Thursday, December 22, 2005 10:17 AM CST
It's all about the...SPIN, ‘Camera tossing’ latest craze in digital photography and, perhaps, extreme sports
By NATHANIEL WEST, Staff Writer
Like most TV commercials for prescription drugs, this article may be as much disclaimer as anything else.
Thus, you may not want to read this story about the new photographic technique called the “camera toss” if:
-- You sell camera insurance;
-- You lack self-restraint as well as hand-eye coordination;
-- You own an expensive digital camera and you have a tendency to read aloud around your young children;
-- You’re a receiver for the Green Bay Packers.
Fortunately, Stephen Haas meets none of these criteria. A former photo editor for the Daily Eastern News at Eastern Illinois University, he is among a growing group of photographers who have discovered camera tossing as a means of endangering their equipment/faces while taking some pretty cool pictures.
“I like the thrill of not knowing what you’re going to get,” said Haas. “It’s also a pseudo-adrenaline rush, throwing thousands of dollars of gear around.”
It works by opening your digital camera’s shutter (for you non-photographers, that’s the thing which lets in light to make the picture possible) for one to two seconds (an eternity to a camera) just before you spin it into the air, usually at night in front of different light sources. The result: brilliant arcs and patterns of light that border on the abstract.
“Camera tossing is basically what it says — tossing a camera in the air,” said Haas, who now works as a photo technician/staff photographer for the Journal Gazette/Times-Courier.
“It usually helps to catch it, too,” he added.
The camera toss has been pioneered largely by Ryan Gallagher, a photographer from Austin, Texas, who maintains the Web site and blog cameratoss.blogspot .com.
Gallagher is also responsible for thousands of postings on the Yahoo Web site www.flickr.com, where amateur and professional photographers from around the world show off their stuff.
The camera toss blog’s “Guide for Beginners” discusses various methods, although the best results for first-timers can be achieved through experimentation indoors under low-light conditions.
“Remember, it’s not about how high you toss, it’s all about the spin you put on the camera,” according to the blog.
Side note: Like this article, the blog starts with a disclaimer. The blogger “accepts no responsibility for any injuries to photographers or damage to photographic equipment sustained during the tossing process,” it reads.
Meanwhile, the camera toss group on flickr.com already boasts almost 900 members who have posted numerous examples of their work.
“This is a ‘technique’ group, and the technique here is regarded by some as insanity,” according to the group’s administrator, who goes by the alias “clickykbd.”
“For we are the reckless folks on flickr that enjoy the abstract, chance, generative, physical photography that results from throwing our cameras into the air.”
Contact Nathaniel West at nwest@jg-tc.com or 238-6860.
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Throw your camera in the air, give it the right spin, and this id the kind of view you can get: A 7-Up vending machine on the campus of Eastern Illinois University.Stephen Haas/Staff Photographer
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