Timeblend Dubai from Florian Kriechbaumer

Florian Kriechbaumer (Website: theflore.com Instagram: @djflore) sent me his work done with Olympus gear:

Timeblend Dubai

New Districts – Day to night panorama of Dubai Marina with the sun setting in between.

Part of the beauty of photography lies in capturing a single special moment that will never appear the same way again. While this is what makes each photograph unique, a normal photo alone can typically only freeze a fleeting split second.

In trying to expand what I can record with my camera, in 2011 I shot my first timelapse video, looking to capture the transition between different hours of the day and night, from dusk to dawn and reversely. It’s often only when you see several hours compressed into a few seconds that humans can really grasp the change in light and colours that occurs during a 24h period – timelapse is the perfect medium to make this possible.

But what if you could combine and capture the same in a single image? This is the question I asked myself in early 2020 when I began working on what became the Timeblend Dubai series. After some research I found that others have gone through similar endeavors over the past years, and I thank those pioneers for the inspiration they’ve provided to me as I started to embark on this project. I’m not claiming I invented this concept, but I did intend to apply my own style to it.

The ultimate aim was to let the viewer’s eye wander through the changes in scenery as day and night flow into each other in a single continuous transition that is not normally obvious to the observer, yet somehow looks natural and makes you think twice about what you’re seeing.

The Giant – Downtown Dubai with Burj Khalifa, the world’s tallest building.

The UAE and Dubai – a city I’ve fallen in love with for over 15 years and call home today – is one of the most photogenic places on earth and it was important for me to cover a wide range of what it has to offer. As a result, the images cover the modern cityscape, such as Downtown Dubai and The Palm, but also the historic parts around Dubai Creek. At the same time I wanted to incorporate some of the natural beauty of the country, showcasing scenes from the Hajar mountains and the dunes of the desert. In total I had about 40 compositions in mind, out of those I shot about 25, and in the end 14 made the final cut.

Desert Transitions – The dunes of Ras Al Khaimah on a clear sunny day, and after the Milky Way rose at night.

When I started working on the project I learnt a lot about how light affects a scene, and how different our environment really looks during a 24h cycle. This meant I had to figure out which compositions make sense for a Timeblend, which parts of a scene work better at night, and which ones better during the day, what time of the day was the best for a certain atmosphere I needed to capture, and how many different images I needed to create a smooth blend – a single daylight and night-time image each was generally not enough. On top of that I had to work around moving objects, lights, cars, people, clouds, and other changes that happened in between the time the photos were taken.

Sometimes that meant going back and re-shooting the same location to capture a missing piece or replace a part of the final work that wasn’t quite what I had in mind. As a result, all of the end results include at least half a dozen individual photos, taken at different times of the day and often on different days – sometimes more than 20 images were blended to arrive at what you see now. None of the images include pieces from another scene or elements that were not actually in their specific spot in at least one of the original photos though.

Wadi Scenery – The Hajar mounts with their tones of brown and beige changing as the sun falls over the horizon and the stars start appearing.

While I don’t normally spend a lot of time on post processing, in this project it was inevitable. Since it is impossible to keep your camera in exactly the same position when shooting a panorama, or the same composition on different days, the images had to be manually and painstakingly aligned, literally pixel by pixel, to achieve a smooth blending effect. Photoshop’s alignment feature was not able to manage this, and its warp tool became my best friend for many, many hours.

I then used digital blending with masks, gaussian blur, and brushes to achieve the transition effect by gradually hiding parts of the different layers and letting the next phase of light come through. In some of the photos light trails and cars with motion blur as well as people were either blended in, or removed by adding a layer of the same photo taken just a few seconds earlier or later, or at different shutter speeds, to remove the distracting subjects I didn’t want.

Palm Scenes – The fireworks and sunset were shot 6 months earlier than the daytime part.

Since I wanted to exhibit the series, I also made sure to capture them at high resolution, either using my Olympus OMD EM-1’s 80 MP mode, or shooting panoramas with multiple vertical photos, resulting in a final output of 200 MP and more. This made the editing process even more painful, as some of the files easily reached 20 GB in size.

For my exhibition I printed the cityscape shots using Titanium Lustre paper, whereas the nature shots use white matt and etching paper – the larger panoramas are almost 2 metres in size.

Beating Heart – The Dubai Creek, typically bustling with activity, in a very unusual calm state, as this was shot during lockdown over two days in April 2020.

Two of the photos were submitted to the 2020 Epson International Panorama Awards, and received Silver and Bronze accolades respectively. The 14 final works are now on display at Zimzy Gallery in Dubai until September 18th – do get in touch if you’re in the city and want to say Hi!

World’s most Powerful 260W Graphene Power Bank to recharge your camera, phone and laptop

One of the things I always carry with me is a power bank. But most of these are annoyingly slow in charging multiple items. So this might be for me (and for you). The world’s most Powerful 260W Graphene Power Bank is now available for preorder on Kickstarter (Click here to read everything about it).

Here are all the features explained:

 

And of you need really the CRAZY power bank check out the EcoFlow DELTA Pro: The Portable Home Battery on Kickstarter (Click here). it collectd over 7 million dollars and you can run a washmachine on it :)