p.1 #7 · Pictures from the American Museum of Natural History in New York
MK3Brent wrote:
Do you have any snapshots of the scenes?
It would be cool to see how ordinary the location is, and how much better you made them look with sculpted lighting.
I loved all of them...
PS, where's the dinosaurs?
Thanks
I have got some pictures of dinos but not all that good.
Way to many people around them.
Here is one of the unprocessed shots.
The lights were very, very bad
Charlie Shugart Offline Upload & Sell: Off
p.1 #8 · Pictures from the American Museum of Natural History in New York
Beautiful work, Lazlo.
I was trying to figure out the mixture of things going on, and then I scrolled down to see the unprocessed shot. Okay- now I understand.
As suspected, your processing has performed magic on that statue. Your B&W makes it look like you photographed a living person dressed that way.
I am stunned by your processing skills!
Charlie
p.1 #10 · Pictures from the American Museum of Natural History in New York
Great processing indeed. I like number two, though I wonder if softening the focus somewhat would make it even more natural. You also might want to check out a recent NY Times article on Hiroshi Sugimoto and his photographs of dioramas at the same museum.
p.1 #11 · Pictures from the American Museum of Natural History in New York
srudy wrote:
Great processing indeed. I like number two, though I wonder if softening the focus somewhat would make it even more natural. You also might want to check out a recent NY Times article on Hiroshi Sugimoto and his photographs of dioramas at the same museum.
Thanks !
Sugimoto's diorama pictures are fascinating, I wish I could see them in a bit bigger size, not the postage stamp size they post on the website.
I have took a few diorama pictures as well, but again it was almost impossible to get something worthwhile, due to the crowd around them and the poor lights.
Here is one: http://lazlo.us/blog1/wp-content/gallery/new-york-july-10-2012/dsc06049_1.jpg