Mark Your Calendars

I was recently informed that I was juried into the

1st Annual Artwalk at the Promenade Bolingbrook

The show is May 2-3 and will feature many area artists.  One feature of this show is that there is an indoor venue if the weather is not so nice…something that is not impossible for early May in the Chicagoland area.

I have a schedule of events in which I shall be exhibiting this year at EVENTS for Roger Passman Photogtraphy.

Bookmark this page and check back as the schedule is getting ready to fill up.

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Recent Shoot for Le Titi de Paris

 

Le Titi de Paris Dining Room

Le Titi de Paris Dining Room

I recently worked with Michael and Susan Maddox,  chef owners of the fabulous French restaurant, Le Titi de Paris.  I was asked to shoot the dining room and a number of current dishes that the restaurant features.  

I arrived at the restaurant in the morning, a little before scheduled time, and began to set up for the dining room shots.  I decided to shoot using High Density Range processing in order to capture all of the highlight, midtone and shadow detail that was present in the room.  Using available light I made three exposures of the dining room, one normal, one two stops over and the final two stops under.  The warm tungsten light of the interior mixed in interesting ways with the blue daylight that streamed in from the windows so color balance was an interesting issue to deal with.  The image on the left is one of several dining room shots that I did at the beginning of the shoot.

Michael arrived a few minutes after I began shooting.  He started to prepare the dishes to be shot.  Right about the time I completed the dining room shots and finished setting up my lights he arrived with the first of many dishes to be shot thaSwant day.  He came out with a delicate pastry swan stuffed with cheese and onion.  The swan was surrounded by a balsamic reduction and a light pesto oil that complimented the visual appeal of the dish.  I wanted to stop shooting and taste the dish on the spot.  But I just kept on shooting.  Here I used only controlled light from two Interfit strobes and a gold reflector adding a bit of warmth to the swan.  I did get to taste later.  It was fantastic!.

 

Sushi

Sushi

The sushi dish on the left presented some interesting problems.  Shooting the glass plate on a white background and maintaining the high key look of the plate against the colors and shapes on the plate was, if nothing else, a fun challenge.

I decided to shoot as open as I could so I adjusted the lights to a generally lower output.  I also decided to adjust the color balance manually so I could maintain the white of the background.  I also used a white reflector to add a bit of highlight to the sauce and the edge of the glass plate. Finally, I overexposed by one-third of a stop.  The resulting image is on the left.

A number of other dishes were shot during the session.  Michael just kept coming out with new plates and creative dishes for me to capture.  Each dish presented a different challenge.  From low contrast, densely packed main dishes to high contrast spun sugar in several desserts, the shoot was a technical gymnastic event.  I like that kind of a challenge.  It allows me to be as creative as I can be and still provide my client with strong workable images that make their business look really good. 

I am proud to have Michael and Susan as clients.

 

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Stadium Seats

 

Red Chairs

Red Chairs

It is snowing in Chicago. By the time morning rolls around nearly a foot of snow will be deposited on the ground. I decided I needed to revisit images of warmer days. As I wandered through my photographs I was drawn to this one. The red stadium seats on a warm Summer day, seats that by morning will not be recognizable, simply jumped off the page at me.
Baseball, apple pie, and hot dogs are all implied by these red stadium seats. The smell of cold beer and peanuts in the shell waft from these chairs. I can hear the crack of the bat, the pop of the catcher’s glove as the ball strikes the mitt, the roar of the crowd as a fly ball clears the ivy covered walls–a home run. All this and more is evoked in this image.
In Kansas City these very seats were mistaken for chairs at Arrowhead Stadium. The rich red of the chairs reminded my guest of a Chief’s game when no one came. Another person decided that these chairs were in Cincinnati while others insisted that they were located in Atlanta, Boston, and Arizona. In fact, they are located in Chicago, my home town. So, while not really Wrigley Field, these chairs make me think about baseball. These thoughts keep me warm on this cold, stormy Winter night.

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Creme Brulee

 

Blueberry Creme Brulee

Blueberry Creme Brulee

Vanilla custard with burnt sugar, a traditional dessert from 19th century France.  Literally creme brulee means burnt cream.  In this case the dessert is laced with blueberries to enhance the dining experience.  Just sweet enough with the smooth custard melting in one’s mouth.  

The image I wanted to capture was set up to capture the luxury of this particular dessert experience while leaving room to represent the simplicity of preparation.  

Lighting in this case was simple, a single softbox strobe light about 18 inches above and parallel to the plate.  4 separate exposures were then combined into an HDR image using Photomatix Pro.  Some additional white balance was necessary and the three blueberries in the front were lightened up just a bit.  I am rather pleased with the result.

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Meet the Twins

 

Twins at 18 Days

Twins at 18 Days

Just 18 days old, these brother and sister twins proved to be a dream to shoot.  I arrived just before feeding time only to find the two safely tucked into their swings sleeping away.  While I was setting up the girl began to open her eyes as if to supervise what I was doing.  She was far more interested in the bottle that was to come and let me know with a cry of joy when it arrived.  Her brother couldn’t be bothered with much at all.  That’s him on the left.

Shortly after feeding, the kids were on the floor on a blanket as I was shooting rapidly.  Chase, the boy, blinked every time the strobe light fired.  He stared straight ahead and strained as he prepared to fill his diaper–so much so that he turned red as a beet.

Shooting very young children is challenging.  They don’t respond to direction and they frustrate parents who would like everything to be perfect.  That is precisely why I choose to take time to shoot children.  The idea is to spend enough time to capture multiple images that are, in the end, accurate depictions of the memories that pass so quickly.

During this shoot I learned the art of flexibility as well.  During the middle of the shoot my sync cord failed and I could no longer fire my strobes.  OMG what to do?  My solution was simple…they usually are.  I decided to shoot using the modeling lights and a faster ISO.  It worked out quite well.  Initial panic was replaced by falling back on technical knowledge and the shoot went smoothly even with the hitch of the sync cord.

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Think About the Weather

Peppers

Peppers

Here I am, looking out my window, watching the snow flutter down from the sky.  My next door neighbor is fighting a losing battle with his shovel.  As soon as he clears a small patch of driveway the snow relentlessly returns covering the black patch of asphalt with a fresh white cover.  While I am warm inside the house, it is a cold 30 degrees outside.  My neighbor is bundled up with layers of clothing, two hats, and a pair of gloves that look like he just got off the moon lander.  

So why pick the peppers to display on the left?  Good question.  The answer is simple.  The warm colors of the sweet peppers in this image remind me of Summer salads, warm days at the beach, picnics in the woods.  I recall tropical sunsets, broiling days in the desert, hikes and bicycles.  Anything to keep me from thinking about the snow and the cold.  So I offer you Peppers.  Perhaps it will do the same for you.

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Kind of Makes Me Hungry

 

Sushi

Sushi

Shooting food is always a challenge.  Since I am working with real food, not some sophisticated facsimile, I get hungry and want to eat the set.  Fortunately, I can wait until I get the shot and then eat.  The sushi to the right was my lunch today.  I shot it as a sample and not for any specific client.

The sushi came from Sushi Station, a sushi restaurant in Elgin, IL.  At Sushi Station customers sit in front of a big, sophisticated conveyor belt with food on it.  When the customer sees something he or she likes one simply opens the door and takes the food.  The plates are color coded so that in the end the plates are counted and the bill prepared.  So Simple.

I really liked the colors of the individual rolls.  I knew I was going to use the green divided plate and wanted something the would go along with the plate.  Placing the whole thing on the maroon mat gave separation to the plate and picked up on the colors of the food as well.  I like the shot.

 

Asparagus

Asparagus

The asparagus spears to the left were also shot today as a sample.  When I saw the bunch in the market I was struck by the one spear that was leaning over to the right.  I thought, “What a picture that would make!”  I lit this image with a single soft light directly overhead and a single honeycombed light 4 stops under the overhead softbox aimed at the mottled backdrop.  The backlight offered great separation of the asparagus from the background wile the softbox light caressed the asparagus like an intimate friend.  

I shot a few vertical versions of this but finally settled on the horizontal because I believe it carries a certain visual strength that the vertical does not have.  It is not ordinary, rather, it reaches upward in a space that projects gravity, weight, confinement.  The horizontal fixes one’s attention on the color and strength of the raw asparagus without compromise. 

Both of these images are available as royalty free stock images licensed for unlimited electronic media use at Roger Passman Stock Photography.

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I Added Two New Stock Images Today

Trees in the Morning 1

Trees in the Morning 1

Late Fall presents a photographer with fantastic light. We are also presented with skeletal foliage (at least in the Midwest where I am from) while the grass still fights to hold on to its late Summer green.

The two photographs on this page are recent examples of HDR photography. Shooting in a range of 2 stops over to 2 stops under, making three exposures of each image, and then combining the three images using Photomatix software, the full tonal range of the image is captured. Foreground and sky are equally valued allowing the images to reflect what I saw as a photographer.

Trees in the Morning 2

Trees in the Morning 2

The images were found near a golf course subdivision backing into a major highway near where I live. While driving past the spot a few days ago in the late afternoon I was struck by the outline of the trees against a stark blue, cloudless sky. I made a note to return when there were clouds in the sky. I wasn’t really concerned whether the clouds were puffy or, as they appear in these images. I just knew I wanted the separation and contrast provided by the clouds in the sky. The starkness of the bare trees against the sky while preserving green in the foreground grassy rolling hill strikes me as a powerful reminder of the season upon us and the season to come.

I sincerely hope you like these images as much as I do. I expect to include them as I make the art fair scene this Summer.

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New Stock Images Available

 

Book Stack

Book Stack

Book Stack is now available (3 versions) through Roger Passman Stock Photography.   The image can be found in the Still Life section. Creating stock images is a way for me to explore creative ways to work with subjects and lighting.  This experimentation allows me to stay fresh, hone my vision, and maintain a creative attitude.

 

Tomato

Tomato

Also available in the same section of my stock site is the image of a tomato on the right.  I really like the rich reds along side the green of the stem.  There is a festive side to this image.

Images at Roger Passman Stock Photography are available as royalty free images with an unlimited use license for electronic media use.  They are also available in prints ranging in size from 5 x 7 in to 20 x 30 in in both paper and canvas medium.  For a limited time I am also offering all stock images in 5 x 7 in folding cards suitable for holiday use in sets of 20.

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Chicago Federal Plaza

 

Federal Plaza Chicago

Federal Plaza Chicago

The day was just a bit overcast and there was a slight Autumn chill in the air.  I planned a whole day downtown to photograph because I really wanted to work with HDR (high density range) images.  The technique allows one to expose for the full range of highlights through shadows by making three or more exposures, some under-exposed, others over-exposed and one as a normal exposure.  In this case, I shot three exposures at the same f stop but at different shutter speeds.  Exposures were in a 5 stop range–2 stops under, normal, and 2 stops over.  Images are then combined using HDR software.

The resulting image is, to my view, striking in its depth of tonal quality.  The inside of the post office in the lower portion of the image is detailed while the highlights of the central building also maintain a depth of detail that would otherwise be impossible to achieve.

HDR lets me capture what I see in ways that let me envision the final image before I shoot.  HDR is, to digital photography, what the Zone System is to black and white darkroom photography.  The ability to see an image as it will be printed in its final form is nothing short of extraordinary.  And all this can be accomplished and saved for future printing with precision.  The results don’t vary from print to print.  I, for one believe that Ansel Adams would have endorsed HDR as the Zone System for digital photography.

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