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Photo courtesy of Golf Digest © Tiger Woods Foundation |
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Tiger Woods rarely gets boxed
in, unless you’re talking about setting up his Golf Digest January
cover with the five most coveted trophies in golf.
Photographer Dom Furore built
a floor-to-ceiling white box approximately 10’ wide by 9’ high by 15’
long with seamless background paper, a white floor, and a white fabric
overhead to ensure that all of the gleaming silver trophies did not create
any unwanted reflections. When light fell off the all-white decor, Furore
explained, it gave a smooth gradation from white to gray.
Similar to the overheads used
on movie sets, this giant white cube was built to cage one very oft-photographed
Woods. Only Furore could see him through the tiny hole he cut in the paper
in front of the camera. Though the white room took hours to assemble,
Woods and his trophies presented other obstacles.
Furore had to figure out where
to place the trophies--not to mention that Woods put his paws around each
of them--for the perfect perspective. He bought bar stools and patio blocks
and went to work with Golf Digest’s Art Director Nick DiDio.
While it took 121/2 hours to
set up the temporary photo studio at Isleworth Country Club in Orlando,
Furore took just 10 minutes of Woods’ clock-like schedule the next morning--and
that included shooting other VIPs. An armed security guard stayed overnight
to ensure that no one would disturb the makeshift studio, or the Masters,
US Open, British Open, US Amateur, and PGA Championship trophies (from
left to right) in the photo.
"We wanted the focus to be
Tiger and his trophies, not, ’Gee, they sure did dress funny back then,"
said Bev Norwood, a vice president at IMG. Part soothsayer and fully on
the Woods trail, Norwood initiated discussions of re-creating the 1930
classic photo of golf legend Bobby Jones posing with his four major championship
trophies before Woods won the US Open and the British Open last summer
to complete golf’s coveted Grand Slam.
The classic look of the Jones’
photo (Jack Nicklaus also posed with his four major trophies in the 1970s)
set tight parameters for Furore, who said that "it left little room to
be creative. But if nothing else I wanted to make sure that it was perfectly
lit." Two twists made the shot challenging.
Furore used a hairlight (Chimera
Pro 14x56") and a 40° fabric grid to separate Woods from the custom-made,
dark charcoal Tanner background. And he lit the midnight-blue velvet draped
under the trophies with a Plume Wafer Strip 100.
"I’m good at the shiny stuff,"
says Furore, who has shot golf clubs for 15 years. "The velvet was really
the tricky part."
Two Plume 200 wafers stacked
together on the left foreground served as the main light, and Furore used
two identical units just to the right of the camera as his fill light.
He shot with a Hasselblad 503CW
with a 120mm f/4 Macro-Planar lens, Gitzo tripod and Arca-Swiss ball tripod
head at 1/125 sec at f/8. He used Fujichrome Astia 120 film, ISO 100 with
normal processing.
Sales from prints of the photo
will benefit the Tiger Woods Foundation. Framed and matted prints are
available exclusively from Famous Photography Inc., www.famousphotography.com
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