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Did you save those 3d glasses after seeing Avatar? If so, here’s another chance to use them. Check out the difference between the regular (bottom) and 3D (top) pictures. http://koudis.com/blog/index.php andhttp://www.workbook.com/portfolios/koudis
I love shooting in 3D – as you probably like to call it. The correct terminology is stereoscopic anaglyph, thank you very much, but let’s just call it 3D. It’s just so much more fun that way.
Last week I had to shoot an album cover for an artist that I can’t name. That’s how it works with celebs. Basically, I’m “embargoed” until the record label says I can show any work. I’ll show you that stuff soon enough. But for now, my point is this – I shot an album cover in 3D. I used two synchronized Canon 5D Mark2’s on a special rig that I designed, to capture simultaneous left and right exposures. It really looks great. But you can’t see it.
But here’s something you can see. And I think this is even better. I’ve just converted a 2D image into 3D. I’ve taken a flat 2D photo I shot of Mike White, and converted it to honest to goodness 3D! Seriously, This was just a normal 2D photo until my conversion. This was not done in simple photoshop layers, dear Watson. This is a full-blown stereoscopic conversion. I imported the image into modo401, sculpted it to get the relief of the head, then re-photographed (rendered) it virtually with two offset cameras. Go get your red/cyan glasses and look at that nose!
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via: Nick Koudis Photography Blog
This is number four in my Ironic Death Series – Hit and Run by an Ambulance. I guess it’s self explanatory. Sometimes, I like to draw the viewer into an image and make ‘em work to find the joke, or the story. This one, hopefully is a quick read. (that’s read read) Here’s the finished image. (click image to see bigger)
Special thanks to Brittany Furlan, our dead girl.
It started its life as a sketch. Working from sketches has its advantages, of course, but it actually can prevent you from thinking about other solutions to the problem. For example, as I was shooting and assembling the elements, I noticed that the white line intersecting the woman’s neck added a macabre element. So I left her there on the side of the road.
The whole idea reminded me of Andrew Wyeth’s painting, Christina’s World (1948). So I thought I’d add that level for an extra bit o’ funny.
Downtown LA has a desolate industrial district that would be great to shoot in, if there weren’t so many damn location vehicles are in the way. Desolate, my ass. Seriously, everybody shoots there. Everybody. It’s like the Costco of locations. Anyway, it’s got nice light.
This is a final plate for the image. Notice that the background is in soft focus. I focused on the foreground which will be her location in the shot. And of course, the Dutch angle helps sell the anxiety of the scene. We’ll create the ambulance in modo 401. And shoot the unfortunate girl in the studio.
And now comes some serious progress. After four solid days of modo-ing an ambulance, I’ve got this render to show for it. This is a gorgeous render straight out of modo. I’ve attached the background image to the render camera, then resized the render to be pixel for pixel to the background image. The ambulance model is sitting on a “shadow catcher” groundplane. ( Sounds like something you buy in a New Mexico gift shop. I wish I had a shadow-catcher for my real life! ) It’s an almost perfect scenario, but in the end, I’m going to have to render the Ambulance separately, so I can blur it to match the background in P-shop. I’ve got some minor tweaks on the model to do before I’m totally done. That means ANOTHER four days of work.

Have a closer look at the ambulance. Still very rough, of course, but modo renders so beautifully, it looks delicious. It’ll be a shame to blur, but sometimes, that’s what sells an image. (click image to see bigger)

via Nick Koudis Photography Blog.
i love a sexy cup
These are my three most often used photographic tools; a Mac, espresso, and a camera, in that order. I find that I use the camera less and less, and as I use the mac more and more, I invoke the magical power of good coffee more often. It’s the Photographic Trinity, really.
But when I say good coffee, I’m very serious. I wouldn’t call myself a connoisseur, but I will say that I’m a coffee snob. In 1999, when I selfishly installed an espresso machine in my NY studio to power up my team, I triggered a never ending search for the next best thing. I unwittingly began a near spiritual walk towards coffee heaven. A $300 cappuccino maker started a cycle of returns to Whole Latte Love, until a $2500 Jura S9 super automatic arrived. You may snicker, but the price of Starbucks sludge still was enough to justify this thing.
( Purists will pooh pooh a super automatic machine, and they may be right, but for a business, nothing beats a fresh ground espresso or latte in 60 seconds. Now get back to work! )
Anyway, this is where I’m going with this. Los Angeles may be culinarily challenged, but we do have two shiny little diamonds of coffee perfection. Intelligentsia Coffee – one in Silverlake and one in Venice.
Going there is like a visit to café-mecca. Most Americans don’t sanctify their coffee enough to really appreciate what’s going on here. There’s an important part of the coffee ritual that shouldn’t be ignored. It should be enjoyed in a ceramic cup, and savored for a few precious moments. Coffee is one of the things that makes our lives beautiful. And for that, it should be appreciated while sipping. Sit down, relax, and let the coffee caress you. It’s a precious moment, really. Don’t waste it on a f\_/cking paper cup with a plastic lid.

So, after trying every bean in creation on our Super Automatic, I’ve found that loading the hopper with Intelligentsia’s Black Cat Project espresso beans has been the best investment in my “Photographic” arsenal to date.