Trygve.Com > Images > sweat and shadow
bodybuilding photography of muscle skin sweat and shadow

sweat and shadow



Digital photography may not offer the full color depth and detail found in film, but it brings an ability to explore and experiment with the possibilities of the art to the casual or beginning photographer that would otherwise be restricted to those with a lot more time, patience, and access to a lab. The lack of film and processing cost alone makes a tremendous difference, and there's nothing like the immediate feedback you get from having the results of the shot right now with no worries over whether the results of your efforts will turn out to be under- or overexposed, out-of-focus, or simply that they fail to capture the image you'd had in your mind.

The technology, of course, doesn't fix your mistakes, but at least it lets you know about them right away.

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The pictures on my pages were almost all taken with a Kodak DC-260. I'm not sure how I could have managed to take a lot of the pictures on my pages with a conventional film camera, especially the weightlifting-related pictures, since these generally involve setting up the camera to take the shot, then running around to the other side, grabbing a weight or other piece of equipment, and then maintaining the right position and angle until the camera goes off.

Oh, and it's real important not to make the "come on and flash, already! This thing is heavy!" face. Even if the weight doesn't look that heavy, when you've held it in a particular way for half a minute or so, sometimes it starts feeling a lot heavier than you'd remembered.

The shots on this page were the result of a random urge to play around with a single concentrated light source and see what would show up.

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