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Double shooter: Photographer captures split-second moments mid-gunshot

One of Alan Sailer's photographs, which he creates by shooting objects with a pellet gun and some well-timed high-speed photography lights.
  Courtesy Alan Sailer

One of Alan Sailer's photographs, which he creates by shooting objects with a pellet gun and some well-timed high-speed photography lights.

Published: October 21, 2009 5:55 p.m.
Last modified: October 31, 2011 10:00 a.m.
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By day, Alan Sailer is an electrical engineer. By night, the 54-year-old shoots roses, bacon and lollipops with a pellet gun in his garage. He takes photos of the objects as the pellet hits them in a darkened room. "The flash shoots at a millionth of a second," he tells Metro. "To capture the picture I have one second."

Sailer has now had over a million hits on his Flickr page. "But I already have a job," he says. "I don't want to become a professional photo­grapher. More money would just mean more stuff around the house." If people insist, he charges a nominal fee, which he donates to a local college.

Besides the pellet guns he uses in his work, another occupational hazard is the studio lights he works with. "I usually need 4-5 shots for each photo. But the real challenge is working with 17,000 volt equipment," he says. Each flash of his lights lasts just 0.5 microseconds. By comparison, a regular camera flash lasts 10,000 times longer.

See more of Sailer’s photos online.

 

Sailer’s victims

Other objects that Sailer has shot:
• Bacon slices
• Lettuce ("Sometimes I think I’d like to include them. But I’ve pro­mised myself to never shoot anything that’s alive," he says of the snails that eat his lettuce)
• Christmas bulbs — sometimes filled with water
• Nuts
• Tomatoes
• Paintball balls
• Crayons
• Dolls
• Cheese



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