Melissa in the Hall

Following up my post a last week with Melissa a few more from that second shoot. The setup for these is much the same as the last image with a little tweak. A single flash behind the door at the end of the hall still provides the only light, but the door now opens wider. The flash now casts a beam through the more open door illuminating more of the hall along with the floor around Melissa. That single flash provides the only light for these images. I left the flash unmodified to produce a very harsh light to better bring out the textures in the wall and give a high contrast lighting reminiscent of film noir. The film noir style focuses on moody, dark, and dramatic themes with a low key black and white lighting style.

So a bit about the setup behind these images and the path that got to here. A few days before this shoot I’d watched the Humphrey Bogart/Lauren Bacall version of The Big Sleep based of the Raymond Chandler novel. It’s a classic film noir and my personal favorite example of the genre. The film tells a tale of a private investigator played by Bogart that becomes embroiled in a mess of blackmail, murder, and betrayal after being hired by a wealthy man to handle his daughter’s gambling debts. Like most film noir the story contains elements of sex, blackmail, crime that have led crime stories to be associated with the genre.

After shooting some images as the last I posted with Melissa peeking into a cracked door, the idea came for these. The light already had an element of that noir look and I enhanced that by shifting the light and removing the modifiers to give sharp lined shadows and hard contrast lighting. Our thought here was the story of a male presence along with a nude woman in a simple interaction of looking at each other across a small distance. The male presence is myself in a rare appearance in front of the camera. The camera is on a tripod at the far end of the hallway from Melissa and being triggered by a remote. I don’t remember for these two, but in several of them Melissa has the remote and triggered the camera hiding it shadow for the shot.

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I like the first image above mostly from Melissa’s pose and expression. The male looks to have just come into the hallway and found her here. The look on Melissa’s face has just enough ambiguity in its neutrality to make you wonder at her reaction to the arrival. She seems a little concerned and guarded. There’s the question of why is she in the hall? Why is she nude? Who is this person with her? What is their relationship? What’s inside that room with the open door? My positioning where I stand in silhouette and block any view beyond her are both intentional to add mystery to the scene.

In the second below I’m a more full presence and I like the connection of her looking up at me as I look down toward her. Her pulled in body contrasts with the less guarded expression. In both images I think there are several stories once can fit to the scene. What are the intents of both characters and what relation do they have? Why are they here? It’s that ambiguity and question I wanted to capture in these photos. In the end a noir story or movie isn’t about the results. You don’t watch The Big Sleep to find out who killed the chauffeur, you watch to see the investigation and the twists and turns of the story. Here the photo doesn’t tell you what happened before this moment or afterward, but provides enough for you to write your own story around it.

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Melissa from Winter

I know I’m posting kind of randomly right now. I’ve had a number of shoots this year I’ve not posted anything from so I’ve been making an effort to go back and catch up on some of the better ones. Here I’m going all the way back to end of last year and first of this one with and some shoots with Melissa Troutt. She’s always one of my favorite models to work with and one of the best art models I’ve ever had the chance to collaborate with. We end up with some interesting things every time we work together and that’s part of what makes our collaborations so enjoyable. I spent some time last week going through those photos again this past week and realized I’d never posted any of these so I’m correcting that.

First a couple of her in a simple setup with her lying on a white sheet draped over a large sofa and natural light coming through a sheer curtain on a window to the side and behind me. I love the eye contact with the camera and her body pose in this image.

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Another that I really like. Her I think her face has a nice subtle emotion with a hint of sadness and regret. It’s a good pose again as it enforces that feeling of sadness in her body. I do wish I’d had Melissa move her forearm a bit to completely cover her nipple as i think the image would have worked even better as an implied nude.

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One more for this post from a different shoot with her that’s completely different. Here we have a much different setup. The ambient light provides just enough light to give shape and the primary light is a flash that shows through the crack in the door. I like the element of mystery to this one with the darkness on her body leaving her nude, but only barely revealed and the question of what she’s looking into the door for. Is she looking to get in or out? There’s a lot of stories I think can be placed into this photo.

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I’ve a couple more of Melissa and this same shoot for a later post, but that’s all for now.

Leanne Without Snake

Adapting to change is always a useful ability for any photographer. I’ve rarely had a shoot where everything went according to original plan and often some of the best work comes from the unexpected. The unexpected can be good or it can be bad and the difference often comes from how well you adapt to the changes and work them into the shoot. Finding the water over a falls too hard to get a model into might lead you to posing a different way. An example of needing to adjust came after the snake encounter I mentioned a few postings ago.

I’d come to Arizona without planning to do many indoor shots, but I had planned for the possibility of a few and had brought some lighting for those with me. This meant Leanne and I were able to finish that shoot back at my hotel in Phoenix. I’d not planned anything beforehand so I largely had to make this up on the fly, but I think it worked out in the end. While I’d hoped to get in much more outdoor time with her, the results of the indoor work I think came in quite nice.

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In the Woods with Porcelain

There has been a lot of poor luck around my outdoor work this year. Many planned outdoor work was postponed by the rainy weather that’s been common this spring and early summer and much by cancelations, postponements, and rescheduling. And then there was my encounter with a reptile in Arizona. Still I have gotten a few nice outdoor shoots in this year such as this one in May with Porcelain. We were a bit constrained on time so we headed to one of my favorite locations near Asheville to get in a quick shoot.

The heavy rain of the weeks before meant a lot of water over the falls and I spent most of the shoot standing in water resulting in a later purchase of new socks. It also meant getting her her into the falls would definitely not have been safe and the sun wasn’t in the best spot. Still I think we got a few nice shots from the shoot.

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Snakes … Why Did There Have to Be…

Okay so the title gives away the ending, but there are photos so indulge me. My plan for June included a trip to Arizona. Let’s just say almost nothing went according to plan. In fact I’d go as far as to say it would be hard to describe the trip without using the word “cluster.”

In spite of the problems I did have the chance to work in a few nice shoots. Near the end of my time in Phoenix I had the chance to work with Leanne, a wonderful model suggested by a friend. We’d planned a shoot in the desert outside the city. Everything went perfectly at first. It was hot, about 110 that day as I recall, but we’d scheduled the late afternoon past the worst of the day’s heat. We headed to the location and started to work right before the good golden light of sunset moved in.

The first shooting location went well. We found a nice rock formation near the top edge of a small canyon. The timing worked perfectly since we arrived as the sun started to set providing that wonderful golden light. This image comes from that first area and is probably my favorite of the outdoor images of the day.

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We next moved to a new spot and worked for a few minutes. The sun really started getting a nice glow at this point leading to these two images.

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Perhaps a minute after the second of those two images, I looked down before moving to my left to reposition. It’s a habit I’ve developed in years of outdoor shooting on occasionally iffy terrain. It also is something I’d drilled in while planning for some backpacking in the desert that had been planned to be careful where you put your foot or hand for any of the less desirable desert residents that might be around.

As you probably guessed from the title, in this case it was a very good thing. When I looked in the direction I’d planned to move I saw a rattlesnake coiled up about three feet away (a speckled rattlesnake to be exact). No rattle or threatening stance, but just the reptile trying to blend in and not be seen. I froze, told Leanne not to move either, and then very slowly move to a safer distance before more quickly moving much further away. Once out of danger we gathered our things and left the area to our new little friend.

I’m not overly fond of snakes, in fact I’d go as far as to say I have a phobia of them. Leanne also didn’t seem eager to continue working in the area after the encounter so that ended the outdoor shooting for the day. We did some more work indoors later, but those will come another time. The lesson here is to be aware of your surroundings when shooting outdoors. The snake was camouflaged very well against the rock and had I not taken the time to distinctly look around I would have moved directly toward him in my next step. Instead all escaped unharmed.

I have to say though, worst shoot crasher ever.

Orias with Invisible Man

I usually go into a shoot with the concepts that I want to work around pretty much in mind. Often though when working with a model the two of us combine ideas and produce something different than the original plan, and usually to a better result. These photos arose from that. Orias and I were working on some images with her wearing black gloves and I noted an almost Venus De Milo effect when I moved to a low key lighting against a black background. We explored that concept and This led to the idea of playing up that using the fact that wearing flat black on this background and lighting left those parts invisible. We played with it a few different ways. First some shots with someone else draped in black behind her and out of the light. The result is the other person isn’t visible and where his body overlays hers you get an almost cut out effect. The concept is actually pretty old. I believe it goes back to stage magic in the 1800’s if not earlier. In this first photo you can just see the arm to the right of the model.

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In some other images we shifted a bit. Here you can see how her arms disappear where she’s wearing the gloves while only the non black covered arms of the other person are visible. I’d prefer an assistant to stand in as the shadow here, but without one I had to improvise and work on both sides of the camera. Needles to say, this requires a very professional approach and a lot of trust between model and photographer given the contact involved. I’m wearing black pants, a black shirt, and a black ski mask pulled down. Even a slight sliver of skin showed up in photos and in one of these I did have to clone out a small element of my neck that peeked out during the shot. The camera is mounted on a tripod. A wireless remote allowed triggering of the camera and a delayed timer on the camera allows the shot to be triggered and then to finish posing.

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An interesting set of images and while not something I’d do everyday or even that often, I think they came out well.

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Noir with Shelby J

Had the chance to work with Shelby back in April. We did a number of styles of work, but my favorites from the shoot came from some later images. Both are interestingly implied nudes where Shelby is only lit by a single light that’s been tightened down to a small circle of light. The first is the noir styled image. I intentionally left the light visible here as I like the effect of it almost as a camera at the side and I think gives the overall image a bit more interesting feel that ties in with her expression. I’d consider this an implied shot even though her nipple is just visible under one arm.

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From just a bit later comes another image. This one I leave color thought the lighting is similar, in this case reduced to a bright strip with barn doors on the strobe. I like the intense look from Shelby off the camera here. Again an implied shot.

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Overall a nice shoot and there are some other photos I’ll come back and share at a later time.

Working with Ivy lee

Had the chance to work with Ivy Lee for the first time last month. A nice lingerie shot from some glamour work we did early on. I’ve picked up a new plugin for black and white work that I’m playing with so look for some of the more art styled and nudes later on.

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Light Painting with Keira and Angela

During the summer days I love working in the mountains. If you’ve not experienced it, it can be hard to believe the difference a couple thousand of feet in elevation can make. The downside of that can be when shooting late or at night you can get into some cool temperatures even in the summer months, especially for the model standing around nude. But during these summer days I took advantage of the warmth and a nice isolated area I’d discovered to try my hand at some outdoor light painting. I’d started with light painting earlier this year in a couple shoots. Here I wanted to take the concept outdoors and see what I could work out. Both shoots were interesting that they had some complications and were not smooth coordinating schedules, but both worked nicely and I’m happy with the results.

First with Keira and I already shared photos from the daytime part of that shoot. Afterward we waited out the late mid-summer sunset and tried some light painting. A few nice results below:

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Also had a similar experience with Angela. She and I had tried to work out a time that worked for both of us when suddenly we were able to work out a time to collaborate. I met her in Asheville and we again headed up into the mountains. The weather threatened enough that we at shifted our location to be neared the car in case the lightning that flashed around us turned into an actual storm, which it never did. I was happy with the work and felt a little better control and understanding of what I was doing this time. The shift had a nice benefit in that it located a wonderful bank I was able to pose her against including the photos below.

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