Posts Tagged ‘cars’

audi-acious

Tuesday, July 22nd, 2008

So Saturday lunchtime arrives and I find myself at a loose end, a quick call to Sami and an impromptu rig shoot is arranged.

For a while I’ve been thinking that Cheddar Gorge might lend itself to some interesting rig work. I’ve taken a couple of half decent car photos there before, like these Ferrari shots and I thought the grey gorge walls could work well with the red car.

I’m pleased enough with these all things considered, although I made more mistakes than I would have liked.

Audi TT rig shot

Audi TT rig shot

Audi TT rig shot

and a couple of interior shots I liked.

Audi TT 240 Quattro sport

Audi TT 240 Quattro sport

“There,” said the Mayor. “That’s that.”

it’s MINI, not Mini (apparently)

Friday, July 18th, 2008

I know it will probably come as a massive shock, but I’ve done another rig shot. Shocking I know, but there you go, and here it is.

MINI rigshot

Firstly what I like. It’s sharp and the rig was rock solid throughout. I love the colours, the composition is good and the photoshop work to get rid of the rig only took about 15 minutes. As I’ve seen other people saying they spend between 1 and 5 hours on an image, I’m happy with my results for a 1/4 hour session.

Perhaps for the right image I would spend longer but in this case I couldn’t see the point.

Now the bad things. This was done in a car park which you can clearly tell by the white lines, so it’s not quite as good all round as the Fiesta one I took from a similar angle. Presumably I could get rid of the white lines by editing them out, heck, I might even give that a go at some time. Which goes some way to proving my earlier comment that I couldn’t see the point to be a big fat stinking lie.

top secret

Wednesday, July 9th, 2008

I’ve been asked by a few people to show photos of my rig. I’ll start by saying a lot of photographers that work with rigs will not show photos of, or describe their rig. This is not something I really understand. My attitude is that your work should speak for itself without having to shroud your methods in secrecy.

Perhaps this is because my photos aren’t good enough to be in print and so it’s easy for me to be open about what equipment I use…

In any case after that it would be churlish of me not to post a photo of my rig.

Car camera rig

It’s really quite simple:

1.) Manfrotto suction cups
2.) Arri clamps
3.) 5/8th” Aluminium round bar.

Please note, I’m not saying my system is perfect or the best you could do – I know of people using single bars to get huge distances but as they wont share how they do it, I can’t say any more than that. All I can do is share what I use, and the results in my rigshots pages.

If you have a question, ask me!

In the spirit of sharing I’ll post a photo here that I don’t want to use as an example of my rig work. There are several serious problems with this photo which would mean I’d never normally post it except for one thing… The magic van.

BMW Z4

I know the processing work on this is bad, and that it’s not sharp. But look at that van! The entire background is a blur, except for the silver van on the right. This is not faked or photo shopped.

I can only assume it was travelling at the exact same speed relative to the camera panning. I can’t see how I’d ever achieve this if I was trying to, this has to be a one in a million shot. Shame that can’t be said of the rest of the photo!

home and away

Tuesday, July 8th, 2008

Two photos today, how exciting!

First, I promised the next rig shot I posted would not be of my car, and as a man who occasionally attempts to keep the odd promise, I present to you a Seat Leon!

Seat Leon,  Rigshot

This time round the image is slightly disappointing, because I didn’t consider carefully the interaction between the grey car, sky and road. My excuse I was rushing, but that’s a rubbish excuse.

Next up, I decided I’d get a canvas print done of my favourite photo – Yokohama by night – which I then had to frame myself. Of course the wife then points out the existing decor in the living room doesn’t suit this, so we re-decorate and get new sofas.

Living room

I’m very pleased with how the print came out and how the room looks, and more importantly, so is the wife!

Coming soon – BMW Z4 and Audi TT rig shots. Oooooooooh……

rig-gle me this

Thursday, July 3rd, 2008

I’ll eventually run out of appalling puns where I try to replace any word with something involving “rig”, when this happens either;

- The world will end
- I’ll have to start taking photos of something else

I don’t like to overstate my powers but I fear it will be the first, so any suggestions are greatly appreciated. Moving swiftly on, any day that has a “y” in it’s name is a good day for taking photos, and as I’ve proved before I’m a one trick pony most of the time. My new trick is using my whizzy new rig to photograph cars travelling at break neck speeds.

Automotive Rig, Fiesta

By “break neck” I mean an insane 1mph which is the fastest I can push the car when I’m on my own. I know, pretty fast by anyone’s standards.

Automotive Rig, Fiesta

I will now promise that the next rig shot I post wont be of my car. By promise of course I mean that I’ll maybe post a different car, but probably not. I’ve been thinking about ways I can attach the rig to a dog, but apparently stuff like that is cruel, so I’ll attach it to a person instead.

having a rig-gle

Wednesday, July 2nd, 2008

I went out and had another go with my new rig last week, the intention is that I learn and make mistakes with my car, rather than when I’m doing a shoot with someone else’s car.

This time, I was much more careful with the rig placement – this meant that when processing the shot I didn’t have to do nearly as much post processing work as the first attempt.

Fiesta ST,  Rig

Issues:

1.) The rig isn’t long enough. I’ve got some extension poles being delivered tomorrow which should take car of that problem, as long as they fit!
2.) The car isn’t lit as well as the first attempt, so it’s a much less dramatic photo.
3.) Huge problems with odd speckles and highlights all over the frame. Some research suggests this might be due to dust/dirt on the lens elements. A retry will confirm this.

So, progress of a sort, I’m almost ready to start sticking it onto other people’s automobiles and see what happens!

I’ve also got some Cokin ND filters on the way, which should help me with using the setup in daylight, proving that as with everything else photography related, the first purchase is really only the tip of the iceberg. And my iceberg is melting…