Tuesday 26 July 2011

The Bike Day

A couple of weeks ago I took photos at Lakeside for my father-in-law. Coming up to the day I was trying to think of what kind of angles to get during the course of the day. 

I thought the best thing to do was to camp out at different corners on different sessions. That way I could limit the amount of time wasted on setting up.

NB: Now I have put a few "dud" ones this time to point out some of the things that I was trying to do at the time

First thing in the morning I thought I'd try and get a few in of the bike....



Without flash... a bit too much shadow....

With flash.... shadow looks a bit fake....

Changed flash angle to behind the bike... better 

Flash again with desaturated green, purple and red... plus throw in heaps of clarity and contrast :)


My first hurdle was trying to get into the flow of panning as the subject passed by and trying to marry aperture and shutter for a desired effect. So in the beginning I tried to get the hang of panning with a fast shutter

1st frame

2nd attempt


Argh Too far zoomed out to get any real detail

Lens focused out at last split second - panned too quickly left at that moment



Better..

So the next portion of the day was to shoot at slower shutter speeds so that I could try to convey a sense of motion in the photo. Now there was a whole lot of frame burning to begin with as my fledgling panning skills were a bit inept to begin with. I started at 1/30th sec but soon realised that the motorbikes were going too quick for me to get a nice sharp(ish) image so I ended up shooting at 1/50th or 1/60th sec, which worked out fine.

In order to use some of the larger apertures, I used a polarising and ND4 filter so that I could get a more shallow "depth of field".

ouch..

starting to get there...


better...




Threw clarity and contrast into overdrive to get this look here




This was one of my sharpest of the day

 In all honesty afterwards I thought to myself if the blurred background would've looked the same anyway if I had left the filters off - but unfortunately didn't experiment with that.

The rest of the day I spent trying different angles on the course and seeing if I could benefit from the afternoon light coming through:














And last but not least I tried to do the desaturation thing again.




P.S. Dont smoke





Az

Thursday 14 July 2011

Under my umberella... ella, ella, ella....

So this week I got my new convertible shoot through/Reflective umbrellas which I found some time to play with tonight.

So I asked my lovely wife to partake in my experimentation with umbrella work and she was kind enough to say yes :)






So using the above setup (1 strobe pointed into the shoot through umbrella and 1 CTB'd  Strobe pointed at the wall to separate the subject) Igot some interesting results...

ISO was set to 200, Umbrella Strobe was sitting at either 1/8th or 1/16th power depending on the picture and the gelled strobe was at 1/8th power. I chose to keep the umbrella close to the subject in order to limit the effect that it had on the background. Also when you put it close to the subject - the relative size of the light source increases, hence softening the light further as David Hobby explains in his awesome, awesome blog The Strobist

So I ended up with a few interesting shots of myself and Shona, first including ambient light........




And then I cut out the ambient and boosted the gelled strobe......












I thought I'd throw in a few extra faces there :)

So yeah - I think I'll be using umbrellas alot more now for profiles :)

Az.