Work of Dale Chihully.
Work of Dale Chihully.
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Awards
People's Choice in Anything yellow must be the subject of the photo Photo Challenge
People's Choice in Beautiful glass object Photo Challenge
Winner in The Color Yellow Photo Challenge
Winner in ARTISTS FROM GLASS (close up) Photo Challenge
Peer Award
Top Choice
Absolute Masterpiece
Outstanding Creativity
Superb Composition
Magnificent Capture
All Star
Virtuoso
Superior Skill
Top Ranks
Steve-n-Ning
April 14, 2020
Thank you. I truly appreciate the compliment. Dale Chihully's work has always amazed me.
dgerrans
April 15, 2020
I saw that at the Chihully Exibit at the DeYoung Museum in San Francisco. Very nice photo!👍
Steve-n-Ning
May 18, 2020
Thank you. So do we. He has had two exhibitions at the Phoenix Botanical Garden over the past ten years. Both were captivating.
Steve-n-Ning
May 18, 2020
Chihully is one of my favorite artists. I have a couple of other photos of his work in my gallery.
Steve-n-Ning
March 28, 2021
Thank you. The lighting in the display case was perfect, so I added nothing additional.
Steve-n-Ning
July 13, 2021
Thanks, Kurt. We have seen two Chihully exhibits at the Phoenix Botanical Garden. I hope they can find the money in the future for more of them. His work is always fascinating.
JayneBug
August 02, 2022
Beautiful work of art....love Chihuly! Wonderful capture. My congratulations on your award.
Joviaal
April 28, 2023
Congratulations Steve with your third place in the Yellow Corner photo contest. Well done!
Steve-n-Ning
April 28, 2023
Thank you, Joop, for your kind words. Unfortunately, the contest is still 'Under Review', and Viewbug is likely to steal another few top spots from before it is all over. My photo was #1 overall all the time until they went into review. This is the second time they have taken an overall win away from me. I'm still proud of the photo.
Steve-n-Ning
June 03, 2023
Thank you. Dale Chihuly's work is always stunning, and I was fortunate to capture one of his pieces at its best.
Steve-n-Ning
June 06, 2023
Thank you. Dale Chihully's work is always great, and I was fortunate to capture one of his smaller pieces.
Steve-n-Ning
June 06, 2023
Thank you. Dale Chihully's work is always great, and I was fortunate to capture one of his smaller pieces.
Same photographer See allBehind The Lens
Behind The Lens
Location
This photo was taken at an exposition of Dale Chihully's glass art at the Phoenix Botanical Garden.Time
The photo was taken in the evening, after sunset. The display area for this particular piece was indoors, but nightfall ensured that no stray sunlight created unwanted reflections.Lighting
The lighting was that provided in the exhibit.Equipment
I used my Canon EOS 7D with a Canon EF 24-105mm f/4L IS USM lens at a focal length of 40mm. The camera was handheld.Inspiration
Dale Chihully's work is amazing. Most people familiar with his work know his large outdoor pieces. But he also creates marvelous smaller works like this vase. I wanted to highlight this more intimate form of his work.Editing
I use Adobe Lightroom as my primary editing tool. I also use Photoshop, Luminar 4 and Aurora HDR software. In the case of this photo, very little post-processing was required beyond cropping and optimizing highlights, shadows and colors.In my camera bag
My Canon EOS 5D Mark IV always has my Canon EF 35mm f/1.4L II USM lens mounted on it. That is my go-to lens for the majority of my photos. I also carry several lenses: Canon EF 16-35mm f/4L IS USM, Canon EF 24-70mm f/2.8L II USM, Canon EF 70-200mm f/2.8L IS II USM, Canon EF 24-105 f/4L IS USM and a Canon EF 100mm f/2.8L Macro IS USM. I try to shoot with natural light all the time, but on those occasions where I need an external light source, I use either a Neewer CN-216 LED panel or a Canon Speedlite 580EX. I have tripods by Slik, 3Pod and Manfrotto. I have a Canon EOS 7D, a Canon EOS 30D and a Canon EOS 10D, all of which I still have and use as appropriate.Feedback
Indoor museum-style photography is totally dependent on lighting, usually that provided in the exhibit itself. The key is to be very aware of what you see in your viewfinder and be sure to eliminate as much external reflection and background distraction (i.e.: "photobombs") as possible.