Friday, December 28, 2007

Agent J

Agent J is a model/performer friend of mine. I had shot her before at a club and asked her about doing a real shoot. She said yes! ;)

We had a large variety of clothing and location changes in my home studio. Over a span of about 5 hours I shot nearly 300 images. These are a few of them..






Ok the below image is a total ripoff of Angelina Jolie's cover shoot for Esquire Magazine a few months back. Compare my version to the original . I think I got pretty darn close. Especially since, the original sheet was blue, her skin was nearly white and my back ground is actually purplish-red! A few hundred adjustment layers in CS2 fixed the colors right up!


This is the blue sheet used in the above shot!


This is my dirty old pool table on my back porch.


I have a few more model shoots coming up. I'll post them as soon as I'm done!
Have fun!
Mark

Saturday, December 22, 2007

Unus Mundus


"According to an old Chinese story there were three wise old men who lived separately as hermits in caves. One day they decided to see each other and two visited the third. They walked in a little bamboo grove and had a delightful time of spiritual communication and oblation. When they just stood on a little bridge, they suddenly heard a tiger growl, and all three at once burt into laughter! Then they parted. They had understood the synchronicity, for the tiger in China is the female principle of Yin, the fourth in their spiritual male trinity, which they had ignored! So they could "read" events simultaneously, while they were happening, and draw the right conclusion. This is a stage of development man reaches when he approaches death. Perhaps death itself is nothing else than this third stage, the union with the unus mundus."


Woke up this morning and saw this image in my head...Play!
-Mark

Friday, December 21, 2007

A and A

Austin and Amberly are friends of mine whom asked for some fun Xmas pictures. We met down at the Rockwall harbor with about an hour and a half of sun left in the day.

We started off at the fountain...

Then onto the bridge...



Then INTO the fountains!

They were great sports, laying in the cold wet water!

A bit of cross processing and wow! Check out those green eyes! I'd like to admit I did this on purpose, but the effect was a mistake as I was trying something else...I liked this version better and kept it :)


A nice fun close up...

We found a boat at the pier and decided it was to be a nifty backdrop...

Check out that Texas sunset!


After all the splashing and getting wet, we came back to my place and did a few stock shots for grandma :)

Have a super holidays!
-Mark

Wednesday, December 19, 2007

Biggest Baby Ever!

The Rhodesian Ridgeback dog, designed to be African Lion hunters, bred to fight and live without water for weeks at a time. Sleek and efficient hunting machines they terrorized the hunters prey. ...then there's my dog...Zulu...

It's time for me to leave my house and I tell Zulu to head outside.. It's not even cold! The efficient hunter runs and hides in the only place he thinks I cannot see him...my bathtub! He ran into the bathroom, and jumped right and hid behind the curtain! I was laughing so hard I could barely hold up my camera! What a whiny little baby he is. I had to physically drag him out of the tub and bribe him with a walk and food to get him outside. He's so anxiety ridden, I should get him a prescription for Xanax :)

Here's some pics to prove the fearless hunter is not so fearless :)








Mark!

Sunday, December 16, 2007

HDNet Fights

The CRAAACK of a fist along a jawline echoed through the cheers of the raging fans! I quickly chimped my shot, and I nailed it :) I was a media shooter for this weekends HDNet fights in Dallas, and what rush! Loads of fighter celebrities were hanging around, literally inches away from me.







Fun night!

-Mark

Saturday, December 8, 2007

Mixing Bowl Ringlight

Ahh the music of chefs everywhere cursing my name into the 5th ring of Hades for desecrating the all mighty mixing bowl. Masterfully crafted from the finest stainless steel, by a sweat shop in northern China... The mixing bowl is the only implement a chef uses to mix his ingredients into the finest production he could design. True, he could just thrown his ingredients on the floor and perform the Mexican hat dance to get his cookie dough all mixed up...but really do you want shoes prints in your Keeblers??

Like the mixing bowl, light is the photographer's tool for manipulating, creating and mastering his/her subject. To manipulate light photographers for years have designed ingenious devices to blast their subjects with light. Short of giving their subjects an impromtu tanning session, most light devices are strobes, hot lamps, the sun, ambient light, or even the light emitted by chemical reactions in bugs butts!

The ringlight is one device to irradiate your subject with a circular ring of luminous luxury. The shadow created by the ringlight tends to halo the outer body, while the center of the subject is exposed radially from the center of the X and Y axis of the ringlight. In other words, it looks groovy!

Here's a few pics of my "salad bowl" as my friend Traci calls it. Click on them for the mega high resolution!

This is the dangerous end, that's why you're on the other side! Photons are emitted at the speed of light toward models eyes, wear eye protection! The white stuff covering it all is wedding dress material I bought down at Michaels. It has a nice even, smooth texture. I used a high temperature glue gun...careful, my flesh is still attached to that bowl somewhere along the edges! The internal tube is 4inch to 6 inch A/C coupler, sitting on some weird alien looking pie pan with a 3.5 inch hole in it. I think it's called a flashing mount or something. I used JB Qwik to weld all this together, and man, is that stuff strong!


And the back. This is the part you(as the photog) get to see most often, unless you have U shaped arms. You shove your camera, carefully through the wazoo of this thing. Notice the foam padding I added, it has sticky stuff on it, but I used super glue to lock it down for good. There are two rings of padding, the one at the very beginning opening and one about an inch inside, on the sharp edge of the coupling.


And the side shows how my Vivitar 285HV flash is mounted. I hacked a whole with my Dremel tool and used velcro to secure the flash. The bracket holding the flash is a small L bracket bent with my mighty tools and bolted into place. The flash is mounted on a flash mount to 1/4 nut adapter (ebay $5). The adapter has 3 plugs for sync cords. The snazzy handle on the right is a $2 item from Home Depot.

Total price... hmm lets see, $2 handle, $6 bowl, $2 bracket, $6 dress material, $8 internal tubes, $6 glue, $2 padding, $10 misc hardware....not counting emergency surgery, transfusions etc...that comes to a whopping $42! Nice! The Vivitar you can get for $85, plus the $5 adapters, man I'm still under $200 and I have 9 and a half fingers left, what a bargain!

I can't wait for my next couple of model shoots. One would have been today, but she had an emergency :( Luckily, she rescheduled for next week. So keep on the look out for some cool stuff. I have two more models lined up for some shots aswell, but no firm dates yet.

Zulu, get over here, I've got some ringlight practice! :)

hasta la pasta
-Mark

p.s. the perfect white back ground is courtesy of another contraption I built. A queen sized softbox made out of wooden rods with queen, fitted sheets on it! It's so rickety and about to fall apart, but man is it awesome!

Freudian...

Hola!

Warning..I'm going to get all Freudian Psychoanalytic on ya....

The theory goes, men have a fascination with building things due to the envy of not having the ability to make babies; as women do... Men build scyscrapers, women make babies, men build battleships, women make babies, men build bridges, space shuttles, dams, women make babies, babies and babies...WTF does this have to do with photography??

I'm my little workshop, I have boxes of tools, a disassembled mower, camping gear, tools, motorcycle gear and more tools. Lastnight, after a brief trip to Home Depot, I built the Holy Grail of photographic accessories. The phenomenal ringlight! AHHH! The sounds of angels and trumpets rang out as the JB weld bonded the stainless steel 8qt salad bowl to my A/C gutter tube! My drill pierced the bowl to make holes for the handles and my mighty Dremel tool shredded the steel to make a hole for my Vivitar 285HV flash. The screams of searing pain, echoed the room as the hot glue bonded my right index finger to the bowl, as I applied the white material to the flash opening. The flesh tearing as I ripped my hand away, only to wipe my brow of sweat, blood and the occasional tear as the "device" took life. Breathing heavy, I lifted the alien contraption to headlevel and stuck my camera lens through the beast to take a really crappy shot because I'm an idiot and forgot to connect my Pocket Wizards...5 minutes later I tried again and this time, I yelled in excitement as the flash fired at the chair in my living room!

Zulu...my poor mutt. Ever the target of my photographic experiments was hiding in his usual spot as I yelled for him. I screamed, I yelled, only to fall back to plan L to bribe him with food to sit infront of a wall... A few really sad shots of him as he hung his head low, did he raise his head to glare at the bribe(hahaha I had originally type "bride"!) I had rested on the top of my head.....I'm diggin' ringlights :)


If your not playing, then you're working and that just ain't natural.
-Mark
p.s I''ll post a pic of my ringlight later...

Thursday, November 15, 2007

More, Old Meets New...

I get a feeling of nostalgia from these shots. It's fun playing with new toys, even if they are 50 years old..somethings just never die :)










Have fun and let me know if you give this a try yourself!

-Mark

Old Meets New

I was recently drooling over the new Nikon D300 camera reviews. This thing rocks, it seems to have it all -- to include a fat price tag! An unfortunate loss of an alternator on my car set my credit card back a solid $1300! Ouch! No D300 for Christmas for me!

I haven't picked up the camera lately as I've been super busy with other projects... yes a shame...Also in there somewhere was a tiny bit of creative burnout. :(

So yesterday I'm digging through my work's newsletter full of ads for old junk no one wants and lo and behold I see someone selling something intriguing. An Argus 75 medium format camera, made in the 1940's and 50's. Hmmm, that's interesting. I've always had some sort of fascination with antique gear. So with a quick call I arrange to check out this little contraption this morning.

I'm meet the seller in one of our break rooms and he's carrying the Argus 75 in a stylish white plastic Michaels craft store bag - of which he states goes with the camera :)

I reach in the bag and wow, practically mint condition! Still with the flash attachment. So cool! This little guy, is basically a box, with two lenses, one for the film and one for composition. Via a mirror, the image is displayed at a 90 degree, backwards on TOP of the camera. You basically look down at the camera as it shoots forward. I had to chuckle, with a $2 lens and mirror 50 years ago they achieved a real time 2 inch(high resolution) camera display we all crave for on our digitals :)

We chatted for a bit, gave him $20, told him my plans with it, and he wanted to buy it back!

So what are my plans? Why bring it to the digital age of course! With a nice sharp razor blade, I hack up a long rectangular "tube" perfectly fitted to the camera. On top, it's cut so that my D200 fits in with a 50mm f1.4 + a 12mm macro extension tube.

My poor dog, ever the subject of 2000Watt strobes and forced to sit in front of my camera for probably seems like hours in dog time -- he once again became my first subject with my dual camera contraption. Below are the first two shots! The square format through the viewfinder is a nice break from the 4:3 we typically shoot at.




So what's so interesting about this anyway? Vintage photography, through vintage glass, complete with 50 years of dirt, grit and bits still coating the lens. I'll never clean the lens on this thing as I believe it adds a huge amount of interest and texture. How unique! Especially, in our day and age of digital perfection, a bit of grime and vintage imperfection is rather interesting. I'm going to have fun with this one for a while :)

ok off to play!
-Mark

Friday, October 26, 2007

Wow It's Been a While!

That work thing is really getting in the way of my blogging! I just landed from a week long work trip to Omaha, Nebraska. It was ok, visited a few indie galleries and the Joslyn Art Museum; nice stuff.
I have a very interesting photography shoot early November. Should be fun!

In the meantime, here's two images from a few summers ago in Kansas. These are mammatus clouds over my parent's house. These are indicators of tornado activity and are absolutely amazing too see in real life. I took dozens of images of these. It looks like boiling water! I think these would look great printed BIG and mounted on a wall!





Stay tuned, there's more I promise!

-Mark

Sunday, September 30, 2007

OK!

Yes I'm OK! Oklahoma that is. I know! I know! It's been a while! Let's catch up on the news.

I had a nasty case of poison Ivy recently. About 80% of my body was covered in the stuff. Not fun! The dermatologist game me some good steroids to kick it's butt. Never done 'roids before but WOW! No wonder athletes take them! Talk about Superman! I was eating 2 - 3 dinners a night. Working out twice a day. My poor dog suffered through long runs with me! I was waking up at 5am every morning, launching out of bed ready to rock and roll. It was craaazy! Glad I'm off of that stuff and rid of that nasty Poison Ivy. Oh and I got that stuff from working on shrubbery in front of my house. I've already got one kid doing my lawn, now it's time to hire another to handle that part :)

In other news, I've been away for work in a foreign land for the last week...i.e. Washington D.C.... then came right back and headed up to my buddies farm in Oklahoma for the weekend. Talk about a cool place! Here's some shots:



Here's Calamity Jane (CJ). CJ is a Pit Boxer, half pit bull, half boxer. She's the coolest chick dog ever! My dog Zulu, would so love to hang with her!


One of my buddies horses. I really like this one in Sepia.


There's my friend petting his horse. Right about his time a pack of Coyotes started to howl. The various yelps, and barks were so cool!

And one more shot of the horse.

Ok back to work for me. Busy busy week ahead. Next month I'm once again traveling for some work related stuff. Hope I can get a few more blog entries out by them. I have some seriously cool projects on the burner, things which will knock your socks off :) Stay tuned!
-Mark