Lighting up Sherwood Forest on Hive

in Lightpainters United2 years ago

I consider myself lucky enough to live on the edge of Sherwood Forest in Nottinghamshire. It still has miles and miles of woods which also makes a great location to shoot in the dark. It can be a little spooky on your own with all sorts of painful sounding noises in the middle of the night, a place not for the faint-hearted!

Stranger Things

After I shot this, someone told me this reminded them of a TV series, Stranger Things. I had no idea... Quick and simple to do, big flashgun at the rear of frame with a willing volunteer aka victim to stand and hold a big flashlight aloft. It helps if there is a bit of moisture in the air to carry the beam.

Sherwood-Forest-Hive-version.jpg

Turning the forest on it's head

For a few years, I've been a big fan of camera rotation photography where the camera is rotated on it's lens axis during a continuous single exposure.

Just a simple dead or nearly dead tree without much foliage makes a good subject for rotation. For these shots, I turn the camera to a 45 degree angle and expose for the first of four rotations. In between each rotation I replace the lens cap with the camera still running and turn 90 degrees and repeat for the full circle:

Sherwood-CRT_Hive-version.jpg

A windy night in Sherwood

An aimless wander in to a part of Sherwood Forest I've never been in and stumble upon this gem of a location. The trees would usually be sharper but they've ended up light painting themselves in the wind....

Sherwood-Frights-Hive-version.jpg

Tree of OCD

Shot in Budby Forest, Nottinghamshire, this is quite possibly the longest star trail I've ever done at just under 2 hours long. Thanks to Rob Bates for helping prevent me getting bored waiting that long for the sequence to finish! This is approx 240 x 30 second exposures stacked in Photoshop with one of the frames showing the tree backlit. The curved distortion is created by tilting a fisheye lens backwards towards Polaris (aka North Star).

Budby1-rfs.jpg

Little John?

Another example of the extreme distortion created by tilting a fisheye lens way back; it creates a pleasing sense of scale in the forest. Another simple shot to make; a big flashgun at the rear of frame with a quick swipe from an LED panel across to light up the foreground.

Little-John.jpg

About me:
I usually specialise in shooting lightpainting images but occasionally dabble in urbex and artistic model photography. I'm always on the lookout for someone to collaborate with; please don't hesitate to get in touch if you'd like to create art.

Social Media
https://www.facebook.com/fastchrisuk
https://www.flickr.com/photos/fastchris/

If you want to see more examples of lightpainting, feel free to check out these guys: @fadetoblack, @stepko, @mafufuma, @yo-hoho, @oddballgraphics, @martbarras & @rod.evans.visual

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AMAZING!!!!

 2 years ago  

Thanks @photowanze :-)

Damn these are cool! Looks like a fun evening. Love the wide angle shot at the bottom. It looks a lot wider than my 18mm. The distortion is insane!

Absolutely incredible work!