More before and after light painting images
Before and after light painting. I went back to look for some good examples of images that I shot with light painting to use on my updated website slider on my architectural photography page on my site and discovered these that I had forgotten about. Here are more before and after light painting images. This first one is one of my first spot lighting jobs. I popped a Canon 600 ex rt flash with and dome diffuser up into each of the 4 corners of the umbrella, and onto each piece of furniture at different angles and painted those flashes in to this base photo.
This image was from a custom home Premier Partners in Lakeway, Texas. I used the 600 flash again and popped the light with an umbrella onto the right side of the bar and one from underneath the bar and behind it so I would light the ceiling.
This image was at Riverplace Country Club in Austin. The wood / rattan furniture certainly gained some interest by popping light from multiple angles.
Same with the dining room at Riverplace. I had to replace the view out the windows with a perfectly exposed version.
New Rust Rapture Abstract Fine Art Photos
New Rust Rapture Abstract Fine Art Photos
I attended this years Lone Star Kustom Car Roundup as I have for the last seven years and was not disappointing with the rat rod turn out. These Rat Rods are the source of my Rust Rapture images. I just submitted a portfolio of my Rust Rapture Collection to Left Bank Art and included an artist statement that I had written years ago that is sort of fun to read. It is included below after these images from my2017 harvest of abstract images.
Artist Statement
Johnny Stevens
I was raised in a tiny town in the foothills of the Appalachian Mountains. Our house had a white picket fence in the backyard within which 5 of us kids ran naked throughout our childhood; seriously, naked. The boundaries of my soon-to-be border-less and open mind set were clearly being established without my knowledge. Weekly, the DDT fog truck would drive by the house to kill mosquitoes and we would frolic on foot or bike behind it…. unwitting of the disastrous effects of this dangerous chemical. The resulting effects of DDT on my brain synapses are likely one reason today, I am so attracted to the abstract. Salvador Dali has always been one of my favorite artists, and I sometimes wonder if I observe life more like his surreal representations than what other people see, especially through the lens of a camera. Constantly surveying my surroundings, I find myself hunting for a chance to reveal the obscure – to reveal unique perspectives of ordinary images that are normally overlooked.
Despite the white fence upbringing, I have always harbored the rebel spirit, loving to break the rules, like parking where one should not. In abstract art, there is a sense of freedom in breaking the rules, partly because the art itself has done lots of the rule breaking part. One may say that I really have not broken anything, only revealed it.
Having broken lots of rules in prep school, my parents shipped me off to Fleming College in Florence, Italy. There I was encouraged to break away – in spirit, and on the weekends, on foot. This art institute was housed in a glorious 300 year old Tuscan Villa fit for royalty with breathtaking views of the rolling Tuscan vineyards. Most of the art training I had there was in the dungeon of the villa, a perfectly damp and remote place to host a photographic dark room. The ambient red light, the rancid smell of the print developer and stop bath, and the wrinkled skin on my fingers are all much more vivid for me today than the black and white prints I created years ago. In the adjacent chamber, which must have been the disciplinary whipping room at one time – as the sounds of screams could never have penetrated its thick stone walls – was where our charcoal drawing exercises were held. It became clear on the first day of sketching exercises, when a sleek Italian lady entered the room and promptly dropped her robe, that this cold, damp and very quiet room several floors below ground was also probably the safest place to host naked models.
Up on the Mezzanine of the Villa were perched our oil paints, canvas and easels. I had a spectacular view of the pool and the stately pool cabana which had been transformed into the theater and drama department. Abstract painting was my go-to genre, though I toughed out a few landscapes. Though I have always admired Salvador Dali’s surrealistic paintings, my thesis painting was a dead ringer of “clin d’oeil à Picasso” by Bochaton Emmanuelle. Interestingly, today in my abstract photography I still look for patterns that are disrupted, yet try to honor balance in the composition. It is precisely this theme that became an obsession for me when I discovered the inherent beauty of the rhythms, textures and colors right on the chassis of rat rods.
Eight years ago when I first attended the Lone star Rod and Kustom Car Round-up in Austin, I was blown away by the spectacular beauty of the cars’ organic finishes – particularly the “rat rods” – hot rods whose exterior finish have been subjected to harsh elements –rain, sun, heat and occasionally an owner’s belt sander. The blend of old paint and rust creates a stunning patina. Each photo is an energetic amalgamation of textures and colors creating bold movement and intense mystery. These vintage cars span 40 years and range from a 1924 Ford Model T to a 1966 Chevy. Six years in the making, these “Rust Rapture” images are my favorites in my fine art portfolio.
ARTIST BIO
Johnny Stevens is a commercial and fine art photographer in Austin, Texas. His most popular art photography collection is called Rust Rapture. These photographic images have gained international recognition and are currently displayed worldwide in select boardrooms, offices, hotels, and elite residences. The Rust Rapture images capture the very close up sections of the distressed exterior finishes of vintage “hot rod” or “rat rod” cars. Photographed by an Austin photographer, these pieces have a story clients will love to tell.
The collection is inspired by revealing the mystery that is created from the bold mix of textures, colors and movement. The images display a variety of gorgeous colors and are commanding as large canvas prints in a modern or traditional setting.
“Eight years ago when I first attended the Lone star Rod and Kustom Car Round-up in Austin, I was blown away by the spectacular beauty of the cars’ organic finishes – particularly the “rat rods” – hot rods whose exterior finish have been subjected to harsh elements –rain, sun, heat and occasionally an owner’s belt sander. The blend of old paint and rust creates a stunning patina. Each photo is an energetic amalgamation of textures and colors creating bold movement and intense mystery. These vintage cars span 40 years and range from a 1924 Ford Model T to a 1966 Chevy. Six years in the making, these “Rust Rapture” images are my favorites in my fine art portfolio.” – Johnny Stevens
Commercial Architectural photography for Kohler Kitchen and Bath Products
- At June 27, 2017
- By Johnny Stevens
- In Fine Art
- 0
Commercial Architectural Photography job:
I was asked to shoot this commercial architectural photography for Kohler Kitchen and Bath Products last week. Kohler makes high end and really beautiful products for kitchen and bath. This is Austin’s new Kohler showroom in Gateway Shopping Center. They are located just beside Crate and Barrel. These are a couple of my favorite images. I processed them by combining several exposures together in Photoshop. The images still were just so stark because the room and the product has so much contrast that I added a layer of Nik Filters Detail Extraction and lowered the opacity of that filter to about 30%.
Architectural images that take a bit more work in Photoshop
Some architectural images take a bit more work. Occasionally as a professional architectural photographer it is necessary to dive into Photoshop to do painstaking hours of retouching. Here is an example of one of those architectural images that requires just sitting down at the computer and digging in. Knowing the nuances of Photoshop helps. Here are some of those tricks. First a single exposure of the building right out of the camera.
The after shot after fusing 5 exposures, cleaning up the wires and poles, adjusting color, cleaning up the pavement and replacing the sky.
Telephone pole wires are easy but not easy. The look straight but they are not – they droop. With the spot healing brush set to just a bit wider than the diameter of the wire, if you click on an edge of a window or some type of hard edge and then click as far at you think the wire will be straight enough to be contained in that healing path, and click on a final spot that also has a clean edge, you can make lots of progress cleaning up wires – even wires that cross windows and other parts of the building. Invariably there will be spot runs like this that will not work and you just have to pull out the clone stamp tool and do your best to match the length of the wire. Telephone poles will need the clone stamp tool – they are too wide for the spot healing tool. The spot healing too works as a content aware tool so it is looking for information around it to replace the selected area. Unless your telephone pole is sitting right over a nice clean stretch of brick, none of the healing or content aware approaches will work. Replacing the sky in this image is not too tough because there are no trees poking up over the roof line. A clean roof line is easy to select and then drop in a new sky.
Stacking Architectural photography
Stacking Architectural Photographs for property developement clients
Here is my main use of stacking architectural photographs. Often as professional architectural photographers we get frustrated as we are shooting a scene because even with a wide angle lens, we cannot see enough of the top or bottom of the room or the building. The ceiling architecture of rooms are often the calling cards of the architects and the builders, and they want to see their work in the photograph. Shooting with any lens under 17 mm will really start distorting the image on the edges, as a fish eye lens will do. In order to provide my architectural clients with a larger image, I will merge an upper image which features the ceiling, and a lower images which features more of the floor and the foreground. I can do this with the Canon 17 mm tilt shift lens because all I have to do is shift the lens up and down to get these two images.
Photoshop then merges the two seamlessly.
Now I have a master image that is not a 3×2 landscape aspect ratio, which is what comes out of the camera, but instead, depending on my final crop, I get a 1×1 or square image – the same width as the native capture but taller, and often a much taller image than square like a 1 x 1.3 aspect ratio. Suffice it to say that stacking architectural photographs provides my clients with more “real estate” in the image and gives my cleints’ advertising and marketing design team me more latitude to crop vertically or horizontally depending on the need of the ad layout. The images also now has the feel of the kind of image that might come from a medium format camera.
Rust Rapture installation at Benchmark Bank
I have been honored with yet another Rust Rapture installation at Benchmark Bank in Westake. ” ” This photograph is a fine art canvas triptych print of “Saddle Up” which is a close up of the door panel of a 1954 Ford Custom Pickup Truck. Saddle Up is one the images in my Rust Rapture Collection.
The panels are 24 inches by 36 inches each. Check it out when you are in the area. Benchmark Bank is at 3811 Bee Cave Rd, Austin, TX 78746, right behind Victory Medical on Bee Caves
Tell the ladies (Sheila, Claire, Taylor and Marlee) I sent you. By the way, while you are there go ahead and open a checking account. These guys are awesome.
Windswept installed at Heckmann residence
Windswept installed at Heckmann residence.
Our neighbors fell in love with Windswept – 1954 Ford Custom from the Rust Rapture collection. It is a 33 x 50 inch canvas wrapped giclee print.
Here it is installed in their kitchen.
Photographs which harness dichotomy
This one I shot while walking the streets of New York. I love the door in this back wall flanked by two other walls all of which contain nothing. That door in the back leads to, I suppose, the greener side of the mountain. I did have to drop the palm in back behind the wall to add a bit more curiosity
This one is a different perspective on the view of the Pennybacker 360 bridge in Austin overlooking Ladybird Lake. If you ever made the hike up here you would know that it is not to be attempted in shoes like this.