Recent Posts from the Tag: Multiple Image BlendThe Need For SpeedAfter yesterday’s really fast looking motorcycle, I wanted to show a speedboat I photographed this summer. This is a multi-exposure shot, and I’ve obviously played with the colors to sing of summer, but the end result is a super shiny image of a very fast boat. Hope you like it – Will Click here to see all the images → The FiremanHere’s another Multi Image Blend piece of a senior I photographed recently. I do these Image Blends to tell extraordinary stories, and I think they are far more impactful than a traditional head and shoulders portrait. Meet Jacob – a Falmouth High School Senior with a purpose. While other kids were hanging at... [Click here to read the story and see all the images] The Samoset Pool PanoramaIn November of last year I was commissioned by Ocean Properties to create some images of a new pool they were building at the Samoset Resort in Rockport. If you’ve followed this blog for any length of time you know – the Samoset is one of my favorite hotels in New England, and I was jazzed to create some images. ... [Click here to read the story and see all the images] Stream on the Confederate TrailOn Prince Edward Island in Canada, there is a network of bike trails hundreds of miles long, perfectly manicured paths meandering through beautiful countrysides, and almost completely untraveled and open. On a three hour ride, it wouldn’t be at all unusual to pass less than ten other people enjoying the trails. There... [Click here to read the story and see all the images] On the WaterfrontThis is the harbor at Malpeque, the most colorful harbor I’ve ever seen. It’s like the San Francisco of working waterfronts. When I can, I’ll post some more images from this incredible harbor. In the meantime, this is a textural image. When I work with images, I want to evoke a feeling, or a sensory impression... [Click here to read the story and see all the images] Lobster TrapsLiving in Maine, Lobster Traps are a normal part of the landscape, cluttering up the piers like old tires in a junkyard. Except that what they represent – a rugged way to make a living by harvesting the most delectable little bugs – is a quintessential part of the Maine mystique. Click here to see all the images → On the BeachA lobster trap on a deserted beach – this makes sense, doesn’t it? But this, a bus-stop yellow bench, waiting at a beach that will never have a whole bus worth of people on it, well, this is a little out of place. Is it fuel for a bonfire, or just the world’s least comfortable beach chair? ... [Click here to read the story and see all the images] Hay RollsThis is a multi-image cross process. The shadow sections of our image have been white balanced for the cool light of dawn, while the highlights and sky are balanced to emphasize the sky. Lucia’s sister Nadia has a house just down the road from this farm, and I love the light patterns on the hay rolls. Click here to see all the images → The Bridge – Part IIThis is the same bridge as yesterday’s post, but with the view of the traveller, showing the expectation as one crests a footbridge, and the really interesting light that falls onto the beams. The day after I shot this, I saw a workman removing and replacing the first two beams at the bottom here (evidently, they were... [Click here to read the story and see all the images] The Bridge at St. Peters BaySt. Peters Bay is known for the mussels that are raised in the harbor, and is an entry point to the Points East loop of Prince Edward Island. Here’s another example of a multi-exposure image and the fun, painted look it gives a photograph. With a standard, single exposure the shadows below and on the bridge would be... [Click here to read the story and see all the images] |