Memories

Documenting a historical residence in Cascais

Cascais-residence-interiors-11.jpg

As you’d expect, I love looking at pictures. I think most of us do, especially when they have a personal meaning such as old family photos or that painting grandma used to have above her fire place. Such pictures or photographs can instantly take us back to a different time in our lives which is pretty amazing. Most photographers would probably agree that for their images to evoke such personal memories and feelings for others is very gratifying. In my commercial photography work, there is typically a clear brief as to what we (myself and the client) want to create and how it will be used (for example, documenting a unique design element in a residential new-build for an architectural award submission).

Occasionally, the brief goes deeper as was the case in a recent residential shoot I was commissioned for. The owner of a large historic property was making plans to downsize but wanted to have a detailed record of the house they love as they remembered it. Besides it being a fantastic example of bold 70’s portuguese architecture in its own right, it was also packed with antiques, furniture and decorative pieces collected over many years, and a wonderful fireplace at the heart of the home.

On the day of the shoot I was given freedom to navigate the house to my schedule which meant I could select the best time of day for the interiors and sneak in a few twilight images featuring that wonderful fireplace. I was fortunate to have an overcast day (rare in Lisbon!) with a beautiful soft light filling the property and I opted to stick to this natural light only to document the details with as much realism as possible. Also, no staging or moving things about - This was all about capturing the space as it is/was. Pretty much all the images in the set were taken with either a 24mm Tilt-shift or 50mm. A simple set up and a joy to shoot. Most importantly, a very happy client who now has a set of images that can transport them back to a different time and place.

Please get in touch if you would like to record memories of a place that is special to you or someone you know.

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.