Steve Peat is the UK's best known mountain biker but he has his own heroes; and that was the title of the feature from which this set of images evolved - Heroes for Heroes.  
The commission brief was to take a shot of Peaty with a picture of his hero. Anyways, lucky for me Steve decided his hero is former champion motocross and supercross racer Jeremy McGrath; lucky because I had already shot Mc Grath and only had to print of an inkjet and pop in it my bag. We decided an outhouse of Steve's Sheffield farmhouse would make the best location. As you see from the first series, I shot wide -12-24mm lens-from a ladder with Steve thrusting the print up at the camera. We laid out a racer jersey McGrath had given Steve, along with Steve's Santa Cruz XC bike and I left the other clutter in the frame to make it busy. (it is natural for people to want to clear up and make everything neat when a photographer is coming when very often we want the compete reverse!).
The following frames involved propping the bike up and fixing the print to the frame with masking type whilst adopted the various poses as instructed, and shooting with a 17-55mm lens at the wider end.  The last frames are more conventional mid length to close ups which I thought the magazine would want for its files for use at a later date. I lit the images with my faithful old Q-Flash T2 heads which are still going strong after many a fall, and Pocket Wizard Plus II radio slaves. For the record,magazine ran one of the first images. And often that is the case.
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Steve Peat is the UK's best known mountain biker but he has his own heroes; and that was the title of the feature from which this set of images evolved - Heroes for Heroes. The commission brief was to take a shot of Peaty with a picture of his hero. Anyways, lucky for me Steve decided his hero is former champion motocross and supercross racer Jeremy McGrath; lucky because I had already shot Mc Grath and only had to print of an inkjet and pop in it my bag. We decided an outhouse of Steve's Sheffield farmhouse would make the best location. As you see from the first series, I shot wide -12-24mm lens-from a ladder with Steve thrusting the print up at the camera. We laid out a racer jersey McGrath had given Steve, along with Steve's Santa Cruz XC bike and I left the other clutter in the frame to make it busy. (it is natural for people to want to clear up and make everything neat when a photographer is coming when very often we want the compete reverse!). The following frames involved propping the bike up and fixing the print to the frame with masking type whilst adopted the various poses as instructed, and shooting with a 17-55mm lens at the wider end. The last frames are more conventional mid length to close ups which I thought the magazine would want for its files for use at a later date. I lit the images with my faithful old Q-Flash T2 heads which are still going strong after many a fall, and Pocket Wizard Plus II radio slaves. For the record,magazine ran one of the first images. And often that is the case.
3 Comments
  • 8 0
 Holy description Batman! Batman
  • 2 0
 Sick Geoff,

You may want to copy the description and post it into a blog. if you go to your profile and click on Blog, you should see a link saying write new blog. to add this picture you'll need to enter the image number (which is 7623275) then add the text and voilĂ  the job is a good one. once you have saved it as a draft you'll then want to click publish so every one can see it. then if you want it on the front page you'll have to click submit to pb editors.

Would make a sick read for the amateurs on here
  • 1 0
 Yea I love reading about set ups, so useful for thinking about my own photos!







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