Light Painting

by Photon

Light Painting with Phoenix Mk2
Uploaded03/11/2014 - 21:56
CategoryHumour / Fun
Shutter Speed6.88 sec
Aperturef/19
LensN/A
ISO100
Focal Length35mm
Views/Likes95/0

GIULIO57
Posted 04/11/2014 - 06:38 Link
Great work
PPG
Posted 04/11/2014 - 07:34 Link
Very nice.
drobbia
Posted 04/11/2014 - 08:55 Link
Deserves much thought by producer and viewer. Best large. Tg
"It's not what you look at that's important, it's what you see" - Thoreau
Quote:

swarf
Posted 04/11/2014 - 10:55 Link
Very effective - it must have taken a lot of planning out in advance (and practice!).

Phil
K-5iiS; K-r; ME Super; ME; DA* 16-50 f2.8; DA 18-135 WR; DA 55-300 WR; HD DA 15mm F4 ED AL Limited; FA 50mm f1.4; A50mm f1.7; DAL 18-55mm; M40mm f2.8; + assorted non-Pentax lenses

My Flikr Page link
SMarsden
Posted 04/11/2014 - 10:58 Link
My website
Flickr
Pentax Photo Gallery
"Intellectual brilliance is no guarantee against being dead wrong" Carl Sagan
Posted 04/11/2014 - 14:44 Link
Great planning and extremely effective result... am interested in the how if you have a moment to explain?

Thanks very much

Best
Bobbinalorry
Posted 05/11/2014 - 12:27 Link
generally I don't care for light painting, but this on works GREAT!
Best Regards, Larry.

All the gear & no idea.
Teaka53
Posted 05/11/2014 - 15:31 Link
Like it
Malc
pauljay
Posted 06/11/2014 - 07:12 Link
Love it!
Paul.

Photography is not a sport. It has no rules. Everything must be dared and tried! (Bill Brandt)
PPG
Photon
Posted 07/11/2014 - 02:33 Link
thingsthatihaveseen wrote:
Great planning and extremely effective result... am interested in the how if you have a moment to explain?

Thanks very much

Best

Explantion of the 'How' for images created with Phoenix Mk1 & Mk2

During the summer of 2013 when my local photography club were planning their 'Autumn Light Painting Night', they rescued a bicycle wheel from a house fire and asked me to secure a set of LED lights around the wheel rim and to conjure a short axle extension such that the plane of the wheel would be at 45° to the ground. The wheel was to be spun around the point where the axle extension made contact with the ground. The object of this was to take long exposure photographs of the dome light trace effect. To prevent this arrangement from wandering, I secured the axle extension to an old microwave bearing assembly, mounted on to a disk of MDF, with three feet. They could then play with this thing indoors on a flat floor. Initial tests were successful, so in addition, I made a longer axle assembly of approximately of approx 85 cm long, to give them a large toroid of light effect, Phoenix Mk1: the wheel had risen from the ashes!

During late summer of 2014 I was asked could this set up be mounted vertically to plot a globe of light points. I pointed out that without expensive engineering, it would collapse in a heap on the floor but a few days later I thought of a way of achieving what they wanted; a globe of light. Use the existing wheel on the long axle to drive and precess a central column that supports another wheel which spins about a horizontal axis. A stabilising arm was added to counteract the Gyroscopic Torque caused by the rotating wheel mass being precessed about the central column. The central, upper wheel has two sets of LEDsne red set and one blue set, each set is independently switch-able. I added the horizontal rack of green LEDs; to give a Saturn's Ring type light trace. The conical red light trace was from the string of red LED's that another member laid down on of the tie rod tubes later in the evening. The final set up, Phoenix Mk2, is shown by the image uploaded at 02:09 on 07 November 2014.

I Don't know how that face got into the 8th line of the last paragraph!

Regards
All five minute jobs take a minimum of eight hours!
Edited by Photon: 07/11/2014 - 02:37
Posted 08/11/2014 - 00:29 Link
Great stuff Colin... Thanks for sharing... Btw, also share your pain re uninvited smiley things...

Best
Photon
Posted 08/11/2014 - 01:17 Link
Thank you all for looking and thank you very much for your comments
Regards
Photon
All five minute jobs take a minimum of eight hours!

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