Shooting a stripper suspended from chains

Edited by Laurence Turcotte Fraser
Second camera: Sael Simard

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Before my Von Wong does Europe tour, I put together a crazy photoshoot with Montreal Based Stripper Suntory to attempt to put together a couple of unique shots of him suspending himself in chains. This was a very challenging shoot to put together as we required a bunch of elements that were not necessarily easy to obtain.

Set Requirements

- A loft with metal beams that we could suspend a person and a couple hundred pounds of weights.
- Some sort of support system
- Large industrial chains

Initially, the original plan was to find some sort of an abandoned building and suspend chains from whatever we found there… I’m quite happy that we decided to go with the safer option of renting a friend’s loft for the afternoon as there would have been no way that we would have managed to drag the chains into an abandoned building (which weigh A TON) or find a safe way to suspend them.

For the industrial chains, Suntory did some research at the gym he was attending to actually got the huge chains used to suspend the massive punching bags and we came across http://www.chainestraction.com/.

We took the time to call them, drive over to see what chains they had available they could lend us. The folks over there were actually quite friendly and gave us a really sweet deal on a 3 day rental on the chains.

Finally, we had to figure out how to have the entire thing hanging from our ceiling so we had a specialist come in, check out the ceiling beams and solder some big chunks of metal together to make this whole thing possible.

I have to admit, the entire experience was quite stressful not quite knowing if our home brewed solution was actually going to work… but it did :)

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Photo: KaleenaJayStudios

Makeup Requirements

From there, we had to figure out how we could transform a very yellow asian man into a silvery statue. This is where Jessica Renahan, a fabulous makeup artist came in with a solution.

She prepared a mysterious concoction by blending Vaseline, acrylic, oil paint, charcoal powder all together to get the effect. Initially, we didn’t get the blends quite right and Suntory was so covered in Vaseline that he was slipping all over the place and the Vaseline had a tendency of clumping up in odd places so we rubbed down the Vaseline as best we could and covered him back up with a whole bunch of charcoal powder that really gave him a proper matte texture.

In addition to the makeup, we had to have Suntory actually dehydrate his entire body to accentuate his muscles even more. Three days before the shoot, Suntory tightly controlled his diet in order to slowly and safely dehydrate himself to increase his muscle definition.

Finder

Finder 2

Lighting.

And last but not least, lighting. I threw my lightstands up as high as they could go. Using my Paul C Buff. extra large softboxes, I could get some pretty decent body coverage… almost 10 feet into the air but that was unfortunately not quite sufficient to get any sort of lighting from the top of my model.

The solution –> Clamping a couple speedlights on the ceiling using a pair of nifty Nasty Clamps

To help increase muscle definition in a photograph, it’s always important to remember that harsh directional lighting is what will make the difference to help increase that body definition.

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Photo: KaleenaJayStudios

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The results?

Vonwong chain stripper white

Vonwong chain stripper black

Screaming stripper vonwong

Note: for those wondering about the black background, we actually suspended a 10 foot wide black backdrop onto the ceiling using a combination of gaffer tape and backdrop stand! Unfortunately no BTS footage was captured of the setup :(

Note#2: Any jewellery designers out there want to transform these photos into works of art? Hit me up!

Credits:

Photo: Benjamin “Von Wong”
Model: Suntory
Makeup: Jessica Renahan
Assist: Kaleena Jay, Nadia Zheng
Video: Sael Simard, Laurence Turcotte Fraser

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How to shoot an Epic Family Portrait

I was asked about a month back by Simon and Chantal to create a crazy family portrait of them. They had seen my work in the past and wanted something equally exciting for themselves so I headed over to their place to figure out what exactly it was that they wanted.

Turns out they have a beautiful blank vertical piece of wall around their house that they absolutely wanted to fill with a huge family print so we toured the house and finally settled on their staircase as the perfect location to begin the family portrait.

The idea was to create something vertical, dynamic, a touch of surrealism while capturing the spirit of the family. In our case it would be Simon, calmly reading his newspaper as Maude juggled laundry, breakfast and kids all at once! (And yes you heard correctly in the video… those eggs are real, we froze them :P )

As with any composite shot, the first step was to make sure we had a well lit background reference image to start off of.

Stairs

From there, we shot Simon who was the most seperated and the easiest to shoot from the action. If you’re studious you’ll notice that the lighting hitting simon was slightly different and the reason we could allow for that was because he is completely separated from the action above. I wanted to be sure that he was well lit so we had a diffused beauty dish coming in from the top along with a Nasty Clamp’ed SB-900 from above.

Simon

 

The next step, was to shoot mom. Of course the most complicated but we also needed to know exactly where she would be to place the kids in the right place so it was the next big step. As you can see in the video, we had to use both a hockey stick, and a broomstick with some fishing line to hang all our products up. Yves did a great job there to be our very own levitation device. As you can notice in the BTS shot, one flash was clamped onto the window to simulate windowlight!

I think the toughest part here was really get Chantal to look like she was convincingly waltzing down the stairs! It took a little bit of balancing and lots of laughs but we were eventually quite happy with this one!

 

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From there, it was time to suspend Xavier from the railings. Of course we had to be sure that he would be safe so we had both parents discretely holding him from the back so we could easily remove him from the shot while Yves stayed underneath as additional security.

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Maude was the final piece of the puzzle and also the youngest so we had a challenging time getting her in just the right position but in the end we got this one that we were quite satisfied with ! Once again, Yves playing security on the bottom to catch Maude should anything happen.

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With all these pieces in place, it was time to play with some photoshop magic and throw in a solid white wall in the background to get rid of the distracting windows in the back, a nice window flare and some contrasts! Voila! Nothing particularly complicated.

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To learn more about how to do this type of editing, simply google “composite” or “masking” and you should come about something quite close!

Enjoy!

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Contessa 2012 – Jazz

One of my entries for the men's category of Contessa 2012 in collaboration with Jazz Hairstylist. Unfortunately we didn't even make it into semi-finals but we all had great fun. I'm also proud to say that these were shot using home-depot fluorescents from my DIY VonStudio

I wish I knew why we didn't make it into the semi finals… was it because our models were too androgynous or the photos not strong enough :\ The one thing I hate about competitions is that you never know so you can't improve. 

Oh well, at least we tried :)

Credits:

Photo: Von Wong
Hair: Jazz HairStylist
Make-up: Jennifer La Maquilleuse Dionne
Retouch: Jessika Chiasson 

Lesson#32 for Creatives – Don’t Overwork Yourself

As creatives, we all know that work somehow always ends up coming all at the same time. We go from having a sweet empty week to becoming swamped with a plethora of contracts, meetings and deadlines. Of course, being the passionate left-brained individuals we are, the excitement of taking on a new exciting project often overtakes the logic of realizing that we may not have enough time to actually accomplish said project which results in… overwork. Unfortunately, when your body does tell you that it’s too much, you end up in an even crappier situation of not being able to deliver and those that care about you now have to make time in their busy schedule to take care of you. Love yourself and love those around you, don’t overwork yourself!

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Renne Robyn, a fellow photographer from Edmonton and I have decided to begin a project together… to put together a bunch of lessons that we’ve learned as creatives and summarize them in a series of exciting photographs. This is an ongoing project and if you have any expriences you’d like to share with us for us to re-enact please let us know!

This photograph actually illustrates Renee’s current real life situation of a mild burn-out so head over to her page and send her some love and positive vibes!!

Hope you guys enjoy this series :)

Ben

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The girl in red

Little teaser on an upcoming series I have. This shot, featuring Manon Verret from Aeternis.net who’s a victorian dress designer.

I was originally supposed to have a conceptual shoot on Sunday but things unfortunatey fell through… rather than waste my day, I crashed a Victorian Party with my portable studio and put together a couple shots with my brand new D800E.

Quick and dirty – if you don’t have the resources to put together a shoot on your own, crash an event with all the awesomeness you need :)

Stay tuned for a BTS video!

Credits:
Models: Manon Verret, Yves Pelletier, ?
Assists: Yves Pelletier, Nadia Zheng, Bianca Lecompte
Video: Alliebee Henna
Retouch Assist: Jessika Chiasson