There's a big difference between reading something and doing something.
Now you know your pictures sucked, do it again. And again, and again. Eventually it's stop sucking and you start making practical sense of the theory in your head.
Hahaha. that makes my day.
Well I played some more. I took pictures in the privacy of my own home, taking about 300 pictures of my #20 Tony Stewart hat (did you see that KS race??). I figured out how to calculate distance, and exposure and all with my sunpak 383. There were a couple concepts I simply could not figure out, but then turned out to be so obvious. I can't wait to actually use these concepts for real life subjects (hehe.. my wife's gonna kill me if I don't stop using her for lighting practice)
The Float (I complained about it in the original post)
As for the float pictures (the ones that turned out super bad the other night) I have been thinking of the situation... so here it is.
The Scene:
24' Gooseneck Trailer in the middle of a small field. A very small tree on one side of it. Framing a miniature house, so on the trailer are people and 2x4's. Then a bunch of power tools. People had tool belts, head-lamps around their heads, pencils behind their ears, hammers and tape measures in hands, and were holding nails between their teeth. Seemed to be a good place for pictures.
Thoughts - problems and what I would have done different.
I didn't have anything to reflect the light off of to spread it out, so I could really only use hard light. The hard light cast a lot of uncontrolled shadows from all the 2x4's If I were to do it again (might tonight) I would pull a white truck/car up beside the float, and point a strobe at the white truck/car...at high power. Seems like that would spread the light around real nicely, to light up the whole area. My goal is
not to get some fancy artsy pictures, but rather to capture real quality pictures of people working on this float. This float is the heart and soul of a dorm of a
baptist university in town, and nobody has good pictures, since most of the work is done at night.
Suggestions? Comments?
I'll be working literally all night on this float (parade is tomorrow) and there will be probably 30 people staying up with me. Any tips for my scenario? Tonight, the float will be about 20 feet from a brick wall (side of dorm) and a parking lot 20 feet on the other side. So, basically same situation as before, but just with a brick wall somewhat nearby.
I have a Canon 430EX and a Sunpak 383. My wireless transmitters work great, but settings are manual.
Any suggestions?