View allAll Photos Tagged making$
While his wife tends the flower beds, an Amish farmer is cutting weeds between a field and his yard with a side bar cutter. I had never considered horses to have a reverse, but he was making a right-angle turs, but the farmer executed a surprising back-up maneuver to get the cutter properly positioned.
Looks like this little Witch can’t wait until I’m finshing her shoes.
She arrived few weeks ago having no shoes.
Today I gave it a try and made a shoe pattern and this shoes. Have to say it was easy and faster than I thought.
Happy Witchy Wednesday!
Please be sure to check out the short film for this shoot: Imperfect by James Clayden.
My idea for this shoot was to tell the story of a Dollmaker who had a tragic history and an obsession for perfection and making dolls that she could control. She had failed to keep her dolls in perfect condition on countless occasions. This time she made a doll called ‘Emily’, whom had a powerful hatred for the Dollmaker and over time, plotted a plan against her.
Client: Norwich Fashion Week
Magazine: Dark Beauty Magazine
Photographer: Adrian Farr Fashion Photography
Models: Elle Harris Modelling & Ell Davis
Wardrobe Stylist: Abi Gray Fashion Styling
Hair Stylist: Missy Vintage
Makeup Artist: ArtLook 4U
Videographer: James Clayden Videography
Assistants: Amy Beven, Katie Bradford & Sam Blackburn
Shoes: Imelda's Shoe Boutique
Black Dress, White Dress, Black Choker & Jewellery: Stylist's Own
Props: Looses Emporium
Location: Fishley Hall
Transit: Jamie's Jobs Property Maintenance
A Mallard taking a very messy bath ^^ The low shutter speed made a beautiful effect on the water, so I tried lowering the ISO for the next shots but it was way too low. I love how this one turned out. Cheers everyone.
________________________________
Portugal - Oeiras
Mallard Duck (Anas Platyrhynchos)
Pato Real (Anas Platyrhynchos)
________________________________
Contact Luis Gaspar:
luis.gaspar.fotografia@gmail.com
This is a making of shot from one of the last weddings I did. During the wedding we hadn't got enough time to do the portrait shots. The couple decided to do the portraits some days later. We had luck because the weather was much better on this day as some days before.
Strobe info: Jinbei DC-1200 with 120cm gridded Octabox right from camera with 1/2 Power. Tiggert with Phottix Atlas and PocketWizard miniTT1.
Camera Info: Canon EOS 5D mkII with 85mm 1.2 mkII L and B&W 103 F-Pro ND-Filter attached at 1/125sec, F2.2 and ISO100
Hit L or use this one View On black
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Posted in the We want more! Group :-)
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
As part of our trip to Africa, we went to a village in Zimbabwe where we met the people, went to a school, visited the home of the headman and spent some time in their market. My wife Helen brought some supplies for the school children as well as gifts for the people. This little girl got a bracelet and a toy, which brought a big smile to her face. Clothing and hats with logos of American sports teams are very popular there, and she happened to be wearing a SF Giants hat, our local baseball team. This shot was taken in their market, where we bought some locally made crafts. It was near to the area where yesterday's shot, below in comments, was taken.
It looks to me that this looks a bit like a circle of acquaintances who are making conversation!
Stephen
ODC-Weekend Project
I love making Black Garlic. I have my handy dandy Fermenting machine that does all the work. I buy 1 dozen bulbs of garlic. Wrap each in heavy tin foil, put it into the machine, cover with a sheet of heavy foil and then let it sit for 4-6 days in that fermenter. You can also dry garlic in this machine. I do this in the basement, the garlic smell gets very strong at first. When done the garlic turns black and soft and a bit sticky due to the caramelizing sugars. It kind of tastes like Tamarind or Balsamic Vinegar and it develops a mild sweetness that resembles molasses with a hint of soy sauce. Once done I store it in a big jar in the fridge. Even Shizandra loves it!
Playscape that we made for a swap through Bits of Goodness. Sewing, crocheting, rug hooking, pom-pom making, repurposing old clothes, dyeing.
Article in the Autumn edition of Rhythm of the Home magazine. www.rhythmofthehome.com
On the Dal House Forum we're celebrating Dal's 10th anniversary all year long with various monthly events. For July we're making stamps. I grabbed some of my fav Dal photos and turned them into stamps using BigHugeLabs stamp framer: bighugelabs.com/frame.php
I need one that lets me do portrait oriented photos, because I don't see any option to change the orientation on framer and instead it crops it. That didn't work for some of the photos I wanted to use.
Extras, waiting patiently between takes, in an Anti-American riot sequence set in the Sudan after the Clinton administration bombed a pharmaceutical plant which faulty intelligence had identified as a chemical weapons plant.
Over a year ago I started work in Los Angeles, Toronto, London and Morocco on a six hour mini series based on the 9/11 Commission Report. The docudrama tries to accurately present the chronological weaving of known facts from the first World Trade Center bombing in 1993 that lead ultimately to the events on 9/11. The mini series with a cast of over 250 actors stars Harvey Keitel as John O'Neill....an FBI agent who 'knew" what was about to happen and who died ironically and tragically along with thousands of others (at the Pentagon and in Pennsylvania) in the collapse of the World Trade Center towers.
During prep and production I tried not to reveal in my image posts on Flickr any information that might make our production presence in Morocco on this politically sensitive project visible or vulnerable. Tangier and Ouarzazate in Morocco were used for sequences that took place in Yemen, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Sudan and Kenya. We now start the daunting task of five months of post production, editing close to a million feet of film shot with up to seven cameras, to make a May airdate on ABC.
The image above and others that I can post now that we have wrapped after 85 days of production, were taken during our shoot in Morocco and are images specific to making the movie.
© Ben Heine || Facebook || Twitter || www.benheine.com
_______________________________________________
Enlarge HERE
Full digital painting, several days of work (please see the final
portrait below). It's kind of unfinished, but I like it this way :D
Mika is a London-based, Grammy-nominated
and BRIT Award-winning singer-songwriter.
_______________________________________________
For more information about my art: info@benheine.com
_______________________________________________
Just as I had finished shoveling the driveway… this guy comes around to give me an early Christmas present: a new snow bank. • POTD 359/366
Making a decision.
As a reminder, keep in mind that this picture is available only for non-commercial use and that visible attribution is required. If you'd like to use this photo outside these terms, please contact me ahead of time to arrange for a paid license.
Between Blossom and Gaze – Making Of
This image came to life not just through light and framing — but through Beata’s own touch. Before the first shot was taken, she gently adorned the camera lens with wildflowers. It wasn’t planned, it wasn’t directed — it was her idea, her way of shaping the moment.
What followed wasn’t just a portrait, but a shared creation. Beata stood before a lens that she had made her own, turning a technical object into something soft and alive. The floral detail became more than decoration: it became a symbol of trust, collaboration, and creative intuition.
“Between Blossom and Gaze” starts here — with a gesture that speaks quietly, but profoundly.