The thing that keeps this toy photography thing interesting for me is discovery. I try to think of aesthetics I haven’t seen before and, if possible, try to go for something I think could look nice and different. A few years ago I realized I hadn’t seen underwater toy photography anywhere. I googled it and I found one photo shot in a lake somewhere. But this image wasn’t much more than a document of someone’s toy underwater. That’s all I found. Of course this doesn’t mean it doesn’t exist, but it wasn’t exactly mainstream within our niche.
The one exception is Brian McCarty’s underwater toy photographs. I had found his work earlier and it hit me that there were a few underwater photographs he’d taken of some designer toys. McCarty’s photographs were shot in a swimming pool however, I wanted to go to wildwaters. New asthetics.
First Attempt
In the spring of 2015 I had a little extra money so that I could buy a water proof camera. I bought it in a spur of moment a couple of days before we went on a family vacation to Italy. I packed a toy with me that I figured I could test this idea with; an Action Man in scuba gear. That’s all we had ready at hand at home that would work in the sense of being somethig that actually could belong underwater. I had an opportunity to test this on the island of Ponza for about an hour on the afternoon we spent there. I got a few decent frames, not a jackpot, but a promise.
I kicked myself for not realizing it should have been Lego from the get go. That’s how I’d get my diversity from this idea. I mean, we only had one scuba diving Action Man.
Back home I went straight to a local toy shop and bought some Lego City Deep Sea Explorer sets that had just come out, and headed to a lake that was supposed to have clear waters. But, alas, it didn’t! It was a terrible mess off tiny particles that showed up all too prominently in the photos. While my first experiments were in the deep blue waters of the Mediterranean sea, just about perfect circumstances, and I was beginning to realize this wasn’t going to be as easy as I thought. I had to think on this and wait another year because I didn’t have money to just book a trip back to the Med.
Second Attempt
Come summer of 2016, we booked another family trip to Italy, this time there was four days on Ponza included in our trip. We loved our day on Ponza the year before and would have gone there even if I hadn’t had this box of Lego to take with me.
A few weeks before this new trip was going to happen I had an opportunity to go to the Finnish Lapland with a car on some other business. I took a couple of extra days and drove back home on a route I figured I’d find some nice views to photograph. It was a mild success, but the thing I realized up there on the last stretch was that the north had really clear waters. In June, after the winter, there were meltwater pools and brooks everywhere. I decided to go back some day to see what that was about.
In Italy later that summer, I experienced the most amazing underwater views with my little Lego sub. I took hundreds of images, almost all out of focus or otherwise out of whack. See, it’s really, really difficult to check focus on the camera viewscreen when you’re in a straight sunshine, constantly bobbing up and down with the waves under the surface with a snorkel, wetsuit, flippers, scuba mask, camera, the Lego model and all the viewers from the shore a few meters away. But I did get a few good frames and I loved them. I still do!
I had the Action Man with me again too, but he had a different suit. The original light blue had deteriorated and just melted off. What is it with rubber these days anyway? Anything made of that doesn’t last long, it just melts into this sticky goo. Anyway, I found another wetsuit for the Man but it was orange and it didn’t look half as good as the blue one. If anyone had said earlier I’d have toy figure fashion style issues under the mediterranean waves some day, I would have thought they had a screw loose.
The batch of photographs from Italy, summer 2016, are good. I can make giant posters of some of them, they even look nice in B/W. But I know there is a lot more under the waves for me still. I didn’t get much variation because I was repeating the same scene in an attempt to get the hang of at least one set-up instead of shooting all over the place. One thing at a time.
Third Attempt
Summer of 2017 wasn’t good for underwater explorations as we didn’t travel. I did go to the north again however, and I had the toys with me. But the trip wasn’t about photography, it was about showing my son the north. It was the first time he saw the midnight sun, the Arctic Sea and the reindeers, the emptiness (there’s no one up there early June, it’s almost spooky) and all that. Our time together was more important than my photography. But I did manage to find a couple of cool locations for future endeavours. I took a couple of nice images; there were little moments for photography eventually.
Fourth Attempt
Fast forward to this summer. No travels abroad, but I had a week on my own with a camper van in Lapland with photography on the to-do list. I desperately wanted to spend a little time with this idea and actually try to do something with it. I found some wonderful locations and took some nice photos, the northern waters were crystal clear and the worlds under the surface were different in each pool. It’s still a far cry from the potential I see, but I was happy that my ideas working.
There is something about the way the Lego subs look under the waves I find hilarious, maybe a little crazy too. In the water there’s room around the subject; the views seem to go to infinity; there’s this weird depth. The Lego subject doesn’t feel detached from the surroundings even though they don’t touch anything. They still belong there, they feel like they really interact with the element they’re in. I like that feeling very much.
I have no specific color palette to these images. I’ve experimented with different hues of blues but I haven’t found the exact hue that I’d go for each time. The thing is that each of these should be a little different in colour, at least if photographed in different waters. I’ve discovered the waters are unique to each other in terms of color.
Fifth Attempt?
I’m not done with these yet. There are thousands of pools, lakes, brooks, rivers, seas and oceans out there to explore, I just need to travel a little. When I do, I will most certainly take these items with me, any location with clear waters will do. Unless, of course, the unclear waters make a point, then they’ll do as well. This is very different to my studio work, a welcome change of beat with somewhat unpredictable outcome. Exploration, discovery, just the way I like it. Only, for this I have to actually leave home and do some exploration for real too.
Vesa (Avanaut)
I would be so terrified of losing my Lego if I did that. XD Amazing shots though, even that one in the dirty lake.
Losing them is a constant fear, but so far it hasn’t been even close. Floating in the water with them keeps you within safe distance to them, you bob up and down with the same waves. The pools I don’t go in myself don’t have currents, just those little ripples. Only the litte brooks have been a bit unnerving as the little Lego models tumble with the current, the drag is surprisingly strong. So far so good though. 🙂
Fantastic shots and totally agree with your first sentence!
I don’t think my toy photography journey will take me into water (I don’t really enjoy swimming or snorkeling): I’ve only gone so far as setting up in fish tanks. But how wonderful to see you break out of the tundra!
Thank you Anna!
Swimming is certainly not the same everywhere. That is one thing I learned on travels.
Water is a wonderful element to shoot in though, and good locations can be found in surprising places. I was so happy I took the Lego sub on the hike on top of that fjell. Furthermore, fhe pool was right next to the path up and I was lucky to have a quiet moment up there with the camera and the sub; nobody walked by, there were no spectators. Not until the very end, but I was done by then. It was a good day. 🙂
WOW ❤️ what an impressive report! It is so exciting to read how these photos were taken and what obstacles had to be overcome. Thank you very much ? Astrid ??
Thank you Astrid!
There are obstacles just as in any photoshoot set outdoors. Perhaps these are a little different but there’s always something. Thank goodness the snorkeling isn’t one of them. I love that!
Very happy about the underwater realm being suitable for toyphotography. Needs more testing though. 🙂
Awesome shots! I really love all of them! Excellent work! ??
Thank you very much Luigi! It’s a process, I hope it leads somewhere. 🙂