Digital Camera World

The Art of Seeing

Ben Brain revisits former captures of Tokyo – with some colourful results!

- Benedict Brain www.benedictbr­ain.com Camera: Nikon D810 Lens: Sigma 70-200mm f/2.8 at 150mm Exposure: 1/125 sec at f/5.6, ISO 80

Two issues ago, I shared a circular image of the Tokyo skyline, taken from the top of the Tokyo Skytree in 2016. Several weeks later I was experiment­ing with an iPad Pro and Apple Pencil, and seeing how I could integrate them into my workflow. I grabbed the circular Tokyo image as it was near the top of the Recent Images folder: I simply needed an image to practise painting on with the brush tools. Using the Color Blending Mode, I started colouring in Tokyo as if it was tinted like an old photograph.

Being able to zoom in and out with simple finger gestures was an effortless­ly joyful creative process. It soon became meditative, and I can understand why the colouring-in books for mindfulnes­s that were the craze a few years ago were so popular. It was therapeuti­c. Zooming out to see the enormity of the Tokyo skyline revealed just how much there was to colour in, but it was an enjoyable process, so I decided to continue and commit to colouring in the whole city.

Zooming and panning to colour in buildings, windows, balconies, fire escapes, air-conditioni­ng vents and so on forced me to explore the city and the photograph with a depth I’ve never really experience­d before. It was a really interestin­g way to spend a lot of time with a photograph – and the more time I spent in this ‘space’, the more intimate it became. I started to get to know the city and explore it in an exciting way. It also stimulated my imaginatio­n, and I was soon imagining stories from the little vignettes on my screen.

I decided to take snapshots of these little vignettes and represent them as single images in their own right. This image is one of about 30. These are extreme crops, and I wanted to make A2 prints, so I decided to commit to the rough and ready vibe and exaggerate­d this in Camera Raw: rather than trying to get rid of artifacts and grain, I amplified them. I added more grain, to make the images really gritty, contrastin­g, edgy and garishly colourful.

While they look great as A2 prints, I am planning to make them into a small 32-page ’zine in the spirit of the old fanzines – fullbleed with a homemade gritty aesthetic, which I think will suit the set of pictures and imagined stories.

 ??  ?? A experiment in hand-colouring a Tokyo cityscape on an iPad (above) led Ben into exploring the detail of the city and dreaming up stories about what was happening. For his ‘zoomed-in’ series of photos (left), Ben has exaggerate­d the gritty aesthetic of the image crops.
A experiment in hand-colouring a Tokyo cityscape on an iPad (above) led Ben into exploring the detail of the city and dreaming up stories about what was happening. For his ‘zoomed-in’ series of photos (left), Ben has exaggerate­d the gritty aesthetic of the image crops.
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