Monday, 8 February 2016

Creating Tabletop Landscapes Using Flour and Light

Recently, as part of a photography class at my university, I had an assignment to shoot two rolls of film with the theme “Point of View.” This topic was open to interpretation, but I was encouraged to try something out of my comfort zone. I puzzled over the assignment for a few days – and I almost decided to shoot a roll of typical abstract photographs – but one other possibility began to interest me: With enough effort, could I take realistic landscape photographs from my kitchen table?

I recalled seeing some photographers create elaborate tabletop dioramas, requiring studio lighting and several days of work. Unfortunately, I had just a few hours to spare, and I didn’t know which items would look interesting in such an image. I bought a few products at a nearby grocery store, including a pound of flour; this ultimately became the subject of all three photographs. I also used a few objects that were lying around my room, and a total list of materials is as follows:

  • A lamp
  • My phone’s flashlight
  • A black shirt
  • A mirror
  • A cardboard box
  • Spoons, knives, and forks
  • The pound of flour

I decided to start with the simplest concept that I had in mind: a mountain lit from the side. This photograph was quite easy to take, in the end. After deciding on a lamp to light the scene, I poured the flour onto the front portion of a sheet of paper. I lifted the other end of the paper and taped it to a cardboard box, forming a miniature backdrop.

The hard part was shaping the flour. At first, I had no idea if the shot would look convincing, and I spent quite a while just moving around and reshaping the flour on my table. With some practice, it became clear that the most realistic way to shape the flour was to let gravity do the work; after all, the same process occurs in the real world. After forming the flour into a small pyramid, I simply used my spoon to carve a smoother shape. This process wasn’t particularly quick, but it was fairly easy; after a handful of tries, the flour was starting to look a bit more like a mountain.

Since I had to shoot the assignment on film, I first tested a variety of setups using a digital camera. With these trial photographs, I got a good idea of how to make the mountain look as realistic as possible; more than anything, I narrowed in on a lighting setup. In this case, a single desk lamp didn’t provide enough depth to the photographs, and they didn’t look much like a real landscape. I tried a few different setups, and I ultimately settled on light painting. With the flashlight on my phone, I lit the mountain of flour from the lower-right, casting shadows that looked somewhat realistic. The final result (shot on film) is below:

Mount Hood

For a first effort, I was encouraged. I knew that it wouldn’t hold up to close scrutiny, but a quick glance suggested “mountain” before it suggested “flour.” I was helped by the lack of color – and the graininess of ASA 400 film – in making the image seem more realistic. Still, I had a ways to go.

For my second photograph, I decided to play to a natural advantage of flour: at close distances, it looks like sand. I had in mind a photograph with sweeping dunes across the foreground, as well as a setting sun in the sky. This setup certainly seemed more complex than the first, but even I was surprised by how long it took to create. Take a look at the behind-the-scenes photograph below:

Flour Setup

As you can see in this photo, I shaped the flour to look like a desert landscape. Underneath and behind the flour is a sheet of paper, through which I shined my phone’s flashlight to create a fake sun. The majority of the lighting in this photograph comes from the lamp at the top of the image, which I shined at a wall to soften the light.

I spent a couple hours to shape the flour like this! It may look simple, but it was quite a time-consuming process. Ultimately, though, I felt that the dunes were starting to look realistic. I began taking digital photographs to test my setup, and then I moved on to film.

I learned that part of the difficulty was in positioning the sun properly. Since most of the light was from the left-hand side of the image, the sun had to be angled similarly. I also had to be at a low angle, allowing the sand dunes to block and cover one another as if I had been standing in the landscape. My final result is below:

Gobi Desert, Sunset

In my mind, this was a clear improvement over the first photograph. The sand dunes – particularly along the right-hand side of the image – looked fairly realistic, and the scene’s imperfections reminded me of the early days of photography. The sky, unfortunately, picked up some texture from the sheet of paper; it didn’t look as realistic as I had wanted. Similarly, the left-hand dunes looked more chaotic than those on the right, since they were lit by two strong light sources (the desk lamp and the fake sun). After spending so much time on this shot, though, it was time to move on to the next.

For my third and final image, I wanted to photograph a scene at night. I began brainstorming possibilities, and I thought about reflecting the Milky Way into a miniature “pond” made from a mirror. I couldn’t find a good material for the stars, though, so I thought about doing the moon’s reflection instead. This proved more fruitful, since I could create a realistic moon by shining my flashlight through a black t-shirt that I owned.

I now had my main concept, but I still needed a foreground to anchor the composition. I began to shape the flour to look like a shoreline, trying to create a beach scene at moonrise. In the process, though, I noticed that the flour was starting to look like an iceberg; in fact, the resemblance was fairly pronounced. I discarded the beach idea and began to concentrate on creating an Arctic landscape.

This one was much quicker than the other photographs, since the flour already had the proper shape. I tried a few different camera positions, deciding on one that allowed the fake moon to have the most realistic reflection. The final photograph is below:

Glacier Bay, Moonrise

This image, I believe, is the most successful of the three. The flour has the same shapes and forms as ice, and the moon in the background makes for the most convincing sky out of all three images. Even the reflection is somewhat convincing, harkening to long-exposure photographs of the night sea. It is worth noting that the photograph above is actually my digital image of the scene, since the film version did not scan as accurately as the first two.

In the end, what do I think of these photographs? On one hand, I certainly won’t be putting them in my portfolio or displaying them on my website; I still need a lot of practice before I can create something that looks perfectly realistic. On the other hand, I had tremendous fun trying to take these images. This entire process helped me think about real-world lighting conditions, and it showed me some of the ways that photography can be deceiving without the use of Photoshop. More than anything, though, I just enjoyed the process. Sometimes, the best way to maintain your excitement for photography is to try something new.

The post Creating Tabletop Landscapes Using Flour and Light appeared first on Photography Life.



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