beamjockey (
beamjockey) wrote2008-10-21 05:28 pm
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Zeusaphone vs. Hasselblad
Here's the picture of me that ran with my article in Symmetry:

This was cropped down.
It came from a photo shoot where typical shots looked more like this:
Back in June, when the magazine needed a portrait, I got a call from Reidar Hahn, our photographer from Fermilab's Visual Media Services.
I figured Reidar was going to pose me in front of an equipment rack or something. Instead he suggested that, since we were both planning to attend a performance by Zeusaphones, he could snap pictures there. Jeff Larson and Steve Ward set up their musical Tesla coils in the parking lot of the Naperville hotel where Duckon 17 was taking place.
Reidar needed to use a combination of flash (to illuminate me in the foreground) with a long exposure time (to capture the arcs of the Zeusaphones). I think it was four seconds. I tried to be still. His remote-controlled flash setup was unhappy in the presence of powerful radiofrequency emitters, but he coped. I'm sure he's faced tougher challenges in a lifetime of superscience photography.
While I was posing, Terry Blake donned his chainmail suit and chicken-wire helmet, becoming "Doctor Zeus." He strode between the coils and began to brandish a pair of fluorescent tubes amid a storm of purple lightning. The crowd loved it. The music buzzed. Reidar snapped away.
So I was recorded for posterity by a Hasselblad with 36 megapixels. There is more detail in this photo than you wanted to see.
Here's my General Technics pin.
Here are half of my eyelashes.
All in all, given that I am quite vain, I am very glad to have these pictures (even if their full glory did not find its way into the magazine). You can never have too many photos of yourself posing in front of Tesla coils, I always say.

This was cropped down.
It came from a photo shoot where typical shots looked more like this:

Back in June, when the magazine needed a portrait, I got a call from Reidar Hahn, our photographer from Fermilab's Visual Media Services.
I figured Reidar was going to pose me in front of an equipment rack or something. Instead he suggested that, since we were both planning to attend a performance by Zeusaphones, he could snap pictures there. Jeff Larson and Steve Ward set up their musical Tesla coils in the parking lot of the Naperville hotel where Duckon 17 was taking place.
Reidar needed to use a combination of flash (to illuminate me in the foreground) with a long exposure time (to capture the arcs of the Zeusaphones). I think it was four seconds. I tried to be still. His remote-controlled flash setup was unhappy in the presence of powerful radiofrequency emitters, but he coped. I'm sure he's faced tougher challenges in a lifetime of superscience photography.
While I was posing, Terry Blake donned his chainmail suit and chicken-wire helmet, becoming "Doctor Zeus." He strode between the coils and began to brandish a pair of fluorescent tubes amid a storm of purple lightning. The crowd loved it. The music buzzed. Reidar snapped away.
So I was recorded for posterity by a Hasselblad with 36 megapixels. There is more detail in this photo than you wanted to see.
Here's my General Technics pin.

Here are half of my eyelashes.

All in all, given that I am quite vain, I am very glad to have these pictures (even if their full glory did not find its way into the magazine). You can never have too many photos of yourself posing in front of Tesla coils, I always say.
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I've always loved posing in unusual settings. To get the Zeusaphone and the halftrack in the same year was a great stroke of luck.
Keep a camera handy. Teach your kids to use it. Take every opportunity to pose in cool locations, on cool vehicles, or with cool people. Don't ignore whimsical or misspelled signage.
Never pass a fiberglass mascot.
If you should happen to go on a steampunk vacation, bring a camera.
(You have the advantage of being somewhat famous. People will take pictures of you and all you have to do is harvest them from the Web.)
For inspiration, examine my Adventures in Our Solar System collection.
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K.
Fiberglass mascots
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It makes a whole lot more sense now.
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I'm wondering which cost more -- the camera or the Zeusaphones.
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I did not know they made cameras with 36 megapixels yet. Hasselblads have always been at the cutting edge, but still, wow.
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Hmmmmm
Re: Hmmmmm
The reflections in my glasses indicate that the parking lot lamps were jumping around quite a bit.
Re: Hmmmmm
Re: Hmmmmm
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Nice photo. Nice detail :-).