Tonight Laura and I took off for Wheatland, better known as Pasadena to do some experimental photography.
I have long been a fan of Troy Paiva's Lost America, which is full of fantastic night-time photography from the American South-West. He uses a technique called light painting, which basically involves having really long (10+ minute) shutter times, and "painting" the scene with colored light, either via flashlight or via a camera flash.
He recently switched to digital, and the fact that he's using a camera very similar to my own made me decide to FINALLY go out and try it myself. (I had been putting off trying it with film since my Pentax K-1000 is a pain, and my Sigma 35mm would eat batteries keeping the lens open for so long.)
So anyway, take a look. What you see here is exactly what the camera saw - these images have not been altered in Photoshop. In fact only one image was cropped, and that was just to get a ghost image of myself out of the frame.
Let me know what you think. I'm really pleased at the results from my first time.
I have long been a fan of Troy Paiva's Lost America, which is full of fantastic night-time photography from the American South-West. He uses a technique called light painting, which basically involves having really long (10+ minute) shutter times, and "painting" the scene with colored light, either via flashlight or via a camera flash.
He recently switched to digital, and the fact that he's using a camera very similar to my own made me decide to FINALLY go out and try it myself. (I had been putting off trying it with film since my Pentax K-1000 is a pain, and my Sigma 35mm would eat batteries keeping the lens open for so long.)
So anyway, take a look. What you see here is exactly what the camera saw - these images have not been altered in Photoshop. In fact only one image was cropped, and that was just to get a ghost image of myself out of the frame.
Let me know what you think. I'm really pleased at the results from my first time.