used my Mamiya 645 AFD with a 120 mm macro lens and a no 1 and no 2 extension tube, depending on how close I needed to get in. Depth of field was not an issue as it was nice to have a good focus fall off, to draw the eye to the focussed details. Most of the time I was shooting at around f18. I do not like to close down too much with this lens as it starts to go beyond its optimum performance, which is noticeable when shooting with digital. The next creature was a Mexican Red Knee Tarantula, which was quite hand-able to photograph We tried several other types of large spiders but they just wanted to run off the set. I had to get some ultra close ups, so  this is where the 65mm macro and Canon EOS 1DS mk2 was used. This lens is incredible for macro work and for the photographs of the spiders eyes and fangs came into its own. I also used the ring flash to push a bit more light into the picture, which at such close distances would be difficult with just side lighting. This lens requires a lot of concentration in focusing, the image in the viewfinder is quite dim and too minimise vibration, especially at x3 magnification and above you need to lock up the mirror first. The animal handler held the spider on its the legs so we could get a close up of the fangs. To achieve focus I got him to move the spider slowly towards the lens until it was pin sharp. Sounds a bit hit and miss but it worked a treat! The snake was next, again we were looking for a selection of features including scales, eye, spurs, nostrils and overall pictures. We had a couple of Boa Constrictors to work with, a young one which was about 70 cm long and an adult at around 1.8 metres. I chose the larger one as i thought It would be better for the pictures. However, as soon as it was placed on the background  it just wanted to ‘escape’, whatever the animal handlers tried it just did not work. The only photograph we used it for was for  the close up of one if its spurs [ What was once in it s evolution history, where it had limbs ]. The animal handlers had to hold the snake very firmly for this shot and struggled to do so, it was amazing to see how much strength a  a 1.8 metre  snake had! We succeeded and put the snake away and for the other pictures used the far more manageable smaller Boa Constrictor. This was so much easier to work with and stayed in position to be photographed.

From underneath

A complete set change to photograph the animals from underneath. This is the part I had been really looking forward to, as something I had not done commercially. A few days previously I had done a few test shots with this set up, so I knew it would work. It is best not to leave anything to chance on the day, especially when time is so tight. I placed a large piece of strengthened glass on some trestles and used a strip light as the main light and some fill  from a medium sized softbox and a reflector at the rear of the set for additional fill to help ‘bounce’ the light around. About 2 Metres above the glass, I clamped into position a large white board which was lit by 2 flash heads with spill kills. This in effect would be the white background as seen from camera position. We started with the spider, got some reasonable shots, but from underneath was not very colourful and quite dark. Next came the snake and finally the Chameleon. I knew the moment the Chameleon was on the set that he was the perfect subject for this type of lighting, as very little of him was directly in contact with the glass and thus was able to light him well from underneath. He stayed absolutely motionless as I lay down below the glass and hand held the camera with my Mamiya 645 AFD and 80 mm digital lens. I captured several images and then checked them for exposure and sharpness on my laptop. I felt really pleased with out come and after a long and intense day, it had made it all worthwhile. Must say thanks to Steve of Emerald Exotics for the use and handling of his reptiles

Posted in News

Henry the Eighth’s Armour and Weapons

In May 2008 I got a call from one of my clients: The Royal Armouries who asked me to quote for a job of photographing all the King Henry armours held by the Royal Armouries in The Tower of London and their main museum site in Leeds. This sounded like a great job and quite special, some of the armour had not been photographed for over twenty years! So, I put in a quote as part of a legal tender process and fingers crossed, hoped I would get the commission. I had worked in the Armouries  before for various publishers and  for them directlys, so I had lots of experience photographing lots of shiny swords, guns and arrmour. A few weeks past before I got a phone call to say that I had got the job. I was pretty excited  at the challenge ahead! The brief entailed photography for  a ‘coffee table’ type book that would coincide with a year long exhibition of Henry at the Tower of London called; “Dressed To Kill”. This was to commemorate 500 years since Henry was crowned King of England. Further usage of the pictures would be for exhibition display and for merchandise. The criteria was also to create a ‘ fashion ‘ look  for the images, as the exhibition was based around Henry as a highly fashionable man, which was reflected in his armour and clothing.  We thought the best way to achieve this was to get away from the more  conventional way of photographing museum artefacts and instead use more ‘drop focus’ and more ‘ back lighting’ with black backgrounds, so the armour would stand out.

Work begins at The Tower Of London

The photography was arranged for early July, where I would have a week and a bit for photographing two complete suits of armour and all the additional pieces including helmets, small arms, swords. It was certainly going to be challenging! As usual budgets dictated the amount time  allocated for photography. At the beginning of the week I arrived at the Tower with a considerable amount of equipment, and was shown  a room which had been used for storage. My heart sank as there was no way I could photograph full armour let alone some of the  weapons in here, not only was it tiny but it had a ceiling height of only about 1.8 Metres. After some discussion with the  Designer and Art Director it was agreed that we needed somewhere substantially larger. Space is a premium in the Tower Of London and the only possible place that I could work in would be in The White Tower, which is the oldest and the most original part of the Tower, which is a Norman Keep.  Henry’s armour and trimmings were all on display in here so at least they would not have to travel far to photographed. even so, this was still a big undertaking as the this building was being visited by thousands of tourists a day. I must say the staff at the Tower were extremely  resourceful and motivated and in no time had cordoned off half of the middle floor for the photography, yet still tourists could flow past and watch us all at work! We had to put up some screens as it was felt that the flash photography could be a health risk for any who was susceptible  to epilepsy. The area allocated for the photography was huge! With really high ceilings and quite dark with overhead spotlights. Although I now had a fantastic working space, the flash would dissipate quite quickly in such a large space. I decided that the way forward was to build a mini studio inside the room. After many trips to the car and climbing 3 flights of stairs we finally got all the equipment into the room. I had brought with me several very large white nylon sheets with me. These are extremely useful when photographing very large objects on location which need to be cut out. But, on this occasion they would be used to ‘contain’ the flash. We acquired some moveable scaffold and proceeded to tie chord around large wooden timbers in the room. Next we attached the cloth to the chord with small bulldog clips and we created a 3 sided ‘room’. Next lights went up which was an assortment of  softboxes, honeycombs and bareheads with standard reflectors. By the time all this was completed the day was over, next day the photography would begin!

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    View of set, showing full armour of Henry the Eighth ready to be photographed

    hen16

    Final image of Henry The Eighth armour on black background

    The first armour we photographed was known as Henry’s ‘Silver and Grey’ which was the earliest surviving armour of his, from the period in which Henry was very slim and trim! It was mounted on a horse and so we planned to photograph in the same way as the old wooden frame underneath the armour was set in that position. To access the armour and horse, the curator had to remove a very large glass panel as it was located inside  a large glass case. When things like this are removed , there can be various problems. The removal of the glass went without without a hitch. But then, disaster nearly struck as they tried to remove the paper mache horse from its mount. This horse was made in the 1920′s and was the worse for wear, as they started to move it from its mount the horse started to break up. The curator was extremely worried and would not allow the removal of the horse from the case. We were now left in a situation in which we had the armour but no mount! I had a little think and proposed that we mounted the armour on a high stool which would be secured by one of my flash packs and a magic arm! The curator agreed and we tested the set up before standing away from the armour which was mounted complete with saddle and stirrups. This was not an ideal situation as we had to be very careful of our composition and keep the shots relatively tight. More importantly we were dealing with a national treasure something that was basically priceless. so I was grateful that the staff had every confidence in my work around!

    The Silver and Grey Armour on its 'mount'

    The Armour on its 'mount' Notice 'blind' Art Director!

  2. The lighting was put into place around the armour and a black velvet background was put behind the armour. The process now was to get the lighting balanced. In all there were 5 to 6 lights used depending on the angle and size of shot. The main lights were large  softboxes  that were bounced  off large reflector screens and then diffused through translucent screens. This really soaked up the light and each light was on maximum power from the packs at 3000 joules each. The smallest aperture at 125 ISO was f16. This was not such an issue as we wanted some drop focus. The other lights were used for picking up highlights on the edge of the armour and comprised of strip lights and honeycombes. Again they were diffused through diffusion screens. The problem with armour is that is very reflective and easily burns out, so softening the light is a necessity. The balance is holding detail but at the same time not lighting too ‘flat’. I always start with the general lighting, then gradually introduce effects lights to ‘enhance’ the subject. This particular suit of armour was not the shiniest, so I could work with slightly harder light sources, unlike some of the pieces I would have to photograph later on. A variety of shots were achieved and by the end of the day had photographed this suit of armour.

    Detail of silvered inlay, most of which has now been worn awat

    Detail of silvered inlay, most of which has now been worn away

    Up In Leeds

    A few weeks later I had a week to finish off the armours up in Leeds. Here,  things were a little bit easier, a fully functional photographic studio meant that I did not have to ‘build’ a set for the armour. With white walls and a grey floor, the lighting was a lot  easier to control. More importantly because I could black out the space, I could gain a smaller aperture by switching off the lights and multi flashing. This was impossible at the Tower of London as the overhead spotlights were permanently on. Therefore, having the shutter open for a long period for multi flashing would have been a big problem as the spotlights would have recorded and effected the lighting of the armour. We photographed two suits of armour and accessories over the week. These were very shiny. Therefore, I used a roll of Tough Rollux. This was used around a frame and the armour was placed inside it. Very shiny objects act like mirrors, so you need to reflect something onto it, otherwise it just photographs black when using flash, The opposite problem is that if it picks up any direct light sources then it will burn out. So the Rollux was used to help solve this problem. Lots of white paper was used in strategic positions to lift the armour as necessary. Again, lots of indirect lighting was used to keep the lighting ‘soft’ enough for the armour. Of course this resulted in flash power being reduced considerably and multi flashing was essential to gain the necessary flash output

    If you look at the picture below, you will get a good idea of how the lighting was set up.

    Field of Gold Tournament Armour on set

    Field of Gold Tournament Armour on set

    Notice the paper on the one side which was used to reflect onto the armour, the same would be applied to the other side before photographing

    Curator and Designer putting armour together on set

    Curator and Designer putting armour together on set

     Field Of Gold Armour

    Field Of Gold Armour

    'Holding on to' Henry's famous codpiece on Articulated Armour. Armour being put into position

    'Holding on to' Henry's famous codpiece on Articulated Armour. Armour being put into position

Posted in Past Assignments Tagged , , , , |

Testing Canon 65mm macro lens

close up matchead

Canon 65mm macro at x4 magnification, daylight f16 25 secs ISO 640

Posted in Work

My wide colour gamut monitor

Recently bought an Eizo ColourEdge CG241W monitor, after using a Lacie CRT Electron Blue IV for several years.  There seems to be a lot of choice out there for high end LCD monitors from manufacturers such as Eizo, NEC and Lacie to name a few. They all were capable of displaying most of the Adobe 1998 colour profile. After a bit of research I decided to go with the Eizo. Using it is has been revelation: Deep blacks, rich colours and good contrast, but more importantly the clarity and sharpness compared to my old CRT was in another league! Comparing the two side by side made the images on the CRT somewhat ‘soft’ and ‘fuzzy’.

Using the Eizo with an Apple Laptop

I use the Eizo with a Macbook Pro, and when using Photoshop CS4  I  have all the palettes on the laptop screen and the big image on the monitor, the same applies when using Capture One Pro [my preferred Raw Converter especially as I work tethered, for capturing images]

It soon came apparent though, that images displayed on my Eizo, especially skin tones and reds were displaying far more intensly than the laptop. At first I thought it must be the wider colour gamut of the monitor displaying colours that I could not see previously. But that begged question “how will it look in print”  So I printed out a proof from my printer which has been custom profiled and therefore fairly close to Photoshop’s soft proofing on the monitor. The result was skin tones and reds were absolutely fine. Obviously the problem lay with the monitor or so it seemed. Something was not quite right? Tried re-calibration of the monitor but nothing changed. I know one should not judge colour from a laptop screen, but my  laptop screen has been good enough to see heavy colour casts and the images looked fine on it.  So I started to investigate a little deeper. Found some really information from Eizo and Adobe regarding using Open GL Draw in CS4 with multi monitors It is the case that when Open GL Drawing is enabled, the colour management is only correct on the primary monitor [In this case the laptop screen}. The only work around at the moment is to go to your Photoshop Preferences menu, choose Performance, then deselect Open Gl Drawing in the checkbox and then reboot Photoshop.

After switching off the GL capability my monitor displays fine. The downside is that you know longer have the capability to use the GPU to use the functions that are some of the new features of Photoshop CS4, such as animation zoom and canvas rotation. Instead, it workse like the earlier versions of Photoshop in which the zoom feature was not so smooth and somewhat 'jagged' at odd number zooms [33.3% 67.7%]. But, I think it is a small price to have the colour displaying properly. If anyone knows of any other solution I would like to know.

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Eizo Monitor with Open GL Draw on

gl-draw-off

Eizo Monitor with Open GL Draw off

Gl-Draw-pref

Photoshop CS4 Preference Pane showing Checkbox

Posted in Technology Tagged , , , , |

Accidental Picture

ladybird-2jpg

Photographed a Ladybird for the cover of a small field guide of British Insects. The intention was to get a nice overhead shot of the Ladybird. The insect was quite shiny so I used a honeycomb as the main light, so to keep the highlight quite small. A reflector was used on the opposite side as fill in. Because I wanted no shadows, I put the insect on glass and lit a white board underneath the glass, but far enough away as to not light the subject.

Depth of field is a problem and to help keep focus I needed to keep the insect quite still. Putting it in the fridge for a while, seems to make insects quite ‘sleepy’. So after a short period, I took it out of the fridge and was able to place it underneath the lens. The trick now was to photograph it after it started to ‘wake  up,’  and just enough for it  to start to move, so I could see all its legs. A bit hit or miss, but eventually I got what I wanted.

The picture above was not the one I intended, for when the insect woke up completely and became very active, the wings came out and it started to beat them rapidly. I took a quick ‘snap’ and the result was really interesting, I really like the symmetry and the blur at the tip of the wings. The wings were beating so quickly,  that a relatively fast flash duration could not freeze the motion. After the picture was taken, the ladybird flew off the set and found freedom again!

Posted in Work Tagged , , , |

Preparing For Next Week

Creepy Crawlies

Photographing a large spider, Chameleon and Snake next week, they will be used for some chapter openers on a new book on animal life.

Hired a 65mm macro lens for the Canon. This is an impressive lens, which has x5 magnification capability. Used on such high magnification is not a simple task as depth of field is so narrow, add that to a moving subject you have to be really on the ‘ball’. Will test it over the weekend, with my Bowens ring flash. Looking at modifying the ring fash so it can be used  easier. At the  moment it is quite cumbersome and heavy. Will  adapt it so it is more like the latest ring flash from Bowens which has a hand grip and is much more manageable . Maybe a piece of wood from a broom handle will be sufficient, until a more permanent solution is worked out!

For slightly wider shots will use a Phase One Mamiya and P30 back, with No1 and No2 extention tubes on my 120mm macro lens. Again, will test the lighting this weekend with the ring flash and some additional side lighting, as I do not want the lighting to look too ‘flat’

Some of the pictures will be of the underneath of a snake, so I planning to use a large piece of glass and photographing from below.

Guess there is a lot to think about, planning is always the key to a successful photo shoot. Keep you posted over the next few days

Posted in News

latest Work

Mus-002

Artificial Hand 16th Century

Posted in News

My first ever blog

Trying my first ever Blog. A little about myself: a photographer who has been doing this since leaving college in 1990. I work about 75% of the time on location in the UK and abroad often in museums. Rest is studio based here in lovely Oxfordshire. If I need a studio near some of my bigger clients then I will hire one in London.

Excited about doing this, hopefully will give you all an insight to how I work, as sometimes I get to photograph some pretty special things. Working for some major book publishers gives me a fair amount of diversity. But budgets are often small, so I have to work fast and efficiently. Hoping to engage the reader with my experiences past and present. Will try to post pictures of set ups etc with a little bit of technical writing, not just to show the end result!

Posted in News