- Joined
- Jun 2, 2013
- Messages
- 4,569
- Reaction score
- 4,228
- Location
- Portland Oregon
- Can others edit my Photos
- Photos NOT OK to edit
Troy is my good friend who has been volunteering as my assistant for the last few months in order to learn more about photographing people. He also tends to be my stand-in model when I'm testing lighting conditions and settings, but most of the time he is super awkward in front of the camera, and even when I think we got a good shot of him, he's too insecure of his looks in order to feel good about any of them, so they usually get deleted. Today, after several months of assisting me and having several test shots taken, I finally got one of him that made his jaw drop and made him feel good about himself when he saw it. I think he's finally feeling comfortable with having his own picture taken. It's certainly not a technically perfect shot, but I'm happy to give him a portrait that he loves after all of the help and work that he has contributed to my photo shoots.
To me the crop is awkward where it cuts off at the bottom, and any other crop that I tried seemed to throw things off, so I just accepted it as a flaw. I also wish that I had positioned the stool differently, because as it is it looks like he's sitting on a weird hovering disc. Also, I think for the next shoot that I do with this light setup, I'll rent a fog machine.
Canon 5D Classic with a Canon EF 50mm f/1.4 lens attached, set to f/5.6, 1/160th sec, ISO 100.
There was a single strobe in a giant octabox as the main light to camera right set to a power level of 6, a big white V-flat to camera left for fill, and as you can see the big antique constant light behind him creating the back lighting. That thing was so damn bright and put out so much heat!
To me the crop is awkward where it cuts off at the bottom, and any other crop that I tried seemed to throw things off, so I just accepted it as a flaw. I also wish that I had positioned the stool differently, because as it is it looks like he's sitting on a weird hovering disc. Also, I think for the next shoot that I do with this light setup, I'll rent a fog machine.
Canon 5D Classic with a Canon EF 50mm f/1.4 lens attached, set to f/5.6, 1/160th sec, ISO 100.
There was a single strobe in a giant octabox as the main light to camera right set to a power level of 6, a big white V-flat to camera left for fill, and as you can see the big antique constant light behind him creating the back lighting. That thing was so damn bright and put out so much heat!
