Studio Photo Classes

Studio Photo Classes Classes on the the use of Studio Lighting to achieve artistic effects in photos that compliment the subject and do so without photoshop.

18/07/2020
work done by some really talented ladies. enigmatic and tenebrism style of human figure photos.
11/02/2014

work done by some really talented ladies. enigmatic and tenebrism style of human figure photos.

photos by Sharon Millar, Susan de Gannes and Jeannine Story.

by Jeannine Story
18/01/2014

by Jeannine Story

photos by Sharon Millar, Susan de Gannes and Jeannine Story.

Nudes done in deep shadow with an enigmatic overtone masking the human form's realism and identifiable structure.
22/12/2013

Nudes done in deep shadow with an enigmatic overtone masking the human form's realism and identifiable structure.

Students were given the task of creating enigmatic interpretations of the human form. The subject was either made to loo...
17/11/2013

Students were given the task of creating enigmatic interpretations of the human form. The subject was either made to look like something else or its true nature hidden in the contrast of highlights and shadow. Images by Jeannine Story, Susan de Gannes and Sharon Millar .

26/09/2013

For the first human form i can think of I turn to Hippolyte Bayard. From Wikipedia-Hippolyte Bayard (20 January 1801 – 14 May 1887) was a French photographer a pioneer in the history of photography. He invented his own process known as direct positive printing and presented the world's first public exhibition of photographs on 24 June 1839. He claimed to have invented photography earlier than Louis-Jacques Mandé Daguerre in France and William Henry Fox Talbot in England, the men traditionally credited with its invention.

While working as a civil servant, Bayard experimented with photography. He developed his own method of producing photos called the Direct positive process.[2] It involved exposing silver chloride paper to light, which turned the paper completely black. It was then soaked in potassium iodide before being exposed in a camera. After the exposure, it was washed in a bath of hyposulfite of soda and dried.
The resulting image was a unique photograph that could not be reproduced. Due to the paper's poor light sensitivity, an exposure of approximately twelve minutes was required. Using this method of photography, still subject matter, such as buildings, were favoured. When used for photographing people, sitters were told to close their eyes so as to eliminate the eerie, "dead" quality produced due to blinking and moving one's eyes during such a long exposure.
In the summer of 1851, along with photographers Édouard Baldus, Henri Le Secq, Gustave Le Gray, and O. Mestral, Bayard travelled throughout France to photograph architectural monuments at the request of the Commission des Monuments Historiques.[3]
Self Portrait as a Drowned Man[edit]

Bayard was persuaded to postpone announcing his process to the French Academy of Sciences by François Arago, a friend of Louis Daguerre, who invented the rival daguerreotype process. Arago's conflict of interest cost Bayard the recognition as one of the principal inventors of photography. He eventually gave details of the process to the French Academy of Sciences on 24 February 1840 in return for money to buy better equipment.
As a reaction to the injustice he felt he had been subjected to, Bayard created the first staged photograph entitled, Self Portrait as a Drowned Man. In the image, he pretends to have committed su***de, sitting and leaning to the right. Bayard wrote on the back of his most notable photograph.

17/05/2013

registration tomorrow at 10 am till 2pm. call for directions or email [email protected]

All images are straight from the camera, shot by students and have not been retouched.
17/05/2013

All images are straight from the camera, shot by students and have not been retouched.

State of the art studio with all the equipment you would ever need and more
09/05/2013

State of the art studio with all the equipment you would ever need and more

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Port Of Spain
00000

Telephone

8682911635

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