Pedestrian’s Foot

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cliveh

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If I wanted to recreate the photograph taken by Otto Steinert in 1950 called Pedestrian’s Foot, can anyone suggest how it could be done?

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Sirius Glass

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Shoot from above.
Long exposure.
Show the model the photograph of what you want.
Tell the model to not move his foot but move everything else.
 
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cliveh

cliveh

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I'm not so sure it would be that easy to do with the model moving everything but their foot on a long exposure, or with combination printing. I think it was a false foot/leg with a slightly longer trouser leg flapping around in the wind.
 

ic-racer

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One-half second exposure should work for a subject with a brisk walking pace. Time the shutter opening with the planting of the foot on the ground. Dark clothing and a light background will complete the effect.
 
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cliveh

cliveh

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One-half second exposure should work for a subject with a brisk walking pace. Time the shutter opening with the planting of the foot on the ground. Dark clothing and a light background will complete the effect.

Would you like to do this and post your result, as I don't think it would work.
 

dpurdy

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Looks like there was another pedestrian with a frozen foot on the bottom left that he dodged out in printing.
 

David A. Goldfarb

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I was thinking it might be a shutter slit effect.
 

Sirius Glass

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Looks like there was another pedestrian with a frozen foot on the bottom left that he dodged out in printing.

No that is just a doppelganger!
 

Sirius Glass

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I'm not so sure it would be that easy to do with the model moving everything but their foot on a long exposure, or with combination printing. I think it was a false foot/leg with a slightly longer trouser leg flapping around in the wind.

Do you have a spare foot and leg laying around?

What makes the photograph work is that the blur of the upper body is believable. A composite photograph is often not believable; neither are contrivances like a false body part.
 
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cliveh

cliveh

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Do you have a spare foot and leg laying around?

What makes the photograph work is that the blur of the upper body is believable. A composite photograph is often not believable; neither are contrivances like a false body part.

So what is your solution?
 

ic-racer

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Would you like to do this and post your result, as I don't think it would work.




I suspect the person in the Steinert photogaph was running, in which case there is no time when both feet are on the ground:
V8000065-Muybridge_photo_sequence_of_a_running_man-SPL.jpg
I don't have any of my own work like that scanned for posting, but it would look something like this:
running+blur.jpg
 
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cliveh

cliveh

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I don't have any of my own work like that scanned for posting, but it would look something like this. One-second exposure:
View attachment 55699
However, those folks are just walking and spend too much time with both feet on the ground.
I suspect the person in the Steinert photogaph was running, in which case there is no time when both feet are on the ground:
View attachment 55700

No, the whole of the upper leg and body is missing, nothing like the image you post.
 

Bill Burk

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I'd like to believe it was a single frame, but it seems the simplest explanation is a camera on tripod for several frames. On one frame there is a blurred pedestrian, whole body... but it is superimposed through a vignette as a combination print onto a blank sidewalk frame.
 
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cliveh

cliveh

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I'd like to believe it was a single frame, but it seems the simplest explanation is a camera on tripod for several frames. On one frame there is a blurred pedestrian, whole body... but it is superimposed through a vignette as a combination print onto a blank sidewalk frame.

But can you replicate it?
 

Sirius Glass

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But can you do it?

A qualified maybe with a few tries, but more likely it would require experimentation and many trials to do it right. I have to get back to reproducing elliptical wheels on cars with my Graflex.
 
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