Corey Rich - http://www.coreyrich.com/#!/portfolio
Corey Rich is an outdoor adventure photographer and film-maker. Corey links well to my movement project due to the fact he specialises in sports, lifestyle and portraits, this has enabled me to receive large amounts of inspiration from several images to come up with some shoot and image ideas of my own.
Born in the West Coast of the States, Corey is never not surrounded by phenomenal landscape and luckily surrounded by all of the outdoor talent, climbers, surfers, mountain bikers, white water kayakers, red bull teams etc.
Born in the West Coast of the States, Corey is never not surrounded by phenomenal landscape and luckily surrounded by all of the outdoor talent, climbers, surfers, mountain bikers, white water kayakers, red bull teams etc.
Workflow
This is an example of an image I could influence into my Movement project due to the fact, of the high shutter speed use, it enables the photographer to capture fast moving detail and completely freeze it, to create a compelling image. I can also help freeze movement on a higher level by assisting myself with the use of Flash, this will mean I can create unique textures, shadows and highlights within the image but also frame a moment which expresses speed and sometimes danger.
This image is very similar in a way that fast movement has been frozen. However this image expresses a larger sense of danger and a burst of success. This particular frame has been captured from a slightly lower angle to show the severity of the height the athlete is achieving during the jump
This image inspires me to apply the use of multiple exposure into my work, or blending multiple images together in post production to produce a more creative outcome for an image. In this example Corey has taken two images in the exact same position to create a juxtaposition between both stationary and movement, the mountain bikers shadow is perfectly crisp however the mountain biker herself is motion blurred, this is created by blending two images together that have used different shutter speeds, one of around 1/60 and one of around 1/250.