| Posted by David North on February 26, 2012 | |
Another success! What a way to reveal the bowels of of a locomotive
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| Posted by Jake McGarvie on February 26, 2012 | |
Another great one Anthony. You have developed a new spin on night photograpy. Thanks for sharing and keep em coming.
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| Posted by Bernie Baker on February 26, 2012 | |
What's the secret to not getting open engine room doors in the image? Are they opened and closed quickly as you paint the engine room with light? Looks great.
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| Posted by Dennis A. Livesey on February 26, 2012 | |
Excellent job! I admire your technique Anthony.
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| Posted by Anthony Dickson on February 26, 2012 | |
Bernie- I start with the doors closed. Open each door or group of connected doors, paint with my flashlight, and close the doors before moving to the next door. This greatly reduces, if not eliminates, the doors appearance. The color of the inside of the doors while determine how much or if they will show. This old turd had a lot of soot and rust on the inside of the doors which helped in my case with the ambient light being so close. Thanks for the comments!
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| Posted by TheSPModeler on February 27, 2012 | |
If you did the whole loco like this it would almost be like a Ghost train!
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| Posted by on February 28, 2012 | |
You've done it again, Anthony! As someone on Facebook recently pointed out to me, the photo resembles something from the movie, Tron. Well done!
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| Posted by Jordan Webber on February 28, 2012 | |
I can't get over how awesome of an image this is. Really well done.
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| Posted by Jeff Sell on February 28, 2012 | |
Almost seems like X-Ray vision! The blue hue interior light makes it look so modern or futuristic. Good job!
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| Posted by John Young on July 14, 2014 | |
WOW! An amazing new slant on locomotive photography. This isn't just a snapshot - it is a work of art Anthony.
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