This is another in my (very) occasional series shooting my grand-daughter Chloe.
The aim was to get some Halloween shots, we (Rebecca and I) knew this was going to be a tricky shoot as poor Chloe has been suffering with a persistent cold for weeks and her moments of smiling are currently very short-lived - and take a lot of 'work' by Mum to achieve. Rebecca coaxed one good smile (in #1) near the beginning of the second session, just after lunch. The first session; before lunch, was quickly determined to be a lost cause.
I knew I wanted to try a colour wash up the (pale blue painted) wall as a background, because a previous attempt to use a large white reflector as a background resulted in all the shots showing creased background.
I think the room is less than 12'/4m square, so using an umbrella as the key light was always going to result in a lot of multiple light bounces off walls and ceiling reducing contrast possible. At least I chose the reflective umbrella over the shoot-through, or things would have really got out of hand.
As I recall, Chloe was about 3' (1m) in front of the wall and I was about 4-5' (1.5m) in front of her. She was on a faux sheepskin rug on the floor, I was lying flat out with my back against the stairs, shooting sideways, which at least made the camera in portrait orientation. Unsurprisingly, I had problems, despite careful umbrella placement and angling of its light throw, with it washing out the magenta light I was chucking up the wall. Similarly, there was, despite snooting the magenta gelled flash and aiming that carefully, quite a bit of reflection of that on to the side of her face.
Focal length and aperture chosen to suit this situation, shutter speed set to 1/200s.
1
(439-6103)
2
(439-6142)
3
(439-6149)
Turns out the EXIF for all three was identical:
Nikon D7100 + Nikon 50mm, f/1.4 lens at f/4, 1/200s, iso 1000, Manual with Godox X1T-N RF trigger hotshoe mounted.
2 (manually set) speedlights:
Key: Godox TT685N firing @ 1/32 power in to a white 30" reflective umbrella
Background; Godox TT685N, magenta gelled firing @ 1/40 (aka 1/32 power, minus 1/3 stop) down a Rogue Flashbender curled in to snoot shape to prevent direct light hitting Chloe.
I made a list of lessons learnt after the shoot 17/10/2016, it is frankly appalling that I still make these stupid errors so often - read on while I weep (and hang my head in shame):
A) Check ISO before you start! (The 1000 iso was 'left over' from previously shooting fungi in woods)
B) Check the flash zoom setting when mounting in to modifier so it is appropriate (the flash was only illuminating part of the umbrella - which probably did me a favour in terms of narrowing the spill angles, but this was accidental)
C) Don't do the entire shoot at one aperture setting (in case you misjudge DoF requirements)
D) Try umbrella half collapsed to reduce spill next time*
E) The advantage of the 1000 iso was the flashes ran at 1/32, which meant they could shoot bursts of 3 or 4 shots in a second, this allowed 'fleeting expression selection' in PP
F) I struggled with enough light to Auto Focus with - we had the room light off (on a dull day), to avoid the risk of a tungsten 'contamination', this meant only the centre AF point worked reliably, but focus and recompose is risky with a moving subject at f/4 and close distances. In hindsight, I could have tried the Focus Assist light on the RF trigger, but that would have required switching out of burst mode
G) Another after-thought, seeing the loose fit of her T-shirt, should have been to try the old 'clothes peg' (or clamp) 'trick' behind the subject - to pull the clothes to a better fit. However, knowing kids, this might have proved quite a distraction
H) Yet another after thought; I probably could have reduced the visibility of the reflected BG light on the side of her face if I had only thought to put the BG light camera right (same side as key), so it was hitting the lit side of her face, not the side in shadow
I) Don't cut off parts of the subject! although, in my defence, that's tricky with a prime lens and limited manoeuvring distance for the photographer when an arm is suddenly thrust out where it wasn't a second before!
* I have since bought a small (24"/60cm) square soft box and grid to hopefully allow better aiming of the key in confined spaces.
I have also bought a stacking grid thingy for another flash, which will allow even better aiming of a small/hard light source for rim or background use in future shoots.
I had wanted to try a GoBo to cast a scary shadow in the magenta light behind Chloe, but space and time precluded giving this a try. I also wanted the magenta coloured wall to be more saturated, but this was all I could manage at the time. I must practice at home, so I know the 'formula' for a better result next time.
Thanks for stopping by to look and hopefully to pass comment too.
I hope anyone else shooting similar subjects can learn from my mistakes
Cheers, Dave