Here’s Red Dog Rig 3. It was working near Northgate at the time, just a couple miles north of the U.S. border. I got some of my favourite sunset shots on this rig, including a stellar orange silhouette of the drilling floor. Watch for it in the video slideshow.
Here’s a look at Red Dog Rig 3
28 06 2014Comments : Leave a Comment »
Tags: Commercial Photography, Drilling Rig, Red Dog Drilling
Categories : Commercial Photography, Commercial Video
Pacesetter Directional
23 02 2014Some days when the phone rings, an unexpected call just works out. That was the case with Pacesetter Directional, a Calgary-based directional drilling company. They were looking for current drilling rig pictures in southeast Saskatchewan, and pictures of their tools in action. As it turns out, they were present on several of the rigs I shot in 2013, in particular, Red Dog Drilling 3 and 4. When I do a rig shoot, it can often take 12 or more hours, because I shoot EVERYTHING. You never know what the client might find useful. In this case, it paid off. The drilling company likely won’t have much use for pictures of the downhole tools that were on the racks, but Pacesetter sure did. I was able to supply them with a number of usable pictures from my existing library of their equipment and people in the field.
What was even more interesting was the fact that I knew one of their field hands from when I was a kid. I was taking pictures on the drill floor of Red Dog 3 last fall when a guy in grey coveralls says, “Brian?”
This is not surprising since I’ve been writing for Pipeline News for going nearly six years now. People see me with a camera all over the place. But then he identified himself as Chris. We went to church together as kids, and his older brother was my age. We spent a lot of time together in our younger days, and now, probably 20 years later, he recognized me. Our moms are still best friends, but we’ve all gone our separate ways. Now here Chris was, a directional hand with Pacesetter, and here I was, taking photos, of him, on a drill floor.
It turns out the pictures I got of him turned out beautifully. The lighting was just perfect, the colours jumped out. It was a perfect day.
Several of those photos can now be found on Pacesetter’s website, which was recently revamped with the library of photos I provided. About 3/4 of the photos I found on their site at this time were mine. Two of these are now part of my canvas print collection for sale, and indeed, I coated them yesterday. They should be mounted Monday.
- Here’s Chris.
- This is very close to a new canvas I recently printed.
- A new derrick against the sky is a beautiful thing.
- This is similar to another canvas I’m now producing.
- And here’s Chris again.
Plans are to do more work with Pacesetter later this year when time allows.
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Tags: Commercial Photography, directional drilling company, Pacesetter Directional, Red Dog Drilling
Categories : Commercial Photography
United Centrifuge Video Slideshow
10 02 2014I love the rocking beat to this video slideshow put together for United Centrifuge. You can check out their new web page at http://www.unitedcentrifuge.ca
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Tags: centrifuge, Commercial Photography, drilling, Drilling Rig, United Centrifuge
Categories : Commercial Photography
Trimount Developments Duplex Virtual Tour
3 11 2013This is a virtual tour I recently completed for Trimount Developments. It’s their duplex show home in Estevan’s Dominion Heights.
Click here to be taken to the virtual tour.
Click here to be taken to the gallery.
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Tags: Commercial Photography, Estevan photographer, Real Estate, Trimount Developments, virtual tour
Categories : Commercial Photography, Real Estate, Virtual Tour
Old Photo Restoration
27 09 2013About once a year or so I get asked to restore an old photo(s). These are typically precious family heirlooms, with only one copy. One was a very large, extremely high resolution 8×20 print. They often have scratches, folds, discoloration, fading, and sometimes even parts (like people’s heads!) missing. In this case the set shown at the beginning of this video were third or fourth generation reproductions, with film negatives or prints only 1.5 inches square. I was able to print them 13×16 for 9×12 canvases. Check out the video. The gallery is here: http://galleries.zinchuk.ca/Retouch/Marg-Neitling/
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Tags: Commercial Photography, Estevan photographer, Photo restoration
Categories : Uncategorized
Gilliss Oil Tools: I Need a Video
27 03 2013The call was an interesting one, to say the least. The client needed a brochure for his product, and a video, and all of this had to happen pretty quickly. He was out of the country and would be for several months. Not only would he be out of the country, but soon he would be on another continent! On top of that, he wanted photos for use for an updated web page, and his web page designer was on a third continent, on the other side of the planet. In the meantime, I had holidays coming up soon and I, too, would be out of the country. Would I be able to help him out, and get it done before either of us was on an airplane?
The answer was “Yes.”
It was a big challenge because this would be my first commercial video project.
The company was Gilliss Oil Tools, and the project is for the “Bulldog Clamp.” It’s a mechanical clamp for picking up oilfield tubulars on service or drilling rigs. It sees a lot of use with service rigs. Instead of wrapping a sling around a pipe and then unwrapping it, the clamp grabs on, and then is manually released. It has a safety lock to ensure it will not let go unintentionally. Some people who don’t have this tool actually lift these very heavy pipes by hand.
All-in-all, it’s a pretty useful tool. From the video editing work, I found it takes about 15 seconds to unlock it, move it to the next pipe, and engage it again.
The photography part was relatively straight forward. I picked up for different sizes of models and brought them home. My kitchen table became a studio, with a white paper backdrop. I also did some tabletop video work, showing how the tool works. After, oh, about 20 takes, including several slow motion takes, I was satisfied with the in-house work.
The next stage was to line up a service rig to visit and film. Dean Gilliss’ son, Logan, did the leg work, and came out with me that day. The conditions worked out very well. It wasn’t too cold, and the cloudy day made for nice soft lighting.
Finally, I went to the plant in Estevan, Axis Services Inc, where they are manufactured and got still and video media there.
The brochure was printed at Del’s Commercial Printing in Estevan. The final result looked amazing.
The excellent website design was done by Tareina Hunt of Nut-Nae Art Websites & Graphics. She has done a substantial number of websites for local businesses and organizations. I recently worked with her on the Captive Oilfield Rentals website, providing photography and a virtual tour. However, during this project Tareina was in the Philippines, 10 time zones away. She used the still photos for the web photo gallery, and included a PDF of the brochure to make it printable anywhere. The focal point of the web design was the video.
I used three video cameras in the shoot. The Nikon D4 did the bulk of the work. I also used two point of view cameras. The GoPro was positioned in several odd angle using the heavy-duty magnetic mount I made for it. I even put it on the clamp itself to get a unique point of view.
The music is a very catchy, manly tune that really drove the video editing process. The clips are timed so that actions occur in time with the beat. The slow-motion occurs during the slow part of the song, and the quick slideshow during the speedy part. I especially like the end, where the welder strikes an arc just as the music crescendos at 4:13. I tried to use a fast-cut editting feel throughout. The video slideshow of still photos, which worked as the underlay for the whole video, is specially done to be in perfect timing with the music. This allowed for very sharp effects for the opening and closing titles.
As someone who has worked with still photography for, well, ever, I have to say, in this case, the video presentation really makes the product shine. Seeing it work immediately shows the potential customers how effective the product is. In a flash, they get it. You see, one, you want one.
The testimony by Southern Range Rig 8 driller Clint Law was totally unscripted. I simply asked him what the Bulldog Clamp is and why they used it.
The video was hosted on YouTube. The choice of YouTube was very deliberate. It is universally accessible. It means the web host does not have to deal with different media players or transmitting large video files. It was shot in high definition, and can be viewed in 720p. YouTube is also important for the client because it will allow him to track the analytics very closely to monitor the effectiveness of the campaign. I set up a YouTube channel for the client to make all this happen. Similarly, I set up a Google Analytics account for the client to track the performance of the revamped website.
The final result can be seen here.
I spent my week in Vegas attending WPPI 2013 – Wedding and Portrait Photographers International. There I was able to pick up an number of tools and resources that will improve future video work, including professional audio recording equipment meant for work in outdoor conditions. A professional camcorder is in the works, too.
For my first time out, I have to say I am very happy with the results. Already this video has led to two other similar projects planned for this spring. Watch from them here.
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Tags: bulldog clamp, Commercial Photography, commercial video, Gilliss Oil Tools, Nut-Nae, youtube
Categories : Commercial Photography, Commercial Video
Canadian Advanced ESP Dual HPS Skid
10 10 2012
This shoot was a follow up of one I did earlier this year for Canadian Advanced ESP. They make electric submersible pumps as well as horizontal pumps for water handling. (Click here or on the photo above to be taken to the gallery)
The assignment this past spring was to do a virtual tour of their shop in Estevan, as well as a single HPS skid package built by Brent Gedak Welding, also of Estevan. They wanted something to show at the Global Petroleum Show in Calgary in June. The virtual tour was loaded onto a laptop, I believe, for display in their booth.
Later this summer they asked for a follow up shoot of a dual HPS skid package. Apparently they liked the first shoot enough to follow up with a second. It took a while to get all the ducks in a row, but this is the result.
I did some exterior shots in the daylight during the golden hour. But the main focus is the interior. I have to say that the folks at Brent Gedak Welding and Canadian Advanced ESP had it spotless when I arrived. The only dust in the building was what came in on my boots!
The trouble with shooting during the daylight was the mixed lighting and lack of sharp contrast. I found from the previous shoot that using strobe lights at night made the red really jump out and provided consistent colour and sharp contrast. As a result, I did most of this shoot at night, after sundown. I spent several hours crawling over the skid, getting every conceivable angle I could think of.
The centrepiece of this shoot are the three 360 degree panoramas which can be found at www.zinchuk.ca/CAESPDUAL/. They were added to the initial tour under the headings “Dual HPS 1 2 and 3.”
The first is shot from the centre of the skid, the others at each end. There are numerous popup photos showing details or alternate angles of items like valves, piping and motors.
The addition of the three scenes to the original tour meant some editing of the spooling, test bench and HPS skid scenes to provide links to the new scenes.
Virtual tours like this are rapidly becoming a specialty of mine, and they seem to be in high demand. I use a $1000 tripod head, nodal rail and L-bracket setup to ensure I have the millimetre-accuracy needed for it all to line up. The result is 22 or so 16 megapixel photos all merged into one. That is then reduced in size to be manageable for web viewing. The result it a fully panable and zoomable virtual tour that you can show a client anywhere using the iPhone in your pocket.
The highlight was when I dropped off the thumb drives with the final product. Apparently they were “giddy in Edmonton” when they saw it. It made my day.
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Tags: Canadian Advanced ESP, Commercial Photography, virtual tour
Categories : Commercial Photography
Betts Drilling Rig 1 Complete
12 02 2012
It took two visits to the field, several visits to the rig up site in Estevan, and well over 30 hours of editting, but I think the results are worth it. This is Betts Drilling Ltd. Rig 1, the first of two rigs this new drilling company has put together in short order. It went to work in southeast Saskatchewan on Nov. 29. Rig 2 is just about complete, and is expected to go to work this week.
The first day I was there just after sun-up, but there was no real nice sunrise to shoot. I stayed the entire day to get the sunset, only to find it, too, was not too great. That necessitated a second trip to the rig at the tail end of my day when I was in the area later in the week. I got there literally three minutes before the sun went down, and got the shots I wanted.
In this shoot I tried to get the scenic nature of the skies, since there aren’t many mountains near where they are drilling. I also focused a lot on the details, from the mud leaping up in little balls on the shaker, to the effort the roughnecks put into removed drill pipe caps.
I also did three 360 degree panoramas, one inside the doghouse, one on the drill floor, and one on the roof of the doghouse. Unfortunately the hoarding around the drill floor limited the view, but perhaps that can be revisitted in the future. These panoramas were the result of using the new Acratech GP ballhead and nodal rail, combined with a Really Right Stuff L-Bracket for the D700. It’s about $1,000 of kit, but I think the results speak for themselves. Stitching of something like 18 photos for each was done in Photoshop, with final adjustment in Lightroom.
Click on the photo to be taken to the gallery. You will be able to see these photos later on Betts Drilling’s website.
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Tags: 360 panorama, Betts Drilling, Commercial Photography, drilling, Drilling Rig, new drilling rig, pano, southeast Saskatchewan
Categories : Commercial Photography
























