Postcards of the Night - An art Photo Story

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For the first time in a long time, I've taken my camera, and some lights, and a few friends out into the night. No real plan, no real outcome desired. Just the notion of night time, eerie light, a white dress, a female form, and a narrative that would unfold as we worked.

This work is a collaboration that would not be possible without the assistance of others. I am grateful to both Abbey, and Erin. I hope that this is the start of some sort of collective or coven of artists, as I'm really happy with the outcome.

This is work not in my normal style - it challenges me to present rawer, less "technically sound" photography, but in doing so, I feel as though a narrative has been strengthened by the use of light, form, presentation.

I have some titles for each image in the sequence. The sequence is very important.

Post Card of the Night

Unsteady

Untilted

Balanced

Unburdened

Unrisen

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Unrising

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Unreflective

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Crossed

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Unburdened

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There are other images in the series that don't necessarily fit into this as a sequence, but none the less, they're evocative, ephemeral and ethereal images.

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The technical babble

The majority of these images were shot tripod mounted, at ISOs of in the range of 6400-12800 - it was DARK. Lighting was supplied by a LED static light, our torches, and the hopes and dreams of whatever reflections were conjured from the stream.

Lenses used were a 24-70 f/2.8 and my shiny new toy, the 85 f/1.2.

Images were shot on June 1, 2025, in South Australia.

Further Thoughts

This rawer, less technically polished style of photography is ever-more about controlling and directing light, particularly in areas with no-to-low-light, and I loved the challenge of tweaking these images in post, which was merely bringing up shadows, and dropping the highlights for more contrast.

I have also added specific masks where the exposure has been increased selectively in order to bring attention to the brightest parts of the frame.

I'm really pleased with this work, and I think I want to get some of it printed for my forthcoming exhibition.

And now...

It is time for your thoughts. Let me know what you like, what you hate, what you think can be improved, or feel free to discuss the frailty of life,the ephemerality of moments, or how people who don't understand the way subjects reflecting light aren't actually ghosts, but instead just forms moving through time.



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9 comments
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I love how you experimented during the photo shoot and appreciate the technical description as well.

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Thank you! I have always enjoyed long exposure "Stuff" but never really ventured into it with portraiture. I was surprised how well the mirrorless bodies I own (Z6 and Z5) handled the "zero light" focusing - while we were using a video light, I "hacked" the focusing for some shots by flashing the torch at the subject, using auto focus, then swapping back to manual before exposing.

Could have taken my Ad200s and some gels out for lighting, but figured static light would help us more in the absolute blackness of night!

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All these experiments are going to lead to a new discovery. Once you like the outcome, you're going to go further and explore other possibilities. We have a few photographers in this community, who are experimenting with lights and long exposure and I love the outcome, so keep doing what you do :)

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Yes, there's also the light painters community which has incredible work!

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That reminded me that about a year ago I attended a photography workshop where we also did experiments with motion during long exposure. The result is usually very impressive 👍
Great work, @holoz0r

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Thank you. Long exposure photography is something that I've always had an interest in. Applying it to portraiture is definitely something I want to continue working on.

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Very creative 👏 I like how you gave the series and every shot a title and thanks for the technical details as well 😊

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Cheers! Definitely felt like this series of images was a lot more artful compared to my standard portraiture which is more glamour / editorial. This took me out of my comfort zone for "Technically pristine" photography and I loved the freedom it gave me

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