Reach out to us

Send Message
Thank you! Your submission has been received!
Oops! Something went wrong while submitting the form.
**For inquiries related to your personalized link, please reach out here,
Log in

The Sphere

Overview
Photographing The Sphere in Las Vegas meant hanging from a crane 400 feet above the desert floor in 116-degree heat. This was one of the most complex construction projects in modern history, and capturing it required the same precision the builders brought to the work itself.

The assignment demanded more than a good camera. It demanded trust, physical endurance, and the ability to find composition in active construction zones where conditions changed by the hour.
Type
Architecture , Construction Photography
Location
Las Vegas, NV
Scale gets the attention. Process tells the truth.This is where both come into focus.

Heat changes how you shoot.

At 116 degrees, everything slows down. The camera heats up. Focus gets harder. Timing gets tighter.

You don’t chase shots in those conditions. You anticipate them. Watch the rhythm. Follow the light. Be in position before the moment happens.

There’s always a moment when it all lines up.

Everything aligns for a few seconds. Crew, structure, and light moving as one. There’s no time to adjust or rethink it. You take the shot, and the moment is gone.
After the Dust Settles, most of this work disappears once the project is finished. The process. The people. The complexity behind it. These images hold onto that. A version of The Sphere that only existed for a short window of time.