Photo Credit - Linhbergh
Linhbergh is a creative director and a commercial photographer. He has done photography for many car brands including the world's number one fully electric car company, Tesla Motors. He takes amazing pictures all around and at whatever scenery he arrives upon. These two pictures caught my eye because of all the professional photographers I've posted about for these past couple of weeks, I've never seen anyone take even a single picture of a mustang before and made a shot of circuit racing so blurred to the point where you can see the car perfectly fine but the rest of the image is a complete blur.
Thoughts
This mustang picture caught my eye due to many things. First off, I like how he didn't decide to go with a stand still shot of the mustang and instead, chose to go with a rolling blurred motion shot. To me personally, it gives the mustang an aggressive personality even though the mustang itself already looks aggressive enough; the picture makes it look even more aggressive with the dip on the front end. It also really brings out the speed of the mustang, the mustang in general is a really quick car despite it's body weight but this picture gives you a slight hint that it's fast. To back up my statement, the RTR idea was created and designed by US Drift Champion Vaughn Gittin Jr as his signature and career drift car is of course, the Mustang RTR. He didn't modify the 6 cylinder models but for the eight cylinder models, he added a bunch of performance modifications as well as suspension modifications to make it both handle well through corners and to have quicker acceleration. Now, I like how the sunlight reflects off the side of the car, the brightness of the sunlight really brings out the RTR side emblem and you can actually see the scenery as well, reflecting off of the car's body. If I had the money, I'd definitely purchase one of these cars. You don't even see any of these RTRs running on the street and that makes them very rare. The second picture, I find this shot to be super interesting because you can definitely tell that the photographer did a scanning shot with this but was so accurate that he made most of the BMW's body in full focus while the rest was just a blur along with the background. You can also just barely make out that the BMW was about to hit the apex there on the right of them but if any non car enthusiast were to look at this picture, they'd be like what's this car doing and where is this car? The picture just gives off this sense of mystery but overall, it's an awesome photo.