Basketball Eclipse

Basketball Eclipse

April 15, 2009 By Joe Morahan

Basketball Eclipse

This has to be my favorite shot from the shoot. I would have to agree that it might not be the strongest shot I took, but the odds of this shot seemed like 1 in a million. What happened is when Branden was shooting around while I was switching cards, I noticed the basketball pass through the sun, which gave me the idea to try to create a eclipse of the sun with a basketball. We set him in the correct position, and I had him toss up a few shots and I held down the shutter taking as many images at a time as I could. Quickly we realized that an inch to high or to low, the angle of the shot, as well as the camera position all were variables to the shot. Another thing, the sun is constantly moving, especially toward late afternoon as it just drops from the sky. Anyway we kept trying and finally one shot, and one only made a perfect eclipse of the sun. There is no photoshop used in the image, other than color/contrast and dust. A real Eclipse.

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Shot details: f/13; 1/2500 sec; ISO 100

Focal Length 78mm; EF70-200mm f/2.8L IS USM

Camera Details: Canon EOS-1Ds Mark III

Branden is one hell of a sports model. Nothing is impossible and a real pleasure to work with. I rarely say anything, but he had to have been one of the greatest people I have ever worked with.
Here is a link to Branden’s website: www.brandennicholson.com

Slick Stop-Hockey

This is another industrial/scientific sports photography concept that I have worked on.  This shot shows a hockey player coming in and doing hockey stop.  The speed in which the skater was traveling was great creating a spray effect of the shaved ice off the rink.  The shot was 1/250 of a second, but I had the indoor lights turned off and used a Profoto B2 Location Kit to get the super fast light.  The flash duration was not timed for this shoot because I had to keep changing the light power, but I would have to guess 1/2000 of a sec.  The fast flash duration help stop the high-speed action in its tracks and can offer some cool shots of ordinarily events.

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Filed Under: Action, Hockey Stop

Light Tracing – How To

Light-Tracing Behind the Scenes

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Behind the Scenes

This image shows me waiting, (very still might I add) as the exposure is going on. You can see the camera right in front of my pointing straight up capturing all the action.

Shot details: f/16;  30 secs; ISO 1600
Focal Length: 15mm; EF 15mm f/2.8 Fish Eye

Camera Details: Canon EOS 20D

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RAW 675X UDMA 6 Hoodman 8 GB CompactFlash Professional 500,00 Cycle Cards.

This is an off-shoot angle of the images I was working on.  This helps show what my set up was, and how it was made.  As you can see I have 2 light stands with fishing wire between then, and the object just taped to the fishing line.

Shot details: f/16;  49 secs; ISO 1600
Focal Length: 15mm; EF 15mm f/2.8 Fish Eye

Camera Details: Canon EOS 20D

RAW 675X UDMA 6 Hoodman 8 GB CompactFlash Professional 500,00 Cycle Cards.

This is a much longer exposure 92 seconds to be exact, you can see more light from the mini-mag.  The longer you wait the more passes that mini-mag will do and as you can see it started to light the top of the ball (out of camera view).  You can also see the real camera and how that is pointed straight up capturing the passing light.

Shot details: f/16;  92 secs; ISO 1600
Focal Length: 15mm; EF 15mm f/2.8 Fish Eye

Camera Details: Canon EOS 20D

RAW 675X UDMA 6 Hoodman 8 GB CompactFlash Professional 500,00 Cycle Cards.


Another angle of the light tracing behind an object.

Shot details: f/16;  49 secs; ISO 1600
Focal Length: 15mm; EF 15mm f/2.8 Fish Eye

Camera Details: Canon EOS 20D

RAW 675X UDMA 6 Hoodman 8 GB CompactFlash Professional 500,00 Cycle Cards.

This is a much longer exposure 92 seconds to be exact, you can see more light from the mini-mag.  The longer you wait the more passes that mini-mag will do and as you can see it started to light the top of the ball (out of camera view).  You can also see the real camera and how that is pointed straight up capturing the passing light.

Just another different angle.

Shot details: f/22;  30 secs; ISO 1600
Focal Length: 15mm; EF 15mm f/2.8 Fish Eye

Camera Details: Canon EOS 20D

RAW 675X UDMA 6 Hoodman 8 GB CompactFlash Professional 500,00 Cycle Cards.

Snowboarding: Morning Snow Fall

Morning Snow Fall; Snowboarding

This image shows a woman walking with her snowboard to head out riding for the day.  It was right after a morning snowfall so all the trees are covered in snow.  It only stays like this for a short while before the wind blows the snow off, or the heat of sun melts it off.  So it was real cool to capture this moment.

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Forced Perspective Running through the Desert

H2O

Here are two shots from my new series that I have been working on.  It uses the forced perspective to a max and they are turning out to be quite fun.  The only problem is I can’t seem to close down enough to keep focus throughout the image.  Thank god for photoshop, but I would like to get one of these on a piece of film some day.  Maybe the old 4×5 closed down at f/64 might work, but till then I have been blending the different shots and layers together.  I specifically remember with Ralph, one of the greats was teaching us this in class and it seemed so simple there, and when shooting nature, it can be.  But having the bottle only a few inches from the camera, it’s really hard to keep that focus in the back ground.  And as soon as you move the bottle back a bit, the neck hits the horizon killing the overall look to the shot.  Anyway this series has been driving me nuts, and has been a fun challenge and expect to see a few more.

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H2O

Image description:

This shot shows a woman running through a cracked and dried up lake bed.  She is running around 45 yards from the camera making her a bit small in the frame, and is in the overall background.  In the foreground a bottle of water rests on its side dripping some water from the cap.  The bottle is very close to the camera creating an illusion to the camera prospective.  The cracked ground fits together like a puzzle, and is in desperate need of water.  As the drop falls from the cap is looks like the drop of water is the same size as the runner in the background.  Its a play on hydration. Shot in El Mirage Dry Lake Bed, CA ***Composite***

This shot has similar aspects to the other image, but was shot in Denver right after a snow storm.  Its a play on forced perspective.  The water bottle which sits near camera, just inches away is set around 30 yards in front of the basketball hoop in the background.  The bottle has a drop of water coming out that looks as though its going to fall through the basketball hoop.  The drop because its close to the camera looks around the size of a real basketball. Layers were used in this shot, to keep focus and for other image compositing.  Shot in Denver, Co.

*Composite

Women's Health Magazine

Women’s Health Magazine featuring the fitness photography of Joe Morahan.  This shot was taken in El Mirage Dry Lake Bed in Southern California.

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Joe Morahan Featured on Photogrill

How a Creative Sports Photographer Made This Hot Photo

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By Craig Sillitoe   

View Story on Photogrill

PHOTOGRILL: Tell us about this photo, how did the idea come together?

PHOTOGRAPHER: I needed an image involving a football player, but something striking, not another vanilla shot of a diving catch, or a crunching tackle. I wanted to produce a powerful image but one with a different slant, an unusual perspective. But how to achieve a shot unlike the thousands seen each week? I envisioned a combination of action, yet posed, controlled-lighting shot. The twist was the point of view, through another player’s eyes. I have never actually played football, but as I closed my eyes, this is what I think it would look like from one player to another.

PHOTOGRILL: How did you physically make this shot?

PHOTOGRAPHER: The type of shooting I love most is compositing images together. Sometimes I shoot up to 7 different images for one picture, but this one was a bit different. It was one single image, though it did need heavy post-production to complete the image. After shooting composites for years now, I have found the one key trick to make them work, the lighting. In each photo the lighting has to match, to make the image “feel real”. If I use specular lighting for my background (which is the case most of the time, because the sun is lighting my background) I need to make sure that when I photograph the model, or any other elements, that I match the ratio and the lighting type with the background.

I needed to make sure of a few key points so that the image came out the same as I pictured it in my mind. The football mask had to be in the shot. So I went to a sports store, and bought a face mask for $15. The model had all the other gear needed. I set up on a tripod, and got my angle. Grass on the bottom 1/3 of the frame, the top 2/3 was all sky. The football player was to dive through the sky part of the image. It helps to be extremely low, so that when the player dives, it looks like he’s flying through the air.

There was one small complication with the shoot. I thought I would be able to use a c-stand to hold the mask right in front of the camera, but it did not work out so well. The mask kept moving, and not staying in the right position, so I held it by hand right in front of the lens. It did slightly move throughout the shoot, but I was able to capture the image I was hoping for. Also holding it by hand give me the freedom to move it closer to the lens, or further from the lens depending on the shot, and how big the player was in the frame. Once everything is set up, I take many photos. I was submitting these to a stock agency, so the more the better.

PHOTOGRILL: What did you do in post-production?

PHOTOGRAPHER: This wasn’t a full composite, I did not shoot totally separate photographs to put together. However it did take a lot of tricks to put it together. The original location did not work out, so I had to use a back-up location, next to the ocean at Seal Beach, California. There were palm trees, boats, and a dock in the background which was not part of my plan. So I made sure that the football player was diving through the sky, and that the mask was level with the horizon line. Then I dropped down the sky in photoshop using the pen tool to cut the objects out. The pen tool helps make super tight, accurate cuts.

PHOTOGRILL: Tell us about your photography in general.

PHOTOGRAPHER: I am in a transition period at this point of my career. I graduated Brooks Institute of Photography in December 2005. I gained contracts with Getty Images, Jupiter Images, World Sport Images, and NewSport Photo. I was submitting images to these agencies on a regular basis and they were selling them to clients throughout the world. I am always shooting for my portfolio, to grow as an artist and as a photographer. So many of the images I submitted were self-assigned and personal projects. But lately I have been moving over to the advertising industry. I have a lot of projects in the mix, including playing around with directing which I have found to be extremely rewarding.

Creating images to submit for stock agencies gave me freedom to create photographs on my own. My main goal was to create something different from the get-go, and hope it would stick out from the crowd. After all, stock agencies are a crowd of images right? Maybe tens of thousands of football images, creating something different is hard, but with the right pre-production it can be done.

PHOTOGRILL: How do you conceptualize your ideas?


PHOTOGRAPHER: I don’t really have a single method of conceiving the ideas. I hate to admit this, but sometimes while sitting at dinner with friends they pop in my head, and I cannot stop thinking of them. They flood my head all the time, and I often get distracted from life by these ideas. Some are great, and others, not so great. I always have a book that I carry around and do simple sketches of ideas and make notes. I often look through my book and revisit old ideas, mold and shape them into better projects.

I always have the ‘big shot’ planned out in my mind. I never have to remember what the big shot is because I’ve been thinking about it for months. It’s the smaller shots that I need to make sure that I have written down so that I don’t forget a small detail shot. My main goal is very simple, when someone looks at one of my images I want them to think “wow, that’s beautiful” even if it’s only for 2 seconds. I love this world we live in, I think its quite beautiful and I want others to think that as well.

PHOTOGRILL: How do you go about lighting different elements of the photo?

PHOTOGRAPHER: I do a couple of small tricks to help me get the lighting I want for a shot. I make sure I am at a sync speed, & get my background image. I find the proper exposure & then close down by a few stops, so that my background is slightly under exposed. Then I bring the model in and get the lighting the way I want it. Like most of my photography, this shot has two lights, the sun, and one flash. The sun was the rim light, and I used an off camera flash as my key light.

As I said before lighting is key. Using different types of lighting across the photo makes it look a bit off to the viewer. Another mistake I have made in the past, was to have differences in perspective. My background shot was taken from maybe waist or shoulder high, and I photographed a runner to drop in from low to the ground. The angles did not match up, and the mismatch looked bad. Especially when I shot with a wide-angle lens which intensifies distortion.

PHOTOGRILL: Can you tell us about your career?

PHOTOGRAPHER: At Brooks Institute I majored in Industrial and scientific photography, which people always find a bit odd. However I am a numbers guy, and Brooks did not have a major for sports photography. So I figured that the extreme high-speed photography education would eventually comeback around while shooting sports in a commercial atmosphere.

I make these photos because I have too. I will never stop making images, or creating works of art, it just runs in my blood. I loved playing sports while growing up, and when I walked onto a soccer field, basketball court, I would forget about everything in life, money problems, emails, school work. This very peaceful feeling would take over for the following 90 minutes. I try to create this peaceful feeling while photographing sports.

PHOTOGRILL: What equipment do you use and what’s important in choosing equipment for you?

PHOTOGRAPHER: This is a funny question, because many of the photographers I know are complete gear junkies. I am not. Of course I know my way around almost anything, but I can’t keep up with all the new cameras coming out every few months. I would prefer to spend time thinking creatively.

My gear has to be perfect, I depend on it for my living. I use Canon cameras, mostly the Mark III 1DS. I use Canon lenses, for almost everything, but I sometimes use Ziess Lenses. For Compact Flash Cards I only use Hoodman RAW cards. I use Pocket Wizards to sync my flash, so I have less cables and cords. I only use Profoto lighting. Like I said earlier I usually under expose my background by a stop or two and therefore my flash has to over power the sun, and profoto has very powerful lighting. And for carrying all this around, I use Lowepro backpacks. And like other photographers I still bring hundreds of little pieces of equipment that I may need to every shoot.

Find more of Joe’s photography at Joe’s Website