This moment wasn’t planned at all.
I was photographing a tiny gecko through a Petri dish taped to a glass door, using two speedlights on each side.
Suddenly, this cat showed up out of nowhere — completely fascinated by the little creature on the other side of the glass.
The gecko is safe.
The cat is safe.
And I got this unexpected shot that became the highlight of the whole session.
Curious cat looking at a lizard
Photo by Felix Tchvertkin
Make a statement in any room with this framed poster, printed on thick matte paper
This is another shot that was some time in the making. For about a week, I had my eyes on a group of these Red Trillium growing along the top of a slope at the edge of an old pine plantation. I knew what I wanted this shot to look like. I imagined the sky, glowing in bright sunset colours, seen through the pines with the flower in the foreground.
On a first try, for the sky to get colours in it the ambient light was too low and the flower and foreground were too dark. I tried increasing the exposure to get the flower bright enough but the shutter speed was too low so that the slightest puff of wind blurred the flower.
On another evening, I tried light painting the flower with an LED headlamp. Still this resulted in a fuzzy image and a washed out sky. Between tries there were some evening where the sky was cloudy and I would not have gotten the colours I wanted in the sky.
The evening I got this shot, the sky had finally cleared and I had brought a speedlight and strap-on diffuser. It was also the first evening where mosquitoes were out in mass. Lucky me with no bug dope; they ate me alive! The image was done in one shot at two seconds. The strobe was hand held off camera and fired manually with the output turned down to balance the sky.
Camera: Pentax K-3
Lens: Tamron SP 10-24mm f/3.5 DI II
22mm / ƒ/32 / 2.0s / ISO 100