12.21.2012
Holidays 2012
I've done pictures of my son with Christmas lights to send out as our personal holiday card. He's now 12 so this #13 in the series... He's been a good sport and it's become a fun tradition for us.
11.29.2012
First Bike
I often get asked to shoot for Pro Bono clients, I usually do it as it's an easy way for me to lend support to good causes. This one came my way for cyclekids, click on the link for a description of the beneficial work that they're doing. When the Designer was spelling out the project, I shared an episode with my first bike - they came up with a visual and included it the final piece.
11.13.2012
Drinks, cheese and different food.
A couple editorial pictures for Boston Magazine. Above is a representation of how many drinks they serve a night at Eastern Standard, there are 100 glasses... Below is the cheese cart at L'espalier.
Below are ingredients that the chef from Bondir brought by the studio. And yes those are crickets in the lower left corner. Apparently they're a popular menu item. I finally succumbed to peer pressure and ate one, slightly crunchy and buttery....
I had heard of brown bread before we shot this, something to do with a can... Negative space on top and to the right is for type.
Labels: photography
Advertising Photography,
Boston Magazine,
Boston Photographer,
Bruce Peterson,
Commercial Photography,
Editorial Photography,
Food Photography
10.12.2012
Violent toys
I still play with guns, metaphorically speaking in that I shoot toy ones in my studio. I find it interesting, if not alarming, that we have these violent objects depicted as toys for our kids to play with. My son got this one at the Topsfield Fair. It's a dual action device; pull the hammer back it's a laser pointer, squeeze the trigger and you get a electrical shock, actually a pretty good sting that kind of hurts, nasty little thing. He decided after everyone he was going to trick into getting shocked - got shocked - that it would be more interesting to take this thing apart and when I saw it lying there on our living room table it said photograph me...
Labels: photography
Advertising Photography,
Boston,
Boston Photographer,
Bruce Peterson,
Commercial Photography,
Editorial,
Photography,
Still Life Photography,
toy gun
9.28.2012
Hidden Treasure
I have some toy soldiers my Dad had as kid. I've photographed them several times, but not for awhile - this one is from a couple years ago. Occasionally I'll just start messing around with different channels and blend modes in Photoshop and see what happens, this ended up as a pleasant surprise...
Labels: photography
Advertising Photography,
Boston Photographer,
Bruce Peterson,
Editorial Photography,
Still Life Photography,
toy soldier
8.20.2012
Social Security
From a quick, and I mean quick, editorial project where they wanted a Social Security Card with some 3 dimensional qualities...
Labels: photography
Advertising Photography,
Boston,
Boston Photographer,
Bruce Peterson,
Commercial Photography,
Editorial Photography,
Social Security,
Social Security Card
7.26.2012
Food and Drink
I'm not a food photographer, at least in the sense of creating make me hungry kinds of pictures of stylized prepared food. It's just not my thing. But, I was approached by the Photo Editor at Boston magazine to shoot some food items, he actually had to kind of talk me into doing it. I'm glad he did, had a good time making these and the butter breton pastries, shown above from Flour Bakery - are absolutely wonderful, not so much though if you count calories.
Flour is actually close to my studio, we get food for shoots there all the time. The food scene around here is pretty good, besides Flour we have a couple other excellent options in the neighborhood. Several repeat clients have remarked they look forward to lunch here. There's a coffee roaster whose espresso beans I buy, cappuccinos and lattes we make at studio put Starbucks to shame. It's going to get better too, there are plans in the works for more highly regarded chefs opening places within walking distance.
Labels: photography
Boston Magazine,
butter breton,
Editorial Photography,
Food Photography,
lemonade
7.18.2012
Recycling
Labels: photography
Advertising Photography,
Boston Photographer,
Commercial Photography,
plastic,
recycle
6.27.2012
Award Winner
I produced this project last year and it won a Manny Award for Best Medical Device Campaign. The agency, Lehman Millet has been a long time client and the very talented people there have provided some of my more interesting assignments over the years. I'm pleased that work we've done together has brought them some recognition.
One thing of note on this project. When the Creative Director approached me about this I was concerned about getting a hornets nest, because if / when this happened it would become my responsibility. So I did a quick ebay search and voila, there was this beautiful, iconographic hornets nest available. It was a bit pricey, apparently these are collectable. I just bought it even though this wasn't a for real project yet. It became a piece of sculpture in my studio and then a few months later the project happened. It's still here in it's sculptural form, really an amazing object...
And for shooting the hornets, get this: we found a guy who does insect taxidermy...
Labels: photography
Advertising Photography,
Boston Photographer,
Bruce Peterson,
Commercial Photography,
Hornet,
Hornets nest,
Manny Award,
Still Life Photography
6.13.2012
Digital quality of life
I've been busy with commissions the last few months, not so much on my own pictures though. Some of that work will eventually find it's way for public display.
Through it all I've invested in some new technology and made techno lifestyle improvements. The first being upgrading to the new version of Photoshop CS6. I tried the Beta version and never went back. In my view it's a substantial upgrade, one feature alone is huge for me and worth whatever the cost is. Saving in the background, that screen shot above is a welcome sight for me.
I work on big files. Routinely have layered 16 bit files over 1GB, often close to or over 2 and they can take awhile to save. Extra large psb files can take like 10 minutes. Now I can keep working while Photoshop saves those files, in previous versions when Photoshop was saving a file - that's all it could do was save. The new dark interface is pretty sexy, I'm kind of an interface snob so that appeals to me, patch tool now works on a separate layer with content aware algorithms... There are other features too, but saving in the background is much appreciated by me.
Like I said I work on big files, so I've had a RAID 0 for scratch and data files for years. RAID 0 reads and writes you data across multiple drives simultaneously - I've got a 4 drive RAID so each drive gets one quarter of the data. It's a lot faster than a single drive. I got a tip from Rick at Mac Gurus to stripe my disks across different enclosures - I've got two 4 drive enclosures for 8 total drives - and he was right, I did indeed get a performance upgrade. See my screen shot above for read and write speeds, pretty cool, and another lifestyle upgrade.
I've also digested a new Mac Pro tower in the past few months. 16GB RAM modules are now available for it so I put 3 of those in it, big lifestyle improvement. While I don't have any pictures I can share right now as new, I can tell you a new Mac Pro tower with 48GB of RAM, that saves Photoshop files in the background, striped across 4 drives in 2 enclosures is new for me and I'm pretty excited about it.
Labels: photography
Advertising Photography,
Boston,
Boston Photographer,
Bruce Peterson,
Commercial Photography,
Still Life Photography
4.25.2012
Public display of affection
My son and I went to the driving range now that spring is here, upon walking into the pro shop was greeted by one of the ads I shot with Arnold for Titleist last fall. It's always fun to run into my work in public, more so when there's someone along to share it with...
Labels: photography
Advertising Photography,
Arnold Worldwide,
Boston,
Boston Photographer,
Bruce Peterson,
Golf,
Titleist
4.10.2012
Archive
I just re-upped my subscription to Archive and there was tab for rankings, so I clicked on it and voila there I was...
Labels: photography
Advertising Photography,
Boston Photographer,
Bruce Peterson,
Commercial Photography,
Lurzer's Archive
4.04.2012
The Replacements
There's a lab at Mass General Hospital that tests and studies joint replacement parts. They get them sent in from all over the world. Made a visit there for an editorial client. Here's what worn out hip replacement joints look like.... Ouch and kinda yuck, but also pretty interesting.
3.16.2012
Get a Grip
I shot these recently for Brunner, an ad agency in Atlanta. Wonderful people to work with. The photography was relatively straight forward for me, the challenge was getting the surfaces that resembled a bench top of a golf club fitting environment. The wood surface above was a piece of new butcher block a few days prior to the shoot. Tip: use steel wool that has been steeped in vinegar as a base layer for distressing wood. You can also add some tea into the brew for more of reddish color.
The above piece is the real deal, it's a used grip repair station. Heavy duty piece of steel with attachments you can't see in the picture. I end up with the props after a lot of shoots, and it's not uncommon to have some indecision about what to do with the debris... I was finally a victim of market forces a few years ago and lost my huge studio with a great location. Still have a great Boston location, but not enough space to store weird things like this. Tossing the stuff seems like such a waste, selling it is time consuming and I don't have a place keep things just because I have them, it can be a problem... Not this time though, this found a home after we moved it around the studio for a few weeks...
Labels: photography
Advertising Photography,
Boston,
Boston Photographer,
Bruce Peterson,
Brunner,
Commercial Photography,
Golf Pride,
Still Life Photography
2.29.2012
Stuffed up
We found the above teddy bear while sourcing stuffed animals for the campaign below. We ended up commissioning all of the animals we photographed for the ads, but I thought this one was worthy of a photo op. It just looks so sad and the fur is so authentically aged, would have worked for our concept but would have been very difficult to modify for the necessary bloating.
Actually one of the interesting things I learned when speaking to the artists who make real teddy bears is; the proportions we wanted, big body little head for our bear is counter to what is typically made for a kid's stuffed animal. They usually make them in the proportions of babies, whose heads are in larger proportions to their bodies than the rest of us.
Which points at a challenge with these kinds of projects, when we commission artists or artisans for props for photography, they usually make what they make. What we need is a prop for photography, and there can be a difference. In the case of the bear in the ad below, the teddy bear artist provided us with mostly what we asked for, but we ended up removing his arms and head so they could be positioned separately on set, took some of the fur from his back side and added it in front so we was even more bloated. There was an apparatus behind him holding him together and pushing him out in places. Those kinds of things are difficult to get from someone who isn't used to taking direction on their creations, we don't need a stuffed animal in this case per say, we need a fat bear prop. I've worked with the same model maker now for probably close to 20 years, and whenever we have custom props like this, even if he doesn't make them, I still try to get him included as he understands we need a prop for photography.
Another challenge on this one, we produced the bear ad on the week between Christmas and New Years...
Labels: photography
Advertising Photography,
Boston,
Boston Photographer,
Bruce Peterson,
Commercial Photography,
Still Life Photography
2.16.2012
Cutting Edge
Late last summer and early fall I had two opportunities to see world class medical research on organ transplants. The above image I made for Proto Magazine, it's produced by Time Inc in New York for Mass General Hospital here in Boston. That is a human heart. It's been "decellurized", meaning it's been stripped of all of it's donor's tissue. The idea (as I understand it) is once the living cells have been removed they have a "skeleton" of an organ that they then grow the recipients own cells back onto it. They're putting them in animals now, could perhaps be a technology for humans in the next 10 to maybe 20 years.
From a photo shoot experience stand point, the above image was an interesting afternoon. This heart was inside the machine shown below. In the second picture, you can see it's in a big glass jar inside that machine. Hardly ideal for photography. Our plan was to photograph it as it was being removed from the jar - that way we could get a clear view of the heart without having to look through the scratched up glass on the jar. I was working with an assistant to the lead Doctor on this research, Jeremy. He was eager to help, but was nervous about damaging this very precious organ - as we could be exposing it to risk with our requests for a better picture. Actually it wasn't going very well - the heart looked a piece of chicken, yellowy and blobby....
The main research Doctor, Dr Ott, came in to see how it was going and he wasn't impressed. Conceded it indeed looked like a piece of chicken and photography as we were approaching it wasn't likely to change that. He decided to take charge, with the confidence of someone who is used to being in control of big moments, like when he's got his hands in someone's chest cavity. I'm smart enough to recognize when someone has better skills than I do for the task at hand, and thankful when they have the authority and power to act on their ideas. So I was happy for the help.
We had some fiber optic lights that we could put inside the sterile environment. Flexible tubes that put out a small spot of light, but we only had 2 of them. I also brought some of those lights that you attatch under your kitchen cabinets - needed something small that could provide illumination inside that machine, which wasn't going to come from my strobes. Dr. Ott suggested we put the fiber optic lights inside the heart, they would fit in where the aortas and veins attach to the heart. I think he and I were the only ones in the room that liked that idea, the entourage that followed him around were all very silent, just kind of looking around - but he did it. Put his hands in there and directed those little tubes of light where I thought they should go to make the best picture. I think I had the most educated gaffer, with the steadiest hands, probably in the world on my crew for 20 minutes. Below is a shot from my assistant's phone - that's me in the shadows in the background while another research person assistant photographs the event.
I came back a few months later for Boston Magazine. The same research assistant was there, and they had moved the experiment out of that small stuffy room and could now do this procedure, really anywhere, but we were confined to his lab bench. Below is a good shot of what a pig heart looks like during the process of loosing the tissue cells in their new and improved vessel.
The research assistant I was working with, Jeremy, wanted a picture of a heart and lung combination. I was game to see what that looked like, and the magazine ended up using it. Below are lungs and heart from a rat. These were expendable so we were able to shoot them outside of a sterile environment. After the shoot, he mentioned that I should come back and shoot one of the heart surgeries. While that would be very interesting, I'll wait for the invitation instead of seeking it out. I suspect I'll be busy with prior commitments.
Labels: photography
Advertising Photography,
Boston,
Boston Photographer,
Bruce Peterson,
Commercial Photography,
Still Life Photography
2.03.2012
I don't know Jack
I recently shot the new Jack Daniel's bottle for a couple different ad campaigns. One of them was a super rush project for destination saturation at train stations in China. I just think it's cool that a lot of Chinese people will be looking at my pictures - everyone who goes through those train stations can't help but see them.
They wanted this wide angle effect on one of the images, which I found out the day of the shoot. Super rush project... First time since I bought my sexy Hassleblad that I now use that I missed my clunky old view camera. Had to get one, what they wanted simply wasn't possible without one - no way you could get it in focus with that exaggerated perspective with a conventional camera and wide lens. There isn't a view camera that will accommodate a high end digital back available to rent in Boston - or if there is, I don't know where to find it. Had one driven up from a dealer in Hartford, enjoyed a leisurely lunch waiting for it to arrive, worked out well. Had mixed emotions opening the case, was kind of fun to set up a view camera again, like seeing an old friend, then I quickly remembered everything that annoyed me about about using one almost exclusively for the 15 years before I bought the camera I have now.
They wanted this wide angle effect on one of the images, which I found out the day of the shoot. Super rush project... First time since I bought my sexy Hassleblad that I now use that I missed my clunky old view camera. Had to get one, what they wanted simply wasn't possible without one - no way you could get it in focus with that exaggerated perspective with a conventional camera and wide lens. There isn't a view camera that will accommodate a high end digital back available to rent in Boston - or if there is, I don't know where to find it. Had one driven up from a dealer in Hartford, enjoyed a leisurely lunch waiting for it to arrive, worked out well. Had mixed emotions opening the case, was kind of fun to set up a view camera again, like seeing an old friend, then I quickly remembered everything that annoyed me about about using one almost exclusively for the 15 years before I bought the camera I have now.
On a side note, my son is taking Mandarin in school this year, 6th grade. Had a proud parent moment while showing him flash cards with Mandarin characters and watching the intense concentration on his face as he decoded the symbols. It's very interesting to watch his progress. He gets it, I don't have a clue and never will...
Labels: photography
Advertising Photography,
Boston,
Boston Photographer,
Bruce Peterson,
Commercial Photography,
Still Life Photography
1.20.2012
Available light
This is a "robot" that performs surgery. Boston Magazine ran an article about innovators in the Boston area and BU Medical Center has one of these Da Vinci machines. I don't do lots of location work, at one time I did, but this seemed appealing to me so I accepted the assignment. I scouted the place a few days in advance, got a tour of the operating rooms and places where we could photograph this thing. I was surprised how small and cluttered operating rooms are, this is a big machine, like the size of refrigerator. Then the good part was, we could have it for one hour - it's a busy place and photo shoots aren't their highest priority. I asked for the largest room available, and they graciously complied, we could have it from 6-7AM.
It wasn't going to be easy to light in those cramped rooms. I'm looking around and see three lights hanging from the ceiling, much better versions of what you stare at while you're at the dentist. I think I freaked out the photo editor a bit when I explained - we're going available light on this one.
It wasn't going to be easy to light in those cramped rooms. I'm looking around and see three lights hanging from the ceiling, much better versions of what you stare at while you're at the dentist. I think I freaked out the photo editor a bit when I explained - we're going available light on this one.
Worked out well - and was fun to wing it, more time would have been nice, but I can say that about most projects...
Labels: photography
Advertising Photography,
Boston,
Boston Photographer,
Bruce Peterson,
Commercial Photography,
Still Life Photography
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