Entries in Ferrari 458 Italia (2)
Ferrari 458 Italia Photographs in Detail
Tuesday, May 3, 2011 at 11:03PM
Jason Collin
Ferrari 458 Italia front left fender and wheel arch - St. Petersburg Car PhotographyAt a recent car show in St. Petersburg I had a chance to see and photograph my current favorite car in the world, the Ferrari 458 Italia. As I described in this other photography tip post on the Ferrari it is very hard to get good full car photographs at a car show. Therefore, I focused on detail shots more than showing the 458 Italia in full.
Ferrari 458 Italia designed by Pininfarina logo - St. Petersburg Car PhotographyThe few badges that decorate the 458 Italia are all classy, like the above Pininfarina logo, whose meaning is not obvious unless you are a fan of Italian sports cars and supercars.
front grill air spoilers bookend the Prancing Pony logo on Ferrari 458 Italia - St. Petersburg Car PhotographyThese flexible spoilers on the front facia of the Ferrari 458 Italia are designed to change shape at speed to improve downforce. In the middle of the rest of the matte black spoiler resides the Ferrari Prancing Pony logo.
Ferrari 458 Italia LED headlight - St. Petersburg Car PhotographyOne of the most striking design features of the 458 Italia is its elongated LED headlights. These are a new design element being featured on all new Ferraris (California, FF) and ad a distinctive look that to me signals a new generation of Ferrari. They are radical, but I like them even though the remind me of the head of an Alien from the Alien series of movies.
Ferrari 458 Italia LED taillight - St. Petersburg Car PhotographyThe taillights also contain LEDs but maintain the traditional circular Ferrari design, although they are in a single cluster, while the previous F430 model featured dual clusters. I prefer the dual design as a single cluster seems a bit small and in the middle of no where looking.
Ferrari 458 Italia rear view - St. Petersburg Car PhotographyThe rear of the 458 Italia is Spartan with just another Prancing Pony logo and the Ferrari nameplate on top of the engine cover. Not pictured is a triple, centered tailpipe cluster. For some reason I did not think to photograph those!
Ferrari 458 Italia engine block detail - St. Petersburg Car PhotographyThe engine cover is transparent showing off the massive V8 that looks more like something that would power a spacecraft rather than a mere automobile. Obviously the engine sounds even better than it looks.
Ferrari 458 Italia Brembo carbon ceramic brakes with red calipers - St. Petersburg Car PhotographyAny supercar nowadays has to come with carbon ceramic brakes and usually brightly color brake calipers. The 458 Italia is no exception. The wheels themselves are a kind of generic pentastar looking design that seem conservative in comparison to the styling of the rest of the exterior.
Ferrari 458 Italia 2011 model right side view - St. Petersburg Car PhotographyHere again is the full side view photograph I made by cloning out many distractions. I may someday have a chance to properly photograph this particular 458 Italia as the owner did express interest at having photographs. I of course gave him my business card. Hopefully he will call soon!
Photography Tip - selecting and cloning a clean Ferrari 458 Italia
Friday, April 22, 2011 at 4:11PM
Jason Collin
2011 Ferrari 458 Italia at a car show in St. Petersburg Florida
- Learn this digital photograph editing technique from Jason in a 1-on-1 lesson, reserve today!
Car shows are great places to see a large number of awesome cars in a small space. However, that small space and numerous other car fans walking around create a nearly impossible situation for photographing the cars in full. Detail shots are usually what I focus on, but still I want to have at least a few full car shots as well. Some of you may know that the Ferrari 458 Italia is my current favorite car in the world. At a recent St. Petersburg, Florida car show I had a chance to talk with the owners of the above 458 Italia who were very nice people. I photographed their Ferrari at length.
I could not get a shot like I wanted to while there due to other cars being parked so close to the 458 Italia and of course because of many other people coming to peek at Ferrari's latest mid-engine super car. So I had to settle for the best angle I could get taking into account the sun's position and just the space I had to shoot in. Photoshop CS5 helped with the rest.
Too clone out things from complex surroundings, quick select them then clone stamp in safetyIn the above screen shot you can see how I first used the Quick Select Tool (W) to put a protective fence around the objects I wanted to remove (silver car, people, etc). I do this because the Clone Stamp Tool (S) is very temperamental and very hard to use along a distinct edge like the front fender of the red Ferrari and the silver Ferrari. Basically, containing the unwanted object in a quick select field allows me to not worry about coloring outside the lines, so to speak. You can see I selected some grass from the foreground and already started stamping it onto the silver Ferrari. The sharp edge of the red Ferrari fender will remain perfectly intact.
Likewise for the people above the red Ferrari. I will clone some of the trees and stamp them on top of the people to complete the illusion that the Ferrari 458 Italia is alone in a field. To close the quick select areas hit CMD-M (on a Mac).
Using this quick select and cloning method will allow you to cleanly and easily remove objects from complex surroundings.












