View allAll Photos Tagged practicaleffects
Neca Blade Runner 2049 Officer K. Photo captured with practical light effects.
Prints available via my website, www.tommilton.co.uk
Star Wars X-Wing Miniatures A-Wing. Effects were captured completely in camera.
Prints available via my website, www.tommilton.co.uk
Rey action figure from Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker by Bandai/SH Figuarts. Shot with a 2x anamorphic lens and practical lighting effects
Prints available via my website, www.tommilton.co.uk
Spider-Man action figure from Bandai/SH Figuarts photographed with practical effects.
Prints available via my website, www.tommilton.co.uk
Captain Marvel action figure from Bandai/SH Figuarts photographed with practical effects.
Prints available via my website, www.tommilton.co.uk
Police Granada scale model 1:32. Blur and lighting effects were captured in camera.
Prints available via my website, www.tommilton.co.uk
Prints available via my website, www.tommilton.co.uk
Starlord Disney ToyBox action figure with practical lighting effects and a music visualiser.
Prints available via my website, www.tommilton.co.uk
"Seems to me you lived your life like a Krusty in the wind...."
Saturday Morning Krusty Kartoon using all practical effects.
Shot with Nikon D7100 HD 1080p video and Nikkor 18-300mm lens.
Stock sound effects.
Royalty free music from CCMixter.org:
ccmixter.org/files/zep_hurme/53987
"Break Free" by Zep Hurmes featuring Loveshadow.
I just got a silly idea for this this morning and decided to run with it. When I was younger I used to watch comedy shows like Monty Python, SCTV, and Bizarre that used practical stuff that was really funny.
Spider-Man action figure from Bandai/SH Figuarts photographed with practical effects.
Prints available via my website, www.tommilton.co.uk
Strabuck's Viper Mk II from Battlestar Galactica Starship Battles by Ares Games. Motion effects were captured completely in camera.
Prints available via my website, www.tommilton.co.uk
Star Wars X-Wing Miniatures A-Wing. Effects were captured completely in camera.
Prints available via my website, www.tommilton.co.uk
Experiencing Doctor Strange's Mirror Dimension with Lego and some household glassware as a filter. All the effects were captured completely in camera.
Art prints available via my website, www.tommilton.co.uk
Prints available via my website, www.tommilton.co.uk
Star Wars X-Wing Miniatures Y-Wing (This thing is seriously small, only 6cm long). Blur effects were captured completely in camera, with diorama background taken from some sky scape photography I did in the past.
Prints available via my website, www.tommilton.co.uk
This is the new(ish) joy toy 6” master chief figure, and I simply blew some flour and ash and then tweaked on Snapseed
This retro release of "Demons" (1985) nicely plays up the film's horror elements. The late-cycle grindhouse classic, set in a movie theater, drew strong crowds and was memorably the "A" picture of a double feature...at least at Chicago's long-gone Dearborn Theater. The "B" entry was the not-bad disturbed-primate outing "Link". Once a very common tape...now scarce.
Bandai 1/144 scale U-Wing as seen in Rogue One: A Star Wars Story. Blur effects were captured completely in camera.
Prints available via my website, www.tommilton.co.uk
I'm super floored with how this photo came together. It was all done with in-camera, practical 'magic'. Took me a ton of tries to get the image, but it was 100% worth the effort. We are Groot!!!!
Marvel Legends Starlord using Phillips Hue bulbs and an off camera flash w the magmod creative gels. Flare created with LensFlare iOS app
Prints available via my website, www.tommilton.co.uk
This retro VHS release of the storied splatter pic "Nightmare" (1981) is a second or third edition, put out by Korea Media. The earlier editions came in a small-box format with slightly different cover art. This "star box" format, with plenty o' crimson on display, is slightly rarer. The unabashed B-grade program, helmed by Romano Scavolini, punches past its weight with backstory. In North America, it was given a self-imposed X-rating for gore upon initial release. According to legend, practical F/X wizard Tom Savini may have worked on the film as a consultant, although he demanded his name be removed from the ad campaigns. A DVD release, from Code Red, strangely cautioned collectors that it would press no more than 100,000 (!) discs of the film. The Leonard Maltin "TV Movies" guide gives it a famously 'dissy "Rated D--for disgusting" review.