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You are here: Home / Archives for Jason D. Page

December 2014 Light Painting Contest Entries

December 22, 2014 by Jason D. Page

ORBS ARE PROGRESSING! Here are the entries for the December 2014 light painting photography contest. Everyone PLEASE VOTE in the comments section of this page to pick your top 3 images, the images all have a number in the title (EXAMPLE… IF ONE OF YOUR FAVORITES IS THE IMAGE TITLED “December 2014 Light Painting Contest 02″ THEN YOU SHOULD PUT THE NUMBER 2 AS ONE OF YOUR CHOICES). Please remember that the theme of this contest was to create a light painting using some sort of ORB as you can see there are many different creative and innovative interpretations of an “ORB”. Voters that do not include 3 unique choices in their post will not be counted. In other words no 1,1,1, or 5,5,5, or 7,7,7,…..Please pick your three favorite IMAGES based on the image alone.






The light painting photography contest series is sponsored by the best damn companies on earth COAST Flashlights, Neon Flexible, LED Flexible,and Light Painting Brushes ! Please support these awesome companies that support our light painting art from, without them this contest series would not be possible!
Light-Painting-Brushes-Banner


December-Light-Painting-Contest

Filed Under: Light Painting Contest, Light Painting Photography

Patrick Rochon “Inspired Light”

December 13, 2014 by Jason D. Page

Inspired-Light-By-Infinity
Prepare to have your mind blown out of your head.

You may have seen recently Light Painting Photographer Patrick Rochon teamed up with the creative design team at Infinity to create the most beautiful automotive advertising campaign ever. I know I am a little bias but oh my goodness this is some stunning work! Now that things have settled down a bit for this inspiring light painter, Patrick finally had a few minutes to answer some questions about the project. Check out these images, the BTS video and the short interview with Mr. Rochon below!

Light Painting Inspired Light by Patrick Rochon
Light Painting Inspired Light by Patrick Rochon
Light Painting Inspired Light by Patrick Rochon
Light Painting Inspired Light by Patrick Rochon

Light Painting Inspired Light by Patrick Rochon
Light Painting Inspired Light by Patrick Rochon
Light Painting Inspired Light by Patrick Rochon
Light Painting Inspired Light by Patrick Rochon

LPP ∇ Holy cow Patrick this is just great, how did this project come about?
PR ∇ It came through email from TBWA. The Infiniti client was looking for something fun, new and creative to do. TBWA saw the Red Bull wakeboard video and asked me if I could do something with cars.

LPP ∇ Who else was involved? Did you work with any other light painters on this project?
PR ∇ Evan Jones is my partner on this, he’s the mind behind the Red Bull project we did last year. As soon as I got this offer I got him on board. It’s amazing to me that he invested two months on this going at it non stop never knowing if this was going to work. This was a big risk for him but he sticked in all the way until we got a green light. We did a photo shoot and the making of video as a first part and we also created a live show similar to the shoot in front of a crowd at the Dubai Motor festival.
For the live part I reached out to Cisco and his partner William. First to get the live light trail on the video screen and second for Cisco to do portraits with participant, he’s a specialist at this. So we ended up with a team from Orlando, Los Angeles, Montreal, Paris, Morocco. Plus in Dubai the local team was composed of “we are the world” with so many nations working together, it was great!

LPP ∇ This must have taken some time to bring this vision to life, can you tell me a little more about the process what was involved?
PR ∇ Like I said before, enormous time of preparation, thinking, designing, bouncing ideas and negotiating with the client. I was spending hours every day and sometimes full days with Evan on Skype. The project started six months prior but it took a good four months of work.

LPP ∇ How many lights were on those cars?
PR ∇ Each vehicle has a total of 2,520 LEDs with output exceeding 30,000 lumens. Designing and assembling the Light Rigs took a team of six specialists several weeks. The specially-made LED strip lighting is a proprietary product manufactured in China under U.S. specification.

LPP ∇ Where were the final images created?
PR ∇ In Dubai

LPP ∇ Thats a pretty awesome place! How many trips did you get to make there?
PR ∇ Just one, I worked from Montreal the whole time by Skype. The computer is now such a resource, a real powerhouse. Then I went one week in Orlando to meet with Evan and work on the final preps tests and tweaking of the lighting on the cars. From there, we went to Dubai for three weeks. First one for the shoot, the second for the edit and the third for the live show.

LPP ∇ What were some of the technical challenges of a project of this magnitude?
PR ∇ The technical challenges!??!! That’s basically what we did all day every day. Solve problems. It is impossible to list the amount of difficulties we had, it was like a non stop fight uphill. That is why I chose my team wisely and this became one of the main keys to this successful accomplishment. To name one, time was one of the biggest challenges, we needed more time to do this. We were constantly working in emergency mode. We had to change the design of the rig on the car three times because of the lack of time we had once the first deposit was given.

LPP ∇ You also did a live performance for the launch?
PR ∇ The live was amazing because of the direct response and contact from the crowd. This was a tour de force with many obstacle heading our way. We would like to refine it and push it further.

LPP ∇ What was the most rewarding part of the whole project?
PR ∇ Seeing the dream go from mind to matter and the feedback we are getting from the public watching, definitely.

LPP ∇ It is just wonderful work congratulations on a very successful project!
PR ∇ Thank you.

To learn more about the project check out the Infinity website HERE.

Filed Under: Light Painting Photography, Light Painting Video

SNL Light Painting Photography

December 3, 2014 by Jason D. Page

SNL-Light-Painting-Still
Check out this MAJOR Mainstream light painting! A few months back I was talking with the film production unit from SNL about light painting and the different ways to incorporate it into their opening montage. They decided to use a Pixelstick and a stop motion technique. “We shot that same frame over and over until we had about 40 frames. Technically we needed 240 frames for a 10-second shot but with a few dozen frames, we could sequence a timelapse shot by randomly repeating frames without it being noticeable. The result is a shot that combines the look of a graphic with a handmade, stop-motion quality — another really fun in-camera trick.” The results by light painting standards are pretty basic but I think this is a great example of how light painting is growing and how it can be used commercially.
P.S. I had nothing to do with the shoot itself I just offered up some pre-production advice.

SNL Light Painting

SNL Light Painting 2

Via Petapixel

Filed Under: Light Painting Photography

Thymio The Light Painting Robot?

December 3, 2014 by Jason D. Page

Thymio-Light-Painting-1

You may remember back in 2009 when that fancy robot vacuum the Roomba came out, some smarty pants kids got together at the Braunschweig University of Technology and made some really cool Jackson Pollock like light paintings. This robot is a little different from the Roomba because this robot doesn’t suck…(see what I did there) its actually pretty cool and you can use it for light painting with its built in multicolor LED that identifies which mode the robot is in. It will flow you around the room, follow a line you have drawn out or you can program it to do all sorts of stuff like this:



Yeah yeah its no Pixelstick but still pretty cool. Learn more about this little light painting robot HERE.

Filed Under: Light Painting Photography

Light Painters on News Stands NOW!

November 25, 2014 by Jason D. Page

Light-Painting-Photography-Cover-Magazine

There are a few magazines you may want to pick up on news stands NOW featuring Light Painting! The first is ShutterBug Magazine’s “Expert Photo Techniques” issue featuring masters Troy Paiva, Lance Keimig, and Darren Pearson! The other may be a little harder to find but if you do it will be worth it for the images alone, its FOCUS Magazine out of the Netherlands with a cover and feature on LAPP Master JanLeonardo. Go get yourself a hard copy of these beauties!

Filed Under: Light Painting Photography

Iron Man Light Painting

November 16, 2014 by Jason D. Page

Light Painting Iron Man

Light Painting Iron Man

Check out these super cool Light Paintings and BTS images from Iron Man Live! Created by JanLeonard, Barney Flashlight, Heinz Jörg Wurzbacher, Garry Krätz and JanLeonardo’s beautiful lady Anna Möller.



Filed Under: Light Painting Photography

Adobe Remix – Janne Parviainen Light Painting Photography Interview

November 3, 2014 by Jason D. Page

SONY DSC

Recently Adobe launched a project recently called Adobe Remix in which they “invited a broad mix of creatives” to reinterpret their logo. Janne Parviainen was the artist selected from our light painting family to put a light painting spin on the Adobe Logo. The results are nothing short of spectacular! Janne’s light painting work and creativity almost always blows my mind but this is really taking it to another level of awesomeness. Check out the video, images and interview with Janne to find out a little more about this masterful work!

LPP ∇ Janne absolutely masterful work tell me a little more about the Adobe Remix project?
JP ∇ Thank you. Adobe invited a select group of creatives to express what Adobe means to them through their work. Adobe asked them to play, experiment, hack, make, socialize, datafy, dimensionalize, illustrate, and mashup our logo any way they see fit as part of the Adobe logo remix.

LPP ∇ How did this project happen how did Adobe get in contact with you?
JP ∇ I received an email from Adobe where they wanted to know if I would be interested in participating in the Adobe Remix project. I was very happy to get the message, especially because I had been on a sour mood all day after I had gotten an email that a work I had been planning for Japan’s television had been cancelled and given to an other artist. So the evening definitely got better after receiving the Adobe’s mail!

LPP ∇ That would change my mood for sure, How did Adobe find your work?
JP ∇ Apparently Adobe’s Creative Director is a fan of my work and had suggested my work for the Remix project which was really cool to hear!

LPP ∇ Thats a great fan to have! How long did you work on the project from start to finish?
JP ∇ I think I worked around from 60-80 hours on the project, especially for the first version of the logo which was really crazy amount of work with all the lines I had to draw. The tricky part in this project was that in order to create one straight line to the photo I had to correct the lines angle as much as four times a 90 degrees angle in my studio. So basicly one straight line in the photo could go from ceiling to a wall and from there to a door and finally to the floor so you can imagine the work to get it look like a straight line!
Janne Parviainen Light Painting Adobe Remix Drawing Lines

LPP ∇ What exactly is a forced perspective drawing?
JP ∇ Forced perspective is a technique that employs optical illusion to make an object appear farther away, closer, larger or smaller than it actually is. It is used primarily in photography, filmmaking and architecture. It manipulates human visual perception through the use of scaled objects and the correlation between them and the vantage point of the spectator or camera.
Janne Parviainen Light Painting Adobe Remix Forced Perspective

LPP ∇ Why did you chose a forced perspective, was it just to make it more complicated, lol?
JP ∇ I checked the previous projects in the Remix series and thought that in order to compete with them I had to do also something else besides light painting to my version. I had been experimenting with forced perspective drawings for a year or so so I decided to try to create as complex drawing as I just possibly could. I had planned the drawing to be actually even bigger in size but couldn’t find a place to execute it in so I decided to tear down all the extra stuff from my studio and make the project in there.

LPP ∇ How did building the logo out of wood help you?
JP ∇ I actually thought to use the wooden logo so that I could trace it with light and to make a light painted version of it to the finished photo but gave up from that idea after a few tests. The completely drawn logo worked much more better and created the similar effect without looking too sloppy. The wooden logo helped a lot in visualizing the project though so I’m glad it wasn’t completely in a vain since it was awfully a lot of work to do!
Janne Parviainen Light Painting Adobe Remix Wood Logo

LPP ∇ Can you tell me a little more about how you lit the scene? How many lights did you use and how did you use them to light the scene?
JP ∇ For the b&w versions I used a small Olight flashlight on a low power to light the drawing so that I could highlight the right areas without exposing the drawing too much. The light characters were drawn with a green colored led light because it has more variation in the light trail than a white one in a b&w photo.
SONY DSC

For the multicolored version I traced the drawings from a very close distance with a color changing rgb led in order to get the smooth color changes to the drawing and not to lit the other parts of the photo too much. After that I traced my body to the right locations with a color changing rgb led.
SONY DSC

LPP ∇ Did you ever mess up mid exposure and have to start again?
JP ∇ I made something around 20 different versions of the photos with exposures ranging from 16 to 39 minutes so I’m glad none of them had to be started again because of mistakes in the lighting. I forgot the resolution in two versions for the making of resolution though, so ended up with two rather noisy versions (which were luckily on b&w so they didn’t look terribly bad). I worked a couple of weeks till 2 to 5 am and was so exhausted at the end of the day that I didn’t remember to change the camera’s settings before starting to light paint.

LPP ∇ In general when your doing such long exposures do you feel while your shooting that you have messed up and need to start over, or do you always just keep going and then see how the image looks?
JP ∇ I usually just keep going and see how the image looks like because usually my photos are so full of light trails that small mistakes don’t even show in the final photo. Like in my paintings also in my light paintings I believe that mistakes make art sometimes even more interesting.

LPP ∇ You left some of the drawings unfinished, can you explain a little more about how you finished them during the exposure and why you chose to create the image this way?
JP ∇ The intentional unfinished parts in the drawing are the spots where they continue with light painting. After I draw the Adobe logo the unfinished parts were next to draw because I needed to know where the light characters would be in order to compose where to draw the other characters. When I was exposing the photo I tried to place myself so that my body was continuing from the unfinished parts of the drawing and then traced my body with light. It was really a physical challenge sometimes to try to hold the right position while tracing it with light. Especially the figures on the sides of the photo were challenging to do because of the heavy perspective distortions from the 17mm wide angle lens I used.
Janne Parviainen Light Painting Adobe Remix Drawings Unfinished

LPP ∇ I really like your tripod set up. Did you ever accidentally bump the camera and have to move it back into position.
JP ∇ Yeah the tripod set up is a good example of my technical skills! 😀 What you couldn’t do with some duct tape? I wanted to get the camera as high as possible so I figured to use the work ladders and just to tape the tripod to it with the tape. I also taped the ladders to the floor and to a closet so I didn’t have to worry about bumping into it (which I did plenty). I wish I would have done the same thing to my making of camera too since I had great deal of problems with the camera moving during the project when I was editing the video.
Janne Parviainen Light Painting Adobe Remix Tripod

LPP ∇ How long were the exposures for your final images?
The multicolored version was 39 minutes of exposure and the b&w version of the white room was 16 minutes.

LPP ∇ Again it is just incredible work thank you for sharing a little more about the project.

JP ∇ Thank you.

For More incredible work check out Janne’s LPP Profile HERE and his website HERE.

Filed Under: Light Painting Photography

Light Painting Contest Winner, Oct 2014

November 3, 2014 by Jason D. Page

October 2014 Light Painting Contest 06
And the winner is…. Jelle Schuurmans for this Futuristic Bionic Image! Here is a little more about how it was created.

Jelle said “I made this shot after a night of experimenting at home because of bad weather outside. I had the “Bionic” idea in my head for a while after seeing some guys PCB (Printed Circuit Board) pattern arm tattoo. So I started by making a PCB light stencil. Since we don’t have any of those nice and big storm drain tubes here in the Netherlands I wanted to try and create a similar “tube” effect, so in this case I ended up using a big metal bin. The end result was not what I had in mind, the bin is not nearly large enough to get a real tube effect, so I though maybe I could combine the PCB hand with this metal bin effect.
I placed my camera inside the metal bin, held my hand in front of the opening and used a flash to light up my hand. Now I took the stencil box and flashed the PCB pattern in the opening. All done during one long exposure in the dark living room.”

To see more from Jelle check out his Flickr Page HERE

For this winning image Jelle will receive a LPP prize pack filled with treasures from our sponsors below. 

Light-Painting-Brushes-Banner

Click here to see the current contest theme and find out how to enter to win your LPP prize pack!

Filed Under: Light Painting Contest, Light Painting Contest Winner

October 2014 Light Painting Contest Entries

October 22, 2014 by Jason D. Page

Here are the entries for the October 2014 light painting photography contest. Everyone PLEASE VOTE in the comments section of this page to pick your top 3 images, the images all have a number in the title (EXAMPLE… IF ONE OF YOUR FAVORITES IS THE IMAGE TITLED “October 2014 Light Painting Contest 03″ THEN YOU SHOULD PUT THE NUMBER 3 AS ONE OF YOUR CHOICES). Please remember that the theme of this contest was to create a light painting using some sort of Light Stencil as you can see there are many different creative interpretations of a “Light Stencil”. Voters that do not include 3 unique choices in their post will not be counted. In other words no 1,1,1, or 5,5,5, or 7,7,7,…..Please pick your three favorite IMAGES based on the image alone.



The light painting photography contest series is sponsored by the best damn companies on earth COAST Flashlights, Neon Flexible, LED Flexible,and Light Painting Brushes ! Please support these awesome companies that support our light painting art from, without them this contest series would not be possible!
Light-Painting-Brushes-Banner

October 2014 Light Painting Contest Entries

Filed Under: Light Painting Contest, Light Painting Photography

“Transcend” Light Painter Linda Costa Cheranichit’s Solo Exhibition

October 18, 2014 by Jason D. Page

linda_costa_cheranichit__01_voo_da_menina_mulher
Congratulations to light painter Linda Costa Cheranichit who is having a solo exhibition of her work as a part of Atlanta Celebrate Photography! The show is called Transcend and Linda will be displaying 23 light paintings some of which will be printed as large as 5 feet by 8 feet! Linda says “the work is about my’s life journey, my emotions and memories around my immigration away via airplane from my family and culture of Brazil, using flight as metaphor.” The opening is Friday Oct. 24, 2014 from 6-9pm located in the Atlanta Aviation Community Cultural Center. If you have a chance check out the opening and show your support! Below are a couple images that will be displayed for more info on the show click HERE for more on Linda click HERE!
linda_costa_cheranichit_04_spread_your_wings
linda_costa_cheranichit_02_vento_levou_boa_viagem

Filed Under: Light Painting Photography

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