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Posts Tagged ‘dance’

NAB 2018: Watch these high-speed camera robots ‘dance’ at the Nikon booth

11 Apr

Nikon-owned Mark Roberts Motion Control (aka MRMC) brought its high-speed Bolt and Bolt Junior ‘cinebot’ camera robots to NAB this year. And in a fit of “just because we can, probably means we should,” the company decided to choreograph a little dance number for the two robots on the showroom floor.

DPReview decided to skip NAB this year, but friend of the site Jim Goldstein graciously allowed us to share his two videos of the bots in action. To quote Jim, it seems it’s “Out with ‘booth babes’ at NAB and in with ‘booth bots’.” We 100% support this change.

You can see the full routine from two angles in the video above and below.


Videos by Jim M. Goldstein and used with permission.

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Last Dance: A Dozen Hustled & Bustled Abandoned Discos

13 Feb

[ By Steve in Abandoned Places & Architecture. ]

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Disco ducks and dancing queens can no longer shake their booties since these dozen decrepit abandoned discotheques took down their mirror balls.

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The 1970s haven’t aged well and the various labels applied to the much-maligned decade haven’t helped its rep: The Me Decade, the Malaise Era and the Age of Disco don’t evoke a wealth of fond memories. Even worse, Disco music and discotheques somehow managed to outlast their best-before-date in many places, notably Europe.

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Take the Discoteca Excalibur, an Italian disco housed in a fake medieval castle. The dance hall was only open for a few years in the early 1990s, and again in 2004-05. Boogie knights!

Don’t Leave Me This Way

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A disco by any other name, still sucks it would seem. Take the Good Omen Garden, a once-thriving dining & dancing emporium near Osaka, Japan. Building it out in the boondocks was neither a good omen nor a wise business decision.

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Like many Japanese urban and rural abandonments, the Good Omen Garden displays a creepy “frozen in time” look with tons of fixtures and decor pieces left in situ, if not totally unmolested. Urbex explorer Florian from Abandoned Kansai ventured inside back in November of 2012 and lived to show & tell the tale.

I Will (Not) Survive

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When Club Zillion in Antwerp, Belgium opened in October of 1997, it did so with a bang courtesy of an indoor fireworks show, smoke blowers, confetti cannons, and programmed industrial robots. The place’s main claim to fame was a hydraulic dance floor that not only rotated, it rose and dipped in tune with the music.

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Club Zillion closed with a whimper in 2001: its owner was convicted of human trafficking and did time while city authorities plotted the demise and demolition of the so-called “blue cancer”. Thanks to YouTubers Bros of Decay, you can take a twelve-minute video tour filmed in November of 2016, mere weeks before Club Zillion was razed. Images above courtesy of Flickr user Roger Price (antwerpenR) and Urban Treasure.

Lipps Unincorporated

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The abandoned Dolphinarium discotheque in Tel Aviv, Israel looked kinda cool and funky from the get-go thanks to its distinctive curved facade. Long abandoned by 2015, the former nightclub proved to be an irresistible template for Israeli street artist Dede, who re-imagined the building as a gargantuan set of wind-up chattering teeth – key included.

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“Without any doubt this is the biggest art challenge I have ever had,” explained Dede. “I’ve had this vision for almost a year now.” With visions like this, who needs hallucinogens?

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Last Dance A Dozen Hustled Bustled Abandoned Discos

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[ By Steve in Abandoned Places & Architecture. ]

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NYC Dance Project: How two photographers capture the beauty in movement

06 Nov

NYC Dance Project: The Art of Movement

Charlotte Landreau, Soloist, Martha Graham Dance Company. © Ken Browar and Deborah Ory

New York City-based photographers Deborah Ory and Ken Browar have spent the past two and a half years creating images of today’s most influential dancers in their home studio. A project that began in a quest to make photographs to decorate their daughter’s bedroom quickly became a long-term endeavor to capture the beauty of movement. This self-funded project, fueled by their passion for photography and dance, resulted in the team’s first book: The Art of Movement—a beautiful, award-winning 300 page compilation featuring photographs of more than 70 dancers from the world’s leading companies including American Ballet Theatre, New York City Ballet, Alvin Ailey American Dance Theatre, Royal Danish Ballet, among many others.

Ory, who started dancing when she was 7, began her photography career photographing rehearsals when a dance injury prevented her from performing. She has shot editorial for magazines including Self, Martha Steward Living and Real Simple and served as photo editor for House and Garden and Mirabella.

Fashion and beauty photographer Browar began his career in Paris, with work published in some of the leading fashion magazines in Europe and the U.S. including Vogue, Elle and Marie Claire. Browar’s interest in dance began when he photographed dancers for the Paris Opera Ballet.

Together their NYC Dance Project has been featured in numerous magazines ranging from Harper’s Bazaar to Vogue Italia.

For behind the scenes insight into the project, you can read our Q&A with this talented team. Be sure to scroll through the gallery to see some of the images from the project.

The book can be purchased here. Follow NYC Dance Project on Facebook and Instagram And if you’re in New York City, check out these events celebrating the book:

November 7 – ABT Jr Council Book Launch – A cocktail party and book signing; many of the ABT dancers will be there. More info and tickets

November 10 – Barnes and Noble Book Signing – 7pm – 150 East 86th Street, New York City. A book signing and Q&A. Ory and Bowar will be joined by Martha Graham Principal dancers, Lloyd Knight and Masha Dashkina Maddux (the dancer on the cover). More info here

?November 30, 2016 – Martha Graham Dance Company Studio Series – 7pm. Ory and Browar will be having a discussion with Artistic Director, Janet Eilber. Members of the Martha Graham Company will be performing and there will be a chance to take photographs of the dancers. Reserve your tickets here

December 8, 2016 – Rizzoli Bookstore – 6-8pm. 1133 Broadway, New York City. There will be drinks and a launch party to celebrate the book as well as a panel discussion with Ory, Browar and the dancers.??? rizzolibookstore.com

NYC Dance Project: The Art of Movement

Xin Ying, Principal, Martha Graham Dance Company. © Ken Browar and Deborah Ory

How did the NYC Dance Project get started? What was your inspiration?

The inspiration for the project came when our daughter Sarah, an aspiring ballerina, wanted to decorate her room with dance photographs. To our disappointment, we were not able to find images of the current dancers that Sarah admired in any contemporary books or photographs. There were beautiful images of famous dancers from past generations – such as Baryshnikov or Markova, taken more than 40 years ago – but nothing of the current stars.

Ken decided we needed to photograph these dancers ourselves. We were great fans of Daniil Simkin, the American Ballet Theatre Principal Dancer, and sent him an email asking him to be our first subject. Daniil loves photography and agreed to be photographed and this was the beginning of NYC Dance Project. Daniil helped us in getting a lot of other dancers involved in the project. It was a time when dancers were starting to use social media to promote themselves and they were interested in having images taken.

We originally thought it was going to be a blog, but after we had 4-5 shoots, we realized this had a longer life than we thought it would.

NYC Dance Project: The Art of Movement

Gillian Murphy, Principal, American Ballet Theatre. © Ken Browar and Deborah Ory

You’re very active in social media. How has that benefited you and the project?

Social media is a really important part of our project and we started with it right away. Daniil Simkin was very involved in social media and helped us learn how to promote our project through Facebook and Instagram. Our audience has been really active and it’s been a great way for us to reach even more people. Through social media, we have been able to reach an international market – we have dancers from around the world contacting us and asking about doing shoots with us when they are touring to NYC. It’s been a great way for us to connect worldwide with the dancers.

Having a large social media following was also important to our publisher, as it’s a great way to promote the book.

NYC Dance Project: The Art of Movement

Michael Jackson Jr, Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater © Ken Browar and Deborah Ory

Your studio is set up in your living room. How do you manage that arrangement?

Ken and I mostly worked in rental studios or outdoors previous to this and the fact that we work from our home changes the mood for the shoot. There are usually no more than the two of us, the dancer and sometimes a hair and makeup artist. Because it’s a small crew, in our home, it’s a very warm and friendly environment. There is something about the casualness of being in our home that we really love. We also can do a shoot at the last minute. Often we leave our studio set up for a few days and shoot several dancers. We go in spurts where shoot a lot, then we put our home back together and spend a few days editing.

The space we have is very large. We were able to do a shoot with 9 dancers here, although it was very tight. Ideally we would have an even larger studio, but as this is a self-funded project, we never would have been able to do it if we rented a studio.

NYC Dance Project: The Art of Movement

Michael Jackson Jr, Daniel Harder, Sean Aaron Carmon, Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater. © Ken Browar and Deborah Ory

Tell us about how your studio space is set up, what gear you use and how you work together.

Our home is a loft space with 16 foot high ceilings. Usually our background is about 15 feet high. We work with a Hasselblad on a tripod, using a standard 80mm lens. We now have the H6D. We like working with medium format, because we love the way it looks. Also, we like printing the images very large and the medium format lends itself well to this. We work very slowly, as we are using strobes and never have used a motor drive. When a dancer does a jump, we have to get the timing right, there is no room for mistakes!

We tend to keep our lighting very simple, with just one or two lights – from the top and/or side, depending on where the subject is and how they are moving. We’ve been using Profoto’s D4’s. These are not as fast as other lights that would stop the action 100%, but we are not bothered by not having technically perfect images. It’s the emotion and movement that we are trying to capture.

Our light is just to enhance the movement. We’ll start with the movement and think about how the light can work the best to complement it. Since the dancer is always moving throughout these shoots, we are constantly adjusting the light, bringing reflectors in and out and refining things. It’s all very fluid.

NYC Dance Project: The Art of Movement

Artem Ovcharenko, Principal, Bolshoi Ballet. © Ken Browar and Deborah Ory

…(cont.) People write us all the time asking if we can send them a lighting diagram. We can’t do this as we are constantly adjusting the lights. It’s so helpful having two people making the images – one of us is watching the dancer and the other is moving a light or adjusting it.

We use hand painted backgrounds that we’ve had an artist make. She is constantly refining it over and over for us. At one point she told us that she can’t add any more paint to it, it was getting too thick to roll up!

We have wood floors but we put a Marley dance floor, which comes in rolls, on top of the floor and underneath the canvas. That helps dancers from slipping and helps keep the canvas in place as well.

In the beginning we each worked with our own camera and had our own idea of what the image should be. The dancer would have to repeat the movement for each of us and we would compare who captured it better. Now we have become a team and work with one camera.

NYC Dance Project: The Art of Movement

James Whiteside, Principal, American Ballet Theatre. © Ken Browar and Deborah Ory

When a dancer comes into the studio for a shoot, how much do you direct them? Where do you begin?

Most of these dancers are well known dancers that we have seen perform before. If we haven’t seen them live—such as dancers from another country—then we’ll watch videos of them so we kind of know their strengths. Ken and I have an idea about what we would like to capture about each dancer, but once the dancer comes in, it’s a collaboration with them as well. We have them start moving with very little direction from us. We’ll look at a few images together and start to refine them. Usually we pick one or two ideas to work on and fine tune those until we get an image we all feel works well.

NYC Dance Project: The Art of Movement

Miriam Miller, New York City Ballet. © Ken Browar and Deborah Ory

Who styles the dancers and where do you get the outfits for the shoots?

I [Ory] do most of the styling for our shoots. Once we worked with a stylist and we felt it was too much about fashion and often the clothes did not move well. The clothing needs to be simple and beautiful, but most importantly, it needs to move well.

Clothing is a really important element for us. We’ve gotten outfits from different designers, including Leanne Marshall, who has been a big contributor for us. Companies like ABT will sometimes give us old costumes. They’re tattered and hand stitched and I love that you can see little rips and tears.

We also sometimes paint their pointe shoes so they match the clothing. In fashion you would never wear the same colored shoes with every outfit, so why would you wear pink pointe shoes with every dress?

NYC Dance Project: The Art of Movement

Fana Tesfagiorgis, Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater. © Ken Browar and Deborah Ory

What software do you use and how much post-processing is involved?

On set we shoot tethered with Hasselblad’s Phocus software. The images are brought into Lightroom to edit and the post-processing is done in Photoshop, after we have made our selects. Post-processing is pretty minimal in terms of what we do to the pictures. Most of our time is spent cleaning up spots and dust in the background. There is very little manipulation of the images themselves.

Often we have to remove cats from the photos! Our cats are literally walking through the set and often they are in the photo or there is a tail in the picture. They will go lay down underneath the dancer, no matter what the dancer is doing!

NYC Dance Project: The Art of Movement

Misty Copeland, Principal, American Ballet Theatre, from our shoot for Harper’s Bazaar, Degas story. © Ken Browar and Deborah Ory

You were commissioned by Harper’s Bazaar to do an editorial with American Ballet Theatre’s Principal dancer, Misty Copeland in conjunction with the Degas exhibit at MOMA. How did that come about?

Harper’s Bazaar found us on Instagram and also through another principal dancer who recommended us for this job. Glenda Bailey, their Editor-in-Chief, wanted someone who was used to shooting dancers, rather than a fashion photographer. Also, we had worked with Misty before, so they had seen our images of her. While we were very fortunate that they picked us, we were not really looking for commercial assignments at that time. They asked us if we had a porfolio and we just suggested they look through our Instagram feed. It was interesting to us as we knew how difficult it can be to send your portfolio and try to get jobs with magazines like Harper’s Bazaar.

It was a really difficult shoot. Bazaar wanted to make the pictures look exactly like Degas’ painting of dancers. We were stressing about how to make these images keep the perspective and painterly look of the Degas paintings. Degas sometimes just painted things in the background and we could not figure out what these things were. What are those blue streaks? Is he painting a set or was that just for effect? It was really a challenge re-creating these paintings!

There were about 50 people on set, and it was the first time we had worked with a crew that large for a dance shoot. The space we used at Pier 59 photo studios in NYC was really large, but we had to create 5-6 sets and there was only room to put up 2 at a time. Luckily, there were a lot of people to help us create these sets and it all came together beautifully. There was a lot of press surrounding the story, so it really helped us to get better known.

NYC Dance Project: The Art of Movement

© Ken Browar and Deborah Ory

Your first book, The Art of Movement, was released this October. What was it like to publish your first book?

As photographers, both of us had always dreamed of making a book. We certainly did not just create the images for instagram! Meeting with publishers was a bit depressing, however; most said they only do a dance book every ten years or so. It took a lot of persistence, and also a great literary agent, to help us find the right publisher. Although it worked out in the end, we got our contract at the last minute. Our publisher, Black Dog & Leventhal, wanted to get the book out this year, so we had to work incredibly quickly to meet the deadline. We barely slept for a few months. Putting together a 300 page book in such a short amount of time was very ambitious and stressful, but looking back now, it definitley feels worth the struggle!

NYC Dance Project: The Art of Movement

Michael Jackson Jr and Sean Aaron Carmon, Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater. © Ken Browar and Deborah Ory

What’s next for you?

It’s likely that we will make another book. The next step is also working with galleries. We just started working with the Holden Luntz Gallery in Palm Beach and will be looking for a gallery in NYC as well.

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Blow-Up Party: Inflatable Black Plastic Dance Club & Bar

28 Sep

[ By SA Rogers in Drawing & Digital. ]

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Deliberately dark and pipe-like to recreate the feel of being in a secret subterranean space, this inflatable nightclub and bar by Bureau A comes complete with blow-up benches, tables and a DJ booth. Constructed entirely from black PVC membrane, ‘Shelter’ was commissioned as a party venue for the Federation of Swiss Architects (better known as Bund Schweizer Architekten) and installed inside the cold, concrete Pavillon Sicli in Geneva.

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“The underground fascinates and completes the hygienic and pan optical work of the over-ground,” say the architects. “For one night, the black hole of a neat and well-organized society is revealed as a potential for distortion, a potential of let-go and provoke, with a slight smile, the unsaid and the sweat. The mysterious black vessel lands in the modern space of a highly engendered concrete vault; a great spatial condition to explore the corners of what is hidden.”

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The space inside is clearly quite limited and dark, so it would have been interesting to see what it looks like with people inside. The concept of inflatables for temporary spaces certainly isn’t new, but it’s still pretty cool to see these structures show up in unusual shapes and configurations, standing tall within mere moments of arrival on-site and then disappearing so quickly, it’s as if they were never there.

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[ By SA Rogers in Drawing & Digital. ]

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Living Light: Human Figures Dance Inside 3D-Printed Zoetrope

02 Jul

[ By SA Rogers in Drawing & Digital. ]

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All it takes are a few highly focused beams of light and a spinning zoetrope to make a human figure spring to life, walking or even dancing in a barely-visible translucent circle. ‘Process and WALK’ explores the relationship between time and movement, taking a two-dimensional image of a person and applying it to a three-dimensional object. In effect, the person’s movements are stretched out to take up the entire circle, each fraction of an inch containing its own particular shifts of the arms and legs.

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Artist Akinori Goto lays out the whole process in the video above, showing how he transforms a animation of a person walking into a 3D axis that can then be translated into data for a 3D printer. The result looks like no more than a warped piece of plastic mesh, with no discernible shapes embedded within it. Place it on a turntable and it still won’t look like much – until beams of light highlight just one segment of the edge.

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Once that happens, the walking figure appears. Every few seconds, the illuminated figure seems to multiply, sending additional figures to other points along the zoetrope. It’s simple and complex at the same time, pairing a pre-film animation device that’s been in use for centuries with cutting-edge small-scale manufacturing technology

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[ By SA Rogers in Drawing & Digital. ]

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Nikon D7200 Field Test: Desert dance photo shoot

10 Sep

Nikon’s flagship APS-C DSLR is a real workhorse. Offering a 24.2MP CMOS sensor, the D7200 provides a 51-point AF system sensitive to -3EV, an increased buffer depth with 6 fps continuous shooting and 1080 HD video at 60p. We tagged along with pro photographer Gabe Bienczycki on a desert photo shoot to push the D7200 to its limits. Read more

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Mesmerizing Motion Capture: Dance as Point Cloud Data

14 Apr

[ By Steph in Art & Photography & Video. ]

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The graceful movements of a professional dancer are rendered as a cloud of flickering metallic dots using inexpensive Xbox Kinect sensors and 3D tools. Constantly shifting and changing even as the dancer stands still, the data points create a ghostly impression against a black backdrop, seeming to embody motion itself.

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Asphyxia is a collaborative experimental film project by Maria Takeuchi and Federico Phillips, performed by Shiho Tanaka, combining various technologies to stress “the desire to be expressive without limits.” The sensors scanned data points on Tanaka’s body, which were then combined and used as the basis for the creative development of the film.

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The filmmakers rendered the data into this hauntingly abstract form, placing it in a photorealistic environment to add to the eerie quality of the finished product. Check out the behind-the-scenes process above to learn more about how it was made.

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[ By Steph in Art & Photography & Video. ]

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A Guide to Photographing Dance Performances in a Theatre

09 Apr

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One of the biggest challenges as photographer is shooting inside a theatre, simply because the only thing that you can control is the camera. You may be faced with very dim lighting conditions, dancers moving around at great speed, different lighting settings during the show, no use of flash, and your movement in the theatre during the show may be limited.

I am writing this guide based on an assignment you have with the organizer, as photographer of the event. Some of the points might not be relevant or accessible for you if you are attending a performance as a member of the public.

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Preparation for the shoot

Know the ground

A protocol for all professional photographers is to understand the grounds and what to expect. This can be done through an early visit (if allowed), or a search online for other’s work in the same location, to understand the layout and surroundings.

Request to attend a rehearsal prior to the performance (usual this is done free of charge) if possible, but to me this is mandatory if the opportunity exist. This not only gives you a chance to enter the theatre but also to understand what is to be performed and its sequence. You can then be better prepared to know the photos you will wish to take, and at which location you’ll need to be so you’ll be ready for the shot. Take this opportunity to talk to the organizer on which seats you will be allocated or which seat you prefer. I will cover location of seat for shooting in the technique part later.

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Settings: f/2.8, 1/125th, ISO 1600

Choosing your seat (if you have a choice)

I am very particular in my location of shoot as it reflect the quality if work I will produce from the assignment.
Most theatres can accommodate hundreds, to thousands of spectators at various elevations. My personal recommendation is to locate yourself on the ground level, a few rows behind the front, right in the middle. Below are some explanations of some problem you may encounter at different locations.

Up in the balcony

Cons: Too far from the stage, shooting angle not directly perpendicular to the dancers.

First row seats

Cons: Too near to the stage.

Side Seat

Cons: shooting angle not directly perpendicular to the dancers, too many distractions in photos (sometimes you can see dancers at the side before entry to the stage.

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Ideal seat

On the ground level, a few rows behind the front, right in the middle is the ideal seat. Personally if I can only sit at one location throughout the show, I will prefer this seat as it provide me a comfortable direction to the stage and most of my shots will be facing the dancers.

Type of Equipment needed

With the above, you can know decide what equipment you need for the shoot.

Flash Gun

As most performances prohibit use of flash during show, you can omit having one on your camera during the performance but do still carry one with you (I use it for group photo at the end of the show). The use of LED light is good as well for after the show shots.

Camera

In such challenging conditions, a camera with capability to handle high ISO settings without producing too much noise is preferred. I usually have my Canon 5D Mark II, and also my Sony 7R for such assignments.

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Lenses

The most important piece of equipment you need after understanding the grounds and location is the right lens. A zoom lens is mandatory for me to enable me to reach out to the stage and get close-ups of the dancers. Lenses with large apertures are preferred in such low light conditions. I will touch on that more at the later section on why. I usually have my 70-200mm f/2.8 on my Canon, and the 16-35mm f/2.8 on my Sony 7R for wide-angle shooting.

Tripod/Monopod

This is a interesting topic as most theatres prohibit you from setting up a tripod, subject to organizer approval. If you are given a seat for shooting, a tripod will be difficult to manage with limited legroom space. I always use a monopod for such assignments in order to conserve energy.

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Camera settings: f/2.8, 1/30th, ISO 1000

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Camera settings: f/3.2, 1/500th, ISO 2500

Know your gear inside out

I am often on site photographing events and someone will come and ask for help as they can’t tune back to certain setting or something is not functioning correctly on their camera.

Shooting in a theatre is like sports photography. If you missed a moment it will be gone, and you will not have a second chance. Always be ready, and anticipate what is coming up. Study your camera inside out for all the functions that you wish to use and manipulate during the shoot. Know all the commonly used functions like setting ISO, aperture, shutter speed, etc. I usually use AV (Aperture priority) and control the ISO if I need more shutter speed.
On ISO, every camera has its own capability to handle ISO and minimize noise. Know the limit of your camera, like my 5D MarkII, I will not push it to more than 5000 ISO.

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Camera settings: f/2.8, 1/200th, ISO 800

Techniques to adopt

Basic technique for shooting such scenes is to select the right ISO for the shot with the right shutter speed, depending on the movement speed of the dancer. Things moves very fast in a performance and you have to make your camera adapt to what is happening on the stage, so you capture what you need.

A common trick I use something is to pre-focus on an stationary object on the stage prior to the dancers coming into position. This only works if you attend the rehearsal and know the staging of the show.

Lastly always shoot RAW for such events so that back at your desk the white balance can still be adjusted. Color balance can be off due to some lighting differences during the show.

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Camera settings: f/4, 1/250th, ISO 1600

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Camera settings: f/2.8, 1/320th, ISO 1600

Photos taken during Enana Production and Academy performances.

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The post A Guide to Photographing Dance Performances in a Theatre by Ray Toh appeared first on Digital Photography School.


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Light Footed: Smart Shoes Paint with Light As You Dance

27 Mar

[ By Steph in Design & Products & Packaging. ]

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Paint with light in real-time with a pair of shoes that not only have 100 LED lights embedded into the sole, but are also fitted with advanced motion tracking sensors to put on a dazzling show matched to your movements. Orphan by Japanese startup No New Folk Studio is a programmable performance shoe that can be set to blink and change color according to the speed and orientation of the dancer’s movements.

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The Orphe shoes are essentially an artistic medium, bringing technology, dance and light painting together in a highly customizable experience. Users can either use the accompanying app to communicate with the shoes via Bluetooth, or pre-program their own effects. But the functionality goes beyond personal expression.

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“The 9-axis sensors embedded in each sole pick up the movements of each shoe in real time. This data can then be used to wirelessly control various external devices, allowing the shoes to function as musical instruments, video game controllers, foot switches, etc.”

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Each shoe contains a small circuitboard with an ARM Cortex-M3 microprocessor, a tracking device, a wireless module and a charging circuit as well as the LED light strip. The project is

The Orphe shoes are essentially an artistic medium, bringing technology, dance and light painting together in a highly customizable experience. Users can either use the accompanying app to communicate with the shoes via Bluetooth, or pre-program their own effects. But the functionality goes beyond personal expression. “The 9-axis sensors embedded in each sole pick up the movements of each shoe in real time. This data can then be used to wirelessly control various external devices, allowing the shoes to function as musical instruments, video game controllers, foot switches, etc.” Each shoe contains a small circuitboard with an ARM Cortex-M3 microprocessor, a tracking device, a wireless module and a charging circuit as well as the LED light strip. The project is currently seeking funding on IndieGoGo, with backers snagging their own pair for $ 270 as a reward.”>currently seeking funding on IndieGoGo, with backers snagging their own pair for $ 270 as a reward.

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Social Dance Photography Tips

23 Mar

Nowadays it is very popular to have social dancing as hobby; people go dancing to the themed parties, special events, and travel to the international dance congresses. So definitely the subject of social dance photography is getting more interest worldwide. Doesn’t matter what kind of dance you enjoy the most – the challenges of capturing a great dance moment are very similar.

Photo1

Have you ever seen dark, blurry photos, taken from a weird angle of yourself on the dance floor? I bet your answer is yes. Being a dancer myself I could relate to such matters too, which made me realize that it’s not an easy task to get great dance shots. So I started practicing.

Photo2

Gladly I had a lot of opportunities to do so due my active role in growing Zouk community in Abu Dhabi, capital of United Arab Emirates.

Zouk is a Brazilian dance; very sensual and addictive. It is known as the dance of the 21st century, and is becoming viral all over the world. The rhythm of Zouk gives dancers a lot of flexibility and freedom to experiment and adapt their style to the music. It offers a lot of beautiful poses for photographer to capture (head flicks, body rolls, spins, twirls, dips and various hip movements).

Let’s look at the challenges of capturing beautiful dance movements and how to overcome them:

Photo3

A dark environment

Social parties are usually happening in bars, restaurants, or ballrooms where the lights are dimmed. The trick is to expose for the ambient light (use a slower shutter speed, open your aperture as much as possible, increase ISO – up to 1600 worked fine with a Canon 5D Mark II), and use second curtain shutter sync for your flash. For Canon 5D Mark II users that option is located under External Speedlite control>Flash function settings>Shutter sync – check your camera’s manual if you have a different body. Not a problem if your shutter speed gets really low – you still will get last part of the frame frozen, thanks to those flash settings. You can get really creative if the ambient lights include lasers and rotating heads. By moving your camera sideways when the shutter is open you will get strikes and lines which will make your photos even more interesting. Sometimes it is hard to get focus right in a dark environment, so I usually have small pocket laser with me to light the dancers at the moment of focusing.

Photo4

Direct flash

Often with this option you get overexposed figures of dancers and a dark, underexposed background. If possible, scout the environment before the dance event. Search for white walls and ceiling, which can work as a large soft box to reflect light, and use bounce flash instead of direct flash. Another alternative is to use a portable speedlight softbox off-camera to diffuse, and soften strong light.

Photo5

Shutter delay

Have you ever pressed the shutter release button and the slight delay gets you a photo of dancers with their backs to the camera, instead of what you imagined? Try to study movements (if you are not dancer yourself) to oversee what move comes next and press the shutter just before that so you catch the right moment. Each camera is slightly different, so test yours to understand.

Photo6

Camera angle

If your camera angle is too high the dancers’ heads will look bigger and their legs shorter – not always pretty to look at. I usually shoot at the chest level, or in some situations – waist level. Sometimes experimenting with getting really low works well too. Decide on the go what works for you – judge the available space between you and the dancers, and keep in mind how you’re using your flash (if you are bouncing it – you need some distance).

Photo7

Lens choice

My favorite social dance photography lens is 24-70mm f/2.8. It serves me well most of the time, though it depends on size of the party. If the crowd is big and you would like to show that, you might switch to a wide angle lens from time to time, for example, a 16-35mm f/2.8.

Photo8

Full-body shots or close-ups?

This is up to you again, depending on dance aesthetics. One note: do not cut off hands or fingers and include a little space around the subject, so photo can breathe. Although this is very subjective, sometimes it can create a different mood when you fill the frame really tight.

Photo9

Lastly – keep practicing

Apply the general rule of photographers; the more you practice – the better shots you get!

Photo10

I wish you happy social dance photography; hope you will make dancers look beautiful and graceful! Catch your moments!

Please share your experiments in comments below and ask any questions there as well.

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