Turning fireworks into abstract wallpapers

Turning fireworks into abstract wallpapers

‌‌I was about to give up. We had been walking for an hour in the rain trying to find a spot to watch the fireworks. The crowd was unlike anything I've seen in Tokyo.

We finally found a good spot, five minutes after the fireworks had started. Unfortunately, it turned out to be quite underwhelming. I did not want all this walk in the rain to go to waste so I pulled out my camera.

Embracing uncertainty

The usual way of photographing fireworks is to use a tripod to make long exposures, which photographers around us thoughtfully brought with them.

To compensate for the lack of stabilisation, I initially tried shooting with a very high shutter speed, freezing the moment. The results were quite bland — just pictures of fireworks.

I thought to myself, what if I embraced this limitation? Instead of keeping the camera stable on a tripod, I can try moving the camera around and see the kind of results I get.

And it was fun! I am glad I did not go home.

The wrist tilt

The method I used here is focusing on the edge of the fireworks and quickly panning away from it. In order to get a straight line, I tilted my wrist rather than my entire arm.

yellow summer fireworks in tokyo, long exposure and abstract photography
red summer fireworks in tokyo, long exposure and abstract photography
orange summer fireworks in tokyo, long exposure and abstract photography
orange summer fireworks in tokyo, long exposure and abstract photography, sci-fi glow

The brush strokes

Not sure how I got those, but they might be my favorites.

green summer fireworks in tokyo, long exposure and abstract photography
yellow summer fireworks in tokyo, long exposure and abstract photography
summer fireworks in tokyo, long exposure and abstract photography

The curvy tilt

After trying to get straight lines, I wondered how curving the trajectory during the tilt would look like. I ended up with things that look like wheat crops or confetti ribbons.

summer fireworks in tokyo, long exposure and abstract photography
summer fireworks in tokyo, long exposure and abstract photography
summer fireworks in tokyo, long exposure and abstract photography

These experiments ended up saving the evening for me. It was a good reminder to get out there.

I particulary love the glow between the fireworks. This results in an organic feel that would be hard to get on a computer. Despite being visually simple, there is an organic depth that adds just the right amount of complexity to balance the picture.

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fireworks wallpapers

Take care!

Grégoire

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