Happy Monday! We hope you enjoyed learning more about the home renovation adventure our tiny blogger pals are embarking on — we can’t wait to see what totally unique and not the least bit bloggeriest projects they come up with!
In the meantime, we’re here with one of our favorite recurring features: the truth behind the photo. We know that you consider us to be awe-inspiring photographers, so every once in awhile we like to get real and show you what goes on behind the scenes for us to get those incredible shots. Sometimes it involves climbing out windows:
And other times strategic cropping and zooming:
Today we figured we’d share some behind-the-scenes shots from the tiny house, which is surprisingly hard to photograph.
When first photographing the house, we took two sets of photos: one with a DSLR meant to get good photos, and one with a camera phone meant to get misleading “this is a real house” photos for our cruel “we bought a house!” post. Neither set was easy to capture. The DSLR photos involved a lot of lying on the ground using a pile of books as a tripod, since Sage’s tripod isn’t short enough to get a floor-level shot:
And the camera phone photos involved a lot of Naomi wedging her hand and phone inside the house to try to take photos as though she was a tiny person touring the house.
Who knew it took so much work to get a photo like this?
Here we are combining techniques — Naomi taking a photo with her phone from inside the house while Sage photographs from outside the house. I guess this is what we look like to those tiny bloggers.
The whole thing involved a lot of fending off the cat, who really wanted to get involved with the project:
Overall, it was more of a workout than one might imagine photographing a dollhouse to be….
In other news, here are a few behind-the-scenes shots from a post we’ll be sharing next week:
In case you’re wondering what the heck is going on here, please take a moment to harken back to that post we did last spring where we gave our dear friend Stephanie (who named Plaster & Disaster) advice on making over her patio. You probably assumed that she thought our advice was terrible and that’s why we never circled back, but it turns out she was actually working on it all along! So there.
On Friday we went over to her place to photograph the fantastic results, and also to photograph ourselves photographing the results. So meta. Here’s one that’s either really artsy or just bad form, depending on how low your standards are.
Next week we’ll share photos of the actual patio transformation, but in the meantime we hope you’ve been totally sated by photos of us taking photos. It’s fascinating, we know.