When you first see the swooping, curling, technicolor tendrils in Graham Jefferey’s work, you can’t help but wonder how he can manage to make ordinary gray smoke so beautiful.
Our pal Haje recently collaborated with Graham on a piece that delves into all the details: the lighting, the exposure, the best way to create the right kind of smoke, even the photoshop work needed to create the effect.
Unconvinced? Flip through Graham’s examples and you’ll be fired up to make your own!
A Smoke Photography How-to
www.photocritic.org/2007/artsmoke-photographing-smoke/
Bookmark this in Del.icio.us
You might also like...
Fun with Food Photography… or, How to Capture Your Culinary Creations on Camera
Smoke pellets from special effects supply houses, glycerin-filled spray bottles, shoe polish, and microwaved cotton balls -- standard tools in any food photographer's arsenal.
If you've...
11 Tips for Sparkling Fireworks Photos
Here in the States, we celebrate our independence every 4th of July by blowing up things in the sky.
In fact, ever since Taoist monks created...
People in Motion — Two Quick Tips for More Interesting Shots
Capturing motion well is one of the most difficult photographic challenges. It can be hard enough to get the lighting and composition just right in...
Published on
January 29, 2007 — See more
Tutorials
[…] […]
Pingback by Monkey Plunger » Blog Archive » Silky, Sultry, and Smokin’ Hot — A Smoke Photography How-to — February 28, 2007 @ 5:42 pm