Wednesday, February 24, 2016

Advanced Students: Double Exposure and Multiple Exposure Photography

Hello Students,
For this project you will be exercising two artistic photography techniques, double exposure and multiple exposures.

Assignment Requirements:
  • Create 1 double exposure image or portrait, must utilize juxtaposition as the driving concept in the choice of images you are combining
  • Create 1 multiple exposure image or portrait. Must contain at least 4 exposures/images combined into 1
  • Create 1 artistic double exposure (blending of images) using white/clean backdrops, paper filters, experimentation, research and creativity, also Photoshop

What is Double Exposure?
Double exposure with a traditional film camera involved exposing 2 different images to 1 piece of film. The effect creates an overlay of 2 images into 1, the areas of dark and light combine. With digital camera's we can take 2 different photos and combine them into 1 by using Photoshop's layers. See examples below:
Composer Karlheinz Stockhausen, double exposure made using a film camera, 1980 by Claude Truong-Ngoc / Wikimedia Commons 
Double exposure made using a film camera

What is Multiple Exposure?
Multiple exposure is when a camera is timed to take an exposure at different intervals of time, creating a series of images into 1 image. With a digital camera we can take multiple images and combine them with photoshops layers and some clever use of the Eraser Tool. See examples below:
A multiple exposure image created with photoshop
A multiple exposure composite image of a lunar eclipse taken over Hayward, California in 2004.

What is an Artistic Double Exposure?

When you pay attention to the light and dark areas you can have some amazing results with double exposure. Photoshop lets us combine and erase and change the way our layers blend together. Try to achieve an artistic effect seen below. Can you figure out how the images below were created? The examples below were made by the artist Dan Mountford. Clean backdrops to the individual elements  is important, the architecture needs clean skies behind them and the portrait does as well, plus the "blends" are created with filters/paper close to the lens to block out part of the exposure in the example below. Others are created differently, see if you can reverse engineer the methods used and try to replicate them yourself.

Link: Gallery of Artistic Double Exposures
Tutorial: Artistic Double Exposures in PS
Tutorial: Aneta Ivanova Double Exposure Method in PS

Photo Credit:Dan Mountford

Photo Credit:Dan Mountford


Student Work Samples: Double and Multiple Exposures











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