Excellent tip Manfred and easy for my brain to remember - thank you!
Yes, I am. I have focused on environmental portraits up to this point. Thanks, I'll give that a try. Plan to start experimenting on myself so I can get a good handle on the flash. I prefer a constant light source as you can see it (I'm eye driven).
It does. I have the older version which is 5300K. My blunder was placing it too close to a fairly neutral couch - it prob picked up that color a bit.
I had a reflector with me. I need to get a stand for it, as it didn't seem to be throwing enough light up... another thing I need to experiment with on myself.
This is an extremely helpful tip explained in a way I can visualize - thanks.
Thanks
Thanks
I did figure out the shadow issue quickly. Looking forward to getting that light source closer and darkening up that background. Thanks for hair light reminder as the background darkens.
I was using a prime lens - a 105mm. Do you think cropping some more from the bottom would help - of would it be too tight?
Sure -- please just remember that I only started using my flash in December with the help from all of you.
Thanks. I'll check him out. My favorite portrait photographer at the moment is Sean Archer from Russia.
Yes, thanks for the comments you and Manfred have provided. The easy tip Manfred provided was super. As this is of interest to you as well, be sure to read it. And I will def add that hair light!
Yes, she did have a lot of foundation on. The Ice Light should have been ok (5300K daylight balanced) but I made a mistake and placed too close to a fairly neutral couch :-(
I didn't notice the button, so thanks for fine tuning my eye. What about the necklace bothered you - I see that are subtle?
Yes, I have a couple of books (I don't learn as well via just reading), and I also have some videos which I love. Posing is a real skill for a variety of reasons as we know
Thanks for all your comments Dave.
Last edited by KimC; 19th January 2017 at 02:05 PM.
The color of the background in your original file that you just posted complements the model's brown hair much better for me than the color in your finished version at the top of the thread.
So, I revisited this after pondering the comments... and here is a revised version...
Note: I modified the image some on 1/19 - it was too warm for my taste and brightened face a hint. I'm still not happy with it and prefer my original ... I think I'm struggling with this as I think I have developed a style with my other images and this one is just not fitting. :-(
Last edited by KimC; 19th January 2017 at 02:21 PM.
That is one advantage of using studio lights rather than small flash - built in modeling lights.
In studio type work, you might want to consider shooting tethered. Connect your camera to your laptop with a USB 3 cable (TetherTools is where I bought mine) and you will get a large view of every shot. Lightroom allows you to shoot tethered (although I have gone to Capture One, as it seems to be a lot more stable). It's a great learning tool and used by a lot of pros for this type of photography.
The main downside of constant light is that it is relatively low intensity when compared to flash.
If you have any CTB (Colour Temperature Blue) gel, try wrapping it around your light source and see if that gets the colour of the light up a bit. I'd start with 1/4 CTB. You can always wrap a second sheet around if that is not raising the colour temperature enough.
The reflector depends on light spill from your key light to illuminate the scene. It needs to be just out of the frame. If it is too far away, it won't throw enough light. I sometimes have my light sources so close that the get into the corners of the image, but are easy to retouch out in PP.
Part of the problem is that you have too much light on the arm. Portraiture is generally about the face and this is where the light needs to be. In your initial shot, the arm is definitely too brightly lit.
I would suggest you start with your 70-200mm lens. I personally would try a different pose. The one thing that you don't want in a portrait is strange looking "amputations", where the cuts are in an awkward place or there are unattached limbs just sticking into the frame. On this shot I personally would have tried to fit in the whole arm down to the elbow.
If you are like the rest of us, once you master it you will wonder why you thought it was so difficult. Remember that this is the preferred way of shooting for most commercial photographers because the light is so easy to control, unlike natural lighting.
Yes, have a look at how he poses his models. Stick to the "rules" until you master this genre and then start working on your style. It's already well developed in your other work, so you'll get there quite quickly.
I've done a couple of the things i mentioned (plus a bit of shine removal), etc. Unfortunately my Wacom tablet is not accessible right now, so I had to edit with a mouse. I'm not 100% sure of the colour correction either as I really don't trust the colours on my laptop screen. A slight change of the angle I view at makes a difference, unfortunately and I will retouch my work when I get back home.
Last edited by Manfred M; 19th January 2017 at 12:46 AM. Reason: Added edited image
Reviewing this thread about the immense difficulty of shooting portraits reminds me of why I'll stick to photographing wine. Aside from all the obvious reasons, there is always the fallback position that if the subject proves to be uncooperative, I simply drink it. And if the subject proves to be cooperative, I simply drink it.
Kim, first of all, thank you for starting this thread. I've learned a lot from the various comments.
I was about to post a comment that I preferred the white balance/colour correction in the RAW file as well as in your re-worked image in post 27 when I saw Manfred's recent post. To my mind the white balance in your first post as well as in Manfred's post 28 is too blue. (I'm looking at the image on a relatively good monitor that has been calibrated and profiled – albeit not for the past two or three months.) But I'll be interested in what others may comment about the white balance.
edit: "RAW" presumably is the SOOC jpeg?
Last edited by Cantab; 19th January 2017 at 02:12 AM.
I'm working on a laptop that I profiled and calibrated last week. I white balanced my shot against the gray seamless that is in the original image; using an area to the left and near the top of the model. The subjects arm still has a bit of a blue colour cast; definitely more than I expected but I'm not aiming at 100% here as there is something a bit strange about the light. The IceLight is at 5300K and the Speedlight should be in the 5500K to 5600K range - the colour should be reasonably close.
I don't 100% trust the colours on this laptop and would have preferred to white balance against a proper target, but if anything I find the image just a touch warm (outside of the arm).
Yes, I have been considering that and prob will do so once I start experimenting on myself. I also use Capture One for processing of RAW images. I do have access to LR now, as I signed up for a subscription this winter so I could start to learn PS. I use Affinity and it doesn't seem as powerful, so I feel I need to bit the bullet. I have tried working RAW images in LR so I can cut down on software, but I prefer the result with Capture One.
I do believe the problem with my IceLight was related to where I placed it. Until now, I have never had a problem with the color of the light it was throwing. If it continues, I'll def look into your below suggestion. My flash was only on 1/4 power.
Thank you for the advice.
Yes, absolutely! And it gets at where my light source was and how it was positioned. It was a def lesson. I tend to be someone who learns by doing, so why I sought out a friend to experiment on. I don't forget my hard lessons.
That is my favorite lens and was in my bag :-( Yes, def need to really study posing... and practicing them on myself.
I hope so. I was surprised that Sean Archer is just a natural light guy. I purchased some books and videos by Roberto Valenzuela and he has helped me see "light" differently... and has made me want to really learn my flash.
His posing is just gorgeous. Will do. I did figure out this morning, I am having a hard time with this set of images as they just don't look like my other work... maybe I was trying to be something I'm not.
Thanks for modifying the image. I'll wait until you are home and on your calibrated monitor to comment on color. What I do really like, and I would like to know how you did it -- you seemed to give more shape to her face.
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You're welcome. I don't mind putting my work out there as it's how we all learn; and I've learned a lot here. I prefer true C&C on my images as it helps me see how others might see them and helps me think differently and of course learn.
I'm struggling with this set Bruce. See my comments to Manfred today.
I have a calibrated monitor, but I just can't get this image to a place I personally like. Out of all of them, I prefer the original. I agree the original is a hint on the cold side (I tend to like colder images).
Last edited by rpcrowe; 19th January 2017 at 07:41 PM.
Hi Kim!
Hey I wonder if you would mind saying your camera settings? I have a couple of questions I’m wondering about. Just personal curiosity I guess!
A couple of those are: do you think at the settings you used is the Ice Light having any real effect on the shot other than providing reflections? Did you shoot using one light at a time at chosen settings and a shot at chosen settings with no lights fired?
And the reason I ask is sometimes using flash at particular settings will over-ride any continuous lights used unless there is a particular “glare” from them (a brighter light reflected directly into the lens) in the shot. The light itself may not have any, or much effect, but a glare off a reflective surface from one may.
Taking the above mentioned shots will tell you the story on what your lights are doing in the scene.
Again, I’m just curious for my own edumacation! Never used an Ice Light, and unless I’m doing say, a special effects type thing in a studio setting, I don’t usually mix flash/continuous! I would assume you already have this worked out, but have not seen anything saying.
Maybe I’m just in The Wild West of lighting at the moment!
Camera settings were:
ISO 200; 1/160s; f/3.2; 105mm
Flash was on 1/4
I do know the Ice Light filled the shadow under her neck. All shots were fired with some light. Some of the initial shots I used only the Ice Light, but it wasn't cutting it. All over shots used both.