Tag Archives: flash photography

Alter Ego

 

Technical Details: Canon 5D MkII, Canon 24-70mm @70mm, ISO100, f/11, 1/160 sec, studio/strobe lighting

Hello Gang,

Welcome to today’s post.  We’re going to take a bit of a different direction today.  As many of you know, I shoot both fine art landscapes and portrait work and today’s portrait images were inspired by celebrity photographer Derek Blanks.  Derek pioneered the concept of Alter Ego in photography – capturing an individual’s distinctly different identities in one single image.  Brilliant!  I love Derek’s work with this concept and wanted to play with it myself.  Then the opportunity to work with a fast-rising start up social media marketing company, The Social Lights, was presented to me and we discussed the possibility of working with the Alter Ego concept.

Martha, a co-founder of The Social Lights, gave me some descriptions of herself as a working business professional, but also gave me some thoughts on her love of Vintage and the TV show Mad Men.  So, we went with it…building two Alter Ego’s around the modern day business woman and the vintage woman, representing the modes of communication of the times.

Lighting is easy, but its also difficult.  Its easy to get your lights to do what you want, its difficult to know what you want.  Having worked with studio lighting for a few years now, I could see in my mind the “look.”  With that image in mind, I went through the following process to establish the final lighting diagram you see below.

Step 1.  Establish Key Light – the beauty dish is my key light and once I was happy the amount and positioning of light falling on Martha, I was ready to move on;

Step 2. Establish Fill Lights – the umbrellas are my fill lights.  They have the job of bringing the rest of the scene, along with heavy shadows on Martha, back up to a level that made sense for me;

Step 3. Establish Hair/Rim Light – Now I was ready to set up a Hair Light.  For this I used a large softbox.  Why?  I had a spot grid but it produced a harder light than I wanted for this shot.  So, all I had on location with me was a large rectangular softbox.  It cast a broad, very soft and subtle accent.  Perfect;

Step 4. Background Light – This was not immediately obvious.  While looking at the test shots I had a feeling that something was missing.  The background light was it.  Right behind the couch, dead center.  It creates that added sense of drama and dimension.

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The Best Of What Will Be

Today’s post arises out of the strong interest to create portrait photography of people I find personally compelling, but to shoot them in a place that represents, to a greater extent, their story.  I’m after the story in a very few, but meaningful, words and still images.  This is certainly not a fashion shoot and hopefully less contrived than an editorial shoot.  A few of you in my readership know the subject personally and/or professionally, and many of you have never heard of him or his accomplishments.  In any event, I’d love for you to post your reaction to the words, the images or both.  And of course I’m happy to answer any questions regarding technique.

Background: Subject of the shoot was Dan Hanlon, an entrepreneur that has founded several businesses including Excelsior – Henderson Motorcycle.  The story of EH is well documented in the press and I’ll leave it to you to research it, but he did raise about $100 million to bring to market a heavy weight cruiser motorcycle and compete directly against Harley Davidson.  I’ve known Dan for a decade, well outside the EH experience, and am aware of his vast entrepreneurial career.  I am drawn to what I affectionately refer to as his “Danness;”  the idea of Dan, his energy, drive, value systems, his DNA, or more conventionally, the stuff that makes him tick.  With the help of my good friend and entrepreneur, John Benzick (Risk, Stumble, Stand), we photographed and interviewed Dan for 2 hours in a small barn on the dairy farm in Belle Plaine, MN where Dan grew up.  John was still talking with Dan while I was breaking down my gear when Dan made reference to a quote by Shakespeare. A friend of Dan’s would use this quote to describe him. It was these last words and the images I chose that, for me at least, capture his Danness.

The Words

“Some men never seem to grow old.  Always active in thought, always ready to adopt new ideas,
they are never chargeable with foggyism.
Satisfied, yet ever dissatisfied, settled, yet ever unsettled, they always enjoy the best of what is, are the first to find
the best of what will be.”

-William Shakespeare

The Images

 

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A More Technical Post

Hi Gang,  I want to share an image I shot over the weekend and discuss some of the technique use in it and the images in my previous post. “Why Are They Surfing Lake Superior?” Let’s start with that one by mentioning the photographers currently inspiring/influencing my personal work.  One is Joel Grimes (my cousin KC turned me on to him) – Joel’s work blows me away.  Another is the work of Eric Curry, who I’ve mentioned previously.  I’m beginning to play with their techniques as a fresh start to 2011 photography season.

Next I want to share a quote my friend Megan sent to me, read by her daughter from Jim Henson’s Doodle Dreams book.  “An artist gives people back a part of themselves – the stories and sounds, the feeling of what it’s like to be alive.  That’s a pretty powerful gift.”  Its just a beautiful quote I wanted to share with others.

In the Lake Superior portraits I used one light, my speedlight with a softbox on a light stand, above and right behind me.  My intention was to use a three strobe setup, but upon arriving I found out that my power converter wouldn’t handle it.  No worries, I had my alien bees battery pack as a backup.  Well, I thought it was charging the entire drive up, but it was dead.  So, #3 backup was the single speedlight I was fortunate enough to have with me.

I first shot my portraits with the light, then had John the surfer step out of the scene and shot a series of 3 images for HDR processes.  In post production I first produced the background using the Photomatix HDR engine, then I brought the frame with John back in and masked him into the image.   In both images of John I used a series of Photoshop processes, including Selective Color layers pulling back the brightness on reds and yellows, as well as a mix of gradient maps and high pass filtering to get my own gritty look.

In today’s image it was much more complicated.  Tommy, the subject, is an amazing talent.  He’s a musician, but he’s also incredibly inventive and creative.  The remote control car at his hands was built by stripping down parts from three other cars and building what he wanted.  He knows more about a race car than a NASCAR crew chief.  I wanted to photograph him in his boycave, where his work gets done.  It doesn’t stop with cars, though.  He builds extremely large, intricate Star Wars cruisers, in the background is a solar oven he built as a class project (it basically got much hotter much faster than any other), and like many young men, he digs riding his skateboard and snowboard.  While building his creations he watches “Top Gear” on TV.

The space was staged and then I brought in my strobes.  Two accent/rim lights and a key light immediately camera left.  Then the lights were removed and I shot a series of 3 images with all the room lights on, for HDR production (Photomatix Exposure Fusion engine).  After that, both Tommy and I started painting with light.  We used a fluorescent work lamp from Home Depot wrapped in blue gel for the star wars ships.  I used a spot light for the car at his hands, as well as across the floor, the stack of tires, the small helicopter lower left, etc.  Then on the lower left space ship Tommy put a flashlight down inside to get the warm glow in the control deck.   All in all, I layered together 25 frames to compose the single final image.  I’ve included a few of the layer images for reference.  The first is the HDR image, then a couple of frames painted with light.

 

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Final shots from Santa Monica Pier

This set of images is of Larry Dallas Poling, a street performer on Santa Monica pier. I photographed him at the end of the day, right before sunset. I really loved his sound and guitar work, but after a few minutes he told me to beat it…that I was hurting his tips. :)
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Here is a youtube video of him performing on Santa Monica Pier:

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In all three images I used a speedlight with ring flash and used some creative editing techniques to get the images where I wanted them…in the first and third images I used my fixed 85mm f/1.8 and the middle image was shot using my 16 – 35mm f/2.8.

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(I) Portrait Photography: The 11 month old

Yesterday I had the joy of photographing my neighbor’s 11 month old daughter.  Everyone here understands what that means; constant motion, unpredictable, accidents!  With all that happening its beneficial for the photographer to be prepared.  Scout the space, decide what you want for natural light, decide what you want for key or fill light, and get it all set ahead of time.  With this type of high energy subject its paramount for the photographer to trust the lighting setup, to remain behind the camera, not checking the LCD too often. To pull back and look at the LCD is going to eliminate a lot of great photo possibilities!

My setup was simple.  I placed a Canon 580EX II on a light stand, attached an umbrella and Pocket Wizard II transceiver.  I aimed the umbrella up into a corner of the room, essentially creating three sources of soft bounce light (ceiling, two opposing walls).  I then established camera settings without flash that allowed me two things: first, shutter speed that was good for hand-held action.  I shot at 1/200 of a second and second, enough light to open up or blow out windows.  This turned out to be ISO 800, f/5 aperture, 1/200th second shutter.  My lenses for this included the 85mm fixed and the 24-70mm zoom.

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Great Comparison of Ring Lights on Strobist

Strobist is running a two part series comparing the Ray Flash v. Orbis v. AB 800 Ring Flash

You can find that series here.

I think there are a couple of important points to draw out:

1) Quality of Light is subjective;

2) The Ray Flash and Orbis are used on a speedlight, but can be mixed with studio strobes on or off camera.  I’ve tested the Ray flash with my Canon 580EX II with excellent results;

3) They are great for both fill and key light applications.

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These images were test shots mixing my Ray Flash and 580EX II on-camera with AB 400/800 strobes.  I’m very pleased with results and the Ray Flash is a lot of bang for the buck.

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Landscape Photography: Giving Up #1

dayintherain#1Today’s image is the first of three I’ll be posting as a series titled, “Giving Up.”  In early Octoboer, 2009 I left Saint Paul at 3 am to catch sunrise on Lake Superior in Duluth.  The forecast was for rain, it rained all the way up I35, then stopped in Duluth.  Then started again in Two Harbors and never let up the rest of the day.  “Perfect” I thought to myself.  I’m not at a computer, I’m not working, I do have my cell phone, but thank you ATT for having bad service on the North Shore.  No pushing.  Its so easy to push hard, natural for many of us.  To take hold of circumstances, engineer a vision or outcome, start pushing on the objects we think we need or can help us construct this vision, often times repeating the same processes we’ve employed in the past.  This is not good or bad behavior, but we can’t assume it will actually produce the outcome we desire.  My entrepreneur friends should notice I’m speaking directly at them.

Nor does it guarantee that we’ll feel good about the process when we’re done.

“Perfect” I thought again.  I can’t lose today.  Its horrible weather, so no expectations on the photography, just get settled into being here, explore areas I haven’t explored before, and just keep moving.  At times I still love exploring.  Maybe its just looking at land for sale around the arrowhead, maybe its taking the recommendation of my friend Lavonne; that gravel road “shortcut” to the top of Carleton Peak or the trail up the east side of the Beaver River that might give me a entirely new perspective (I’ve looked Lavonne, the trail isn’t there:)).  In the next installment of Giving Up, it will be the turnout on Hwy1 near Finland.  The “turnout.” Its not marked, its not used much.  It was magical.

In taking this attitude, in avoiding the same routines I usually use, in giving up on the idea of taking good pictures, I was able to have one of the finest days of personal photography I’ve had in a long time. This was the last image created on that day in early October.  I shot this at Split Rock Lighthouse State Park, let Kaya out for a run, and headed home.

Technical: ISO 50, f/10, 2 second shutter, manual exposure mode, camera flash set to manual and rear curtain sync with no flash compensation

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Natural Light Portrait Photography

theDudeThe timing of this article, Shooting with Available Light, could not be more perfect and I think the author makes some excellent points.  I was on a trainwreck of a natural light shoot just a few days ago, photographing in hard early afternoon light.  I started with a strobe…ok, fine, but a bit stifling on creativity.  Moved to on camera flash, but very difficult to manage in that bright a light, and finished with a scrim and flash.  What I wanted the entire time was JUST A SCRIM AND REFLECTOR, but there was only me.  Moral of the story, shooting natural light is fantastic with a few modifiers, but its best to have one, if not two, assistants to work with those modifiers

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Lensbaby Composer Portrait Photography

harryperry11The next series of images this week are portraits I shot of quintessential Venice Beach characters. The first few are of Harry Perry, a street musician who has played Venice for over 20 years. I connected with him late in the day and he allowed me 20 minutes of shooting (if I purchased a T-shirt/CD package for $20). He was a business man through and through, he knew his crowd and knew exactly how to work them. I photographed using my Canon 580EX II camera flash and Fong Dome Diffuser. I set the camera in aperture priority mode with a -2/3EV adjustment, and the flash was in ETTL with a -1/3 EV adjustment. I was also using the Lensbaby Composer lens and shot two frames, one with his head sharp, one with the guitar sharp (relatively speaking) and brought them together in a “split focus” technique with Photoshop. This Wednesday I will publish a short Image Critique where I discuss using this flash technique. Technical: Canon 5D, Lens Baby Composer, f/4, ISO800, 1/8 second exposure. Here’s a link to a great link to a YouTube video of Harry doing his thing.

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Venice Beach Flash Photography Example

pier21pier2a1 Hi Gang, I recently had a few hours to kill in L.A. so I headed down to Venice Beach. Next week I’ll post and discuss some of the street photography I did and this week I want to post some of the miscellaneous things I shot.

I’m starting with the last photo I took and working backwards. This image is of the Venice pier and I’m using it to set up a discussion on Wednesday about a different shot of the pier. On a technical note, I used my my Canon 580EX camera flash, hand-held and manually fired 4 times, to light the underside of the pier.

Technical: Canon 1Ds II, 24-70mm lens, screw-on Singh Ray Warming Polarizer, f/14, ISO100, 30 second exposure, tripod.

Color is a unique subject in an image. It can enhance or detract from other subjects. I’m curious to know which you prefer, the color or black/white version, and why?

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