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September 2010 Archives

I know I promised that I'd catch up soon on my 365 Cellphone pics. Well, I lied. But don't feel too bad. I'm nearly two months behind on posting my daily self-portraits on flickr. But I'm working on it. So here we go, let's try to get some of the pics from earlier in September posted.

On September 4th, I once again wanted to illustrate the idea of taking photos of everyday objects and trying to present them as art. Like a modern-day Dadaist, the cellphone photographer should always be on the lookout for "found art."

By varying the angle and exposure of the shot to present a view of the object that we are not used to, we can draw attention to the image. Then by getting close to the object, filling the frame and paying careful attention to the texture and feel of the object we can force the viewer to look at it in a new way.

This image was heavily post-processed in Adobe Photoshop. It was sharpened more than normal in order to really make the texture of the worn metal really come through. After that, a soft-light layer was added with a diffuse glow filter applied to the image in order to over expose the background and allow the parking meter in foreground to pop.


The September 5th photo is much more of a classic photography image than most of what I've been featuring in here lately. This is a classic landscape shot, presented as a portrait aspect ratio in order to make it standout a little from the norm.

The image was post processed into black and white to make the texture and tones really stand out. The water of the stream I am particularly proud of as it the black tone it takes on is very murky tone.

The key to this photo, and what made me snap it in the first place, was the lighting. The shot is actually taken in a small tunnel. The light is peaking through the trees and just barely entering the mouth of the tunnel where I am standing. Enough ambience to get the shot, but leave the water with that dark and murky look. 


On September 6th, I was working on rebuilding my main computer and had been using an old laptop as my backup. I set it down for a moment to do something else and was struck by the perspective of the keyboard out of the corner of my eye.

I've found that a lot of my favorite cellphone shots utilize extreme perspective. Given the lack of a means of varying the zoom on the iphone's camera, it's probably true that I gravitate towards these kinds of shots. 

Some small sharpening was done in post for this photo to really simulate a crisp macro photography feel, but most of the strength of the photo comes from simply getting very close to time subject and filling the frame.


Perspective was again the critical key to the photo for September 7th. I'd actually been meaning to do a shot like this for a while.

Skyscraper photography with a cellphone is actually quite deceptively simple. The fixed lens is wide enough that perspective of large objects is automatically exaggerated. 

The key here is to get as close to the building as possible. This shot was actually taken from across the street because getting any closer I would not have been able to fit the entire building in the shot.

The iPhone 3GS allows the user to focus on an arbitrary part of the frame by clicking on it. Here I focused on the base of the building and then shot up allowing the focus to fall off as the building trailed off into the distance. The lines on the side of building converge as it gets higher and much like other perspective tricks I've used during this project, this causes a sense of movement throughout the picture.


September 8th's photo is anothere attempt at a classic photography example.

This glass was shot under studio hotlights. The key light was set to camera right pointing down at the glass with a smaller fill light to camera left to maintain a sense of form on the opposite side of the glass. This fill light and a small back light pointing at the glass from behind allow the glass to maintain separation from the background. 

The iPhone was focused on the glare on glass. This has a nice side-effect with the iPhone's camera. The sensor knows to stop the aperture down to attempt to not overexpose the point of focus. Consequently, the black backdrop becomes underexposed which leads to a solid black fill effect. Without the back light, background would be even darker, but allowing a little light to seep into the upper corner of the frame creates a more natural effect.


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I've been looking forward to writing about this one for a while. Way back in January of 2008, I was invited to participate in an art show based around the concept of light. I came up with an exhibit that featured photographs of high-key black and white photos so overexposed that all but the most important details of the subject were washed out and only the key details remain alternating with heavily shadowed chiaroscuro photos in color with intense shadows. 

It was a hit.

After the show I continued to experiment with both forms on occasion over the last two years. It was as much a learning experience on the nature of the usage of light in photography as it was a form of artistic expression. 

Anyway, as I worked on both styles and people began to see the results I began to realize they might make an interesting coffee table book collection similar to original exhibit I did the first set for. 

This is that book.

The book contains 68 pages of photos and is available in three styles. A softcover, a hardcover with ImageWrap and a premium hardcover with dust jacket, all available from my blurb.com bookstore. I tried to do something unique with the book. I like to think of it as a yin yang, light leading into dark and dark leading into light. It has two front covers and no back cover, meaning it can be read in either direction. Like light and darkness they are two sides of the same coin. There is no end. One side has a foreword written by Dave Wood, an introduction written by me, and features a succession of the light images. The other side features a foreword written by Michael Dunn, a second introduction written by me, and features the dark images. All of the included images are artistic nudes featuring Elseworld models Sarah, Trix, Megan as well as several others.

I'm quite proud of it. So if you're a fan of my work, stylized photography, or just like seeing pretty, naked people then I hope you consider buying a copy. And if you do, then please let me know what you think. I'd love to hear.
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boxcar-5.jpgSometimes, it's just fun to make up big words.

I loved this new Zivity set with AmandaBeth the moment I shot it. Even before I had a chance to edit it. I just really liked the mood of it, even while we were out there shooting. She came to me with a single idea "I want to do something that involves smoking cigarettes." Just as it often does, my mind went into overdrive trying to figure out how to make a basic simple concept into something cool.

We drove out to the warehouse district late at night and looked for a suitably industrial location to shoot it. Amanda had a great looking futuristic outfit and I found a bunch of abandoned boxcars set up that I thought had a nice post-industrial feel to them. The entire set was lit with the headlights from my truck and that combined with the smoke from her cigarette gave it a nice Mad Max beyond Thunderdome kind of appeal.

I'm superhappy with how it turned out and would love to know what you think. So check out Boxcarcinogenesis and let us know. As always, more pictures after the break.

http://www.zivity.com/photographers/chrismaverick/photosets/55
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Ok, so I've fallen behind with posting the 365 cellphone pics but that doesn't mean that I have stopped taking them. Quite the opposite. I've been busy taking them in a variety of locations and it just took me a while to get them ready. 

Night photography presents a special challenge with cellphone. Like everything else we've discussed, when the sensor lacks enough light to get a proper exposure, it compensates automatically by adjusting the shutter length and aperture. This typically results in blurred images, but when you anticipate this, you can use it to your advantage for taking stunning long exposure shots. 

It took several shots on a busy nighttime street to get this photo to work out exactly how I wanted it. Basically I just kept waiting for cars to drive past and triggered the camera as they were entering the frame. The trick is to time the shot so that the camera starts recording as the car is entering the frame, as there is a delay between the fire button press and that actual activation of the digital shutter. With some practice however, this can be timed quite well. 

As an additional tip. Since the length of the shutter can't be directly controlled, it can artifically be manipulated by finding a location with enough background ambient lighting to give the camera the sense that the scene is not as dark as it really is. The lights from this grocery store provided that.


While the lens of most cellphones isn't truly a macro lens, everyday objects can be seen from new and interesting lights by getting very close to them. The nice thing about this sort of photography is that you can gain greater camera stability by simply resting the cellphone on the same surface that the object is resting on, in this case a kitchen counter.

The key here is that since the camera has no macro lens you have to keep it far enough away from the object to actually get it to focus. To simulate an actual zoom effect, crops may be made in post production

As always, varying the angle of the object being photographed, rather than shooting it straight on can increase interest in the photo. Similarly, cropping the frame so that the object extends beyond it increases it's sense of mass.


Sometimes a subject will be pre-lit and a lot of your work as a photographer is simply done for you. That was the case at this diner. The deserts in the display case are already lit to draw attention to them and entice the restaurant patron into buying a slice. As such. you merely need to find an interesting angle to showcase them for your shot.

It certainly isn't perfect studio lighting, as display lighting isn't generally as concerned with things such as fill lighting, however, you do get a nice even level of light across all the of pies and the result is a photo that certainly gets the point across to the viewer.


Cellphones are perfect for capturing things such as graffiti and murals and other urban art. Typically there is a vast array of color in the scene already and the urban grit is often highlighted by the shortcomings of the impoverished camera sensor.

If the photo is taken at a well lit time of day, things like aperture and shutter speed aren't really an issue. The primary difficulty for this shot was trying to get it while avoiding being run down by rush hour traffic. 

Plan your shot ahead of time. Get used to visualizing how you want it to appear in your mind and where you need to be in order to acquire the proper framing. Once you have your photo set in your head, you can move into place and make simple quick adjustments to get the shot.


This landscape illustrates how good standard photography techniques can be applied to cellphone photography for similar results.

If subjects are backlit and properly exposed for the sky, then the subjects themselves tend to appear in silhouette since there isn't enough light information coming from the front to allow details to appear. 

As such, the key to a nice backlit scene such as this is to wait til exactly the right time of day. Right as the sun sets. Typically photographers will use "Golden Hour" to take wonderful portraits as the light temperature at the hour just before sunset (and just after sunrise) is perfect for capturing skin tones. As such, you can use this dusk lighting to capture some great portraits of human subjects and end your shooting day with a silhouetted shadow landscape such as this one.
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bath-31.jpgWhen I posted Trix's last Zivity set, I talked about how it just came about randomly. We hadn't planned it, but it was just convenient to shoot and we basically shot it in a sewer in the basement of the studio we were in.

Well, it all worked out because the set we DID have planned together was all about getting clean.

Well sort of anyway. This particular studio is just opening, so while it's functional, running water and all that, the bathroom was far from what I'd call clean. But it had the look we wanted.

To me, the set is all about Trix's eye makeup. Lately, we've been working on doing some darker, more alternative looks for her, and we wanted to build on that for this. To me this says that the woman in the photo had an awful day. Maybe it was a date. Maybe it was work. Maybe she killed someone. We don't know. All we know is that she's home now and she has to get the stench of the day off of her.

I love it.

I hope you do too.

As always, more pics after the break.

Check out "Throw That Baby Out With The Bath Water" and let us know:

http://www.zivity.com/photographers/chrismaverick/photosets/54
glasses-10.jpgI do so love working with Megan. Everything is always so easy. Zivity and Playboy posted a "Girls with Glasses" and she immediately called me up and said "hey, there's a new contest. I'm not doing anything tomorrow. Want to go shoot for it?"

It's funny. I wonder what we'd end up doing if we ever actually planned a shoot more than 24 hours ahead of time. It would probably ruin our whole flow.

Anyway, our initial plan was to shoot this set on a Playground. We even started to do that and got some great looking shots on a swingset, but the playground was right next to the woods and the sun was just pouring into them so perfectly that we really wanted to go back there and see how it looked. We found a path and started down it. Megan started just dropping her clothes behind her as we went, so I just kept shooting. It was natural, organic and perfect and I'm really proud of what we came up with.

So please check out Morning Hike(NSFW) and let us know what you think.

More (NSFW) preview shots after the break.

http://www.zivity.com/photographers/chrismaverick/photosets/53
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Photography has pretty much become my family hobby. Why? Because if I do something everyone else has to do it. I can't have anything to myself. That's why!

Anyway, I've learned to accept this, and so for Christmas, I decided to buy both my niece, Nevaeh (age 3), and my nephew, Kaspien (age 2), digital cameras. This was also in some way a gift to their parents as it removed the children's needs to take the "grown up cameras" and break them.

I did a bit of research on kid cameras and came to the conclusion that the Fisher Price Kid Tough brand of Digital Cameras had just the bit of indestructibility that would be needed for the kind of abuse that I knew the kids would be likely to put them through. I bought two of them and the kids seem to be quite taken with them.

Anyway, now that they've had them for nine months, I got to thinking what quality of images could the kids come up with. Obviously, the camera is impoverished, even more so than the one in my iPhone, which I'm using for the daily cellphone project, but the sensor in the Kid Tough camera is a whopping .31 megapixels and only capable of producing a 640x480 image with considerable grain. There is no flash. There is no control over ISO, aperture or shutter speed (not that the kids would be able to understand it anyway). Basically, it's as no frills as it gets. That said, for a two/three year old to run around and document their world, this is more than sufficient.

I was actually pretty impressed with the results. Obviously neither kid has any formal photography training at all. But unlike adults, who have to learn a new technology, since they've grown up in a world where digital cameras have simply always existed, they have no problem adapting to their use and each of them developed their own style of taking photographs. Both of the kids have given me permission to republish their photowork here in this forum. Much like the cellphone photos, I've done a small amount of post processing work on the photos, most notably to sharpen the images given the dull sensors, but the artistic vision of each image is 100% that of the kids.

Nevaeh Thomas Photography

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Nevaeh, at age three has learned the base secret of successful photojournalism. Namely, take your camera with you everywhere you go. The photos seen here were taken at her daycare. She enjoys taking photos of everyday objects around her, things that she tends to interact with: A photo of her own feet. A portrait of a classmate. A flashcard board. Much like the photography that an adult photojournalist might perform she has taken to seeing something that she finds interesting and snapping a photo of it, generally from her own perspective.

What is interesting about Nevaeh's work is that the things that she choose to photograph tend to be objects on her own level. The photo of her own feet is essentially indistinguishable from a similar photo that an adult might take as they're testing out a new camera and experimenting with interesting camera angles. 

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By contrast the portrait she took of a classmate is taken head on and in a very familiar tone. The expression of the subject is warm, inviting and natural and one assumes she has some rapport with the photographer.

The truly interesting thing about this photo is that it is taken from the perspective of a three year old. The model in the photo is clearly not an adult and as adults we typically envision such subjects as smaller than us as viewer, looking down on them creating a more diminutive effect than normal, however, as the photographer is of a similar size to the model, we instead see the child in a way we are not normally accustomed. At eye-level. The differences in anatomical proportions between children and adults become very prominent when viewed like this and the effect is definitely striking. 

If I have any criticism here for her here it's that she cropped out the subjects hands and the very top of her head. Oh well, she's three, she's learning. What are you gonna do?

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Finally, Nevaeh shares with us a photo of a flashcard board in her classroom. An object that she probably interacts with quite frequently, however most adult viewers would have little experience with. As I said, the job of a photo journalist is to invite us into and document her world.

Without knowing anything about photography at all, she did a couple of very intriguing things here. 

One she filled the frame. This works particularly well in this image, because if one were to be interacting with the board, they would not do it from across the room where they'd view the entire board at once, rather instead they would stand right next to it, concentrating on one or two numbers at a time while the rest of the sign falls off in the periphery of their vision.

Secondly, she lined the shot up quite naturally into a rule of thirds grid. Obviously she knows nothing of this concept, so i can only assume that she stood next to the sign and moved forward and backwards (the camera has a fixed lens, so she wouldn't be able to zoom) until the image "looked right" to her and snapped the picture. She even got a little bit of a tilt angle to the photo, which i will assume in accidental. Still, the result is pleasing, particularly with the vibrant colors the the sign displays.

Kaspien Thomas Photography

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Kaspien, being a year younger than Nevaeh is certainly less refined and dedicated to the craft, but he has certainly taken to a definite style of photography that becomes quite interesting when you contrast it with that of hers. He is less meticulous and more apt to point the camera and shoot, which means that while she gets a more well planned and composed shot (at least as much as a three year old can plan), he gets much more natural and dynamic photos. Less pretty but more energetic.

Similarly, Kaspien is doing what most people do with a camera. He is documenting the world as he sees it. However, unlike Nevaeh, Kaspien tends to document the adult world from a child's perspective (as opposed to a child world from the child's perspective).

As such, while she shows us on the level views of objects we don't normally interact with, Kaspien shows us objects we might see every day but from an angle we would never experience. For instance this photo of the back headrest of the a seat in a car, taken from his vantage point in a carseat, well lower than the eye level we'd normally view this at as adults, but interesting when one realizes that this is the exact angle of this common everyday object that he sees every day.  

Kaspien2.jpg
Instead of taking portraits of other children on his eye level, Kaspien focuses most of his photos on adults around him. This lends to one of two types of photos.

First he shoots at his own eye level, several feet shorter than his subject is which gives us a view of a headless, faceless adult, one of many in the world of a child, forced to interact with an ever changing succession of legs and buttocks, placed right at our eye level. 

Looking at this photo, I am immediately drawn to memories of a typical childlike behavior exhibited by many toddlers. Namely, when they are frightened by the presence of an unknown individual they will seek comfort and protection by tugging at the pants leg of a parent or other familiar adult. The impetus behind this behavior becomes immediately obvious when one notices how familiar this view must be to an individual hovering around the two foot tall range. 

Kaspien3.jpg
His other alternative is to shoot for the face of the individuals he wishes to capture. But since they are far above his eye level we end up with an opposite effect to what is typical of adults taking photos of children. Namely that we are looking up at the subject and this angle makes the subject look far larger and more imposing than they otherwise would.

It's also an angle that we tend to never see people from and this creates a fair amount of tension and pull to the photo which makes it interesting in a way that a typical snapshot from an adult might not be.

The work of both kids was quite interesting and I thank them both (as well as their parents) for sharing with me and allowing me to share with all of you. One would hope that some lessons about photography (namely angle, and familiarity with subject) can be gleaned from them. I'm sure they'll both be shooting for National Geographic by this time next year.

Zivity Preview: Sewer Rat

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sewer-10.jpgTime for another Zivity set preview. I've been pretty busy over there lately.

So this was a fun set to do. Trix and I were at a group shoot a couple months ago. We promised ourselves that since we work together all the time we would go out of our way to work with other people. But the whole thing fell into chaos and people were missing and rescheduling time slots and it turned out I was stnading around waiting for another model to be ready to shoot with me and she walks up to me in lingerie, with crazy makeup and hair and says "we're both free! we need to shoot a zivity set now!"

I do love her so. :-)

Luckily I'd already scouted out the whole warehouse and I knew exactly the location that would be perfect for the look she had. The basement was under renovation wtih the water and sewage pipes completely exposed. It was the perfect post industrial look for what I wanted to do. And of course, as always, Trixie rocked it. 

(as always, there are more photos after the break)

Anyway, the set went live yesterday and we'd love to know what you think so check it out and let us know:

http://www.zivity.com/photographers/chrismaverick/photosets/52

pool-5.jpgI had another Zivity set go up last night, once again with Sarah Prankha.

Usually when I'm doing a shoot for Zivity, I have some grand story that I'm trying to tell. Some weird concept that probably only makes sense to me. Well, this time the concept was pretty simple.

Incredibly gorgeous girl lounging around in a bikini and it's so hot she decides to take a dip in a private pool. 

Sometimes it's the simple stories that work best. :-)

So please check out Summer on the Ski Slopes and let us know what you think:

And now to break some of the photo magic. Despite the title, the shoot didn't actually occur on a ski slope. It was actually shot in my own backyard. I happen to live on a pretty steep hill, but I have my own pool. This is an example of how you can disguise a shoot by using creative camera angles. We wanted to present the idea that Sarah was in a remote location, enjoying the summer all by her lonesome. We accomplished this by keep very close angle of her with a wide angle lens in the pool which makes the pool look larger than it actually is (18 feet) and by making sure that all the wide shots showed as much greenery and sky as possible, simulating the look of a remote locale.

The shoot was done on a particular hot and bright summer day, however it was cloudy outside which cools down the color temperature of ambient sunlight just a bit and diffuses it. An on camera flash was used for fill which was pointed directly at the model. While this washes her out slightly, it does create a very summery look for the light. The pictures were then processed in Adobe Lightroom 3.0 to get a slightly muted color effect.

Check out a couple more preview pics below or see the entire shoot on Zivity at:


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This page is an archive of entries from September 2010 listed from newest to oldest.

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