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Painting with light.


MarkLB

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Hi all. I've been playing around with a technique called 'Painting with light'. Basically it's long exposure, low light. There are several ways of applying the technique, from the simple lighting of a single object, as I've attempted here, or more elaborate images of outdoor settings where the photographer can spend hours 'painting' details in with light.

These are a couple of images of 1/72 scale kitset models. The first is a Supermarine Spitfire Mk1, the second is a Messerschmitt Bf-109E3. This is my first attempt and I hope to improve so I will be posting more pics. Have a go and post yours :)

Mk1SpitLit.jpg?t=1295614519

MesserBf109.jpg?t=1295614519

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  • 2 months later...
Definitely need a dslr. My camera gets really noisy after only about 15 seconds. (Also only goes up to 15 seconds.)

Do it. I bought my first about 2 years ago and I've already upgraded since then. If you like accessories then the world of lenses will make you !drool:. The difference in quality is definitely worth the price but it really makes you a photo snob haha.. I can't stand half the photos I see on Facebook because they're taken with crappy compacts and they're often really blurry/ noisy (or maybe my friends are just really shocking photographers haha!)

..I think my camera expenditure might actually come close to my fish expenditure! :facepalm:

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Do it. I bought my first about 2 years ago and I've already upgraded since then. If you like accessories then the world of lenses will make you !drool:. The difference in quality is definitely worth the price but it really makes you a photo snob haha.. I can't stand half the photos I see on Facebook because they're taken with crappy compacts and they're often really blurry/ noisy (or maybe my friends are just really shocking photographers haha!)

..I think my camera expenditure might actually come close to my fish expenditure! :facepalm:

Nah, I'm reasonably happy with mine. It's a crappy compact but it still manages pictures like below, which I'm happy with. Could certainly do better with a dslr and the right lenses, but not $1500 better to me.

spidermacro2.jpg

weevil.jpg

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Pardon my ignorance, but I'm not quite sure I understand the point of the technique, haha! Is it that the low-light, long-exposure creates the shadowy background effect?

It let's the photographer create highlights and shadows to give the image atmosphere or to give the object more shape. And it can be done without fancy lighting equipment, a torch is often all that is needed.

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