I had planned to do a couple of other compositions of the MBR and after the awesome comments I’ve been getting this is one of them.
I’m not really in love with this one. But I’m putting it out there in case anyone might have some thoughts on the matter.
Instead of mentioning some of the issues I’m coming across I’ll just wait a minute and let it settle.
What I will say is that this is, for me, a difficult room and I’m coming to the conclusion that a big part of this is just like anything else.
If you can’t control every aspect and detail, then you end up in the position of doing the best you can with what you have to work with.
The shot is an ambient, and an overall flash shot with two lights bounced off the ceiling on either side of the camera in the main room, and another flash bounced in the ensuite (bathroom).
Another shot with a flash pop in the shower stall to give it a boost and I did two flash bang shots in the far room (with the guitar).
I purposely limited myself to 24mm FL here.
Hand composited.
A couple of questions are coming to the forefront now and could go either way.
I have seen a couple of the Biggies in this genre state that as the eye travels a distance into another room, said room should be lit a bit brighter to keep the eye in the shot, traveling that distance and back, to make sure the entire space (including the far reaches) gets a good view in the limited amount of time a shot is viewed.
Lighting.
In my limited experience with interiors I am finding shadows are unavoidable in most situations. Especially blending an ambient. The best wisdom that makes sense to me is when lighting try to have the shadows falling where they would fall in an ambient as according to windows/natural lighting of the room. Soften them if and/or as much as you can. I have seen a few shots where I’ve seen no shadows at all but few. Most are HDR and look a little iffy to me. HDR software works sometimes but will also introduce more problems than it solves. In this shot, there is a sliding glass door to camera left of the armoire, and a two-story split (standard width) window on the extreme camera left wall where the headboard of the bed is. Nothing on the camera side of this room and it needed some help. No windows in the ensuite and it was a black hole. One narrow wall height window in the far room and it is in shade from the exterior features so not a lot of help there. In fact its main quality was causing a hotspot on the floor. Not a lot of help there either.
Composition:
The spaces in this house are not always obvious compositions to me. The main spaces are not rectangular, segregated rooms, not always bright daylight, and it has a kind of flowing feel by design. Extreme altitude (sharp gables) in the ceilings. I’ve painted the entire house inside and usually had to base camp the day before and summit the next day to caulk, trim, and coat the extremities! That is if it didn’t snow up there over night! Thank god for bottled oxygen and Sherpas!
It has occurred to me that if they called it inferiors instead of interiors I’d already be pretty good at this!
I think it needs a pile of clothes on the bed!