I set out last weekend to get a little more practice with the rig. I hadn’t used it since the Ferrari shoot and was itching to give it a try again. The RSX hadn’t been washed recently, but due to the lack of rain was still decently clean.
I set out to find a good location and settled on an industrial area in North Houston that had railroad tracks and a nice open area next to them. It was a Sunday, so I figured that traffic would be fairly minimal in the area.
My girlfriend Ashleigh was nice enough to tag along, since it’s much easier to set up the rig with two people. We call her the resident “flash-girl”. As we were setting up the rig, I saw a worker from one of the factories pop his head out of a door on the side of the building to have a look. He came walking over, which I figured meant that I wasn’t going to be able to shoot there. But the first thing out of his mouth was “What the hell is that thing?”. He was fascinated that these are the types of tools used to create rolling shots in ads, and had a lot of questions about how the final images comes from this huge “thing” hanging off the car. After his curiosity was satisfied, he walked back towards the door and disappeared into the factory again.
Once I started shooting, I realized that in my haste to get outside and practice, I really didn’t think logically. It was midday and the sun was beating down in full force, limiting to no more than a 2 second exposure even with a 3 stop ND filter stacked on top of a CPL. The car was under the cover of a roof extending off the factory, which helped to cut some of the harsh shadows and highlights, however.
As I was shooting, I heard the whistle from a train coming. I quickly set up the car for the shot and was able to take a few with the passing train as a backdrop, which I thought was pretty cool.
I tried taking a few static shots, focusing on different portions of the car so that I could graft them in if the rolling shots had some soft spots. I also took a few while spinning the CPL around to minimize reflections on various body panels and windows.
In post, it was just a jumble of layers, layer masks and cloning. I learned my lesson on using a shorter exposure on rig shots – all the photos still had recognizable backgrounds which made it pretty tough to clone the rig out. Next time I will definitely stick with an exposure time of at least 3 seconds so that I get a nice blur and cloning doesn’t take another few weeks off my life.
Once everything was cloned out, I dropped in some donor sky images that I took while in New Mexico to get a more dramatic effect. I also did some high-pass sharpening, some color overlays and slight desaturation to get the final look. I think they both came out well, but the rear rolling shot is clearly the best one. A bit disappointing, as I’d hoped the rolling train would be a great backdrop, but the lack of light on the side of the car in that shot keeps it from being the best it could have been. I’m still happy with both, however!
On to the images!
And the before shots:
Thanks for checking in!
Theo