When Los Angeles-based writer and travel photographer
“When California started going into lockdown mid-March, I began thinking about how I could stay creative and connected to travel/the outdoors while I stayed home,” Sullivan tells My Modern Met. “I had the idea to create adventure scenes using household objects and ordered a handful of model train figures so that I would have a sense of scale in the images. I kept having ideas for new scenes, so I continued the series.”
The resourceful photographer’s first miniature scene—titled
Each little landscape is planned out in advance and shot with clever lighting so that it looks just like the real outdoors. “I try to get very clear on the idea for a scene before I start to assemble it,” Sullivan reveals. “Once I have an idea and sketch it out, it can take me 10 minutes to an hour to set up a scene, then usually 30-60 minutes to photograph it. Sometimes things don’t go the way I planned, so I just try to stay open to changes and to enjoy the experimentation part of the process.”
Scroll down for some of Sullivan’s photos from her Our Great Indoors series, and then follow her on
When Erin Sullivan was stuck in quarantine, she decided to use food and other household items to create nature photography shots—but in miniature.
Each image from her Our Great Indoors series is carefully composed and photographed to look as though it’s really shot outdoors in nature.
Here’s a peek into Sullivan’s photoshoots:
Erin Sullivan:
My Modern Met granted permission to feature photos by Erin Sullivan.
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