Dean Oros Photography + Design | Thunder Bay, ON

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  • Reflective detail of a crystal chandelier.
    House and Home IMG_6898 - Version 2.tif
  • Bathroom faucet and sink.
    House and Home IMG_6950.tif
  • Interior of elegant, upscale living room.
    House and Home P1010058.tif
  • Window-lined restroom with soaker tub.
    House and Home IMG_6920.tif
  • House and home: interior design.
    IMG_6880 - Version 3
  • Upscale, residential den, sunroom.
    IMG_P1010058.tif
  • Looking down at shoes tossed on carpeted front foyer, which leads up wood stairs and banister to second floor of home. Sunshine streams in through front door windows.
    House and Home IMG_7325.tif
  • Shake it girl! Sky's Band rocked the house and kept everyone dancing throughout the evening.
    _MG_6380.jpg
  • Speed Bump Sign Beside House
    IMG_9447
  • Nature is very accommodating, as shown in this night-time wintery residential street photograph captured in Toronto. Tree branches, over-hanging electrical wires, automobiles and sidewalks look equally beautiful covered in snow.<br />
<br />
Northwestern Ontario is one part of the province filled with an abundance of nature. During winter, scenes of beautiful, snow-covered trees reaching for the sky are readily accessible in nearby forests untouched by man.<br />
<br />
I’ve found the beauty of nature’s winter co-existing amongst the hustle and bustle of big-city life to be more difficult to capture. Heading down to Southwestern Ontario’s Toronto, such beauty is there if you look for it.
    Lifestyle IMG_8702.tif
  • A few final touches before the bride becomes a wife.
    _MG_5479 - Version 3 - Version 2 - V...jpg
  • The grande finale to Daphina and Charles' fox trot.
    _MG_6340.jpg
  • The reception hall was gorgeous. High ceilings, lots of history. The lighting throughout the evening was very dim (and romantic!). I don't tend to use additional lighting sources as it would be too much of a distraction and would ruin the ambiance of the event.
    _MG_6154.jpg
  • Captured during the bridal party portraits. Very cute!
    _MG_5930.jpg
  • I loved the ceiling work and wanted to incorporate it into a kissing image.
    _MG_5782.jpg
  • The beautiful bride enjoys a quiet moment.
    _MG_5451.jpg
  • Daphina's wedding gown. Captured minutes before she put it on to walk down the aisle.
    _MG_5338 - Version 3 - Version 2.jpg
  • Lake Ontario, Toronto Beaches, (Canada).
    Winter _MG_6044.tif
  • Captured during the bridal party portraits. Very cute!
    Cheek kisses from bridesmaids to bri...jpg
  • The bride's wedding shoes, resting on a leather chair, waiting for her to slip her feet into them.
    _MG_5349.jpg
  • This is the biggest group shot I've done to date with about 170 people. Many thanks to everyone who helped wrangle the guests. A special thanks to Amalia Ward, the wedding planner who made sure the chair I was standing on while capturing this image didn't slip from under my feet.
    _MG_5961.jpg
  • Another playful image. We managed this shot with only a few seconds to spare as we were on a very tight shooting schedule. I get such a kick creating images like this - it relects the personality of the couple to a tee.
    _MG_5940.jpg
  • We had a great deal of fun arranging this playful shot. Creating this type of image on a couple's special day is only possible with lots of mutual trust.
    _MG_5855.jpg
  • Grandma Au, 94 years old, flew in from Hong Kong for the wedding. I love her face. I wish she spoke English: I would've liked to speak with her. We did the best we could with lots of smiles and gestures. Captured during the tea ceremony.
    _MG_4867.jpg
  • Charles' red socks match Daphina's traditional dress. Captured during family formals after the tea ceremony.
    _MG_5209.jpg
  • Countryside village in Hungary.
    Hungary_DSCN0946.tif
  • Teac Electronics: adult lifestyle.
    Lifestyle _IMG_7146
  • The happy newlyweds cut their huge wedding cake! There were a ton of mini-cupcakes and pastries, too. Yum.
    _MG_6317.jpg
  • One of many happy images from an evening of dancing. Charles with some of "the boys".
    _MG_6378.jpg
  • I love the various storylines in this image. Captured after the wedding ceremony.
    _MG_5989.jpg
  • Photographing for the Canadian Cancer Society's Relay for Life is a touching experience. There's an intangible quality surrounding the event. <br />
<br />
Picture the scene: an outdoor field, much like that of a school's outdoor field, with a quarter mile track around the circumference for track & field competition. Bleachers off to one side. A stage at the foot of the track. Several big-top tents scattered around the track, housing such things as registration, food, cancer survivors, massage therapy and more.<br />
<br />
On the entire inside circumference of the track are luminaries: specially designed paper bags with a lit candle inside. Each luminary is a tribute to the lives of loved ones who have been touched by cancer. The track can barely hold all of them.<br />
<br />
On the bleachers the word "Hope" has been written with even more luminaries. Seventy-five luminaries for four letters. And indeed, there are many elements of Hope this evening. As well as another four-letter word: Love.<br />
<br />
In Canada alone, two in five people face a diagnosis of cancer in their lifetime. It is more critical than ever to raise awareness about the disease and the impact it has on the lives of people.<br />
<br />
Photographer Dean Oros  created the "Angelic" series of midnight images using candle light and long exposures while photographing the CCS Relay for Life. Models are from the The Brides' Project, which donates a portion of its wedding gown sales to cancer research.<br />
<br />
Click on thumbnails to view captioned, full-size images. Select images are available to purchase for personal and commercial use.
    Angelic with Photographer Statement
  • Photographing for the Canadian Cancer Society's Relay for Life is a touching experience. There's an intangible quality surrounding the event. <br />
<br />
Picture the scene: an outdoor field, much like that of a school's outdoor field, with a quarter mile track around the circumference for track & field competition. Bleachers off to one side. A stage at the foot of the track. Several big-top tents scattered around the track, housing such things as registration, food, cancer survivors, massage therapy and more.<br />
<br />
On the entire inside circumference of the track are luminaries: specially designed paper bags with a lit candle inside. Each luminary is a tribute to the lives of loved ones who have been touched by cancer. The track can barely hold all of them.<br />
<br />
On the bleachers the word "Hope" has been written with even more luminaries. Seventy-five luminaries for four letters. And indeed, there are many elements of Hope this evening. As well as another four-letter word: Love.<br />
<br />
In Canada alone, two in five people face a diagnosis of cancer in their lifetime. It is more critical than ever to raise awareness about the disease and the impact it has on the lives of people.<br />
<br />
Photographer Dean Oros  created the "Angelic" series of midnight images using candle light and long exposures while photographing the CCS Relay for Life. Models are from the The Brides' Project, which donates a portion of its wedding gown sales to cancer research.<br />
<br />
Click on thumbnails to view captioned, full-size images. Select images are available to purchase for personal and commercial use.
    "Angelic 4" PhotoSensitive Cancer Co..ion.
  • Photographing for the Canadian Cancer Society's Relay for Life is a touching experience. There's an intangible quality surrounding the event. <br />
<br />
Picture the scene: an outdoor field, much like that of a school's outdoor field, with a quarter mile track around the circumference for track & field competition. Bleachers off to one side. A stage at the foot of the track. Several big-top tents scattered around the track, housing such things as registration, food, cancer survivors, massage therapy and more.<br />
<br />
On the entire inside circumference of the track are luminaries: specially designed paper bags with a lit candle inside. Each luminary is a tribute to the lives of loved ones who have been touched by cancer. The track can barely hold all of them.<br />
<br />
On the bleachers the word "Hope" has been written with even more luminaries. Seventy-five luminaries for four letters. And indeed, there are many elements of Hope this evening. As well as another four-letter word: Love.<br />
<br />
In Canada alone, two in five people face a diagnosis of cancer in their lifetime. It is more critical than ever to raise awareness about the disease and the impact it has on the lives of people.<br />
<br />
Photographer Dean Oros  created the "Angelic" series of midnight images using candle light and long exposures while photographing the CCS Relay for Life. Models are from the The Brides' Project, which donates a portion of its wedding gown sales to cancer research.<br />
<br />
Click on thumbnails to view captioned, full-size images. Select images are available to purchase for personal and commercial use.
    "Angelic 1" PhotoSensitive Cancer Co..ion.
  • Photographing for the Canadian Cancer Society's Relay for Life is a touching experience. There's an intangible quality surrounding the event. <br />
<br />
Picture the scene: an outdoor field, much like that of a school's outdoor field, with a quarter mile track around the circumference for track & field competition. Bleachers off to one side. A stage at the foot of the track. Several big-top tents scattered around the track, housing such things as registration, food, cancer survivors, massage therapy and more.<br />
<br />
On the entire inside circumference of the track are luminaries: specially designed paper bags with a lit candle inside. Each luminary is a tribute to the lives of loved ones who have been touched by cancer. The track can barely hold all of them.<br />
<br />
On the bleachers the word "Hope" has been written with even more luminaries. Seventy-five luminaries for four letters. And indeed, there are many elements of Hope this evening. As well as another four-letter word: Love.<br />
<br />
In Canada alone, two in five people face a diagnosis of cancer in their lifetime. It is more critical than ever to raise awareness about the disease and the impact it has on the lives of people.<br />
<br />
Photographer Dean Oros  created the "Angelic" series of midnight images using candle light and long exposures while photographing the CCS Relay for Life. Models are from the The Brides' Project, which donates a portion of its wedding gown sales to cancer research.<br />
<br />
Click on thumbnails to view captioned, full-size images. Select images are available to purchase for personal and commercial use.
    "Angelic 2" PhotoSensitive Cancer Co..ion.
  • Photographing for the Canadian Cancer Society's Relay for Life is a touching experience. There's an intangible quality surrounding the event. <br />
<br />
Picture the scene: an outdoor field, much like that of a school's outdoor field, with a quarter mile track around the circumference for track & field competition. Bleachers off to one side. A stage at the foot of the track. Several big-top tents scattered around the track, housing such things as registration, food, cancer survivors, massage therapy and more.<br />
<br />
On the entire inside circumference of the track are luminaries: specially designed paper bags with a lit candle inside. Each luminary is a tribute to the lives of loved ones who have been touched by cancer. The track can barely hold all of them.<br />
<br />
On the bleachers the word "Hope" has been written with even more luminaries. Seventy-five luminaries for four letters. And indeed, there are many elements of Hope this evening. As well as another four-letter word: Love.<br />
<br />
In Canada alone, two in five people face a diagnosis of cancer in their lifetime. It is more critical than ever to raise awareness about the disease and the impact it has on the lives of people.<br />
<br />
Photographer Dean Oros  created the "Angelic" series of midnight images using candle light and long exposures while photographing the CCS Relay for Life. Models are from the The Brides' Project, which donates a portion of its wedding gown sales to cancer research.<br />
<br />
Click on thumbnails to view captioned, full-size images. Select images are available to purchase for personal and commercial use.
    "Angelic 3" PhotoSensitive Cancer Co..ion.
  • Sea-sponge is glass jar. Bathroom accessory.
    House and Home IMG_6945.tif
  • Leaves and wrought-iron chair in autumn - winter.
    House and Home IMG_2519.tif
  • Adult lifestyle. Woman's face reflected in mirror.
    House and Home IMG_8145.tif
  • Eight candles, soft focus, overhead.
    House and Home IMG_7753.tif
  • High angle image of double-shot, multiple lit candles.
    House and Home IMG_7753.tif
  • Candles visible through a window frame at night.
    House and Home IMG_1746.tif
  • Clay pottery. High angle of three clay pots standing side by side.
    House and Home _MG_4051.tif
  • Hanging crystal chandelier with turquoise wall in background.
    House and Home IMG_8516.tif
  • Part of Holcim Gallery, the most dramatic space at Evergreen Brick Works was formerly the most functional part of the site. The 52,000-square-foot area housed three long tunnel kilns and six single-track drying tunnels.<br />
<br />
The Evergreen Brick Works project transformed an underused, deteriorating industrial site in the city's Don Valley into a regionally important, environmentally based community landmark to engage visitors in diverse experiences connected to nature and the city.  The LEED Platinum designed Centre for Green Cities is the only new building on the site. It incorporates a welcome centre, retail and amenity space, administrative offices, and workspace for the programme partners.<br />
<br />
To capture the spirit of the historic site and its industrial heritage, the Centre for Green Cities knits the new building into and around the existing elements. Old brick walls, steel structures, and metal sheds are retained and define the footprint of the building.  Public functions – event spaces and classrooms – are on the ground floor, immersed in the character of those existing structures. The second floor has a wrap-around balcony, occupying the space between an existing brick wall and the cantilevered floors above.  As an educational institute focused on outdoor education, the balcony offers exterior access to second floor classrooms as well as to Evergreen’s offices on the third floor, while providing an elevated view of both the Brickworks site and the visitor welcome centre.
    Evergreen Brick Works _MG_6693.tif
  • Light at the end of a drying tunnel.<br />
<br />
Part of Holcim Gallery, the most dramatic space at Evergreen Brick Works was formerly the most functional part of the site. The 52,000-square-foot area housed three long tunnel kilns and six single-track drying tunnels.<br />
<br />
The Evergreen Brick Works project transformed an underused, deteriorating industrial site in the city's Don Valley into a regionally important, environmentally based community landmark to engage visitors in diverse experiences connected to nature and the city.  The LEED Platinum designed Centre for Green Cities is the only new building on the site. It incorporates a welcome centre, retail and amenity space, administrative offices, and workspace for the programme partners.<br />
To capture the spirit of the historic site and its industrial heritage, the Centre for Green Cities knits the new building into and around the existing elements. Old brick walls, steel structures, and metal sheds are retained and define the footprint of the building.  Public functions – event spaces and classrooms – are on the ground floor, immersed in the character of those existing structures. The second floor has a wrap-around balcony, occupying the space between an existing brick wall and the cantilevered floors above.  As an educational institute focused on outdoor education, the balcony offers exterior access to second floor classrooms as well as to Evergreen’s offices on the third floor, while providing an elevated view of both the Brickworks site and the visitor welcome centre.
    Evergreen Brick Works _MG_6692.tif
  • Clay pottery. High angle of three clay pots standing side by side.
    House and Home _MG_4052.tif
  • Woodgrain reflecting in glass candle holder.
    House and Home IMG_0849.tif
  • Seven candles, soft focus, overhead.
    House and Home IMG_7756.tif
  • Financial planning. Baby's first bank. Three piggy banks stand one behind the other with coins visible on pink table. Part of hand is visible right side of frame.
    House and Home IMG_9772.tif
  • Baby's first piggy bank.
    House and Home IMG_9772
  • Three wine glasses, three people, a million reasons for a toast.
    House and Home IMG_5688.tif
  • Lit candle in glass candle holder.
    House and Home IMG_1734.tif
  • Candles visible through a window frame at night.
    House and Home IMG_1746.tif
  • The Hungarian Parliament Building (Hungarian: Országház, literally translates to country house) is the seat of the National Assembly of Hungary. It is one of Europe's oldest legislative buildings, a notable landmark of Hungary and a popular tourist destination of Budapest. It lies in Lajos Kossuth Square, on the bank of the Danube, in Budapest.
    Hungary_DSCN0955.tif
  • Chaza McPherson + Daniel Fell, Berkeley Field House, Toronto Canada.
    Floral and Fauna _MG_6196.tiff
  • House and home: interior design.
    IMG_6891
  • Feline pet sitting on window sill in upscale bathroom, complete with large windows and soaker tub.
    Animals and Pets IMG_2222a.tiff
  • Carts were used to move bricks in and out of drying tunnels and kilns, part of the Holcim Gallery, Evergreen Brick Works, Toronto (Canada).<br />
<br />
“Building 16” at the Brick Works housed several massive kilns built in the 1960s for firing and drying bricks. The kilns were fascinating artifacts, but their sheer size – 600 linear metres occupying three-quarters of the building – made the space impossible to use.<br />
<br />
Dissecting the kilns to reveal their hidden spaces and internal workings, opened up the building, providing space for a large-scale contemporary venue (Holcim Gallery), and at the same time tells the story of this historic space.<br />
<br />
Visitors can now access and explore the various interior spaces of the kilns, and learn about the different stages of firing brick: preheating, firing, and cooling. The rich, industrial masonry of this site is brought to life by a simple but strategic process of deconstruction and interpretation.
    Evergreen Brick Works _MG_6658.tif
  • Overhead architecture showcases metal framing and historical piping used in the kilns and drying tunnels building during brick-making of the Don Valley Brick Works. Part of the Holcim Gallery, Evergreen Brick Works, Toronto (Canada).<br />
<br />
Holcim Gallery is one of the most dramatic, and most functional, areas within Evergreen Brick Works. The 52,000-square-foot area housed three long tunnel kilns and six single-track drying tunnels.<br />
<br />
Interpretive signage explains the stories of the brick-making process. This building speaks to the rich industrial heritage of the site.
    Evergreen Brick Works _MG_6657.tif
  • Women's shoes. Bedroom fur rug.
    IMG_6975.tif
  • Feline pet sitting on window sill in upscale bathroom, complete with large windows and soaker tub.
    Animals and Pets IMG_2222b.tiff