I had two images lying around in my random folder for months. One was a graffiti wall I photographed knowing someday I would use it as a texture background. Then I had this kind of wide-eyed pelican photo. This afternoon I thought to combine them for a psychedelic looking fine art photograph. In Photoshop I placed the graffiti wall image right over the pelican photo. Then using a layer mask I was able to brush away the wall to reveal the pelican underneath, as well as choosing the blend mode for the overall look. This is actually a fairly simple Photoshop skill. To get more of an idea of how the combo process works, check out this blog post.
Photo Story
Shinjuku Tokyo Japan light trails
This is a photograph from my archives, taken back in October of 2008 at the start of my DSLR shooting from when I lived in Tokyo, Japan. I lived in the heart of the city, Shinjuku, and getting home required walking over a pedestrian bridge with a great view, day or night, but especially at night. I brought my Nikon D80 with me and a tripod I had just bought allowing me to make light trail images like this one. Note that the brake lights appear on the left side of the road, as Japanese drive on the opposite side to the U.S.
Severe Lightning Storm & Waterspout over St. Petersburg Florida June 2013
While out teaching a 1-on-1 DSLR Photography Lesson in downtown St. Petersburg on June 25, 2013 my photography student and I were treated (?) to a spectacular view of a powerful storm that produced a waterspout, funnel clouds and ground shaking lightning. While keeping a safe distance, I was able to quickly setup to try and capture some lightning shots. This means setting the shutter speed to bulb mode and covering the front of the lens until lightning is visible and keeping the lens exposed just long enough so the overall shot looks good. I only had three chances and was lucky enough to get the above lightning photograph on that third try.
This waterspout attracted a lot of onlookers. In grew in size greatly and I could not get my camera around the tree in the foreground to show its full length. It was eerily translucent and silent dipping up and down from the clouds above.
This is the approach to the storm before we saw any lightning, waterspouts or funnel clouds. I had never seen such a long, thin band of angry looking clouds stretch all the was from Tampa Bay to south St. Petersburg. The sun was going down adding a bit of pretty color to the underside of what really was a menacing stormy sky.
Turning and looking to my right from the same spot as the previous photo shows just how long that band of clouds stretched too. Right above the sailboats two funnel clouds would eventually form right in front of us! They never touched the ground and all we ended up was a little wet once the rain came, but the storm added a lot of excitement to our photography lesson!
Jason Collin radio interview on Picture This WTAN Clearwater Florida
Rainbow over Smacks Bayou Snell Isle St. Petersburg Florida HDR
I rushed home from a networking event to pick up Kiki and get our usual evening dog park time in before an imposing storm on the horizon passed by. Basically, as soon as we got to the dog park a deluge opened up. After even a huge live oak could not provide adequate shelter, we headed back home. Naturally, as soon as we parked the rain stopped and the sun was out.
So back on went Kiki's collar and leash as we headed out for a walk. That is when I saw this rainbow appear vividly over Smack's Bayou. Still we walked on and I let Kiki run around in a soccer field (see lower right corner of the above image for where we were earlier). I just hoped the rainbow would stay visible by the time we got back.
It did. So I mounted my Nikon onto my tripod quickly and was able to make the above photos. I could see a double rainbow with my eye, but getting it to come out in a photograph was not possible due to a number of factors. Still, I was glad that even though our usual plans got washed out, at least I was able to add another rainbow photo to my archives.
Harley-Davidson 50mm Motorcycle Series St. Petersburg Florida Photography
I like to photograph motorcycles with a 50mm lens. I saw this Harley-Davidson parked in downtown St. Petersburg Florida. Using a 50mm f/1.8 lens lets me select only a part of the motorcycle to show in focus by using a large aperture creating a shallow DoF. I like this style for motorcycles where the bike is shown in ever increasing blur from front to back.
Using a 50mm lens up close also means the whole motorcycle cannot be fit into the frame, which I think is a plus. It is much easier to get creative with composition with focal length restrictions.
Entrance in the Clouds
I have written before about how photographing clouds is always good. To end this week I wanted to share this cloud gateway image to fuel your imagination for what may lay beyond the clouds. This is how I often think myself. No matter how stormy the surroundings may be, there remains at least a small portion that is bright and hopeful. As long as that small part still exists, so does hope, and therefore so does life.