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Fun Times On A Houseboat

July 20th, 2009

I shot the houseboat below for a client recently and a couple of images stood out during the shoot that are interesting in a photographic sense.

The first is this fun exterior with the Aurora bridge. Nothing technically challenging with this, but I like the way the bridge overhead and reflected below frame the house nicely. Shot with a 24-70 lens at 24mm with a circular polarizer to help out the blue sky.

Photography is "Problem Solving 101"

The second shot artistically is less interesting but there is more problem solving going on than first meets the eye.

First: I’m on a houseboat. Houseboats float and move with the waves. Which means I need to keep a fairly high shutter speed. Not too much of a problem since the scene if already very bright.

Second: I’m trying to shoot a “deck” which in reality is a “dock”. It’s floating too and much less stable than the house. See above.

Third: The contrast, or dynamic range, between the shadow area and the full sun area is too large for my camera to capture in one exposure.

Solutions

There are several ways this could be approached.

1) Use several images with different exposures and blend them together in Photoshop later. That would work fine but takes too long for this particular job. The movement of the dock and boats between frames might make this a bit tricky.

2) Use several images with different exposures and blend them automatically using an HDR or Enfusion program. That would normally be a good option, but again the potential movement of dock and boats would cause ghosting or copies of elements. Shutter speeds could increase too much trying to get a proper exposure for the shadow are and motion blur could occur.

3) Use a graduated neutral density filter and place it over the full-sun portion of the frame to bring the exposure for the two areas closer together. This works best when the shadow line is nice and straight and the shadow line in this picture isn’t straight. Also I don’t have a graduated ND filter in my kit right now.

4) Wait. I actually did wait to get the shot, but I couldn’t wait as long as I needed. Waiting is a good option and would have produced a nice result when the sun was setting or behind the nearby hill, but no time for that.

5) Use fill-flash. Since I bring my hot-shoe flashes to real estate shoots I had them available. For this sunny day it took two flashes on full power to bring the shadow area up to a relatively decent level so it still looks like shadow, but doesn’t look like a large black area.

Manage the light

Most photography is about managing the differences between the shadow and highlight areas of a scene to bring them closer together so the camera can capture the scene as our eyes see it. While there are a multitude of ways to accomplish that, it always comes down to what works best for the given situation and the effect you are trying to produce.

Digital Photography, Recent Work, Residential Real Estate , , , ,

Microsoft Photosynth - Practical or Not

August 8th, 2007

Have you checked out the Photosynth technology that Microsoft has been working on?

Microsoft Photosynth Website

The project takes photographs from many different photographers, but all from the same general geographic location and builds a 3-dimensional model of how the photographs relate to each other. The latest set they have released is of the Space Shuttle on the launch pad and in it’s maintenance hanger. It is fun to fly around and check out the different angles of the same object that the project brings together.

There is some serious processing going on behind the scenes if you read about the technology on their website. Each photograph is processed and analyzed and unique details are found within the image. Those details are cataloged and compared to the other photographs in the collection. If the same unique details are found the images can be placed near one another in the 3-D model. The analysis also figures out camera angle and location in relation to all the other pictures. It’s quite impressive.

Uses

So how could this be used? The most obvious would be to make an online repository for photographs from anyone that wanted to upload them. In time entire locations could be completely recreated in this virtual 3-D world, allowing anyone to click through and get an idea of what the place really looks like without having to travel there. Google Earth is doing a similar type of virtualization by allowing people to upload 3-D models of buildings. The Microsoft technology has the advantage of using actual photographs.

I wouldn’t be surprised if they eventually are able to warp the images into actual 3-D models of the buildings being photographed.

For me this would be very interesting to use for residential real estate or virtual tour type applications. It would be quick and easy to take a bunch of photos of a location and then have then processed by Photosynth technology and be made available for online viewing. If the processing didn’t take days this could be very cool.

Residential Real Estate

Recent Work…

March 21st, 2007
I thought it might be nice to add some of the recent work I’ve been doing.

Options for Seniors

I am contracted with Options for Seniors to provide photography of new adult family homes and assisted care facilities for their website. Options for Seniors provides listings of adult family homes and assisted living communities in the greater Seattle area. The nice thing about Options for Seniors is they will advise you and take you to the homes listed on their site so you can meet and interact with the care givers. The owner Heidi Sheldon takes great pride in finding the best home for each individual.

After taking pictures in several adult family homes over the past year I am very impressed with the quality, craftsmanship and luxury that some of the homes provide.

On the personal side, everyone I have met has been incredibly nice and seem to genuinely care about the residents they are caring for.

The two pictures above are from the Kelsey Creek Adult Family Home in Bellevue.

Pure Encapsulations

I have also been taking pictures for Pure Encapsulations in Massachusetts. Pure Encapsulations only sells to licensed heathcare professionals. They currently produce 5 catalogs a year and I take the pictures for the front and back cover as well as the individual product bottles.

I work with their graphic designer that handles the catalog. She has specific requirements for colors of the background (usually paper that she provides) and the bottles need to have vertical sides and have the tops slightly showing. To do this requires a Tilt-Shift lens which has the ability to “shift” the image down while keeping the camera perfectly vertical. It’s a handy tool for architecture and product work. The Tilt ability can also be used to provide interesting focal plane adjustments in images.

Residential Real Estate

I’ve been working with a real estate agent lately that really understands that good staging makes a big difference in how a home presents to a potential buyer. Here are a couple of examples.

The first picture was staged by Dana Pederson of Masterful Staging. The second image was staged by real estate agent Rebecca Haas of RE/MAX Metro Realty in Seattle. Her site is Team Reba.
Scott Chytil

Recent Work, Residential Real Estate