Thursday, January 29, 2009

A full cut of CTO?


A full cut of CTO? What on earth is that, and why could I possibly need it? Whenever I go out on a shoot, I'm always thinking about how to take my photography to the next higher level.

When you go out shooting a portrait, are you concentrating a lot of your energy on making sure your pictures are sharply focused? For most of us, the answer is no. Sure, we put a certain amount of effort into making sure that the lens is focused, especially with new equipment, but after a while, focusing becomes second nature. Let's think beyond that. What's going on with the background, and with the light. It's outdoors, and it's about 3:30 in the afternoon, still a little too early for the golden light. The sunlight is behind our model Rosalyn's right shoulder. It's a day after a rainstorm. The grass is a gorgeous green and the skys are clear and blue. Due to some harsh sun backlighting her, it's clear that I'm going to need to add some light on Rosalyn's face, but if I just blast away with an electronic flash, the shot's going to look cold.

With a new Nikon, there are lots of times you can shoot without even thinking about white balance, but this was not one of those times. I wanted the look of warm sunlight on the model's face, and I wanted to do it without throwing off the natural color of the grass, the bricks and the sky. The trick: Place a Rosco Cinegel CTO (Color Temperature Orange) Jell over the flash and bump the flash power up about 2/3 stop. This gives the shot that afternoon sunlight look and the model's skin tones look warm. If I tried this shot without the jell and flash combination, adjusting white balance in photoshop, the results would not have been pretty. Getting it right at the moment you trip the shutter is the key. Visualize. Check your preview monitor and histogram. Fix what's not what you want, and keep shooting and checking. It works!

Friday, January 23, 2009

The Five Second Rule


Ok, us guys have all heard of the five second rule. If something good to eat falls on the ground, it's fair game to grab it up and put it in your mouth as long as you get it in five seconds. But the other week I was reading a photography magazine article saying something about five seconds being the right exposure time for a lot of motion blur shots. And you know what, amazingly enough, it seems to work. Of course, any artsie stuff like this needs to come with a caveat. You need to kiss a lot of frogs to find a prince using any creative photography technique.

Tuesday, January 13, 2009

The Envelope Stuffers


Such exciting action! Sometimes editorial photography just bursts at the seams with opportunities for action shots. Then, you have the envelope stuffers. Some stories tell themsleves. This was not one of those times. I had to really look to find the shot that portrayed the story. These guy and gals who sit in a room and stuff envelopes are really special, and there's a lifetime of wisdom to be had from each one if you can coax it out of them. When a church needs to fill a position like a praise team singer or an leading actor in the Passion Play, it always seems like volunteers line up for a shot at their own 15 minutes of fame. These guys are just the opposite. Some of them are retired folks who've been quitely pitching in behind the scenes for 15 years. They come in on Fridays before the weekend services at their church and stuff inserts in all the church bulletins. Thousands of inserts. Week after week. On the surface, there's nothing in it at all for them at all. And that's the real story. An unselfish love. They come because they want to spread the gospel of Jesus Christ. When I got done with my shoot, I had a pile of outtakes. Faces of the volunteer workers, closeups, even a group photo with everybody holding bulletins in their hands. But it was the over the shoulder shot of this anonymous, older gentleman's hands at work that best told the story.

Monday, January 5, 2009

Shooting Bikers






Shooting a group of bikers presents some unusual challenges. When shooting people pictures, bonding with the people you're photographing is always a key element of success. When they're glad to have you along, the harvest will be bountiful. When you introduce yourself, the first thing they should see is a SMILE! On this day of shooting, I built new friendships with guys with bicepts of steel and hearts of gold. Photographing vehicles can be very technical sometimes. With the bikes, I did some experimenting around with strong backlighting and fill flash. The top shot has the flash power bumped up to fill in the rider's faces. It worked. I got a little lens flare even though my lens was spotless. Keeping your lens elements clean is key for anything facing into the sun, especially when using wide angle lenses that don't benefit much from lens shades. I also took a number of shots using slow shutter speeds. The middle shot above was taken using a 1/60th shutter speed and continuous autofocus. The bottom shot was taken with a little negative exposure compensation, and was tweaked in photoshop to bring out the texture of the leather some more.
What a great day of shooting!

Paul LeGrand Photography

Paul LeGrand Photography
(click on photo to see the website)