-
5th June 2015, 11:13 PM
#1
used strobe on orchids
Was a first...gotten lazy with using LED lighting and adjusting exposure while tethered.
Tis a lot different when using a strobe and having no clue, except trial and error.
Here I used a strobe on one side and bounced light from a mirror opposite side...comments?
-
6th June 2015, 12:31 AM
#2
Re: used strobe on orchids
William, very nice photograph.
Bruce
-
6th June 2015, 12:57 AM
#3
Re: used strobe on orchids
I do have a penchant for natural lighting which may account for my reaction. I love the composition but the flowers look washed out to me. In the garden the tongue like object in the center of the orchid is usually brilliant and vibrant?
-
6th June 2015, 12:59 AM
#4
Re: used strobe on orchids
Nice effort, needs a bit more shadow depth to bring the petals off the screen.
-
6th June 2015, 10:33 AM
#5
Re: used strobe on orchids
My favourite area here is the lower flower on the left..that has the most perfect shadow and detail...
-
6th June 2015, 12:47 PM
#6
Re: used strobe on orchids
I've always found strobe lighting difficult, and admire those who can set up multiple lights to create amazing effects, but one light and a bouncer to fill shadows has, like this shot, a more natural feel to me. Well done.
-
6th June 2015, 01:15 PM
#7
Re: used strobe on orchids
Hey, I got the strobe to shoot smoke, figured I would try it on flowers. I do prefer multiple
lights and shooting tethered while making subtle lighting/exposure adjustments in real time.
Brian mentioned natural lighting and, while I agree with him, it is difficult to pull off when one
is stacking and photo-merging to cough out 30-40 inch images. Wind movement and clouds
tend to disrupt everything.
The using of mirrors to reflect the strobe light is interesting...using the cheap mirror wall tiles
placed hither and yon might prove interesting. If I could, in advance, figure exposure.
-
6th June 2015, 02:14 PM
#8
Moderator
Re: used strobe on orchids
While the shot is nice, I personally prefer flowers that are back-lit. That way the light travels through them and you get interesting colours, shadows (from the internal parts of the flower as well as the overlapping petals) and effects from the transmitted light. They can look almost magical when lit this way.
This shot looks primarily front-lit even though you had the lights and reflector at the side, so you get reflected light only. I have never tried flowers with flash / studio lights, but expect that you'd have to flag the light sources to control the light spill.
Posting Permissions
- You may not post new threads
- You may not post replies
- You may not post attachments
- You may not edit your posts
-
Forum Rules