Sarah in Lingerie
I told you there would be a lot more! But the reallllly good shots are still to come…
Timmins, where Sarah is from, isn’t exactly what you’d call a hotbed of modeling activity. She got in a few shoots there but somehow honed her skills far beyond what would be expected. Girl knows how to model and how to move in front of a camera.
Sarah
Meet Sarah who just recently turned 18 years old. We shot these in Ottawa where Sarah has just moved for school. Being bilingual, she naturally gravitates to being a Habs fan, whereas I’m a Leafs fan. And although the NHL season just started (Leafs with a 2-0 win over Montreal!), I was already mocking her team’s failings tonight via Facebook chat as they were losing.
These were all shot with the natural window light in my hotel suite. There will be a lot more of Sarah in the coming days, so keep your eyes peeled. And check out her Model Mayhem profile!
Adriana
As promised last week, here’s the remainder of the photos from my shoot with Adriana in Ottawa. We shot these in my room at Hotel Indigo. I had a tough time deciding which hotel to stay at and shoot in, as Arc The Hotel also had a great deal on, but I was worried that the rooms might be too small. I’d stayed at both hotels before, but I knew the Indigo a bit better.
Above: Adriana wears the most ridiculous yellow pants that I blogged about last year. SB-900 bounced off the wall behind me as I was scrunched up on the bathroom counter.
Above: SB-900 bounced off the ceiling after we pushed aside some furniture to reveal the hardwood floor.
Above: Backlit by the window and sheer curtains, no additional light sources.
Adriana
On Easter weekend, I drove up to Ottawa to see Adriana, a model I’ve been trying to shoot with seemingly forever. We’ve had quite a few failed attempts, starting a year ago, in May 2009. At the time, Adriana was visiting Toronto to shoot with a bunch of different photographers and although I was supposed to be one of them, we got our signals crossed and our schedules didn’t match up. I’d met Adriana on Facebook a few months previous, and we’d yet to talk on the phone or meet in person. The first day she was in Toronto, I texted her to see how things we’re going and discovered in short order that she was staying in my neighbourhood, only a five minute drive away. Oddly, we both had the evening free, despite not being able to coordinate our schedules before. Rather than shooting, we met for the first time by going out for dinner at the Green Eggplant (highly recommended), in Toronto’s Beach neighbourhood. Despite all the stellar cuisine in this city, Adriana still resists eating anywhere else when she visits Toronto, which is pretty amusing.
Fast forward to July. I’m driving back from Nova Scotia and had planned a one day detour to Ottawa so I could shoot with Adriana. There’s no easy way to get to Ottawa without going through Montreal first. Montreal driving being what it is, combined with summer travellers and construction meant a three hour delay getting to Ottawa, which meant I had to cancel our shoot.
Fast forward to December. Adriana planned a one day there-and-back trip to Toronto just to shoot with me. One of the very few snow storms we had all season decided to put the brakes on that plan and made travelling too treacherous.
Fast forward to March. Adriana planned another weekend Toronto trip to shoot with a bunch of people and made sure I was first in line, given our previous failures. It just wasn’t meant to be, however, as I was booked solid doing a trade show for the entire time she was here. We somehow managed to squeeze in a dinner at the Green Eggplant, though.
Being fed up at this point, I immediately booked a hotel in Ottawa for Easter weekend because I was determined to shoot Adriana. And this time we were successful!
We couldn’t have asked for better weather, as it was sunny and mid-20s all weekend long. On Saturday we headed out on an adventure to find a good beach, because swimwear photoshoots in early April (in Canada no less) are rare indeed. We ended up here:
How we ended up there is more of a story than I have the patience to type, but involved a lot of driving and this was the fourth place we scouted before giving up because it was getting too late in the day. Unfortunately by the time we had arrived here, the weather had cooled slightly and the sky had taken on a hazy, overcast look. All that beautiful sunshine was hidden behind some rather dull cloud cover. We pressed on and got some great shots:
Above: natural light.
Above: Alien Bees monolight in a small umbrella.
One thing you’ll notice about this location is a lack of the thing that usually goes hand in hand with swimwear — sand. The shore that the Ottawa River was lapping against was basically concrete or slate or something; flat and hard with some jagged edges. There were, however, these giant rocks that we used as much as we could.
Because the light was so flat and lifeless, these two photos were shot with the addition of my Nikon SB-900 and Gary Fong Lightsphere Collapsible. I also had the Amberdome accessory attached to it to warm up the light. Despite being plagued with exposure issues when I use the Lightsphere indoors, it was perfect outside, and I’m very pleased with the results.
Coming soon: photos from the rest of our shoot, at my hotel in Ottawa.
Ottawa By Night
[RSS users, please click through to the blog so you can view the video.]
As regular readers of the blog are aware, I’ve toyed around many times with time-lapse videos made with my DSLR cameras. This past weekend in Ottawa, I decided to be a bit more ambitious and make a video with a little variety instead of the static scenes I usually shoot.
The majority of this video was shot in about three hours on the grounds and surroundings of Parliament Hill. Over 4,000 frames garnered me about 90 seconds of footage, which I edited down to 1m25s including intro and outro titles, music, and a few seconds of regular non-time-lapse HD video.
The big swath of fire in the video is known as the Centennial Flame.
Everything was shot on a Nikon D300S with battery grip, set on a Manfrotto tripod. As good as the tripod is, the wind kicked up some fierce gusts that night, which resulted in some video jitter on the longer (200mm) shots.
After tweaking the photos in Lightroom and cropping to 16:9, I pulled each batch of JPEGs into QuickTime Player 7 Pro, which output my working movie files. I used iMovie to glue the whole mess together with movies and titles. I’d never used iMovie for anything more complicated than adding a soundtrack to existing video, but I found the whole process incredibly easy.
Now that I’m a lot more comfortable with the editing process, I have a strong inclination to make one of these vids featuring Toronto… We’ll see.
Music: “Yeah (Pretentious Version)” by LCD Soundsystem


















