
Don't you hate it when you go to the gym and the machines you want are all being used... by the same guy? Learn to share, douchebro :P
The lion dedicated to his workout is
coutzy This was a fun clone photo done at Furry Down Under 2016 in the hotel's gym. It was actually one of the easiest ones I've done so far, partly because I wasn't in suit myself and able to concentrate entirely on the camera and the scene. The shooting was done in less than 20 minutes with almost no difficulty. The editing was a lot faster too, because there was so many downlights in the room that the shadows are minimal and directly below each clone, making them much easier to work with than ones I've done in the past.
Shot with a Sigma 10-20mm f3.5 lens on a Canon 7D. Widest lens I've got, the lens I use when I absolutely need the entire room in the shot. Wouldn't even begin to know how to light this scene with flashes, so I just used an ISO of 1600 (as high as I go, I hate grain) with f6.3 (a necessary sacrifice to keep the room in focus no matter the depth) and 1/8th of a second, lowest I could go without getting motion blur.
Fun trivia fact: There's a vampire in this photo! See if you can spot which one of these lions isn't among the living...
The lion dedicated to his workout is

Shot with a Sigma 10-20mm f3.5 lens on a Canon 7D. Widest lens I've got, the lens I use when I absolutely need the entire room in the shot. Wouldn't even begin to know how to light this scene with flashes, so I just used an ISO of 1600 (as high as I go, I hate grain) with f6.3 (a necessary sacrifice to keep the room in focus no matter the depth) and 1/8th of a second, lowest I could go without getting motion blur.
Fun trivia fact: There's a vampire in this photo! See if you can spot which one of these lions isn't among the living...
Category Photography / Fursuit
Species Lion
Size 1280 x 661px
File Size 226.4 kB
You use a camera on a tripod to take photos of a person doing various things around a room, and edit them all together. It's critical that the camera doesn't move at all between shots.
Search for clone photography or "multiplicity" some call it, and you should find some tutorials. You'll need something like SAI painttool or photoshop to pull it off.
Search for clone photography or "multiplicity" some call it, and you should find some tutorials. You'll need something like SAI painttool or photoshop to pull it off.
Well technically it's a clone photo, I don't know if there's a more official name but that's what I call them. A timelapse shows a progression of time, through either a long series of photos at long intervals or speeded up video. This is just one photo, albeit one made of several photos all crammed together. If I'd tried to do this in a timelapse style it'd be impossible, keeping the shutter open that long would have overexposed it to just white.
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