December 11, 2013 at 12:32 pm

These Might Be the Slowest High-Speed Images Ever Captured

by twistedsifter

slowest high speed photos ever fabian oefner (1)

Photograph by FABIAN OEFNER
Website | Behance | 500px
Courtesy of the MB&F M.A.D Gallery

 

What looks to be an ‘exploded view‘ of a 1954 Mercedes-Benz 300 SLR taken at a microsecond in time, is actually a meticulous and painstakingly crafted artificial moment by artist and photographer Fabian Oefner.

In Disintegrating, Fabian sketches where the individual pieces will go. He then takes apart a model car piece by piece; from the body shell right down to the minuscule screws. Each car contains hundreds of components.

 

slowest high speed photos ever fabian oefner (9)

Photograph by FABIAN OEFNER
Website | Behance | 500px
Courtesy of the MB&F M.A.D Gallery

 

Oefner then places each piece individually with the aid of fine needles and pieces of string. After meticulously working out the angle of each shot and establishing the right lighting, he photographs the components. It takes thousands of photographs to create each image in the series.

 

slowest high speed photos ever fabian oefner (8)

Photograph by FABIAN OEFNER
Website | Behance | 500px
Courtesy of the MB&F M.A.D Gallery

 

The individual photos are then blended together in post-production to create a single image. With the wheels acting as a reference point, each part is masked in Photoshop and then cut and pasted into the final image.

 

Jaguar E-Type 1961

slowest high speed photos ever fabian oefner (3)

Photograph by FABIAN OEFNER
Website | Behance | 500px
Courtesy of the MB&F M.A.D Gallery

 

slowest high speed photos ever fabian oefner (6)

Photograph by FABIAN OEFNER
Website | Behance | 500px
Courtesy of the MB&F M.A.D Gallery

 

“These are possibly the ‘slowest high-speed’ images ever captured. It took almost two months to create an image that looks as if it was captured in a fraction of a second. The whole disassembly in itself took more than a day for each car due to the complexity of the models. But that’s a bit of a boy thing. There’s an enjoyment in the analysis, discovering something by taking it apart, like peeling an onion.” – Fabian Oefner

 

slowest high speed photos ever fabian oefner (5)

Photograph by FABIAN OEFNER
Website | Behance | 500px
Courtesy of the MB&F M.A.D Gallery

 

slowest high speed photos ever fabian oefner (7)

Photograph by FABIAN OEFNER
Website | Behance | 500px
Courtesy of the MB&F M.A.D Gallery

 

“What you see in these images, is a moment that never existed in real life. What looks like a car falling apart is in fact a moment in time that has been created artificially by blending hundreds of individual images together. There is a unique pleasure about artificially building a moment… Freezing a moment in time is stupefying.” – Fabian Oefner

 

slowest high speed photos ever fabian oefner (4)

Photograph by FABIAN OEFNER
Website | Behance | 500px
Courtesy of the MB&F M.A.D Gallery

 

Ferrari 330 P4 1967

slowest high speed photos ever fabian oefner (2)

Photograph by FABIAN OEFNER
Website | Behance | 500px
Courtesy of the MB&F M.A.D Gallery

 

Limited editions of 25 prints per image (120 cm X 70 cm) are available through the MB&F M.A.D Gallery (Price: CHF 1’900. including VAT). Located in Geneva, Switzerland, The MB&F M.A.D.Gallery is a place of kinetic art where horological machines and mechanical art devices reign supreme.

 

 

 

 

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