I tried the grinder/sparks idea early on, but i have a little bench grinder and couldn't make the "scene" impressive (the sparks looked good, but that was it). I really like yours. if it was mine (and i know it's not) i'd do it in the dark or with a dark backdrop to further enhance the contrast with the sparks. It looks like you were going for the whole "fire" color palette across the image.
When i see the chainsaw image, i just wonder what is a guy doing cutting at that angle from the top of a stump? and the shadow distracts me.
Both are fun shots for different reasons, but what I would really like to see is a shot of the grinder with your exposure stopped down so the sparks become the subject and the light source. Boy, think of the creativity that could bring. Have the person holding the metal wear eye protection that would reflect the sparks in it. Shoot from an angle that captures the sparks and the face witht he reflection in it. If you can reshoot, I would love to see what you could do with it. Good luck. That is my 2 cents. I think you may have overpaid though.
That is my 2 cents. I think you may have overpaid though.
I think it is definitely money well spent especially coming from such a distinguished and renowned photographer such as yourself
Great ideas… I’ll certainly try another shoot with your suggestions in mind I might be able to get my daughter to model and try the glasses reflection thing… most shots are of myself as the model with camera on a tripod, hey! Just like you Satch! Maybe there is hope for me yet…Thanks for the great ideas... Thanks for the comment Steve and Pyro...
I loved the first one when I first saw it and still do. For me it has the wow factor. Don't care for the second. Besides being gimmicky, the wonderful detail in the thumbs and the metal being honed gets lost. Not only that but the sparks become the subject of the photograph, not the machine and what it is doing.
Virginia
_______________________________________________ "A photograph is a secret about a secret. The more it tells you, the less you know." Diane Arbus
Comments
I tried the grinder/sparks idea early on, but i have a little bench grinder and couldn't make the "scene" impressive (the sparks looked good, but that was it). I really like yours. if it was mine (and i know it's not) i'd do it in the dark or with a dark backdrop to further enhance the contrast with the sparks. It looks like you were going for the whole "fire" color palette across the image.
When i see the chainsaw image, i just wonder what is a guy doing cutting at that angle from the top of a stump? and the shadow distracts me.
Some of My Photos: app.electrikfolio.com/v/steven-hatch
pyroPrints.com/5819572 The Photo Section
I think it is definitely money well spent especially coming from such a distinguished and renowned photographer such as yourself
Great ideas… I’ll certainly try another shoot with your suggestions in mind I might be able to get my daughter to model and try the glasses reflection thing… most shots are of myself as the model with camera on a tripod, hey! Just like you Satch! Maybe there is hope for me yet…
Thanks for the comment Steve and Pyro...
Winston
anyone else? thoughts?
PS: your new avatar is a little disturbing =c/
pyroPrints.com/5819572 The Photo Section
http://lrichters.smugmug.com
Virginia
"A photograph is a secret about a secret. The more it tells you, the less you know." Diane Arbus
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Winston