Snowflake Photography 

I’m so ready to photograph some beautiful snowflakes! We have had the cold weather for it. It is currently 15 degrees so definitely cold enough for the flakes to not melt. We’ve barely had an inch total in the past two weeks and no flakes. It has come down in tiny clumps or teensy snowballs. I think I’ll go ahead and move my whole setup outside tomorrow since it’s supposed to snow the next 5 days. Yay! I have three different set-ups I used last year. One is my iPhone with two stacked macro diopters. The other is my Canon EOS 5D MIII with Canon 100mm macro with a Raynox MSN-202 diopter. I have shot both handheld with snow that has fallen on a hat or scarf using both natural light and with tiny LED flashlights and using my darkroom enlarger base as a “tripod” of sorts with snow on a piece of glass held up with a clear drinking glass to allow for natural and supplemental backlighting and to add various backgrounds below or inside the glass. One of my backgrounds was a mini cd that fit into the glass perfectly. I used small LED flashlights both above and below attached (taped with electrical tape) to Bogen clamp setups for lighting. Here are a couple snowflake images and a few of last years set-up. 

Canon setup. Handheld. Single shot. This was my favorite shot last year. I also photographed this flake with the iPhone setup, it was not as clear but acceptable.

Canon setup. Handheld.

Canon setup. Enlarger with grey sponge under glass as background. Macro ringlite for lighting (shown below).

Macro ringlite…had to be taped to the Raynox MSN-202 Adapter.

My little setup, small LED flashlights, toothpicks, paintbrush (for moving flakes).

Tiny dried flower. Canon setup. The colorful background is a mini cd.

This is the first snowflake I got to photograph. The snow wasn’t so great. Definitely not perfect snowflakes. Handheld, Canon camera, 100mm macro, Raynox MSN-202. I just let the snow fall onto a winter hat and photographed with natural light.

 

If you have any questions, feel free to ask. Snowflake photography is so much fun. 

Jen Munson – Maternity Session

I had the opportunity to photograph my beautiful friend and fellow photographer Jennifer Munson recently.  Jen is pregnant with her first child right now and her maternity session was magical.  Working with a photographer made this one of the easiest and nicest shoots I have ever done.  The light was gorgeous last Friday evening and the Thoroubred farm she acquired for the shoot was gorgeous!

Halloween Sessions!

It’s that time of year again…yes, Halloween is coming soon.  I’m booking now for Halloween and I am offering a Special for Early Birds (Early Ravens) $185.00/Special for August and September, sessions will be $225.00 in October. Please use the contact form below now. Let’s get creepy people!!!

Winter Shooting – equipment care, condensation, staying warm and exposure.

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Winter: Most people are concerned about going out into the cold from indoors and ruining a camera. Cold air outdoors has little moisture in it so there isn’t a problem with a camera going from a warm environment into a cold one. When condensation does become a problem is when you are ready to bring the cold camera and equipment back indoors. Then condensation can occur on the lens and possibly on the inside of the camera. The best way to avoid this is to put the camera into a nice padded camera bag and bring it inside and leave it in a cooler area of the house until the temperature evens out. You can also put the camera into a ziplock bag or wrap in a larger bag. If you don’t have a cool area inside your house or your home is very warm, I highly recommend putting your camera inside a plastic bag…but do this BEFORE you bring it inside into the warm air. Any condensation will then form on the outside of the bag.
Batteries: Batteries lose power very quickly in the cold. To help with this you can keep your camera inside your coat while not actually shooting. Use a quick release plate if shooting wildlife where you’ll be waiting around for long periods of time. Keep spare batteries warm inside a shirt pocket so when your camera batteries run down you can replace them with fresh warm ones.

Keep yourself warm: Wear layers, warm boots and gloves. You can gets gloves and mittens that fold back to expose fingertips while pressing the shutter button. I ride horses, so I find that a nice pair of winter riding gloves keep my hands warm and I’m also able to feel the shutter button. Riding gloves are made so you can ‘feel’ the horse, a good, warm pair of riding gloves can be expensive though. I also use those little hand warmers inside them when it’s especially cold. One really important thing with both your hands and feet…don’t wear so many layers that you don’t have enough circulation. Especially with too many pairs of socks inside your boots. That will actually work against you and you’ll get cold hands or feet anyway. Take this from a gal who trail rides in 20 degree weather 😉

If it’s snowing, take along a soft dry cotton cloth to wipe down your camera. Keep a UV filter over the lens. You can purchase plastic housings for rain that range from $5 to over $1000.

Exposure: Shooting in the bright snow will usually end up in your image having dull grey snowy scene. If this happens, set your camera to manual and try overexposing up to two stops. On an auto setting…use Exposure Compensation and add up to two stops (or +1 +2)

Cool! Have fun, stay warm!

Super Macro

I’m excited to be getting everything set up to start photographing snowflakes this year. I asked for a Raynox MSN-202 for Christmas and it has already came in.  I’ll need a focus rail and some glass or glass microscopic slides also. I’m using my darkroom enlarger as a copy stand. I had planned on buying the Snow Studio from David Runyan but he is upgrading the design completely and isn’t selling them this year. 

I plan on using a few different types of lighting. Including, but not limited to, having taped the Raynox filter adapter to my Canon Ring Lite, using small LED flashlights taped to a couple of Manfrotto clamps I use for flashes normally, I’ll use some type of bags or lids to color and diffuse the lighting from these, and natural lighting if it works. I’ll see what types of lighting I like and what doesn’t work (melts the snow).

I also have +4 and a +10 close-up filters that fit right onto the back of the Raynox that will get more magnification but I will lose more DOF and possibly will get some fringing. I’m excited to try it out though.

I’m testing my set-up now.  This image is of a very tiny (less than 1/4 of an inch) dried weed flower. I used the darkroom enlarger stand, 2 second delay on the shutter, f16, Aperture Priority, Canon ring lite – photographed with the modeling light, Canon 100mm L macro lens with Raynox MSN-202, Canon 5D MarkIII. 

I just looked up and it’s snowing out right now.  It’s not cold enough for the snow to not melt but yay!

Gothic with Lensbaby!

I’ve been photographing with my Lensbaby lenses a lot lately.  I love the way you can get blur wherever you want it.  I have been using the Edge 80 more often than I usually do and I’m liking that lens more and more.  The Sweet 35 is my current favorite, although the Double Glass Optic with ‘rose’ or ‘birds’  creative apertures or bare (no disc) has been my favorite for the past several years.

I love how you can get people to look like they’re ghosts or floating by using different techniques and apertures with any of the lenses that bend.

Here are several images from a few sessions I’ve had in the past few weeks for Halloween.  I am honored to be featured on LensBabyLove’s website this October.  Thank you!

Loving my Lensbaby lenses!

Beach Bridal

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Portrait – Scarlett Amburgey

Scarlett called me at the last minute two weeks ago needing a quick portrait for a book she has written.  She needed an image for the back cover of her book.  I told her we’d get together and do a quick fun photoshoot and do more than just the one image she needed for the book cover.  We met about halfway and went to several locations that this small town is great for.  I love the locations that are to be found in almost any city.  We spied an old hearse out behind a building at one of the locations.  What a great find!  Scarlett loves to be in front of the lens and was great to work with, I can’t wait to photograph her again.

Fantasy Portraits

$175.00 (within 50 miles, addition mileage at $25/100miles)