hehehehehehe

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im not gonna pretend like im an expert on photographing african-americans ... i have shot a few and being one myself

.. i can share with you some obsticles my hubby has faced while shooting me...
frankly, i think its not much to it ... when i photograph people in a studio setting, i always go full manual (shutter speed, aperture, focus .. sometime auto focus) ... i have a basepoint of shutter speed 200 (good for the lighting in my studio) and go up or down from there.. keeping in mind that there are over 30 shades of african-americans .. im on the darker side, but my skin has an olive tone from the native american in me ... so keep that in mind.
lots of time i have trouble photographing my hubby because he's on the brighter side ... most times he comes out over-exposed so i have to adjust the settings to fit his skin color (which takes about 10 test shots to get it right :?)
another thing u want to keep in mind is background color is important ... complimentary ... me for example, i look better on a black background as oppose to a white ... i've also notice trends for shooting african-americans where the background color is yellow, which i think looks absolutely fabulous (im gonna invest in some of that yellow)
but the general rule is i'd say, even if its the same race of people ... the settings have to be adjusted accordingly .. dont assume if their "caucasian" for example .. their all the same color ... cause i can bet my bottom dollar that my hubby is amongst the brightest when that flash hits his face ..
there is no magic bullet or other special lighting condition's i'd say, i would just say, adjust, adjust, adjust ... try to keep his skin color to the truest .... move your lighting around ... and play with the manuals until you ... ooops!!! are u on film or digital? ... :scratch:
u think u can post a sample photo of him?