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Light Painting with Time-Varying Light Sources by Dan Bennett

February 2, 2016 by Jason D. Page

Light Painting Dan Bennett 009, Hard Rock Cafe, Camera zoomed during the shot.

Light Painting Artist Dan Bennett sees things differently. From an early age he was fascinated with light, specifically time varying light sources. Dan has trained his eyes to see the unseen. On his website and in his book he offers many resources to help others see the light including tutorials on “Eyeball Jiggling” and “Mirror Jiggling”. Check out the full interview, images and videos below.

LPP ∇ Hey Dan your Light Painting work is very interesting can you tell me a little more about yourself and your work with time varying light sources?

DB ∇ My involvement with time-varying light sources goes back a looong way – I started when I was 4 years old! My bedroom had an electric heater in it, which had a neon indicator to show when it was on, and I remember kind of jiggling my head around in the dark and seeing a trace of orange dashes. Of course, at that age I didn’t know that the trace’s dashed appearance was due to the fact that the neon was switching on and off 100 times per second. (This was in the UK – in the US it would have been 120 times per second.)

I went on to develop a technique of moving my eyeballs deliberately so I could see the rapid time-varying behavior of various light sources, and had many years of pleasure doing that. Then in my 40s I decided it was time to write a book about it, and in preparing the book I found out that photographing time-varying lights is easily as much fun as observing them with the naked eye. Plus, it gives one the opportunity to really study the way a light source is varying, especially if its behavior is complex.

Then I found that by choosing the right light sources and moving the camera in the right kind of way, I was producing stunning images that stand up well as light painting art.


LPP ∇ How do you feel your work is different from Light Painting in the traditional sense?

DB ∇ Most light painters create images by doing stuff with lights over a time-scale of maybe 30 seconds to a couple of minutes, sometimes more. My time-scales are shorter – anything from a tenth of a second to 2 or 3 seconds. Whereas most painters use spatial changes in the scene to develop a cumulative time story which becomes the image, I take advantage of the fact that the lights I’m shooting are themselves changing very rapidly. My images are a “convolution” of the lights’ behavior and the motion of the camera.

Most light painters will be familiar with LED sources which leave high resolution dashed traces in the image – it’s a side-effect of the type of technology used in the LEDs, and maybe it’s regarded as a cool effect. You’ll see it if you wave a pixelstick too fast, for example. In my case, it’s this variation that is the source of my images. I simply move the camera and let the lights’ intricate time-varying activities paint the textures and features. After all, it’s much easier to shake yo’ camera than it is to wave a row of street lights around in front of a camera on a tripod!

Super quick tutorial: Set the camera to manual, with the shutter speed at, say, 1 second. Focus on the light source, then take the photo while sweeping the camera, or rotating it, or zooming it, or any combination of the three. If the image was too dark or light, change the aperture or the ISO. It’s that simple. 🙂

I remember one night visiting a garden where every tree was festooned in LED Christmas lights. There were people there using tripods and monopods… not me! Whizz! Sweep! Rotate! Zoom! I was having waaay more fun, and getting much cooler photos too!
Light Painting Dan Bennett 018, A group of LED-festooned Christmas Trees

LPP ∇ What is it about these Time Varying light sources that draws you to them specifically?

DB ∇ So I’d better define what I mean by “time-varying light sources”. I’m talking about lights – usually man-made, but sometimes natural – which are varying in brightness, color and/or pattern very rapidly. Too rapidly to see in normal circumstances. This includes almost every street light: you may think they’re just continuously illuminated, but far from it. They flash 100 or 120 times per second (and there are some LED ones out there that flash over 2000 times per second!). It’s possible to see this behavior with the naked eye – if you keep your eye moving. Here is tutorial on how to use a mirror in the technique of “Mirror Jiggling”

But street lights, though ubiquitous, aren’t the stars of my art images – for that I go to more complex sources such as neon tubes (the real neon, orange-red ones are amazingly complex in the time domain), LED displays (Las Vegas, baby!!!) and other sources. These give rise to the amazingly complex and attractive images you see here.

Since I can use my eyes to see the traces of time-varying lights, I can easily scope out a potential subject by jiggling my eyes for a moment. If I see cool traces, I pull out my camera.

Another aspect of these images is that it’s kinda mind-blowing that it’s so simple to produce such cool photos. Here is tutorial on how to capture the traces in your camera:

LPP ∇ Can you give me some examples of natural time varying light sources?

DB ∇ Twinkling stars can be observed by moving your eyes to see the brightness variations, but since their light’s so dim, it’s not very rewarding. It’s much more rewarding to photograph them! This photo of Sirius, taken by putting a moderate zoom (200mm or so) onto a Canon DSLR and pointing the camera at the star for a 1.6 second exposure while moving the camera in a loopy pattern. This lets us see what the eye can’t: (a) that the twinkling’s happening much faster than you might think (several hundred times per second), and (b) that it’s colored! (The explanation for this is amazing, but I don’t have room for it here.)

Light Painting Dan Bennett 003, Sirius, photographed by sweeping the camera in a loopy way

LPP ∇ Thats remarkable what are some others?

DB ∇ It’s well-known that lightning often consists of multiple strokes along the same path. This makes a wonderful – and very challenging – target for visual observation (where you have to be moving your eye or a mirror when the lightning happens) or for photography (where you have to be moving the camera). I’m including a lightning photo I took by operating the camera like a machine – sweep click sweep click sweep click – once per second for about two minutes!
Light Painting Dan Bennett 019, Lightning striking the same spot multiple times, camera swept sideways

Moths flying in the light of car headlights are good to observe. Obviously, the moths aren’t emitting light, but their wings reflect light in a rapid, periodic way which can be easily observed. In fact, you don’t even have to move your eyes, because the moths are moving for you!
Light Painting Dan Bennett 020, Two moths (a large one and a small one) flying in the light of an incandescent lamp

LPP ∇ It seems you have a very scientific approach to your light painting work, are you more interested in the science or art side of your work?

DB ∇ Good question. Yes, I deeply enjoy the science and technology side of lighting and vision; being able to explain what I can see or photograph is great. And yes, I also deeply enjoy producing great photos that stimulate the eye and brain. But that actually reveals what my main driving force is: enjoyment. 🙂 My book is all about going out and seeing and photographing time-varying light sources, and opening up a whole new world that’s all around us every night and is easy to see and shoot if only we know how. It’s all about enjoyment.

LPP ∇ What is your background? Did you study photography or science?

DB ∇ I have an degree in electronic engineering, but I’m not really an engineer. I’m definitely a bit of a science head; and I’ve been ramping up my photography skills over the last ten years or so, not just in the time-varying lights area.

LPP ∇ What are some of the ways your work could be used from a scientific standpoint?

DB ∇ Another good question… Actually, since most of my subjects are man-made lights, the people who design and manufacture them already know the technology well, so there’s not too much to add there. However, for people who enjoy seeing stuff and understanding stuff, it’s really cool to see into the minds of the engineers. For example, I can glance at a row of street lights and tell you in what configuration they’re connected to the three phases of the electrical supply.


Or I can glance at the LED tail lights of a car and tell you if there’s just one circuit driving them or multiple circuits, and how they achieve the change from tail light to brake light function.

One really interesting observation I once made by accident was when I saw a drop of water falling from a roof in bright sunlight. I wasn’t even watching it; but being a seasoned observer, I idly noticed that it made a dashed trace on my retinas. Well, usually that means that the light source is flashing, and if it had been a street light, that would have been the end of the story. But it was sunlight. I think we’d know by now if the sun was a pulsar… and it isn’t. 🙂 So what was the explanation? It was simply that the drop wasn’t spherical and was tumbling as it fell, catching the sunlight periodically – multiple times per second. This is a great example of the kind of observations you can make and enjoy if you train yourself.


LPP ∇ Getting a little off Light Painting here but thinking about observing the drop of water falling in sunlight. Do you have an interest in quantum theory and the role of the observer? It seems relevant to me especially related to how the lights are actually on and off but we see them as on, without noticing.

DB ∇ I guess it’s tempting to regard the fact that I saw the flashes of sunlight only by not looking directly at the falling drop, as somehow analogous to quantum theory, which states that as soon as you observe something, you’ve essentially changed it, so you can’t know everything about a system even if you observe it. That’s Heisenberg for you.

Well, that’s not really what’s going on here – the timescales are too long and the sizes of objects are too large for anything quantum to be involved. Let me explain the whole basis of visual (by eye) observation of time-varying lights.

The reason that you can’t see that a street light is flashing 120 times per second is that the cone cells on your retina don’t respond very quickly when a light stimulation finishes. They take a while to be ready to tell the brain, “OK, that light just switched off”. When the light source is pulsing rapidly, the next pulse comes along and restlimulates the cone cell before it ever had the chance to register the dark period between the pulses. That means that it’s essentially always stimulated, and you never see the flashing.

This is useful – engineers design all sorts of lights and displays knowing that they can get away with a flashing light output, because no one will see it. (Interestingly, insects can see it… imagine being an ant under a streetlight!)

However, by moving the eye – or by using a mirror to move the image across the retina – it’s possible to take advantage of the relatively slow response of the retina. Moving the image across the retina allows a fresh group of cone cells to be exposed to the next pulse of the light, and the slow decay of the image (persistence of vision) means that a trace is formed which you can see for long enough to interpret and enjoy. It’s actually a graph of light output vs. time, where the time axis is along the path of the trace. Unlike a camera, which records light on the sensor until the image has been captured and processed, the eye’s trace is transient, lasting maybe a fifth of a second; but it’s definitely enough to see all the things I’ve photographed here.

Of course, if you’re asking how the retina’s cone cells respond to light… well, that’s quantum. 🙂

LPP ∇ One last question, can you tell me a little more about your book and what readers will find inside?

DB ∇ The bulk of the book (A Field Guide To Time-Varying Light Sources) is exactly what it says on the packaging – an ordered presentation of all the different kinds of time-varying lights that are out there, from CRT monitors to twinkling stars, street lights to airplane propellers. (In fact, it’s probably the only book on the planet that validly categorizes “moths” and “pulsars” in the same section!) (Actually, it’s the only book on the planet about the topic of time-varying lights, period.)

The first part of the book covers seeing and photographing these lights, with a chapter devoted to photography. If nothing else, the book will provide explanations for some of the dashed-line artifacts that people might see in their light painted images; but hopefully it will also inspire artists to look for new sources of light in their palettes, and to regard time-variance as a class of visual brushes.

LPP ∇ Thank you Dan for taking the time to answer these questions, its a very interesting subject!

DB ∇ Thank you.

Filed Under: Light Painting Photography

LPWA Light House Meeting 2015

February 2, 2016 by Jason D. Page

IYoL logo_final

On December 19, 2015 the Light Painting World Alliance organized a meet up in Dorum-Neufeld (Germany) where 25 Light Artist from 5 different countries got together to create some really cool Light Paintings. During the meet up the group created a GIANT logo (Above) to celebrate the International Year of Light and Light Based Technologies (IYoL) by UNESCO. It looks like it was a blast sharing ideas and techniques with light painters from all over! Check out a few of the images for the meet up and the video below. For the full report head over to the LPWA HERE.


Filed Under: Light Painting Photography, Light Painting Video

Light Painting Photography Contest Entries, January 2016

January 23, 2016 by Jason D. Page

Light Painting Contest 00 January 2016

Here are the entries for the January 2016 Light Painting Photography Contest. Everyone PLEASE VOTE in the comment 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 “Light Painting Contest 05 January 2016″ THEN YOU SHOULD PUT THE NUMBER 5 AS ONE OF YOUR CHOICES). Please remember that the theme of this contest was FLOWERS this means that there should be flowers included in the image in some way, shape or form. 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.

I would like to give a special THANK YOU to Ms. Riley Scroggins and all the students from her photography class that participated in this months contest! Great work and Good luck!







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

Filed Under: Light Painting Contest, Light Painting Photography

Denis Smith Light Painting Workshops

January 21, 2016 by Jason D. Page

Light Painting Denis Smith 01


Light Painting Photographer Denis Smith a.k.a The Ball Of Light is taking the Light Painting Workshop to another level. Focused on education and the total experience, Denis is combining a full service Light Painting experience with some seriously epic locations! If you are a newbie looking to learn the art of Light Painting, an experienced Light Painter looking for guided access to some stellar locations, or an artist thinking about starting your own Light Painting workshops read on because Denis has shared a ton of valuable information in the interview below!

LPP ∇ Denis I am really digging the direction you are taking your workshops! It looks like you have a couple of different options from larger group settings at abandoned insane asylums to Light Painting dream field trips into the wilderness, can you tell me more about what you have going on?

DS ∇ At the beginning of 2015 we (my wife Kyrie, and business partner Sam) decided it was time to fulfill a long time dream of mine, to share some of the knowledge I have around light painting. Our initial event was designed for 30 participants in a huge refurbished warehouse. It sold out almost immediately, so we opened it up for another 2 nights, which also sold out.

On the back of that success we decided to design some more intimate events in more exciting locations. But the ultimate fantasy of mine was to take a small group into the Australian outback, which is where my light painting journey really began.

Denis Smith Light Painting Workshop 18

LPP ∇ I know there is a significant amount of work and money that you need to put up for just one workshop, what you are creating is a massive undertaking… what is it that made you take the leap? Was there a magic AH HA moment for you. Was it the success of the first ones that gave you the push to make a go of it?

DS ∇ With the success of the 2015 events and the amazing feedback we got it was a no brainer to extend the events into 2016. There was a very definite moment where I realized we had a thing. I was standing in front of a group of 15 at our Z-Ward event. This was our first really intimate and exclusive event in a very special location. I looked out across the small group and realized that 5 people had travelled by air, from quite a distance to be there. I felt incredibly humbled, and excited. They had a blast and all said the effort, and expense was well worth it. What a buzz!

LPP ∇ That must have been a great feeling! In the video promo you put out, and just from talking with you over the years, your passion for the Light Painting Art Form is very evident. I know that photography pretty much saved your life can you tell me a little about what you are so passionate about Light Painting?

DS ∇ Ah yes, “photography saved my life”. A huge call, but as the years roll on I feel more and more sure that my discovery of the camera at a time in my life when I truly believed there was no way out helped me climb out of a very deep, dark hole. I still suffer from some pretty aggressive mental health issues, and photography is where I go to find solace. It is a safe place for me, and I can shelter from daily life. What I have learned over the years, and since the release of the Ball of Light Documentary, is that more and more people are using the joy of photography as a means to relax and take time out for themselves.

My passion has not waned, in the slightest. Every time we hold a workshop I see people getting out into the wild and taking what they have learned further. On many cases they are sharing it with their own family, friends and other photographers, It feels like Light Painting is spreading through the photography community like wildfire. Everyone sees it and is in awe.

Denis Smith Light Painting Ball Of Light 24

LPP ∇ How does your passion translate to the workshops?

DS ∇ I have been Light Painting now for 6 years, which amazes me because I remember the first weeks that I discovered it with such clarity. I still go out now and look at the back of the screen with such excitement each and every time. When I have a room of 30, 15, or even a tour of 6 people I get so excited about seeing them experience the same thrill, and it is universal.

It doesn’t matter how tired I am from preparing the events, because it is an incredible amount of work, when that room is full, and the room goes dark, the energy and adrenaline that surges through my body it so much fun. I simply do not stop until the last person leaves for the night. It is hard to explain the thrill. I have no idea where the energy comes from.

Denis Smith Light Painting Brushes 04

LPP ∇ What is the craziest thing that has happened in one of your workshops so far?

DS ∇ We did a workshop in the Z-Ward Insane Asylum. It is quite legendary for being very haunted! I saw a guy about 2 weeks after the event, he relayed to me that he was in one of the cells, no one else next to him. He was sitting on the floor, looked away, then looked back and his camera was attached to his tripod, lying on the floor. No sound, not noise from it falling, not a mark on it, just on its side on the floor. Now this is a pretty straight up guy. He was a little shaken up by it and said he didn’t mention it on the night, as he didn’t want to freak me out!

Denis Smith Light Painting Workshop 08

LPP ∇ Something that really stands out to me about your workshops is the attention to detail, from the gear you have available all the way down to the presentation style. What should someone attending one of your workshops expect.

DS ∇ From the outset I wanted anyone attending the workshop, whether a complete novice, to an experienced light painter, to leave feeling like they had learned a significant amount.

At our events that are specifically designed for beginners we can even provide the cameras and tripods. But people can arrive with the most basic equipment and we cater to that. All events are designed to cater to 30 second exposures at F5.6, so a super basic camera and kit lens works perfectly.

We provide a full complement of light painting tools. This is really important. There is a huge amount of gear, which has been a huge investment for us. From torches to EL Wire, full RGB LED strip tools to basic light wands there is nothing missing.

We partner with some incredible companies that make this possible. The Light Painting Brushes system has been instrumental in making the workshops as comprehensive as they are. Without the Universal Connector we simply would not be able to cater for up to 30 participants properly. We have 30 basic torches that they can connect to the LPB tools we have, but more importantly it shows each participant that they can get creative and design their own tools. Of course a system like this is fantastic, and affordable for those that are not into making their own.

I am a LED Lenser International Ambassador, so I always have a great selection of that product on hand. For our Full Moon in the Flinders Tour participants, they receive a “welcome pack” when booking that includes one of the amazing LED Lenser T2QC torches and SEO3 headlamps. Without the incredible support of LED Lenser this would be impossible

Denis Smith Light Painting Brushes 08

LPP ∇ The workshops are more of a hands on experience, rather than a lecture series correct?

DS ∇ Oh yes! I have been to some photography workshops where you sit in rows and listen to some person delivering hours of theory and you don’t even pull out a camera. We do things differently. At the beginning of each event there is just enough theory to get you started. We have a private Facebook group, as soon as you book you get access to this page, Here you see all of the basics required to get started, there are hundreds of people who have been to an event who are exacted about answering questions.
After the short intro to the space and the light painting tools we have on hand it is all business, we get people straight into the light painting. We always have staff, experienced light painters, on hand right by their sides all night, answering questions and more importantly listening to people’s ideas and helping make them a reality.

I want everyone to leave with a memory card full of images that they created!



LPP ∇ The locations you have already had have been epic, what locations are on the 2016 roster?

DS ∇ This year is all about taking it outside. Our locations like an old insane asylum and will still be on the calendar, but this year we will be introducing our first Full Moon Tour. 4 days and 3 nights in my favorite locations. These are all inclusive, door to door experiences. We will be heading to the Flinders Ranges first. This place is stunning, deep in the Australian outback amongst the most ancient valleys on the planet. This will be extremely exciting and is limited to 6 people.

We will also be doing some great one night events out in the field. We will be heading into the forest; here we will break into small group sand shape the forest with light. We have many dry salt lakes here in South Australia. We will be heading out onto these for an extreme open space experience. There is nowhere to hide on the salt.

We will be holding the Z-Ward Experience again. This is a disused insane asylum here in Adelaide. We have a model with us and with only 12 people in this huge building it is a space to let the imagination run wild.

It is going to be a huge year!

Denis Smith Light Painting Workshop 04

LPP ∇ Wow man that is really exciting! Putting these workshops together especially when you’re taking people out in the field you must run into some challenges, what is the most difficult part of putting these things together?

DS ∇ The amount of time that goes into these events behind the scenes is amazing. I want these to be perfect! So the most challenging part is making sure that each participant gets the attention needed. I always make sure that we have enough experienced light painters on hand to make sure that any question is answered as soon as possible. A complete novice has to leave with the same thrill as an experienced pro, this takes a lot of planning!

LPP ∇ What is the most rewarding?

DS ∇ I greet and say good-bye to every participant as they come and go. It fills me with joy seeing the excitement and nerves as people arrive, then seeing eyes filled with wonder as they leave! I will never tire of the experience.

LPP ∇ Anywhere in the world; where would you want to take a group and teach them about light painting?

DS ∇ Oh boy! Anywhere? I have been light painting in the Angkor Wat temple in Cambodia on the night of a full moon. I would love to take a group there!

Denis Smith Light Painting Ball Of Light 05

Or maybe around the ancient temples of Luxor. I love the idea of doing such a cutting edge, modern form of art around ancient locations, and imagining the people of the time seeing what we are doing. Maybe the massive Moai heads of Easter Island?

LPP ∇ How about some advice for other Light Painters that are thinking about starting their own workshops? What are the things to look out for?

DS ∇ As with anything where people are paying you for a service, you need to set the right expectations, then over deliver. Holding events at the level we do takes a huge amount of time to prepare, organize and deliver the product. You have to have a capital behind you to hold a big event. The costs are up front, and often you don’t get the numbers and payment until close to the event. Time has value, and you must factor that in when preparing. Be careful who you partner with, they must bring real tangible value, or don’t do it. Everyone wants something for nothing and although a huge name might be attached to a partner, be ultra clear about what they are going to deliver, and get it in writing!

I don’t know what advice I would have liked, There were no real surprises. I have an amazing team around me and they make sure I miss nothing. I suppose just not to rely on anyone but myself and my closest allies. That way it is hard to be let down.

LPP ∇ Thank you very much for taking the time to answer all of these questions, I am sure that you will have a really successful 2016!

DS ∇ Thank You.

Want to sign up or just learn more about Denis and his workshop series check out his website HERE!

Filed Under: Light Painting Photography, Light Painting Video

Steven Erra Light Painting. “Losing His Sight, This Photographer Chases the Light.”

January 20, 2016 by Jason D. Page

Steven Erra Light Painting Evelyn_july_2_2012


Light Painting Photographer Steven Erra’s sees in his mind and creates his visions with light. Great Big Story has produced a short film about Steven and his work. Check it out below.

Artist Steven Erra’s vision is slowly deteriorating. He didn’t know he had a disease that would take his sight until he was nearly finished with his art degree. But that diagnosis only motivated Erra further. These days, he works with The Seeing With Photography Collective, a group of sight-impaired artists who specialize in Light Painting.

Filed Under: Light Painting Photography, Light Painting Video

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