Posts tagged: architecture

An HDR Image for the Client

I’m in the middle of a project for Electro-Optic US, a die-cutting manufacturing company based in Alpharetta, GA.  One piece of this project is to create a exterior image of the US headquarters of the company.  Sounds easy right?  Not necessarily so.  Creating an exterior image of a building takes more work than you may think.

The entrance to Electro-Optic US is on the north elevation and because the sun is so far south at this time of year, there would be very dark shadows on that side of the building.  No matter what time of day the shot would be taken, if the sun was above the horizon, the dynamic range of the image (that’s the difference between the brightest part of the image compared to the darkest part of the image) would be too large to correct in post-processing.  And since Markus, the president of Electro-Optic US, wanted the focus to be on the building and not any cars that may be in the parking lot, I created the images below when they were closed and during that 20-30 minutes between dawn and sunrise when daylight first appears early on a Saturday morning.

Creating an Image

I captured the five small images on the right side of the image above just after dawn using five different exposures to capture the brights of the lights, the darks of the shadows and everything in between. You can see them better by clicking on the image to enlarge it in your browser.  I then merged them together in software to create the High Dynamic Range (HDR) image in the lower right of frame.

This created a very workable image but there were things that needed to be fixed before I would call it a finished image, ready for delivery to the client.  For instance the dull sky needed to be replaced and distractions like the signpost removed, the brown grass made to look greener, replacing missing pine straw around the bushes and straightening the crooked window shades all needed to be fixed.  There was even some foliage added to the three bushes at the front so they would look healthier.  That’s an image I’m proud to present to a client.

If you are or if you know a business owner who wants their building to be seen in the best light, even if the images were taken before the sun came up, tell then you know someone who can create that image, point them to this post and introduce us in an email or over coffee.  Thanks for visiting the blog, and remember, I don’t just take pictures, I create images.

Tampa Bay Hotel

While travelling, I often shoot images to use in my portfolio and I shoot them in the way that would I shoot images to be used in industry publications and location websites.

While in Tampa, FL a couple of months ago, I had some free time and I visited the Henry B. Plant museum that was at one time known as the luxurious Tampa Bay Hotel.  It was a resort built by Henry B. Plant, a railroad magnate, containing more than 500 rooms to host the elite of society around the turn of the 20th century.  The grounds cover more than 150 acres and the hotel itself covers 6 acres and is a quarter-mile long.  It was equipped with the first elevator ever installed in Florida and that elevator is still in use today, making it one of the oldest continually operational elevators in the nation.

During the Spanish-American War, it was the base of military operations.  It housed officers and wives in the hotel and enlisted men were encamped on the spacious grounds.   Even Teddy Roosevelt, his wife and his Rough Riders stayed at the hotel prior to embarkation to Cuba.

Today, the hotel (which is part of the University of Tampa campus) hosts the museum in a portion of the first floor.  The rest of the building houses administration offices and classrooms for the University of Tampa.

This view, from the hotel’s garden (now called Plant Park), overlook the North River with downtown Tampa in the background. 

This view is the reverse of the one above and shows more of Plant Park as well as the Tamp Bay Hotel and its Moorish Revival style of architecture.

Here’s another view of the museum entrance and the unique architecture of the building.

I highly recommend a visit to this museum if you have some free time when in Tampa, FL.  It will give you a fantastic perspective of the Gilded Age of America around the turn of the 20th century.

June Re-Cap

 

Blog and Web Site…
 
This blog and the new web site that goes along with it happened this month.  We spent a lot of time getting the site ready and we hope you like the results.
Blogging is something new to me, I’ve never kept a diary, so I hope you’ll excuse a bit of my long windedness at times.  I’ll also attempt to keep the jargon to a minimum when writing these posts.  If you choose to subscribe to the RSS feed, I promise not to overload you with useless information.  And I’ll post when something very interesting has happened or at least once a month.

History…
 
There is a history center in the development where my studio is located called Circa History Guild.  They regularly have interesting speakers talking about various topics.  This month the speakers’ topics revolved around the personal Signed Picture of Robert E. Leeexperiences of their duty during the Second World War.
 
I did some work for them again this month, and the reason I mention this is because most of the items for sale on their web site were photographed by me.  It is truly amazing to think that I’ve handled documents that contain original signatures of our founding fathers as well as other artifacts.
 
Check them out when you get the chance; I have personal knowledge that there are many more interesting things to be posted in the History Shoppe web gallery.
 
 Architecture…
 
The owner of XI Builders stopped by this month and asked if I had some time to shoot a few interiors for him to use in an upcoming client presentation.  It turned out the Restaurant HQpresentation was less than 48 hours away, so of course I did the shoot for him.  Normally, we would meet a few days prior to the shoot so I could see and understand what was necessary, make the proper plans, and have the right equipment with me, but due to my schedule and time constraints, we went over the shots he wanted at the time of the shoot.  In a few hours of onsite work, I managed to create eight images including the one pictured here.  Later that week he told me that the presentation went exceptionally well and the images were just what were needed.
 

June Brides?…

 

 
We all know what most ladies think of when you mention the month of June, brides and weddings!  Well at my studio, that seems to have been replaced with what happens next…maternity sessions!
 
Maternity-ClaciI truly consider ladies that are with child to be beautiful; there is just a glow that surrounds them with an air of excitement and anticipation that goes along with having a child.  During June the  mother’s-to-be kept

Maternity-Jenny

me busy shooting maternity images of their third trimester.  Some were very close to delivery.  During the shoots we did some fun images as well as some in a fine art style to document this wonderful time of their lives.  I had fun shooting these and from the feedback I’ve had, the ladies had fun too.

 
Well that does it for now.  June was a busy month for me.  I hope you have a happy and safe 4th of July!  Enjoy the weekend!

 

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