Photography On Location

Archive for August, 2010

Mixed Martial Arts/Ring Flash

Monday, August 30th, 2010

Had a great shoot today with Sir Greg, a local athlete who is very talented in a number of sports.  Wanted to work on some really edgy portraits, raking side lighting and some ring flash fill.  We used three Elinchrom Rangers for this image.  Two Rotalux strip lights are left and right of the model for soft accent light.  I climbed up a ladder to shoot down with ring flash for fill on this shot.  Light falls off rapidly, so this effect makes the model appear to emerge out of a sea of black.  Interesting angles always catch the viewer’s eye. Try shooting from high or really low angles to mix up your portraits.

Next we added a sword into the image.  This picked up some nice reflection from the strip light.  I eliminated the ring flash and other strip bank for a single strip light on this shot.

We went back to two strip lights in a cross lighting position directly opposite one another for the final boxing stance.

Tech: Nikon D300s, 24-70mm, 1/200 at F8, ISO 200.  Elinchrom Rangers, 2 14×35″ Rotalux Strip Banks, 1 Elinchrom Ring Flash, Skyports triggering the strobes.

Share this:
Share this page via Email Share this page via Stumble Upon Share this page via Digg this Share this page via Facebook Share this page via Twitter

Adventure Sports Alaska Style

Monday, August 23rd, 2010

Just returned from spending a week with my friend Colby Coombs and teaching a backcountry photo workshop for the Alaska Mountaineering School.  This class was unique in that we hiked into a remote area near Mt. McKinley and camped for a few days. We focused on landscape shooting, adventure sports and how to carry all that photo gear on a backpacking trip.

We had a great group, incredible weather, bears walking by camp and  fall colors on the tundra (yes, it is fall in Alaska right now). A great thing about camping is you just crawl into your sleeping bag and watch the sunset from your tent, no need to go anywhere. Denali and the mighty Alaska Range came out in full force.

We brought flash gear with us on this trip, and used a couple of Elinchrom Skyports to trigger some SB900s in our tents under an amazing sunset.  I use custom Elinchrom Skyport cables by Flash Zebra to trigger my speedlites from far distances where the SU800 wouldn’t work. Colby is a fantastic ice climber and was happy to climb up onto a fin on the glacier for the top image.  This coincided with storm clouds building in the background adding to the drama of the image.

Colby and I used to work together as climbing guides. He continued on to start his own well-known mountaineering school while my interests took me down the photography career path. Great to reconnect!

Share this:
Share this page via Email Share this page via Stumble Upon Share this page via Digg this Share this page via Facebook Share this page via Twitter

ring flash

Friday, August 13th, 2010

Ring flash is a special flash that circles the lens and projects right on the lens axis.  What is unique about this flash is the circle reflections and outlining shadow it produces.  This flash is often used in fashion, but it can be used anywhere.  Generally there are two styles of shooting with this flash, one using the ring flash as fill, the other using the ring flash as the main light.  We found another use experimenting the other day, using the ring flash primarily for reflections.

Our set up for this image included 5 Elinchrom rangers using 4 Freelite A heads and 1 Elinchrom ring flash on camera. We started with a ring flash on camera set as the main light on the model’s face.  We added 20 degree grids on accent lights coming in from the side and behind the model.  These lights provided the highlights on the shoulders and neck.  Next we used a boom to put a square Elinchrom Rotalux box over the model to add accent and detail to his hat.  This box was gridded so the light wouldn’t spill onto the background.  The last light was a 40 degree gridded head placed behind the model aiming at the backdrop.

As with many photo shoots, it wasn’t the planned images that we liked the best, it was the spontaneous ones that really worked. Chris (model) brought some glasses as a prop, and we shot some images with him wearing the glasses.  But then he held them out in front of his face, making the ring flash reflections much more prominent and interesting. With this idea rolling, we worked on moving the glasses just right so his eyes weren’t blocked in the background.  A great thing about working with experienced models is they often bring their own ideas to the shoot, and Chris had a good idea here.

Tech: Nikon D300s, 24-70mm lens, 1/250 at F8, ISO 200.  Elinchrom Rangers, Freelite A heads, Elinchrom ring flash and Skyports used to trigger the flash.

Share this:
Share this page via Email Share this page via Stumble Upon Share this page via Digg this Share this page via Facebook Share this page via Twitter

Glowing sea kayak

Tuesday, August 10th, 2010

I seem to be attracted to water and strobe.  I photograph a lot of water sports, so I am always looking for a different way to shoot familiar subjects.  I  was in the Tetons recently and had a chance to produce some ‘glowing sea kayak’ images.  Here is how it works.

For this image I placed 4 Nikon SB900s in plastic ziploc bags and attached universal Elinchrom Skyport radio slaves to the flashes.  I use hotshoe cords from Flash Zebra to attach the speedlights to the transmitters.  The flashes were set at 1/4 power in manual mode, zoomed out to 14mm with the wide angle adapter.  I put a flash in each hatch and two in the cockpit with the paddler.  The paddler left her spray skirt off so the flash in front of her would spill onto her face.

I set up a tripod on the lake shore, tested the flashes (hoping no one got a shock!) and waited for twilight.  I had the paddler be very still since the shutter speed was set to 13 seconds for this shot.

To enhance the blue and still keep the warm skin tones on the model I combined two images in CS4 created from one raw image.  The first shot had the white balance set at 3200 to get the blue skies, the second image had the white balance set to 5500 to get warm skin tones.

Anytime you use flash around water you have to be careful.  I’m planning on using my 1100 watt Elinchrom Rangers for a similar shot, but can’t find any models to volunteer at the moment.

Tech: Nikon D300s, 14-24mm lens, 13 seconds at F13, ISO200. Four SB 900s used with Elinchrom Skyport universal transmitters, attached with Flash Zebra cords.

Share this:
Share this page via Email Share this page via Stumble Upon Share this page via Digg this Share this page via Facebook Share this page via Twitter

When to use fill flash

Tuesday, August 3rd, 2010

Flash comes in a variety of styles and shapes, from simple one light set ups to complex multiple light scenes.  Sometimes simple is all you need.  I have been shooting a lot of assignments lately, from college campuses to indoor skating to Alaska tourism.  And I have to say one technique has saved the day time after time, one speedlight used in a fill flash mode.

Fill flash refers to using your flash so that the flash blends both the ambient light with the amount of flash on the subject.  Fill flash isn’t about making the flash a dominant part of the shot, more like just sneaking it in to where people may not even know it is used.  Fill flash is often used to control contrast by reducing shadows, filling in those dark areas under hat brims and tree branches.

The shot above is just one example of many from recent shooting. We had a couple modeling on a dock with beautiful reflections and sunny day.  But the sun cast strong shadows on the subjects, so we popped just an ounce of flash to eliminate shadows and make the color pop.  Remember the difference between a nice image and a better one is often a simple detail like adding a little fill flash.

Tech: Nikon D3, 14-24m, F14 at 1/250, ISO 200, SB900 shot in fill flash mode at -1.

Share this:
Share this page via Email Share this page via Stumble Upon Share this page via Digg this Share this page via Facebook Share this page via Twitter

digital photography
© Copyright Tom Bol Photography | Usage Policy | Site Developers