There's something I have been trying to understand all weekend, but I just don't seem to find the solution: How does Sarah Moon achieve the blurry/unfocused look of her photographs?
In case you are not familiar with her work, or need some refreshing, here is a small collection: https://jp.pinterest.com/holgerferoudj/sarah-moon/ (alternatively any Google image search would do)
What is confusing me most is that many/most of her images (at least those I am interested in) are not merely blurred by low shutter speeds, but they have very obviously "two silhouettes" of the same person/animal that overlay very closely – at least that's what it looks like.
Shouldn't merely using a slow shutter blur the image more evenly? I guess using slow shutter speed plus a strobe that fires two times in short succession could achieve a similar look, but apparently she is not using strobes (from the little information I could find online). Is this done in post production? Are these double exposures?
If anyone of you has an idea – please let me know. Let's discuss
In case you are not familiar with her work, or need some refreshing, here is a small collection: https://jp.pinterest.com/holgerferoudj/sarah-moon/ (alternatively any Google image search would do)
What is confusing me most is that many/most of her images (at least those I am interested in) are not merely blurred by low shutter speeds, but they have very obviously "two silhouettes" of the same person/animal that overlay very closely – at least that's what it looks like.
Shouldn't merely using a slow shutter blur the image more evenly? I guess using slow shutter speed plus a strobe that fires two times in short succession could achieve a similar look, but apparently she is not using strobes (from the little information I could find online). Is this done in post production? Are these double exposures?
If anyone of you has an idea – please let me know. Let's discuss
