Joshua Tree National Park beneath the beautiful dark skies. This shows the apparent movement of the stars over thirteen minutes. I photographed this while teaching a night photography workshop with Tim Little in Joshua Tree National Park. It feels like a privilege to photograph under such dark skies. But it's even more special when you're with a great group of people. To create this night photo, I set the camera on a tripod. I opened the camera shutter for a long time. While the shutter was open, I walked around with a handheld ProtoMachines LED2 light capable of producing different colors, and illuminated the scene. During the exposure, all the light I shined on the subject was cumulative. This process is called "light painting". Why? Because one uses the flashlight as a paint brush, "brushing" on light, not paint. Light painting to illuminate subjects is a beautiful, addictive art, as you can walk around the scene, deciding what to bring to light and what to keep in shadow. And it's more fun than AI-generated images.
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3 Comments
Ken, tremendous image, but I’m a little confused as to you choosing Joshua Tree National Park for it’s dark sky designation yet you chose to light paint your chosen main subject of a Joshua Tree?
https://www.nps.gov/subjects/nightskies/index.htm
Are you asking why I choose to light paint in a place that is a Dark Sky area? It's not outlawed by JTNP, and I use a relatively dim light during the exposure for several seconds to minimize issues. Thanks.
Yes, on my FStoppers profile, website, and social media, all those are my original photos.
I'm not really sure what you mean by whether they are accessible, though. If that means they are for sale, yes, they're for sale on www.kenleephotography.com.
And I also teach how to create these photos on my workshops (and of course, here on FStoppers)!