Ah, procrastination. But finally, we're starting it...
After shooting a wedding together, Rebecca recently posted on Facebook a shot of me shooting, with the quip "You can tell the photographer by his attraction to light". Indeed. There are a number of things that drive me as a photographer, but probably the foremost is the challenge of capturing the light of a scene in a way that I don't thing other photogs would. Ok, maybe that's a little egotistical, but it's what goes through my mind when approaching a shoot. There's a gazillion photographers out there scrapping for the attention of the world's audience, many of whom are far better at the craft and art than I am. I have my heroes, experts who I would love to emulate, photographs that downright inspire me to see if I can manage to shoot as good. But I don't want to create just another shot just like someone else's, so how to set mine apart?
That's always the challenge. Occasionally, very occasionally, I actually succeed. For instance, when I found out back in June 2010 that there was going to be a lunar eclipse early one morning, I felt that challenge nudge me (and it takes a lot to nudge me out of bed at 3am to go shoot!). I looked around the web at how other photogs shot lunar eclipses...mostly they were just shots of the moon with an interesting foreground. One multiple exposure that has always stood out in my mind, featured in the book SpaceShots (edited by eminent astronomy writer Timothy Ferris, published in 1984), is by Akira Fujii and shows the moon passing through the earths shadow. Because the moon would be setting at sunrise before the completion of the transit (and it was only a partial eclipse, anyway), something similar wouldn't work for me. Another of his, this time a solar eclipse, showed the progression of the event as it moved across the sky. In this approach, rather than zooming in with a long lens on the moon, as I guessed most other folks would try, Akira went wide, and the result was an impressive context shot...the event in relation to the expanse of the daytime sky. But aside from Fujii, I didn't see a whole lot of folks taking this almost counter-intuitive approach of using a wide-angle lens to shoot the moon. So that was my challenge...be different, go wide.
To get away from city lights, I headed out to the end of a dirt road at the southern edge of Edwards Air Force Base (50th East, just north of Ave E for those who know the Antelope Valley), and tried to keep myself awake. The lens was zoomed out to 40mm and I shot an exposure every five minutes, mainly because that gave the earth enough time to turn so that there wasn't too much or too little of a gap between where the moon was in the ensuing images.
Partial Lunar Eclipse, June 26, 2010 |
Trying to be different does indeed pay off!
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