Back At Iron Creek (HDR)

Iron Creek high dynamic range photo taken by Scott ShephardI make a photographic pilgrimage to this place in the Black Hills of South Dakota two or three times a year. I have taken countless pictures here but in 2009, when the photos for today's post were taken, I was experimenting with high dynamic range photography. HDR photos are often two or more photos that are exposed for specific parts of a scene and re then combined.In 2009 the only process I knew for combining two photos into one was a labor intensive task and so I never got around to playing with these pictures. Until yesterday.The process now involves using an automated process in Photoshop CS5 and then importing the composite into Aperture and doing the fine tuning there.Beneath today's post I am revealing the original files. I'm not sure that I should show these files because you might think I am doing something unnatural to the scene to make it look better. But I'm letting you in on a bit of the amazing HDR process. And did Iron Creek really look like the final result in this post? More or less. I say this because HDR processing allows for surrealism and I would say that there is a bit of that here. The result, given the two original files, is certainly intriguing.

Print Friendly and PDF

An Abandoned World

A photo of corral taken by Watertown, SD, photographer Scott ShephardThis piece of coral was lying on a beach in Mexico that was covered with pieces of coral. I'm not sure what causes coral to wash up, or even what coral like this looked like when it was thriving in it's undersea world. But I do know that the many small structure make for good macro subjects - especially in low, angular light.

Print Friendly and PDF

Amazing Lines

The Siena Cathedral photographed by Watertown, SD, photographer Scott ShephardSorry if you don't like cathedral photos. I'm on a run of Siena Cathedral photos these days and I have one more in the next day or so. But it will be, as Rocky used to say to Bullwinkle, "something completely different."

Print Friendly and PDF

Duomo Siena

Duomo Siena in Siena, Italy, photographed by Watertown, SD, photographer Scott ShephardHere's another photo of the Siena Cathedral and one that I adjusted with Apple's raw image processing software called Aperture. I think it's an amazing tool but today I decided it is especially useful to people who shoot architectural interiors in poorly lit places - such as the Duomo Siena. I won't bore you with the technical details, but there are several places within this photo that got special and unique attention - something I never did in Photoshop.If you are wondering about all of those faces that are peering outward, those are portraits of every pope going back to St. Peter, Given that the duomo was built in the 1300's, I wonder if the builders had the foresight and imagination to leave room for at least another seven or eight hundred years of Popes?Canon 5DII 1/60s f/1.4 ISO400 50mm

Print Friendly and PDF

Under An Amazing Dome

The Duomo Siena taken by Watertown, SD, photographer Scott ShephardI have a weakness for domes, including this amazing structure. This shot was taken a few years ago and discarded (along with everything else I took in the cathedral.) The problem was that everything seemed so dark. But having found a way to resurrect photos like this, I offer this shot.

Print Friendly and PDF

The Other Half

Onion cross section photo by Watertown, SD, photographer Scott ShephardOne half ended up diced for our clam chowder soup. The other half ended up on the blog. I hadn't planned on taking a food photo but the symmetrical design struck me as worth of a closer look.This was shot with a 100mm macro lens in light that filtered in through our patio doors. I put the onion on a dark red cushion from a nearby bench and I think it provides a pretty good backdrop.

Print Friendly and PDF

Pretty? Yes. Creative? Probably Not.

So the assignment I gave my students last week was to capture South Dakota winter but to be "creative" in doing so. Of course, what complicates this assignment is what is meant by creative, though to me being creative as a photographer is partly being able to frame and capture something in ways no one else has. What has been submitted has been fun to see, though one of my favorites so far is a manhole cover photographed by a first year student named Tiffany. It doesn't show the beauty of our winters but that's what I like about it. (You should check out Tiffany's photo blog, by the way.)Anyway, I went out to see if I could do my own assignment. While there were amazing photo opportunities yesterday morning because of the frost, I'm afraid that creativity didn't abound. So today I present a pretty photo. But there's not much that is creative here. In fact, I just Googled "pine cones with frost" and I got 1.02 million results, some of which look a lot like my photo. I got 93,000 results when I searched for photos of "manhole covers with slush," but very few actually have slush. Can Google results be a partial measure of creativity?So ends my little discourse on creativity.

Print Friendly and PDF

Chaos?

I had been out in our back yard shooting photos of things covered in thick frost, when I encountered this jumble of pine needles growing out of a small, bushy tree. There was something about the exuberant randomness of the needles that caught my attention.Of course the crystals of frost and the way pine needles develop and grow are probably anything but chaotic. But to my photographic eye they seem to be and I like it.

Print Friendly and PDF

The Pantheon Redux

A photo of the Pantheon in Rome shot in 2007 by Watertown,SD, photographer Scott ShephardYes, this is a repeat - and I'm not even on vacation. Why the repeat? Because I've been learning some new things about photo editing. In fact, I've made a video:

Print Friendly and PDF

Vicky

Portrait of Vicki Bull taken by Scott ShephardI am continuing with my theme of "portraits from the past," this time with a photo of Vicky, who graduated from Watertown High School about 8 years ago.

Print Friendly and PDF

02-01-12 Kristin

Watertown gymnast Kristin Dunn photographed by Watertown, SD, portrait photographer Scott ShephardHere's another photo from my photographic past, this time of Kristin, one of the many fine gymnasts who represented Watertown Senior High School's gymnastic program. Not only was she a great gymnast but she was a wonderful portrait subject.This photo was taken at her parents' dance and gymnastics center, Dakota Gold. As I recall, I hadn't graduated to strobe lights and so I was using my "hot" lights. The advantage of continuous lighting is that the light you see is the light you get. The disadvantage is that it doesn't produce a lot of light. Thus, I was forced to use a fairly wide aperture. Truth be told, this photo suffers from camera shake, but ten years ago I wasn't smart of enough to see that. Today, this is a photo that probably wouldn't have seen the light of day.But I like the photo and so to try to make it look good, I used selective sharpening on Kristin's eyes. And then I blurred everything in Aperture, which is a great tool to help make art out of something that is less than perfect. Kristin, of course, is the most perfect part of this photo. :-)

Print Friendly and PDF

Joelle

This senior portrait of Watertown High School South Dakota senior Joelle was taken in 2003 by photographer Scott ShephardIn my search for photos from my early days of digital portraiture, I came across this photo of Joelle that I took almost 9 years ago. I had a great subject but the the photo also represents the power of Aperture by Apple as an editing tool in that in a minute or two I was able to retouch and then enhance the photo. All of this was done in preparation for my Advanced Digital Photography class at Lake Area Technical Institute.One of the nice things about teaching photography is that I learn at every step along the way and today was no exception.

Print Friendly and PDF