Photography

5 Photography Hacks Under $100

5 Photography Hacks Under $100

As a photographer who constantly experiments with new ideas and techniques, I have been busy playing around with some unconventional things that you may find in a photographer’s kit.

 

I am interested in creating images that stand out both visually and aesthetically. Sometimes, the only way to make an image stand out is by using an unconventional photography technique. For me, it has to look interesting, one way or another. This may be through placing something in front of the lens or using a weird lighting technique. All in all, here are some of my favorite hacks that I use to make images look interesting.

Colored Glass

This is a recent purchase of mine. I was wondering if this would make a difference or not for quite a long time, and it turns out it does. In fact, it makes a huge difference, and I regret not getting it earlier.

Commonly found in a landscape photographer’s kit, this is a collection of rather low-quality gradated stained glass. While negatively affecting technical image quality, this piece of kit makes all the difference visually. You can create gelled light effects with it, play with reflections in the glass, create patterns, and highlight various parts of the image. Below are some images that I took with this piece of gear.

This image had purely white light going in at the start. However, after adding green and blue glass, I made it look a lot more interesting and dramatic.

When working on the street, I often try to find the simplest background possible. However, I am always lacking something when working with simple backgrounds. In this picture, I was playing with the placement of the gradated glass filter in front of my lens until it gave this result.

My kit cost me around $30 from Amazon, and I say that it is ample for most photographers. Sure, if image quality is a higher concern for you, go for a more expensive one made from glass. Quality-wise, this is plastic and cheap.

Dragging the Shutter

If you spend any time on Illyaovhcar.com, you will quickly see that I love working with long-exposure photography. It is one of my go-to techniques for creative shoots. Mixing daylight, constant light, and flash in one perfect blend has been something I experimented with for a while now. Simply setting the exposure to something lower than 1/160th of a second in your studio and changing the sync to the second curtain will open up quite a few things. You can play with light patterns, shadows, falloff, and many more. The key is to find out how to pose the subject and what to move and what to keep static in the shot. Here are some examples of things I shot with long exposure.

Flashlights

This goes hand in hand with long exposure techniques. Some time ago, I was gifted a BitLighter. It is essentially a dedolight in a flashlight form. While the one I have is slightly overpriced, it is a cool product nonetheless. That said, some of the functions can be performed with a much cheaper unit from your local Home Depot. The things to look out for when purchasing a flashlight for photography purposes are the ability to change power and focus the beam. If you are tech-savvy, you can even 3D-print custom barndoors for your light, which will make it even better. I love using the barndoors that shipped with the BitLighter. They enable me to create super cool light patterns which would be impossible with other light sources.

Here are some images I took with the BitLighter and other flashlights as well.

Mirrors

What is a mirror? In essence, it is a highly-reflective surface. What do such surfaces do? Reflect light. The beauty of using mirrors is that they can act as an optical snoot, producing extremely hard light with hard edges while being dirt cheap. Mirrors will reflect the shape of the light they receive, meaning if you create a triangle gobo and put it on a mirror, you will end up getting a triangular light reflection.

When working with mirrors, you need to pay attention to the type of light you are shining into it. My favorite one is the Fresnel, as it concentrates the light beam and makes it harder. That way, I am only illuminating the mirror and nothing else. The downside of using a mirror is that you are complicating things quite a lot. You need to be able to control the distance between the subject and the mirror, as well as the light source and the mirror.

Wind Machines

While a professional photography wind machine costs way more than $100, it can be replaced with a simple ventilator. I have two of these in the studio, and they do the job of an expensive studio wind machine as well. Another useful tool is a leaf blower. While more expensive, this one can be used to create stronger, more directed wind gusts.

A technique I often use in portrait photography, the wind is great for adding drama and movement. Sometimes, your subject will simply be static and won’t move all that great. I had this problem far too many times, and now instead of asking the subject to move, I simply make them move by blasting wind.

Not only are they great for introducing movement in your pictures. they can also be fantastic for giving volume to hair, introducing emotion, and making the image more interesting. This isn’t only true for creating movement in the hair, as the wind can also move clothes in an incredible way. For example, light fabrics such as chiffon can move incredibly freely with the help of wind. From there, you can use blur to create smooth patterns or go in the opposite direction and freeze the motion with flash.

Closing Thoughts

So there you have it, my favorite hacks to use in photographing people and beyond: stained glass, wind machines, flashlights, blur, and mirrors. All cost under $100, and some are free if you take a look in your storage room.

What are your favorite on-set hacks? Let us know in the comments below!

German Photographer Refuses Award for His AI “Photo”

German Photographer Refuses Award for His AI “Photo”
Boris Eldagsen’s “The Electrician” (2022) generated by Dall-E 2 (image courtesy the artist)

Could you imagine losing an art competition to a robot? It’s happened before, and it happened again when Boris Eldagsen, a career photographer from Berlin, Germany, submitted an AI-generated image for the 2023 Sony World Photography Awards (SWPA) under the Creative category. Eldagsen claims that he disclosed to both Sony and the competition organizer, Creo Arts, that his work was made using AI, but neither would outright acknowledge it until he took matters into his own hands.

Eldagsen’s “The Electrician” (2022), inspired by the photos of Roger Ballen, was generated on Dall-E 2 last August using a combination of prompt-engineering (finagling the right text prompts to enter to get the most desirable generative results), inpainting, and outpainting.

When Eldagsen submitted “The Electrician” to three photography contests including the SWPA, he intended to test the judgment panels of each competition to see if they were discerning real photography from AI works.

“It was not about winning anything,” he told Hyperallergic. “I have been a photographer for 30 years before turning to AI and I’m very involved in the German scene in making workshops, lectures, and helping to draft up proposals for AI-related legislation.”

As it turns out, SWPA’s submission guidelines had no clauses about AI art and did not require RAW files from applicants or even finalists. Eldagsen said he received an email from SWPA in January asking for more information about his entry so he provided his social media accounts, where he shares many of his AI images.

“And then when in February they emailed saying ‘Congratulations, you have won the open competition’s Creative category,’ I told them it was AI,” Eldagsen said, proposing the idea of an open panel to acknowledge the proliferation of AI-generated work and the creation of a new category for AI-generated entries. According to Eldagsen, the Sony contact responded that it was fine and continued to offer him the award even after he insisted it should be given to someone else.

In response to Hyperallergic‘s request for comment, a spokesperson for Creo Arts said, “We had various correspondences with Boris ahead of announcing him as the Creative category winner in the Open competition. Boris confirmed the ‘co-creation’ of this image using AI. He has now decided to decline his award. We respect his decision and have therefore removed him from the competition.”

The official press release announcing the 2023 SWPA winners was made public on March 14, after which the competition organizer, Creo Arts, reached out to Eldagsen via email with inquiries about his winning entry. The artist gave them the same response he gave to Sony, suggesting Creo use this submission as a jumping-off point for conversations about AI media, but Creo said there was no immediate platform for such a dialogue.

Eldagsen ultimately took to the stage at a London Hilton to publicly refuse the award. Apparently, they heard him loud and clear this time, as mentions of his name were quickly removed from SWPA’s website and his “photo” was quietly taken down from the exhibition in London’s Somerset House without any communication or explanations.

“I didn’t plan from the very beginning just to be an asshole or to be impolite and rude, but I have a sincere interest in how this will impact the photography scene and it needs to be talked about,” Eldagsen said, frustrated that he had to take it this far.

“And these awards are big in the photography world, but they don’t care, this is a business to them with a big name like Sony attached as a sponsor,” he added. “It could have been a big PR moment for them too, to introduce new regulations or elements to the awards, but they just aren’t talking about it.”


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We Wanted a More “Punk” Exhibition; The Museum Said No

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After “The Wild”: Contemporary Art from The Barnett and Annalee Newman Foundation Collection

On view through October 1 at the Jewish Museum in New York, this exhibition features works by 47 contemporary artists between 1963–2023.


FBI Raids Art Foundation in Puerto Rico

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Wildlife photographer captures shot of ‘Croczilla’ in Everglades

Wildlife photographer captures shot of ‘Croczilla’ in Everglades

A wildlife photographer in Florida discovered one of the Everglades’ most famous residents — “Croczilla,” a 14-foot American crocodile.

>> Read more trending news

Kym Clark posted a video of the huge reptile on her Instagram account earlier this month. She wrote that Croczilla is believed to be the largest crocodile in Everglades National Park and possibly the largest in the state.

“This Croc has been on my herping (reptile searching) bucket list for awhile now,” Clark wrote. “So excited to have finally met him!!!”

The crocodile was spotted at Nine Mile Pond in the national park located in South Florida, according to Field & Stream. The reptile’s length is the maximum for its species, according to the National Park Service.

“There he was right there on the shoreline looking right at me. He almost didn’t look real. He was huge,” Clark told Field & Stream. “I couldn’t pull myself away. It was so interesting, and I knew it was probably a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity.”

Clark told the Miami Herald that she almost missed seeing the crocodile. She said she was preparing to leave the area and decided to look back one more time. She saw Croczilla sunning himself.

“I was shocked to see the infamous Croczilla, not at a distance but immediately in front of me on the shore, basking in the sun,” Clark told the newspaper. “It almost didn’t look real.”

South Florida is the only place where American crocodiles and American alligators are known to coexist, Field & Stream reported. According to the Florida Fish & Wildlife Commission, the American crocodile is “an endangered species success story.” Their numbers have risen from fewer than 300 in 1975 to more than 2,000 adult crocodiles according to the agency.

“As a Floridian, I see alligators all the time. They are very common, but crocodiles are not so common,” Clark told Field & Stream. “You can only see them in the southernmost part of Florida. And in fact, the only place I’ve ever spotted crocodiles was at Everglades National Park.”

Clark kept a safe distance, taking photographs from about 20 feet away, according to the Herald.

“He was very docile and loved the camera,” Clark wrote in one of her Instagram posts, according to the newspaper. “That being said, always keep a safe distance from crocodiles and other wildlife.”

Stunning pictures of Venice on show at photography club’s latest meeting

Stunning pictures of Venice on show at photography club’s latest meeting

Due to the Easter holidays, the latest meeting of Motherwell Photographic Society took place on Zoom.

The guest for the evening was Chris Ceaser from Yorkshire. He is an award-winning landscape photographer who organises photography workshops in the UK and Europe, and has a gallery in York showcasing his work.

Chris gave a presentation called ‘Venice in Pictures and Words’. It told members of the history of Venice accompanied by his images of the city, a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Members were shown stunning images of Venice, many of them taken at sunrise using a slow shutter speed.

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Following a short question and answer session, club president Colin Cameron thanked Chris for sharing his wonderful images with the group and for telling everyone about the fascinating history of Venice.

The next meeting, on Thursday, April 20, will be the club’s annual general meeting. All club members are urged to attend.

Motherwell Photographic Society meet on a Thursday evening at 7.30pm in Holytown Community Centre, Stevenston Street, Holytown, ML1 4RG. As always, anyone with an interest in photography, no matter your level, is welcome to attend.

Members look forward to welcoming friends old and new.

For more information, please visit motherwellphotographicsociety.co.uk or the club’s Facebook page. The website also has a gallery where you can view examples of members’ work.

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Abstract photography exhibition opens in Taipei

Abstract photography exhibition opens in Taipei
  • Staff writer, with CNA

A photography exhibition featuring 99 abstract works by 25 Taiwanese photographers has opened at the National Center of Photography and Images in Taipei.

“The Eye of Abstraction” exhibition aims to establish a new framework for the genre, which has been dominated in Taiwan by photojournalism and documentary photography, exhibition curator Chang Kuan-ho (章光和) said at the its opening on Wednesday.

The exhibition is shown in four sections: “Figurative and Non-Figurative,” “Sense and Sensibility,” “Gestalt” and “Material Mediums.”

Photo: CNA

The first features works by photographers presenting “unexpected beauty” in everyday life captured at unique angles, Chang said.

The second juxtaposes works by renowned Taiwanese abstract painters and photographers, and asks viewers to compare the two art forms, Chang said.

The third presents photography that explores Gestalt psychology, proposed by psychologist Max Wertheimer in 1912.

The theory holds that when people see images they do not understand, they spontaneously appeal to the laws of symmetry, closure, continuity, proximity, similarity and figure-ground organization, he said.

Chang’s “Botany 0.5” on display at the exhibition is one such example.

The images were created by scanning sections of plants and compiling them in computer software to create horizontal and vertical images in a kaleidoscopic effect, Chang said.

The fourth section focuses on materials and mediums used in photography, and explores their intrinsic beauty, he said.

National Taiwan Museum of Fine Arts Director Liao Jen-I (廖仁義) said the museum established the center in April 2021.

However, the vision of Taiwanese photographers more than a decade ago to establish a local museum of photography and images has not been realized, Liao said.

The boundless creativity demonstrated by Taiwanese photographers shows that they deserve a museum dedicated to photography, he said, calling on Deputy Minister of Culture Sue Wang (王時思) to lobby for funding from the Ministry of Culture to make such a museum a reality.

The large output of Taiwanese photographers necessitate the establishment of a venue larger than the center, Wang said.

The creation of a museum of photography and images is a high priority for Minister of Culture Shih Che (史哲) and herself, she said, adding that she hopes the goal can be achieved quickly.

The exhibition is free and runs until July 30.

Comments will be moderated. Keep comments relevant to the article. Remarks containing abusive and obscene language, personal attacks of any kind or promotion will be removed and the user banned. Final decision will be at the discretion of the Taipei Times.

Pinhole Photography in Cuba

Pinhole Photography in Cuba

Photo Essay by Ernesto Gonzalez Diaz

HAVANA TIMES – Pinhole photography is a photographic technique created to obtain pictures with practically no equipment. It is a technique that arose in times of chemical and film photography, based on the construction of a simple pinhole camera or the application of a pinhole to a traditional camera. A pinhole is a sheet, which can be made of acetate, with a very fine hole (usually the diameter of a needle) that is placed in front of the lens.

It is rarely used for commercial purposes, but has had more use in the field of artistic creation. In times of digital electronic photography, this type of photography is attempted, closing the lens diaphragm as much as possible and with high exposure times allowing the entry of very little light over a long period of time, obtaining images in many cases out of focus, blurred, with shadowed edges, but at the same time unique. Precisely because the diaphragm is closed to the maximum, images with a great depth of field are achieved where any point can be observed without the need for a special frame. Whether some photos are more in focus than others depends on the distance the pinhole is placed from the lens and the exposure time.

Here we present images that I experimented with in recent days, in three different settings, always at sunset with little natural light. I have also been varying the white balance and the luminosity of the lens, which is why there are colder and bluish images in some cases and in others more pasty and dark.

See more photo features here.

Palm Springs Studio Wants to Photograph Your Aura

Palm Springs Studio Wants to Photograph Your Aura

An aura self-portrait by Soulglow owner Angelina Mortarotti.
PHOTO COURTESY SOULGLOW AURA STUDIO

Anyone seeking spiritual enlightenment has likely been introduced to their aura — a combination of colors associated with a person’s changing energy fields. From deep violet to sunny yellow, the color of your aura says a lot about your personality and state of mind, according to Angelina Mortarotti, the owner of Soulglow Aura Studio in Palm Springs. Opened in January, the studio serves as a space for reiki healing, aura photography, sound baths, and other services that promote self-discovery and physical and mental well-being. 

How did you get involved with aura photography?

I was in corporate America for many years, working in fashion, and then it hit a point where there was a part of what I was doing that wasn’t fulfilling. So, I started exploring other things. That’s when I first started learning reiki. It was probably about 10 years ago now, and funnily enough, I wrote a report on auras when I was 13 years old. I was very much interested in these otherworldly things that we don’t necessarily understand. And then, I came full circle.

How does the camera work?

People are always curious, [asking] “What is this? Is it fake? Is it a filter?” Your energy is actually read from your hands, [using] an algorithm that shows your current energetic state. So, the technology is kind of similar to an activity tracker, but it’s not just a mood ring. It’s more of reading different lines of energy at different points in your hand and measuring heart rate and subtle vibrations.

That sounds intricate.

Yeah! I didn’t design the camera. There’s [only] a small number of [them] in the United States. Actually, I think there’s only about 30 [aura photographers] that use the same aura system. So, it is a very rare experience. The system that I use is the original aura design that was designed in 1970. So, it actually prints a little Polaroid. [At the studio], you get your printout of your aura right here on the spot.

Is every aura unique?

Every aura is unique, but I will see some similar patterns that emerge. I can look at certain auras and know, “Wow, with 95 percent certainty, you probably do healing work as a profession.” Other times, I see someone where it’s like, “You’ve been running yourself really thin right now.” I mean, I don’t view it as a negative thing, but I can just tell that it’s someone who needs a little rejuvenation. So, there are definitely certain patterns that show up, but at the same time, there is an infinite range of colors.

Are people nervous about sharing their aura with you?

People do get nervous. They’ll say “Oh, my gosh, what if my aura’s black?” But that’s not possible. That doesn’t happen. I always want to assure everyone [that] the aura doesn’t reveal any of your secrets or anything negative. It’s just energy, and it shows where we’re at. If dark green shows up in a photo, that can be an indication of someone going through a difficult time, usually involving loss, where they maybe have lost a parent or a loved one, or maybe they’re going through a divorce. Things like that will show up.

What’s the most common color that you see, and what does it symbolize?

It changes a lot, and it’s really funny. I did portraits for a wedding where the bride was Indian and there were many traditional Indian aunts and uncles that were present. Almost everyone at that wedding had a violet aura, which signifies a lot of spirituality and a higher consciousness. But it was such a disproportionate amount of purple and violet that showed up to what normally comes up. So, sometimes you’ll see these trends within spiritual groups or within a close group of friends. But I feel like I do see red a lot. Red’s a very action-oriented color, so it’s [typically seen around] people who tend to be on the go, very driven, or people that just have a lot of stuff going on.

Do you mind sharing your current aura?

I’m usually pretty consistent. I have a lot of yellow, which signifies joyfulness and optimism.

Why do people typically come in to get an aura reading? Is it mostly for fun or more for inner searching?

It’s really a broad spectrum. Some people come across me, and they’re like, “Oh, this is cool.” But then a lot of people come in because they’re actually seeking this out. A lot of people don’t necessarily understand that your aura can and does change with different life events. I actually have a lot of repeat clients who want to do an aura check-in. We also offer before and after pictures. So, you can see how a [reiki or sound bath] healing session has shifted your aura, too


AI image wins Sony World Photography Awards, then vanishes… by Jose Antunes

AI image wins Sony World Photography Awards, then vanishes… by Jose Antunes
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