Skip to main content
Fog icon
40º

📷Depth defying photoshoot breaks world record with Florida photographer capturing model 163 feet underwater

Model took the plunge without scuba gear in Guinness World Record photoshoot

ORLANDO, Fla. – A Florida photographer went more than 163 feet under for a record-breaking photoshoot.

“It feels like a story... Contrasting the beauty and calm and elegance of a model on something that, otherwise would be decaying,” said Steve Haining.

Haining, from Orlando, combined his two favorite hobbies: photography and deep sea diving to tell this story. But he wanted a unique backdrop.

Steven Haining, Ciara Antoski and Wayne Fryman break Guinness World Record for deepest underwater model photoshoot (Copyright 2025 by WKMG ClickOrlando - All rights reserved.)

“I’m a celebrity photographer and typically do more portrait-type photos. I wanted to find a place that people have never gone to and it became a personal challenge,” said Haining.

A challenge met off the coast of Pompano Beach at a depth of 163.3 feet in the Atlantic Ocean at the site of The Hydro shipwreck.

Haining, the model Ciara Antoski from Canada and several safety divers descended on December 19th of 2024.

The divers donning their wet suits, tanks and masks. Antoski, the model, diving in a dress without any scuba gear. Her safety diver administered oxygen through a mask before she began a series of poses. Haining only having moments to capture photos before it was time for another break for air.

“We couldn’t talk underwater so we used hand signals to communicate,” said Haining.

The dive from beginning to end took about an hour, but the photoshoot only lasted about 15 minutes. The experience caught the attention of Guinness World Records, as the deepest underwater model photoshoot in the world.

Steven Haining, Ciara Antoski and Wayne Fryman break Guinness World Record for deepest underwater model photoshoot (Copyright 2025 by WKMG ClickOrlando - All rights reserved.)

“My favorite photo was the one where Ciara is standing off to the side and she’s looking back at the structure. I feel like it tells a story about the wreck. She’s not just a model in that photo, she’s telling a story and the look on her face is just calm,” said Haining. “The deeper you go underwater, the more you lose color. You lose reds pretty much at the first twenty feet and then every warm color turns to blue then ultimately gray... I like the challenge of figuring out how to bring that color back into the photos.”

Antoski has done deep sea modeling before, having years of training and experience. Haining and Antoski previously broke a world record for deep sea diving. Haining outfitted his camera with special equipment to be able to capture the images beyond the no decompression limit. Both have had extensive training with deep sea diving, Haining crediting Isla Divers in Casselberry for training and support in this record-breaking feat. He said it took about a year to plan coordinating the trip with several safety divers taking the plunge with them.

Steven Haining, Ciara Antoski and Wayne Fryman break Guinness World Record for deepest underwater model photoshoot (Copyright 2025 by WKMG ClickOrlando - All rights reserved.)

So what’s next for Haining? He said he may try to break another record.

“These photos, I hope will ultimately end up in a gallery,” said Haining. “I just want people to see it and appreciate that it’s a model in a place most people will never see in their life and the amount of beauty untouched by the world.”


About the Author
Crystal Moyer headshot

Crystal Moyer is a morning news anchor who joined the News 6 team in 2020.

Loading...