i chose this music video because the way is been shoot is looks like Eadweard Muybridge photographs style.
For this photographs I used the same mattered to take it, except this time i also used fire cracker.
fast shutter speed
For this photographs me and my friends setup the Uni’s studio to experiment with fast shutter speed. the object we use were eggs.
Team work did: two of my friends did the egg smashing, one was on the camera, I mostly was the assistance and I did a bit of directing.
👍
A technique sometimes used for showing movement in photography is light trails. This is where the shutter is left open for a relatively long period of time and a light is moved around within the frame of the photograph. Where the light has been a trail is left, this is sometimes called light painting. It is a technique that I have used before and have utilised in other projects. It is this that have given me the interest to explore it further and combine it with this project for showing movement.
1 image
Harold Edgerton (1964) Bullet through Banana, dye transfer print 14 x 18 inches
2 image
Harold Edgerton (1964) .30 Bullet Piercing Apple, dye transfer print 14 x 18 inches
fast shutter speed
For this shoot I had assistance to help me with poring the food colours inside to the wine glass and my other friend help me to mix the water to get that waves that I have in some of my photographs. I experimented with different food colours as well.
#Contactsheets
I set my camera up on a tripod with a wide angle lens. There is vignetting around the edge of the shot as the camera that I used has a full frame sensor and the lens is not compatible with this. I could have cropped this to give me the same size image that I would have got from a cropped sensor camera, however I like the way it looks. It reminds me of an eye, being circular and this fits with the idea of us seeing more than just a single image that a photographs captures.
#creative
Woman’s Life - Hanna Seweryn
Photography
Be a Woman, a series of photographs where simple movements are transformed into beautifully dramatic gestures, each image features a bright glowing light that illuminates the shadow of an elegant female form behind the backlit screen. The monochromatic tones give the sensation of an antique photo a moment captured in time from the past.
Harold Edgerton
Atomic bomb explosions – from a series taken using his “rapatronic” camera
Edward Muybriadge