Recently got a Christmas card from friends/clients. It included the above photo. In large lettering, "Happy Everything". Man does that fit. They are so fun and easy to work with.
So we took these with combinations of natural light filtered through bed sheets to the left, bare strobes into the ceiling, bare strobes directly aimed at the subject, and my new favorite light modifier, the small softbox that I use with my battery strobes.
Here is an example of the natural light from the window to the left. The sun was hitting it directly so we hung bed sheets to diffuse it. I also bounced a strobe into the white ceiling to the right.
Here's a fun one.
For more of an edge, here I blasted bare strobes from each side.
Here's the love.
And more of the love.
And I'll finish with some of the expressions of the rock-n-roller above.
Be blessed. More photo shoots to come . . .
Labels:
balancing ambient,
black and white,
cross light,
flash bounce,
hard light,
multiple lights,
natural light,
portraits
|
The tough thing about this one is just deciding which photos to post. So here are a bunch of them. Some black and white, some color. Some use strobes some are just natural evening light on the beach. We enjoy a visit with these special people.
Here is a group that I would title
HAIR/Girlhood.
Someone could have a career in modeling I think.
Here is some miscellaneous fun.
One of my favorites of the bunch here.
Mommy is one of my wife's best friends since college.
So thankful to call these gals friends. See you soon.
Labels:
balancing ambient,
beach,
family portraits,
natural light,
sunset
|
Spent some time with my buddy Bryan Boliver and his wife. He is a singer/songwriter and we took some photos to feed his websites for a while. We used a few different lighting styles. In the lead photo above you see side lighting with bare strobes. Very harsh shadows. I love the technique. Gives a good edge to the photo.
Here are some more.
Then we took some ambient light stuff as well since the sun was setting. Placed the sun behind him and exposed for his face and let the background blow out.
Also used an umbrella for key light with an accent light behind and opposite the key light for a more classic look.
Also modified that look a little by having the key light and the accent on the same side as the subject.
A great time with a great friend. Hope you like them buddy. Go check out his music at https://www.facebook.com/BryanBoliver
Be blessed!
Labels:
backlight,
balancing ambient,
black and white,
cross light,
multiple lights,
natural light,
portraits,
rim light
|
During our vacation to north Georgia, we visited Anna Ruby Falls in the Unicoi State Park. I'm certainly not a landscape photographer but this location was very inspiring. Funny thinking back to what I thought I would do as a photographer when I first began. I imagined National Geographic or something. But as it turns out I have never been able to capture the landscapes that I envision. Maybe just need some more practice.
I was inspired by the weather. It had rained most of the time since we arrived. So it was overcast and damp. I brought my tripod with me to get some pictures of us as a family but then it struck me that there was moving water (I know I'm really quick on my feet). I knew that it would be possible to get some blurred water shots using a slow shutter speed and my tripod. I shot multiples of these at different shutter speeds so that I could choose the level of blur that suited me best. It's necessary to have a very stable tripod so that the still objects in the frame are tack sharp. I used manual focus and the live view setting (just like your point and shoot cameras) so that I can zoom in 10x to the area that I want to focus on. I stopped way down on these. Anywhere from f8 to f22. This allows for a slower shutter speed but also gets the lens out of its soft spots when it is nearly wide open.


I took some of the falls themselves as you see at the top but I was more interested in the details in the creek. The colors were great. Greens of the trees, grays of the rocks, browns of the fallen trees, and then the yellows of these mushrooms. They were being backlit and looked like they were on fire.
My son saw this guy so I got him too. Thankfully he wasn't a fast mover.
Be blessed!
Labels:
backlight,
landscape,
motion blur,
natural light
|