In this book, Irakly Shanidze reveals the smoke and mirrors that the best photographers use to surprise, entertain, and inspire viewers. He explains that the individual features of photographer's perception and technical limitations of his equipment make him do things that may eventually make a picture look very different from how a viewer would see the same scene with a naked eye and can lead to a ruined picture. Conversely, photographers who understand these phenomena can use the aforementioned "constraints" to deliberately adjust the level of truthfulness in their pictures.
In each beautifully illustrated chapter, Shanidze discloses the photographic tools that enterprising
photographers can use to create visual deception (e.g., to create a sense of dimension, create day-for-night effects, establish mood, simulate candid photographs, and generally suspend disbelief--without the time-consuming post-processing!). In doing so, he describes the image objectives (in other words, defines the image concepts) and introduces the tools needed to achieve them--whether a lens of a certain focal length, a light of a specific wattage, or a given shutter speed. He also deconstructs some of his favorite images to show readers how he was able to create a chiseled deception of his own.
Armed with this book, photographers will learn to truly take the reins in their photographic pursuits and deliver supercharged, iconic, storytelling images.
"The democratic digital age has ushered in a cacophony of imagery that threatens the very individuality it exists to reveal. At no other time that I can recall has photography been more in need of disrupters willing to share their unique cache of creativity and techniques in a book like this. Photography needs more sorcerers and alchemists like Irakly Shanidze." --Marc Andrew Williams (Advertising Executive, Creative Director of Y&R; Visiting Professor at Center for Creative Studies; Photographer/Owner of Fotografz, LLC; Fine Art Painter)