WhoIsJayLamm
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Exploring music, photography, politics, and nonsense.
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Week 6: Go To a Museum

Creative52, Week 6: Go To a Museum, pic 1
Tugger and Lighthouse
This week’s Creative52 challenge is called “Go to a Museum,” and lucky for me, I work in a museum. That being said, the photographer is tasked to go to a museum and absorb all the artwork. After walking around, and at the end of your tour, ask yourself what images really stuck in your mind. Which images made an impression? Was anything particularly inspiring?
One of the images in my museum tour that stuck with me was a photograph by Julia Sims called “Cypress Sunbeam.” When I saw this, I thought it was interesting that the cypress trees were in silhouette with the sky. It also struck me as a very “Louisiana” photograph. When I saw it, I immediately knew it was taken in Louisiana. Julia Sims has a very hands-off approach, not enhancing the photo. The right moment is captured and represented as is.
I wanted to do something similar, but not copy it…chase it. For my photo I wanted to capture something very much in the vein of Louisiana as well. There’s a place I’ve been to before over in Madisonville that has this really cool looking, burned out tugboat. Just beyond the tugboat is an old light house. It’s located on the Tchefuncte River and is a perfect place to view a sunset. However, the mosquitos in this area are particularly horrendous.
This image consists of 37 shots, 9 brackets for each area of interest and blended together manually. After all, this is my style and my take on a Louisiana landscape.
For the full story and explanation please visit my Creative52 blog here:
https://www.jaylammphoto.com/?p=650

#creative52 #tugboat #tugboats #tugboatsdaily #lighthousesofinstagram #lighthousephotography #madisonvillela #madisonvillephotographer #sunsets #sunsetphotography #sunsetphotos #sunsetoftheday #juliasims #64parishes #onlylouisiana #louisianatravel #louisianahistory #louisianaculture #louisianafolklife #louisianaphotography #louisianalandscape #landscapephotography

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Wizards are Assholes

Let's take a little look at how some of the Wizards in the Harry Potter universe are absolute jerks. Of course, this is all in good fun, but I want to take a look at the behavior and piggishness that Wizards have in this Potterverse. I mean, if they existed along with us here, they'd have a lot of explaining to do.

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Creative 52, Week 29: Shoot a Very High-Key Image

Creative 52, Week 29: Shoot a Very High-Key Image

High-key photography, damn near blowing out your image with copious amounts of light. Make your subject look like a pretty angel coming through heaven’s gate or something.

For this image I wanted to do a slight combination of high-key with low-key elements. By that, I mean, I wanted to put some form of viking face paint on the upper part of my face so I could later overlay an image of stars, the galaxy, or something of that nature. I wasn’t quite sure what yet. My girlfriend helped me with the makeup and even did an initial splatter spray of white on my forehead for texture and added pizzazz.

I wanted to wear a suit for this because you usually don’t see vikings in suits and I wanted to be a Work Viking…Assistant to the Regional Viking.

To make the blown out effect I hung up a white sheet in a doorway. Behind that sheet I put two softboxes with two 100 watt bulbs each to the side. I put two large LED worklights down a bit lower. ...

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Creative 52, Week 28: Shoot a Very Low-Key Image

Creative 52, Week 28: Shoot a Very Low-Key Image
10/14/2021

Low-key in photography doesn’t mean relaxed, chilled out, and soft spoken. Low-key simply means that the emphasis is on the shadows, on the darks. Whereas high-key is all bright and damn near blown out, low-key has crushed blacks and is all mysterious. Perfect for getting close to Halloween, right?

Well, Gina was shooting a video for an upcoming belly dance gathering and was dressed like a witchy crone named Cailleach, a divine hag and Queen of Winter. She had a cool twiggy head band and some matching make-up; plus, we just finished watching this movie, Censor, which had this cool lighting theme all throughout. So, we decided to shoot this low-key image and video using only colored video lights…no strobes. The lighting was inspired by Censor and another movie called Mandy. Both movies are worth checking out.

This whole thing was a challenge because I really wanted to utilize the sharpness and look that I get with my ...

Creative52, Week 27: Shoot a Frame Within a Frame

Collective Isolation
I have a strip of 75mm film I use for a bookmark and recently I was admiring just how damn cool it was. And then I was walking past these windows that look out upon the Mississippi River levee. In a way, this section of windows, framed by the support poles, reminded me of that 75mm film strip.

People, for the most part, tend to mind their own business. It's why we can go out to a restaurant with a loved one and pretend that we're not in a big room with dozens of other couples also pretending that no one else is around. When I set up my camera to take these pictures I decided to capture little frames of people minding their own business. So, no, I didn't want to "Shoot a Frame Within a Frame" using shadows or doorways; I wanted to use the entire wall of windows as a frame to separate interactions, use the lower section of windows to frame individuals going about their business while ignoring others, the upper part of the windows to frame birds flying together in ...

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