• The Blog
  • The Photographs
    • Wildlife
    • Landscape
    • Nature
    • Urban
    • Still Life
    • Portrait
    • Sports
  • Photo Index
  • Downloads

SEEING BERG

  • The Blog
  • The Photographs
    • Wildlife
    • Landscape
    • Nature
    • Urban
    • Still Life
    • Portrait
    • Sports
  • Photo Index
  • Downloads
  • Menu
The Glass Museum in Tacoma rises as a stainless steel cone against the clouds in the sky.  Canon EOS 7D EF-S 17-55mm f/2.8 at 55mm f/10 1/4000 ISO 100 -1ev

The Glass Museum in Tacoma rises as a stainless steel cone against the clouds in the sky.  Canon EOS 7D EF-S 17-55mm f/2.8 at 55mm f/10 1/4000 ISO 100 -1ev

The Glass Museum: A Short Photo Essay 3

September 5, 2014

This last image brings the geometry of the cone into focus as well as emphasizing the way that the light plays on on the stainless steel tiles.  The other images tend to emphasize the unity of the tiles but here I underexposed the image and increased the contrast and texture to the point where we can see the different ways that the light interacts with the materials on the cone.  The lighter centre and the darker edges give the image depth and we get a better sense of it’s shape.  The small aperture maintains focus as you look out to the clouds.  As you have seen in the last three images I am always looking for ways to increase contrast so I framed the shot to include the concrete wall and I increased the black point until the shape at the top of the wall almost looked like a hole cut into the cone.

-Russell Berg

www.seeingberg.com

In Urban Tags Urban, Stainless Steel, Cone, Glass Museum, Tacoma, Sky
Comment
The conical shape of The Glass Museum in Tacoma stands in contrast to the old brick warehouse.  Canon EOS 7D EF-S 17-55mm f/2.8 at 42mm f/4.5 1/400 ISO 100

The conical shape of The Glass Museum in Tacoma stands in contrast to the old brick warehouse.  Canon EOS 7D EF-S 17-55mm f/2.8 at 42mm f/4.5 1/400 ISO 100

The Glass Museum: A Short Photo Essay 2

September 1, 2014

The Glass Museum in Tacoma has been built in an older area of Tacoma that is dominated by railway tracks and old warehouses.  This image is taken from the same pedestrian walkway bridge as the previous picture looking off to the south.  I loved the contrast of the modern curving stainless steel with the old square brick warehouse.  And yet our past has something to tell us about our present as the modern building is reflected in the windows of the old building.  The contrast of the steel-blue reflections with the red brick wall increases visual interest and moves the eye around the frame.  I processed this with Nik HDR to bring out the texture and colour of the brick.  The problem that I see with this photo is that I blew out the highlights in the middle of the sky.

-Russell Berg

www.seeingberg.com

In Urban Tags Architecture, Glass Museum, Tacoma
Comment
A sharp triangular wing juts in front of the conical shape of The Glass Museum in Tacoma.  Canon EOS 7D EF-S 17-55mm f/2.8 at 55mm f/4.5 1/1250 ISO 100

A sharp triangular wing juts in front of the conical shape of The Glass Museum in Tacoma.  Canon EOS 7D EF-S 17-55mm f/2.8 at 55mm f/4.5 1/1250 ISO 100

The Glass Museum: A Short Photo Essay 1

August 27, 2014

It may seem odd to have a photo essay about the Museum of Glass in Tacoma, Washington without any pictures of glass but in the next three posts I want to focus on the architecture of the buildings and it’s neighbourhood.  The large conical building that houses the glass blowing gallery/workspace dominates the area with its textures and sharp geometric presence.  The stark rhombus shaped stainless steel patterns contrast with the more organic circular form of the tower itself.  In the first picture above I positioned myself on the bridge walkway so that the triangular wedge would cut across the cone, providing I hope, some visual tension in the image.  I was also please with the way that all of these harsh geometric shapes and textures contrast with the soft shapes and textures of the clouds in  the background.  I pushed the processing of the textures of the clouds in Nik Silver Efex Pro so that they would be more obvious.  The camera in the far right of the frame, and all that it implies provides an interesting counterpoint to the world that is illustrated in the next image in this series.  Available in a few days.

-Russell Berg

www.seeingberg.com

In Urban Tags Architecture, Urban, Stainless Steel, Glass Museum, Tacoma
Comment

We don't see things as they are, we see things as we are.

-Anais Nin

  • Video (7)
  • Sports (13)
  • Wildlife (20)
  • Still Life (23)
  • Landscape (33)
  • Nature (38)
  • Portrait (41)
  • Urban (46)