Water gives life but may swallow it within the glimpse of an eye.
Marina amidst two worlds.
A sombre summer splash.
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Dieses Bild entstand vor einigen Jahren während einer Ballett Session mit meinem Stammmodel. Sie ist mit Leib und Seele Tänzerin und begeht ihr Leben genauso wie im Tanz voller Leidenschaft.
2 Welten prallen hier aufeinander. Indes könnte man meinen, dass hier ein Widerspruch entsteht, doch zeigt dieses Bild für mich wunderbar, wie sich 2 Welten vereinen und zu einem Werk zusammen fließen.
Ein Schuh im Leben, der andere im Tanz.
My start in photography was very very backwards. I had no experience or real training other than having toyed with point-and-shoot cameras rather unsuccessfully. To this day I am not a "good" photographer.
The initial impetus was seeing aerial dancers rehearsing through some decorative lighting at an art museum gala. We were using high-definition glass gobos of winter branches for an autumnal effect and the shadows wrapping around the aerialists were entrancing. I had recently had corrective surgery on both eyes and it struck me that I could recreate this look to get a better picture than my phone was going to give me. Three days later I was at my local camera shop buying an entry-level Nikon and a wonderful 105mm lens (which turned out to be too long for the space I would use it in). My day job in production (mainly sound, lighting and projection, all playback oriented) did give me some understanding of noise floors, gain structures and the like. I kitted out a spare room in my warehouse with a ring of truss and theatrical lighting and became obsessed with losing and finding models in the patterning. The focus was, literally, less on the people than the technique and I certainly confused the hell out of the sensor on my poor little camera. I quickly discovered some features I wanted and moved up to a mid-range Nikon and then a full-frame. And then I moved outdoors.
The difference between nutso patterning and portraits in natural light could not have been a wider gap. It very much laid bare that I had learned the exposure triangle backwards, among other oversights. One that is jumping out tonight as I look through the archive is that I had some fundamental misunderstandings of the Nikon focus system. I'm still not impressed by Nikon's NX Studio software but I re-downloaded it in order to access the "show focus" feature. This particular day my D750 was set to AF-Area multi-point and it wasn't until nearly a year later that I realized I needed to swap over to single-point, which immediately did away with the stubborn habit of auto focus choosing the wrong damned thing to focus on! There were other instances of consistent misses but this particular shoot, with one of my favorite people who had made a point of coming to my state to work with me….well, it was a bitter evening when I got home and was able to look at these images full size. They looked FINE on the back-of-camera view (I also hadn't yet learned to zoom in and check, a shortcut that I very much appreciate).
These are, I suppose, how one truly learns a work flow. I've never quite been able to ditch handheld in favor of a tripod — I want to be more active in choosing angles, to drop down to my belly to see what it looks like from there. And I'm not usually overly concerned with sharpness itself — I use a lot of vintage manual lenses or lenses designed to be troublesome and I like the result. But there are times when something needs to be sharp.
As painful as it is, I spend a good amount of time on even the worst of shoots. And I don't throw them away in disgust. It's not just to rub my own nose in my mistakes but to come back and see the lesson again every so often. To think about the lesson and then wonder at it a bit and see if I'm drawing the right conclusion. And every so often, as tonight, I find a gem or two that survived my blunders.
STREET ART PHOTOS FROM NANCY
Exploring Nancy in a weekend.
More Photos from Nancy/
http://www.jorgbecker-art.fr/album-un-week-end-nancy.html
In warmes, diffuses Licht getaucht, lenkt die Aufnahme den Blick gezielt auf die natürlichen Konturen ihres Körpers. Der durchscheinende schwarze Spitzenstoff, der ihre Schultern und Brust umspielt, schafft eine subtile Balance zwischen Verhüllung und Offenbarung. Das Licht betont die weichen Rundungen ihrer Brüste und die geschmeidige Linie ihres Bauches, während Schatten sanft Tiefe hinzufügen und den Hintergrund in Unschärfe verschwinden lassen.
Ihr Gesicht ist leicht zur Seite geneigt, der Blick ruhig und introspektiv, die Lippen dezent geöffnet. Die lockeren Strähnen ihres Haares fallen natürlich über ihre Schultern und unterstützen die sanfte, ungekünstelte Atmosphäre des Bildes.
Die Komposition spielt mit der Transparenz des Stoffes und der Klarheit ihrer Silhouette, wodurch das Foto sowohl Intimität als auch Zurückhaltung ausstrahlt. Die Inszenierung ist schlicht und konzentriert sich auf die Harmonie von Licht, Schatten und Körperform, ohne ablenkende Elemente. Es ist eine Aufnahme, die den Moment einfängt, ohne ihn zu überhöhen – reduziert, klar und ruhig.