Hello everyone, I have been a long time lurker and finally decided to make an account. I am a very novice photographer. I would say the avenues I have enjoyed so far are landscape photos, family pictures, and sports photos.
Now my question is for redoing what I would maybe consider a botched attempt at getting new business head shots done. I wanted some outdoor photos just from the chest up. I ended up with a lot of photos that had little to no bokeh and a lot of exposure problems the background and myself.
The equipment I have available currently is my Canon SL1, 50mm 1.8II, 18-55STM, 75-300III, and a SunPak tripod. I am editing with Lightroom 5.
I am hoping to redo these photos this week on my own and plan on using my 50mm lens on a tripod so that my assistant (girlfriend) can operate a reflector if one is needed. I am going to be doing these most likely early in the morning because my understanding is that is the best time to use natural light.
I am hoping for some tips and trips or maybe even some links to videos on what I should be prepared with on the day of. I have been watching some videos of using a flash during the day, so if thats the case I would most likely make a DIY diffuser for my pop-up flash.
Also, I noticed most of the photos he sent me were shot in aperture F8 when I imported them into Lightroom. It's my understanding I should be using 2.2-5.6 on a lens like my own to get good sharpness. Can anyone advise on that? I plan to shoot in Aperture Priority mode.
Thank you in advance!
"Now my question is for redoing what I would maybe consider a botched attempt at getting new business head shots done. I wanted some outdoor photos just from the chest up. I ended up with a lot of photos that had little to no bokeh and a lot of exposure problems the background and myself.
The equipment I have available currently is my Canon SL1, 50mm 1.8II, 18-55STM, 75-300III, and a SunPak tripod."
Why not try this yourself? Unless you're paying your assistant the hourly wage of a professional photographer, what's to lose?
It's not like you're asking how to repaint a 150 year old three story house all by yourself. That would be completely foolish. (Believe me, I know.)
The main issue with a head shot done outside is the variability of the light source(s).
Yes, the "Golden Hour" is typically a good choice for any photography since you will have a rather low angle to the sunlight which naturally provides some dimension to any object you photograph. Light and shadow are the photographer's main tools and the Golden Hour hones them to a fine edge.
Though, you also must realize the available light at this time of day changes quite rapidly and may not remain consistent from one shot to the next depending on how rapidly you can work. Certainly, day to day consistency at this time of year may be unpredictable.
As a photographer, you would always prefer to minimize variables where ever and whenever possible. Studio lighting is consistent and predictable. Therefore, it is those values which make studio portraiture more favorable to good results.
External lighting for either studio or outdoor use need not be expensive to buy and can even be rented for a single use.
You need to do some basic homework on portrait style photography and, if you decide to shoot outdoors, on portraits done with the use of natural light.
Here are two tutorials on portraits;
Butterfly
Introduction to Portrait Lighting
Both deal with fixed position, studio lighting though the effects of several styles can be simulated with natural light and minimal accessories.
First, decide which style you prefer and then determine whether it can be accomplished with outdoor light and, say, a reflector. If not, what can you do? You can select a different style, you can add more light sources or you can go to studio lighting.
Keep in mind when making this decision, your lighting angles change rapidly during the Golden Hour and you might easily run out of preferred light in a short while if you depend solely on natural light and a reflector alone.
Light shade and slightly overcast days are also good choices for outdoor portraits.
outdoor portrait photography - Google Search
In most cases, you'll need supplemental light sources and a fairly good understanding of how to meter the exterior scenes for best results.
Until you decide which style of portrait and which type of supplemental light source you prefer; built in flash, external flash, off camera flash, one light source vs two light sources, stand-mounted with a reflector, etc. we cannot provide anything more specific regarding set up.
Read the tutorials, they should give fairly good guidance.
And don't think you can do this in one try. Go out in advance with your camera and some subject you can use to stand in for yourself and practice before you count on getting a shot.
outdoor portrait photography - Google Search
Then - on the day of - take several shots of each style/pose/scene to make sure you have a selection to work with when it comes to editing. Shoot in Raw Capture to provide the greatest amount of flexibility in your post production.
"Bokeh"?
Or, simply blurred background?
"Bokeh" rather infers you want a specific style of image. To achieve that style you will need somewhat specific backgrounds. This seems a bit much for a headshot style photo.
Are you going for glamour or high society images? If not, it's probably best to forgo "bokeh" at this time.
Most areas have some "high end" magazines which show the expected headshot style for realtors/business people. Take a look at those and determine whether your selected style fits theirs. I doubt you'll see much "bokeh" in those shots. How much do you wish to stand out from the norm?
Your Canon 50mm lens, while not bad for portraits, is not the best for the bokeh style IMO and you would really want to rent a superior lens if that is truly your objective.
Your Canon 50mm can though provide very good blurred backgrounds. In fact, if you properly set up the scene, most any lens with decent resolution can manage blurred backgrounds.
Here are some shots taken with a Canon SX50 bridge camera with a fixed lens that most photographers would consider to be quite "slow".
tonybritton
The backgrounds are blurred not so much by the f-stop of the lens but by the relative distance between the lens and the background subject(s).
Therefore, the concept should be rather apparent, put a lot of distance between you and your background and you will blur the background.
You must, of course, understand the single plane of in-focus (depth of field) and not-in-focus when doing portraits.
Go too shallow with your depth of field (aperture and distance) and you will have results which may place one eye in sharp focus and your ears somewhat out of focus.
A stopped down aperture will have more background subjects in close to or even fairly good focus than will a fairly opened up aperture.
And, of course, your lens to subject distance (the distance your camera is away from you) once again plays into the acceptable degree of in-focus area for your headshot.
best lens for portraits - Google Search
best lens for portraits - Google Search
So, a few days of studying and a few days of practicing and there's not that much to this headshot stuff. You make your plans and you remain flexible. This isn't rocekt science. Errr, ... rocket science.
Or you can just spend the money for a pro.
Good luck.