10 on 10 Blog Circle | May 2018

Yay, it’s 10 on 10 time again! This month I want to share 10 images I took while we were in North Carolina for Spring Break: sunsets and the sea!

We went to the Outer Banks, a narrow strip of islands up to 25 miles off the coast of the mainland. The wonderful thing for photographers about this place is that one evening you can watch the blue light over the east-facing sea with the sun setting behind you and the next you can watch the golden light of the sun setting over the inlet towards the mainland. So many opportunities to get creative!

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Up next in the 10 on 10 Blog Circle is Lexie of Alexis Merritt Photography. Click here to see her 10 images for this month. There are only a few members participating in the circle this month so be sure to click all the way around!

Until next time,

~Ceri

Share Six Blog Circle – March 2018 | Contrast

Massachusetts Photographer | © Ceri Herd Photography

Another month, another Share Six theme! This month we’re looking at {Contrast}.

I’ll admit this theme has had me drawing a blank for quite some time. I’ve come to the conclusion that that is because there are so many opportunities within the theme: high contrast, low contrast, contrast and comparison between multiple images, deep and rich black and whites, soft matte muted tones, the juxtaposition of subject through double exposures… I mean really, the possibilities are endless! Where do I begin?

Since we moved to MA last July it is safe to say that my style has evolved into two distinct parts. On the one hand I am still documenting our lives, I think in a more successful and yet less intrusive way, but on the other I have also allowed myself more creative freedom. I find myself increasingly drawn to tone and texture and away from the high contrast light that was such a dominating factor of our previous home in the desert. The monochromatic winter, the low-contrast soft light has enthralled me:

Massachusetts Photographer | © Ceri Herd Photography

Massachusetts Photographer | © Ceri Herd PhotographyMassachusetts Photographer | © Ceri Herd Photography

This next image was taken during the autumn when the leaves on the trees still dominated the view from our deck. It is a view that is so calming to me, but not because of the way that it looks. A single traditional exposure shows the number of trees, layer upon layer them, and as an image that is not calming. It is busy and unstructured. It does not capture the noise of the breeze through the trees, the smell of the pine sap or the sound of birds singing and chipmunks calling. It does not capture the easing of your breath as you relax into the surroundings.Massachusetts Photographer | © Ceri Herd Photography

Contrary to my previous statement about being drawn to low contrast light and away from deep shadows, as I took trail through woodland recently I was struck by the zebra-like stripes of shadow that lay in front of me. I wanted to capture that texture, the contrast of light and dark, in the direction that the light fell to exaggerate the rays. As photographers we often talk about how light “falls” so I wanted the viewer to see movement in that light.Massachusetts Photographer | © Ceri Herd Photography

My final image in this set was taken on the trail on the same day as the previous one no more than 5 minutes later. Technically and visually, quite the contrast but still very much me.  I have been experimenting with achieving patches of focus in-camera, and I’m enjoying the post-snow return of muted colour.Massachusetts Photographer | © Ceri Herd Photography

Thank you for joining us for another month at Share Six. Please continue around the circle by clicking HERE. I can’t wait to see how the exceptionally talented Sharleen of Sharleen Stuart Photography interpreted this month’s theme.

Join us for this month’s theme by posting your {contrast} images on our Facebook page at SHARE SIX and to our Instagram gallery, by tagging #sharesix and #sharesix_contrast. A new theme will be posted on 6th April.

Share Six Contributor

Inspired by Life Blog Circle | A month of Lensbaby

Massachusetts Photographer | © Ceri Herd Photography

I’m thrilled to be joining another group of talented photographers for a new monthly blog circle. I’m going to be using the {Inspired by Life} posts to share some of my favourites images from the previous month’s 365. I haven’t admitted it publically but I kick-started my second 365 this January. I’m yet to compile the results of my first 365 (2015-2016) so I was reluctant to start another but a new lens for Christmas and the learning curve that followed meant a solid month of practice was necessary. What better way to start a 365 than a month of the project already complete!

As many of my photographer friends know, I lusted after all the Lensbaby lenses for quite some time. It was only a matter of time until one found its way to me. Christmas 2017 my Lensbaby wishes came true and I became the proud owner of an Edge 80. Unsurprisingly, given my love of dreamy softness, it didn’t take long for it to feel like home.

Before I get around to the 365 images I thought I’d share with you my starting point: Christmas Day. We were also brought a beautiful winter storm, so my very first images with my Lensbaby were through windows out onto a snowy wonderland.

Massachusetts Photographer | © Ceri Herd Photography

Massachusetts Photographer | ©CeriHerdPhotography

With a few more days practice under my belt, 2018 rolled around and my Month of Lensbaby began:

Massachusetts Photographer | © Ceri Herd Photography

Day 1

Massachusetts Photographer | © Ceri Herd Photography

Day 2

Massachusetts Photographer | © Ceri Herd Photography

Day 3

Massachusetts Photographer | © Ceri Herd Photography

Day 4

Massachusetts Photographer | © Ceri Herd Photography

Day 5

Massachusetts Photographer | © Ceri Herd Photography

Day 6

Massachusetts Photographer | © Ceri Herd Photography

Day 7

Massachusetts Photographer | © Ceri Herd Photography

Day 8

Massachusetts Photographer | © Ceri Herd Photography

Day 9

Massachusetts Photographer | © Ceri Herd Photography

Day 10

Massachusetts Photographer | © Ceri Herd Photography

Day 11

Massachusetts Photographer | © Ceri Herd Photography

Day 12

Massachusetts Photographer | © Ceri Herd Photography

Day 13

Massachusetts Photographer | © Ceri Herd Photography

Day 14

Massachusetts Photographer | © Ceri Herd Photography

Day 15

Massachusetts Photographer | © Ceri Herd Photography

Day 16

Massachusetts Photographer | © Ceri Herd Photography

Day 17

Massachusetts Photographer | © Ceri Herd Photography

Day 18

Massachusetts Photographer | © Ceri Herd Photography

Day 19

Massachusetts Photographer | © Ceri Herd Photography

Day 20

Massachusetts Photographer | © Ceri Herd Photography

Day 21

Massachusetts Photographer | © Ceri Herd Photography

Day 22

Massachusetts Photographer | © Ceri Herd Photography

Day 23

Massachusetts Photographer | © Ceri Herd Photography

Day 24

Massachusetts Photographer | © Ceri Herd Photography

Day 25

Massachusetts Photographer | © Ceri Herd Photography

Day 26

Massachusetts Photographer | © Ceri Herd Photography

Day 27

Massachusetts Photographer | © Ceri Herd Photography

Day 28

Massachusetts Photographer | © Ceri Herd Photography

Day 29

Massachusetts Photographer | © Ceri Herd Photography

Day 30

Massachusetts Photographer | © Ceri Herd Photography

Day 31

Thank you for taking the time to scroll all the way through! If you’ve made it this far please continue around the blog circle. Click Here to see what the wonderfully talented Melissa Clemons has shared with us this month.

Until next time,

~Ceri

Share Six Blog Circle – October 2017 | Double Exposures

Massachusetts Photographer | Share Six Double Exposures | ©CeriHerdPhotography

Oh my, much excitement! The theme for this month might just be my favourite photographic thing ever!

If you’ve followed this blog for any length of time you’ll know that I use a whole range of creative techniques to pull myself out of creative blocks, to say something different, but first and foremost to relay a feeling rather than simply how a place or moment looks, for soft and dreamy qualities. Of all those techniques in-camera {double exposures} is my first and deepest love. There is not necessarily rhyme or reason why I chose DE when I do, I use it when my gut tells me to.

If you’re new to this technique, check out my {How To…Double Exposures} post HERE and give it a try!

I have multiple collections of double exposures, some of which you may have seen: Desert Heat, in which views of the desert are captured in such a way that the viewer can feel the depth and oppressive nature of the landscape; and Sunset Dreams, images of my husband and son enjoying the waves, using DE to capture dream-like nostalgia.

For today however, I wanted to share some favourites that you may not have not seen before.

Massachusetts Photographer | Share Six Double Exposures | ©CeriHerdPhotographyMassachusetts Photographer | Share Six Double Exposures | ©CeriHerdPhotographyMassachusetts Photographer | Share Six Double Exposures | ©CeriHerdPhotographyMassachusetts Photographer | Share Six Double Exposures | ©CeriHerdPhotographyMassachusetts Photographer | Share Six Double Exposures | ©CeriHerdPhotography

This blog post is part of the Share Six Blog Circle. Please click HERE to see how the talented Kathy of KG Ledbetter Photography interpreted this month’s theme.

Join us for this month’s theme by posting your {double exposures} images on our Facebook page at Share Six and to our Instagram gallery, by tagging #sharesix and #sharesix_doubleexposures. A new theme will be posted on 6th November.

Share Six Contributor

{How To…} Double Exposures

Massachusetts Photographer | Share Six Collections | ©CeriHerdPhotography

Welcome to the first in my series of {How To….}! I often get asked, “how did you do that?” (although I often think the real question is “why did you do that?!” haha!) so my plan is to share with you exactly how I do those little in-camera tricks that I do and why. If I can answer those questions, introduce someone to something new, maybe encourage just one person step out of their comfort zone and unleash their inner creative monster, then I will have done what I set out to achieve.

I love to experiment with a variety of in-camera techniques and whilst I may not be a master, I know enough to get you started. If you’re anything like me, getting started is just the kick you need to unleash your creativity, and will lead you to something that is both new and unique.

When it comes to creative thinking and creating a unique photograph double exposures are, for me, where it is at. I love this technique almost as much as I love my children. Not quite, but almost! My style (or the style I aspire to) is dreamy, emotional and expressive. The techniques I use (freelensing, intentional camera movement, double exposures etc etc) are part of building that style and message: dream-like qualities that evoke nostalgia, a sense of calm and an emotional response.

How to do double exposures ©CeriHerdPhotography

Creating in-camera double exposures is super fun, super creative and super flexible. And to be clear, I am exclusively talking about IN-CAMERA double exposures. Creating the same effect in photoshop is possible, but it is cheating. OK, not really cheating per se, but it is a different discipline for another discussion. Side-tracked rant, sorry, ok…

Double exposures allow you to create anything from clean and crispy silhouettes filled with flowers to layer-upon-layer of texture, and when you combine it with other techniques, totally out-there abstract art. The key to controlling your finished piece is understanding the delicate balance between multiple exposures: using highlights and shadows to your advantage, and understanding how those affect the images as they are layered together.

How to do double exposures ©CeriHerdPhotography

But let’s not get ahead of ourselves. First things, first.

Shooting in Manual for this technique is essential. I am not talking about manual focus, I’m talking about the M on the settings dial, controlling every element of your exposure triangle; if you’re not, you cannot effectively control how two (or more) images work together. If you’re not comfortable shooting in Manual I recommend you read Understanding Exposure by Bryan Peterson. Otherwise, reach out, ask questions (and perhaps I’ll do a {How to…} post on that as well). Then come back!

Ok, let’s Switch It On:

This is how you need to adjust my camera’s make and model function settings to create these double exposures. The menu functions are very similar for Nikon (find “multiple exposure” in the shooting menu).

Menu > Multiple Exposure > Ok > Multiple Exposure > Ok >  On:Func/Ctrl > Ok

How to do double exposures massachusetts photographer ceri herd photographyHow to do double exposures massachusetts photographer ceri herd photography

How to do double exposures massachusetts photographer ceri herd photography

When you’re switched on and ready to go for a two-image multiple exposure, the menu screen will look like this:

How to do double exposures massachusetts photographer ceri herd photography

If you want to create a stop-motion capture (of a golf swing or someone diving into a pool or…you get the idea) use the <On:ContShtng> option and a tripod. If you wish to layer more than 2 images together change the “no. of exposures”. You can also choose to save your source images, which means you can go back and recreate it in Photoshop if you’re not happy with the alignment (uh hum) or just use one of the single images if you prefer it. Once multiple exposures are enabled you can use “select image for multi. expo.” to re-use a base layer image, rather than taking your two images concurrently – a good friend and talented photographer showed me this trick fairly recently…I could’ve saved myself hours of heartache if I’d known about it sooner!

Now Shoot!

Ok, this is the nitty gritty: technically speaking, once your settings are ready as above, you’re going to take an image as you normally would. I say “technically speaking” because as you learn more about the balance between the layers your decisions might be different to taking a single image, but you go through the same motions. Then it gets interesting. If you’re not already using it, switch to live view mode. With live view switched on the screen shows you the first image laid over top of the new view so you can line up your frames exactly as you want them.  Have a play with your settings (N.B. you cannot change ISO at this point, only shutter speed and aperture) and watch as the screen shows you more or less of each layer. Once you’re happy with the balance, release the shutter and give the camera a few moments to process the image. Voilà! Congratulations, you’ve created your first double exposure!

But don’t stop there. Now you know the fundamentals you can get more control over the final product.

I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again: the key thing to look for is highlights and shadows. The more contrast you create in camera, the more distinct your layers will be.

Let’s look at some examples:

When areas of your base image are overexposed (or “blown out”), such as the background of a silhouette, the camera ignores those areas when it applies the second layer. The camera works the second image into the correctly exposed areas and shadows of the first. When doing this with film, which what your digital camera is trying to emulate, you would have burnt through the film by exposing it to the sun for too long, therefore it would be unusable for the second exposure. The second layer fills in the black/shadow areas of your first; the amount is does so depends on how much you under- or overexpose.

The background of this image was purposefully blown out; the boy’s face was in shadow but his skin was correctly exposed against the bright midday sky in the background. The second layer, the flower, was exposed enough to see the details of the plant but not so much that it hid the features of the boy.

How to do double exposures ©CeriHerdPhotography

Let’s look at an example that works in the opposite way. Here the first image is of the boy. One side of his face is in a pocket of bright light, I correctly exposed for his skin so the rest falls into deep shadow. The second layer is exposed in such a way as to show only the bright areas of the first layer. In essence, the more you exposure your second image, the more it takes over your first.

How to do double exposures ©CeriHerdPhotography

Many of my double exposures intentionally use a more even exposure across the two layers. In these examples the images are all about texture, colour and composition, the juxtaposition of the subject matter against itself, so I don’t want one layer to be more dominant than another; the only changes I made were very slight, to match the previous frame, accommodating for any change in the available light (these images were shot at dusk and the light was disappearing rapidly so I had to compensate for that with each exposure).

Massachusetts Photographer | Share Six Collections | ©CeriHerdPhotography

Here is another example of a fairly even exposure of the two layers. The first image was the beautiful pregnant mama, The dark areas of the first image were her chest and belly; the brightest was her hands. I positioned the brightest part of the second image in the same place as the shadows of the first so that we see her nurturing this tree, a tree of life (yeah, maybe it would’ve been better had the tree been full of leaves but it was the middle of winter and there was snow on the ground. The tree was resting preparing for a rebirth in the spring)!

How to do double exposures ©CeriHerdPhotography

You can also add other techniques to you layers! This image was taken from our deck. The first image is a simple view up into the trees; the second uses intentional camera movement: a long exposure where I zoomed out whilst the shutter was open (and the subject of my next {How to..} blog post).

Massachusetts Photographer | Share Six Double Exposures | ©CeriHerdPhotography

I’ve even been known to switch lenses between exposures. Please note, I do not recommend leaving your camera switched on while you change lenses. Take the first image, switch the camera off to change your lens, go back into the multiple exposure menu to use the “select image of multi exp.” option.

How to do double exposures ©CeriHerdPhotography

And now it’s your turn! Go out and have fun. If you have any questions or comments, or you want to share your work with me, please do get in touch! Use the comments section below or send a message using Facebook.

Until next time,

~Ceri