Twilight Photography: Seeing in the dark

Using low light as a highlight

Twilight “blue hour” intentionally chosen to highlight lighting design

Architecture photographers are obsessed with weather forecasts. Everyone wants good weather for their photoshoot as this usually translates to good light (though not always the case). Of course there is only so much good light in a day and some projects require a lot of planning to capture certain parts of a project at the best time in the day to benefit from natural light. It can sometimes feel like a race, especially on those shorter days in the winter months. However, as the sun dips below the horizon, new photographic opportunities emerge.

Twilight photography in the world of architecture and interior design often reveals stunning visuals that can't be replicated during daylight, and in many circumstances, twilight imagery should be included in your shot list.

1. Showcasing Landscape design: The interplay of dimming natural light and emerging artificial lighting can create a beautiful blend of colours and textures that accentuates your outdoor spaces.

2. Materiality: Unique wall or floor treatments come alive at twilight. Texture, shadow, and depth are highlighted.

3. Lighting Design: As the day transitions into night, lighting design takes center stage. Twilight photography is perfect for showcasing the artistry of lighting schemes, from soft, ambient glows to dramatic focal points inside and out.

4. Subject Isolating and/ or Highlighting: Photographing your project at dusk allows you to isolate your subject amidst a darker background. Your building or room becomes a beacon, drawing attention to its design and details.

5. Bad Weather Solution: Sometimes things don’t align and when bad weather decides to play spoilsport during your photoshoot, twilight can come to the rescue, especially for exteriors. The dusk ambiance helps mask uncooperative weather conditions / clouds and can turn them into an asset.

As with all things architecture photography, planning is key. The ideal twilight conditions are only short lived so its back to that race again to get the images needed in the short window of ‘blue light’.

Are you an architect or designer seeking to elevate your portfolio with stunning twilight photography? We can help with this. Let's create stunning images together. Contact us today and let your architecture and interior design projects shine, even after the sun has set.

Teeth

Photographing a dental clinic

Main entrance lobby and reception

A trip to the dentist isn’t usually on the top of peoples list of favourite things to do, usually because of a hang-up from some historical experience or a second hand scare story that has been doing the rounds, but we live in good times! Dental treatments are the best they have ever been and the clinics themselves are being carefully designed to provide a functional space to help deliver the best treatments and also a calm and welcoming environment for patients and practitioners.

Keeping these points in mind were central to my planning of a recent photoshoot at the new Spot Clinic dental practice designed by award winning architects, SABRAB. A complete overhaul of a challenging space high above Avenida Liberdade in Lisbon had incorporated extensive use of glass walls, doors and partitions to maximise the flow of natural light throughout the patient and technical areas. A monochromatic palette of materials was also used to offer a clean, minimal and very modern space for patients to enjoy. My brief was to document these elements for both the architect and clinic, with the added twist that the clinic was operating a normal working day.

Photographically, the challenges were working in tight spaces around delicate equipment (resolved in part by stitching shifted images together for some compositions), illustrating the materiality and colour palette with consistency (lots of colour work in post-production), and showing some life and activity whilst protecting patient / staff identity (timing of shots, use of slower shutter speeds and keeping out of the way!).

For these commercial shoots, problem solving is a BIG part of what goes on, and is a BIG part of what we enjoy at Clear Space. Do you have a challenging space or design that you would like to share with your audience? Let’s discuss the best way to make that happen. Finally, don’t forget to floss every day :-)

Look good, feel good

Interior and lifestyle photography in a wellness studio

Eliane Campos_Aug 2020_HighRes--4.jpg

I sometimes see my job is to document a design, a space or place. Sometimes its to provide a visual narrative to a building - where is it? who uses it? what is it made of? Other times, my photography has the specific goal of conveying a feeling to the audience. Recently, I was commissioned by a local business to do just that.

Health, Beauty and Wellness is a big industry and is a very competitive market place so its important to stand out from the crowd for the right reasons. Eliane Campos Health & Beauty is a well stablished practice 5 minutes walk from the wonderful sands of Carcavelos beach just outside of Lisbon. They offer a broad range of treatments and services that go beyond most and that demand highly trained technicians that operate to exacting standards of hygiene and care. My brief was to capture specific treatments and procedures offered in the salon and to highlight the professional standards and environment that their clients can expect when they visit.

Pre-production meeting and planning gave us our shot list, organised staff, models and interior styling to make time on set as efficient as possible. I opted for high-key lighting using small strobes to emphasise the clinical surroundings of the treatment rooms. This also allowed for colour consistency and flexibility to work around practitioners and models in a series of tight spaces.

Mission accomplished!

Big thanks to Eliane and her team and models for all their hard work on the day - especially as it just happened to be in the middle of a heat wave. We all earned a cold Super Bock that night!

If you need to tell your customers something good about your business or premises, get in touch for a chat. Architecture and interiors photography often widens to include lifestyle images in those spaces and Clear Space is here to help you achieve that. 

Unsung heroes

Details: filling in the gaps

Stairway alternative view

Stairway alternative view

One of the “jobs” of an architecture photographer as I see it, is to throw a spotlight onto the elements of design that get missed as we all rush about in our busy day, heading to meetings, chatting to friends, or checking messages on the go. We take in our surroundings in different ways and our brains regularly fill in the detail that we didn’t quite have time to explore, but the designs, structures and buildings that we walk past are the sum of their parts, big and small that have been carefully considered and painstakingly installed to create the finished article. They are like unsung heroes and it is often these smaller details that I search for when I explore and photograph the built environment. Once you start looking for these details, you can’t unsee them! 

Sometimes these elements are in themselves little works of art. Other times, a bit of creativity in composition is needed to highlight that they exist at all. Finding repeating patterns, strong geometrical relationships, texture in materials, reflections or advantageous light can all help to amplify these aspects of a design whether they were intended to be viewed in this way or a happy accident. Taking the time to walk through, in and around the subject can reveal these little gems but crucially help to plan how to show them off in the best way - lens choice, camera position, time of day, interplay with people, use of supplemental light (or blocking it), post-processing are some of the tools I use and the decisions I make to help others see what they might otherwise miss.

Of course in cases of commissioned work, there is a brief to follow which will vary depending on the goal that my client is aiming for. In capturing architecture photographs of a large infrastructure project, public space or residence, usually the hero is the whole structure or large elements of it. For interior design photography in the hospitality sector, the finer luxurious details and furnishings help to entice customers to visit and can form a larger proportion of the shot list. 

Architecture requires careful attention to details, and therefore photographing it needs that same level of consideration to deliver a set of images that celebrates those details. My job is to help others see your designs the way you intended.