Tag: Portrait

  • Replicating natural light in a photography studio

    Replicating natural light in a photography studio

    Last night, the challenge was to shoot a new headshot. I really enjoy shooting headshots and I’ve often thought about doing them commercially. This was where we got to in the end – not bad for about 15 minutes of work.

    CM-150604-6883web_logo

    One of the reasons Adam and I rented the house that we live in was the first floor front room with the beautiful bay window. It produces the most wonderful light for portraits and still life images, as seen in this image of Steve shot a few months ago.

    10959704_865038693548743_3535574710664553422_n

    I mean, there’s a few differences. Simon’s headshot is much more natural whereas Steve’s is a little more casual. Steve’s is daytime window light and Simon’s is studio lights at night…

    Yeah, so one of the things I’m always really pleased at is that I can make studio lights look like window light. I seem to have a knack for it which does come in quite handy. I never really realised I was much good at this until I shot this picture of a model a few years back. I was pretty pleased with it, so I did what any aspiring commercial photographer would do; I got it printed up at 11×14 and popped it in my portfolio (in black and white, if I remember rightly). And then I went for an interview.

    Well, they loved it at pretty much every interview I went for. Except the London College of Communication, they hated it. But the London College of Fashion interviewers fawned over it and so did the commercial product photography company interviewers – where I ended up working full time. I hadn’t realised until then that shooting ‘daylight’ in the studio was actually quite hard. I thought everyone could do it.

    For the record, the below shot was done with a large, rectangular softbox with a grid on it. I really should buy one, it belonged to my ex and I actually really liked shooting with it.

    But anyway, last night Simon came round after all the good light had gone from the house. The best light in my studio is pre-midday and early afternoon. So instead we had to work with what we had.

    _MG_6847

    Yeah you know, the beauty dish one is fine. It’s just a bit ‘actors headshot’ and glamoury for a business headshot. It’s not really the style that they’re being shot in at the moment, and when you have friends with digital cameras (and time on their hands), there’s really no excuse not to keep your headshot up to date.

    The beauty dish shot was a large Elinchrom dish with the silver baffle and white sock – about 45 degrees and above the subject to the right. Dead simple.

    But there’s a trick. One that I was taught by a top commercial photographer.

    Don’t have window light? Make window light!

    2015-06-05 08.17.42

    This is what my studio looked like when I took a picture of it this morning, still set up. It was all a bit crammed in because on the left I’ve got my product table setup where I was shooting stock last week.

    Just in case you’re not clear how this works, I drew you a picture of Simon having his photo taken. Doesn’t he look happy and carefree?

    2015-06-05 08.17.42-mod

    So yeah. Basically I bounced the very soft but directional light produced by the beauty dish (with sock) off of the window glass and a small amount of ceiling. Most of the light does travel through the glass, but a small amount reflects back in a way that looks very natural. It spreads the light in a way that it would spread the sun’s light which helps make it convincing. I also popped a reflector under his chin.

    I got window the idea from a trick I was shown in the studio. If you want something that looks like window light – bounce a light off of a sheet of glass in exactly this way. Put some black or dark grey a few meters behind it to absorb the excess and you’re golden.

    CM-150604-6883web_logo-2

     

  • Photographing Empire – For Me

    Photographing Empire – For Me

    It’s not often I get time to photograph at PD events stuff that just I want to photograph. Last year I took my old Yashica TLR to the field during setup and shot some little portraits before time in. I really enjoyed it because in a world where people say ‘have you got some good pictures?’ you can genuinely answer with a smile ‘I’ve got no fucking idea’. Which sometimes is precisely the answer you want to give, but you can’t because that’s a bit rude.

    So anyway, I headed down to site yesterday with something that looked like this:

    SONY DSC

    A while ago a friend on Facebook said that one of the big reasons he shot polaroid was because it enabled him to strike up conversations with strangers. It’s true with this too. You plonk down a tripod with this on top and a black cloth draped round your shoulders to block the light and say ‘Can I take your picture?’ and people always respond positively. In fact it’s more than positive, you begin to find out things about their life. Like my friend Douggie telling me how his Dad used to do photography and how he would dabble in the darkroom himself when he was younger. I love hearing stuff like this, it’s so much more interesting than ‘what camera do you use?’.

    The other thing is that people want to have a look. The screen on the top is so accessible, so crisp and so BIG! People just want to look through it and move the camera round to frame things up themselves. It’s so different to digital. And slow. I like the slowness of it all.

    So here’s some shots, with Douggie up first, that were shot yesterday. But not on my film camera, these were shot on my normal camera with a tilt shift lens. (Yes, a real one David. Not a computer filter.)

    _MG_9702web

    _MG_9758web

    _MG_9721web

    _MG_9665web
    _MG_9726webAnd just because it’s beautiful, this is what the lens looks like:

    311488-canon-ts-e-90mm-f-2-8

     

  • Empire 2 – The Planning. (And my Dad).

    So, there is much planning is in the works for my Empire 2 adventure. We’re going to be better organised this time and get SO MANY character portraits shot. Of everyone, if everyone can work with us (and hopefully they will). That’s got to be in the region of 1000+ portraits over the course of the long weekend, which is a challenge for everyone. I can’t help wondering what they’d all look like put together as a year book. Bloody fabulous I reckon.

    And I’m keeping a diary of as many player events going on that I can find out about. People have really run with this one and the photography team have been getting all kinds of invites to things that players are organising. It’s rather exciting really and it excites me that the players want us to be involved in their game.

    I’ve been batting about ideas for projects too and I’m also getting quite excited about these as well. For a long time I’ve not been very enthusiastic about my personal photography work, I sort of hit a wall with it and just burnt out. But I’ve been searching for a project to get my teeth into for a while and I think this might be it. I’m curious about photographing the game and writing an essay to go alongside the selected images (I’m also a wannabe art historian) and then producing it into some kind of book. It seems like an interesting project and things seem to be coming together in my head (including a chapter entitled ‘The Pale Horse’, which I reckon will be rather good).

    So there was something else I wanted to share, and that’s a test shot I took for the character portraits. It’s my Dad, and I’ve never photographed my Dad before. And I realised that I should photograph him more. I never photograph the people that are close to me and I probably should. And you know what? I’m really pleased with it as a simple portrait.