Photography On Location

Archive for December, 2010

Change your position to the light.

Sunday, December 19th, 2010

On the road right now working on an advertising assignment.  I was just in San Diego shooting some surfers and had a chance to do a quick portrait with Josh, a friend and great local surfer.

Since I was working on a tight schedule, I used one soft light using an Elinchrom Quadra and a 53″ octabank.  A great trick to mix up lighting in your images is rather than keep changing the position of the light, try shooting a full 360 around your subject with your light stationary.  This means you will be using front lighting, side lighting and back lighting depending on where you are shooting from relative to your light.  Some shots will work, others won’t, but you might be surprised at some of the results. Walking around your subject and light, both stationary, also forces you to shoot outside the box.  Staying creative and developing your style and technique comes with lots of experimentation and failure.  But the times everything does work gives you a new technique to use down the road on future shoots.

Tech: Nikon D300s, 24-70mm, 1/160 at F6.3, ISO100.  Elinchrom Quadra and 53″ Octabank used for the lighting, triggered by Elinchrom Skyports.

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HDR Efex Pro by Nik

Monday, December 6th, 2010

In the Dominican Republic right now teaching a workshop for Photo Quest Adventures. We have been exploring Santo Domingo and the coastline, beautiful scenery and friendly people.

One new piece of software I have really been having fun with is Nik HDR Efex Pro.  Unlike other HDR software, this plugin shows you versions of how your image will look after the effect, and you still have lots of control to further adjust the look once you choose the effect.  No more guessing on sliders and amounts, just choose the category such as ‘realistic’ or ‘surreal’, then choose the effect in this category. The software will do the traditional method of merging bracketed exposures together to get detail in a high contrast scene, and it also works well with a single image for more creative looks.  The image above was a single shot processed using Efex Pro.

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