Friday 17 December 2010

Portrait shoots

















Portrait shoots

    * Spacious well equipped studio

    * Latest digital equipment. See your pictures appear as they are shot!

    * Unique background colour system

    * No queueing!

    * Digital upload of your photos included free.

    * Fully retouched print included in the shoot price worth £25

    * Lifestyle shoots

    * Each shoot lasts up to three hours.

    * All types of shoot catered for.

A huge range of people come to our Stokenchurch Studio for portrait sessions . Here is a list of recent activities: Birthdays,18+ parties, mother and babies, children, college alumni, friends, pictures for websites, work portraits, musicians, dancers, actors, people with their pets, family groups, partnerships, couples, model portfolios, lifestyle shoots, workshops, industrial clothing, dance groups etc.

Common to all is the need to get a powerful image of themselves. Studio photography can be  a new experience for some of my clients. The key thing is to get organized in advance. Please phone me well before the shoot to discuss what you want to do in your shoot, what the images are going to be used for, and what kind of props you might need. You might want to tear a collection of pictures from magazines to bring with you as rough examples of the sort of thing you want to do. There is plenty of space to store clothes for your shoot. You cannot bring too much with you for the shoot. You will be the a star for the day. All of the pictures are from one shoot with a  model new to studio work.

Make up and props may be important for your image. Clients have come with Harley-Davidson motorbikes, guitars, saxophones, their much loved dog, snakes, bunches of flowers, dreary clothes worn by actors for a part in a play, little black dresses, ball and party wear etc. Other clients have wanted much more formal clothes as their picture was destined to go an an office wall or website imparting a lot of information. What you need to bring depends on what sort of image you need us to create.

A portrait shoot is a real red letter day that you will not forget in a hurry. This is why many of the Studio Portrait Shoots are bought a gifts using our gift voucher system. The giver pays for the shoot and the free print. If the recipient wants additional pictures they pay for the extra prints. (see Gift Vouchers on my website www.david-turner-photography.co.uk)



  

Thursday 9 December 2010

Using studio flash. 1

Studio Flash Lighting 1.
General Information.

Over the last few years many amateur photographers have been tempted to buy studio lighting kits to use for mainly indoor work. A large number of brands have appeared from the far east to compete with the more established English, American, and Swiss brands. Anyone looking for a dealer could consult my friend Graham at his website www.gwdigitalandphoto.com for sales advice on what is needed. For beginners its often advantageous to buy a kit that includes some of the very necessary accessories like stands and reflectors etc. You will also need a flash meter.

 Lets assume that  you have acquired a set of studio lights. Most of the products on the market  have the following features:-

1   A modeling light that works in tandem with the flash tube. These can be adjusted from zero up to about 5 stops of light (depending on the particular unit)  The function of the modeling bulb is to mimic the effect of the flash when it occurs. Effectively, all of the light aiming is done with the modeling light and the exposure with the flash tube, so an important criteria in designing the unit is to make the spread and distribution of the two types of light as similar as possible. Cheap brands might not be very good in this respect.

2   There is the odd occasion when it would be desirable to shoot with flash and not have the modeling light switched on, so a switch is usually built in to facilitate this.

3  The strength or power of the flash is adjustable. This is indicated digitally on most modern lights. They are easier to see in a dim studio but no more efficient than the dial type adjusters they have superseded.
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4  When looking through a camera lens it is difficult to see if all of the flash units have worked so most have either an audible or visual signal, or both, to indicate that each particular unit has fired. On some units the modeling bulb dims after the flash has fired. I prefer the audible signals peeping around the studio in complex shots though it is largely a matter of what you are used to.

5  All of the lights have to be synchronized with the shutter to work at exactly the same moment to give correct exposure. This is achieved by one flash unit being in sync with the camera hot shoe or sync plug. Slave receptors built into the other units then cause them to fire as the camera shutter is opened. They work by UV light. There is also usually a jack plug socket for additional slaves to be used if necessary. Wireless connections are more reliable as the signal is less directional  than UV light. It is also possible to link units together with a wire. An old fashioned method that wasn't very reliable.

6.  Flash units are attached to lighting stands with a standard spigot usually supplied with the stand rather than the light unit.

7.  If they are to be transported in a car a substantial case is needed.

8.  Flash units are powered by capacitors that are quite powerful enough to give you a fatal electric shock. There should be a dump button to allow you to discharge the flash power down the earth cable.

9.   The cost of the flash tube is about half of the complete unit and it is very fragile. Retain the plastic or metal caps used in transit to protect your flash unit
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10.  Lights on tall stands are very unstable things. Toddlers,cats, and adults have all managed to knock mine over so I weight the base with gravel filled canvas bags. These are homemade.

In order to measure the light you will also need a special form of light meter called a flash meter.  Flash meters are able to measure sudden pulses of light and to trigger the flash units to enable the light emitted by sepate units at different strengths to be measured collectively. (See my other blog on Lighting Ratios.)




Soft box over object.
Lets start off with simple lighting of a small stationary object. Just use one light and some basic equipment such as a small soft box. As you can see from the photograph the light is suspended over a table nearly horizontally . ( It is tilted down at the front a little to cast light on the front elevation of the object.) A sheet of black card is attached to the back of the soft box. This has the effect of shading the light from the background. Depending on how deep the card is alters the amount of cast light bouncing off the background surface. The illustrations below show the card at is maximum size, then folded in half and then removed altogether.











In this picture the contrast is at its maximum rendering the background black at the top and then becoming white at the front.









Now the sheet hanging down from the soft box has been folded in half along its length allowing more light to spill on to the background sheet, reducing the contrast to mid gray.








The sheet has now been removed completely .

A simple sheet of paper can make a lot of difference in the lighting effect.
The big problem for most beginners with limited space and equipment is to support the soft box over the light table. This was done with a boom arm fixed to a substantial lighting stand. The stand was weighted at the base with gravel filled bags. A light weight stand might have tipped over if it was cantilevered too far.

Flash meters.
In order to measure the strength of the light its necessary to have a special type of light meter called a flash meter. Almost all of the flash meters on the market are also conventional light meters very similar to the ones built into most cameras. Built in camera light meters are unsuitable for measuring very short intense bursts of light emitted by the flash units. When used as a separate piece of equipment the flash meter can be pointed at the light source from position of the object or person being photographed.  It measures the light falling on the object or person.This is called incident rather than reflected light metering as the meter measures the light from the subject position.

Where a number of lights are being used a flash meter can be pointed at each light  in turn to evaluate its power in relation to the other flash units. In this particular case things are very simple as there is only one light.  The meter is placed close to the subject (the paper dog) and aimed at the camera lens. The invercone is extended to add light bouncing around the subject and a measurement made of the flash. The camera is set to this amount of exposure.
Flash meters vary a lot in their sophistication. I prefer one that is also a conventional light meter as well as this can be used in other types of photography to check camera light readings. Cameras tend to come and go but many professional photographers stay loyal to their trusted meter as it is an independent measure of exposure.