What looks like a CGI special effect was drawn by one person, in total darkness, in real time, with no ability to see what they were creating. 💡 🖼
The technique is called long-exposure light painting. The camera shutter stays open for up to 30 seconds, and in that window the photographer physically moves a handheld LED light through the air. The camera records the full path, neon skeletons, dinosaurs, solar systems, all invisible to the human eye until the shutter closes.
The photographer draws completely blind. Every stroke has to be planned and executed from memory. Pablo Picasso famously posed for one of these photographs in 1949 for Life magazine, and the core mechanism has not changed since.
Seventeen years of practice. Thirty seconds of darkness. One shot.
The technique is called long-exposure light painting. The camera shutter stays open for up to 30 seconds, and in that window the photographer physically moves a handheld LED light through the air. The camera records the full path, neon skeletons, dinosaurs, solar systems, all invisible to the human eye until the shutter closes.
The photographer draws completely blind. Every stroke has to be planned and executed from memory. Pablo Picasso famously posed for one of these photographs in 1949 for Life magazine, and the core mechanism has not changed since.
Seventeen years of practice. Thirty seconds of darkness. One shot.
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