Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2013/04/02
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Hi there on the other side of the Channel, Since the age of 13 my son, now also 18, showed the same behaviour. This reassures me and thank you for the technical infos. I don't have a DMR yet but I happen to have the same studio lights. Be careful because they are real bazookas. It's not easy to keep so many kids together in a studio, in front of a lens and take several good and sharp shots. Your photos show a good beginning. In general you can go high key with kids but not so with adults and certainly not with elderly people. Going digital recently I soon learned to underexpose a little bit. With the Leica R-8 & 9 you have the chance to have a flashmeter in your camera. Go for the faces but keep details in the highlights and in the shadows. Not easy with digital photography. This often gives a problem with ladies who don't like to see their wrinkels. So go for very soft light. If you are in a hurry inside a building with one person, there is an easy trick to begin with. Place your subject next to a window (not from behind) in a (withe) corner with a reflector on the other side or a softened far away low power flash. Some experienced photographer call this the Rembrand portrait. You can do the same in a studio. Put the person in a (white) corner and a softened flash on its side, not in front. Do the same with a black screen or something else, not too close, behind the subject. Gradually change the angle of the flash between the side and the front. You can then add and/or change the direction of a second and even a third flash. Never use them with the same power and don't put them at the same distance. I prefer semi translucent umbrellas in most cases. Or use the normal umbrellas and add a second semi translucent umbrella in front of it. The Elinchroms do have a second fitting for this. Or use thin withe fabrics or translucent tracing paper, because most studio flashes are very harsh, especially for portraits. With digital you can learn really fast and also in a studio. Good luck and have a lot of fun, Cedric 2013/4/1 Charlie Chan <topoxforddoc at btinternet.com> > It is rare that I have my nephew and niece visiting, esp when my oldest > son, Alex, is back from Cambridge. So I decided to have a go at shooting > them with a pair of Elinchrom 500 strobes. Definitely not my normal thing. > In fact, this is the first proper portrait session that I have done with > lights. So, please forgive me if these are a bit hackneyed. Anyway they > were all game for a laugh (except my 18 year old daughter, Coco, who won't > go anywhere near me when i have camera). Lots of Easter Eggs certainly > helped fuel the cocoa sustained frenzy! > > http://topoxforddoc.zenfolio.com/p218878823 > > DMR with 50 Summicron at ISO100 > 100cm Elinchrom Octa high up and just to the right > Second EL500 pointed at the background > Reflector from the bottom left > > Please feel free to chip in. I've got loads to learn about studio lighting. > > Thanks > > Charlie > > > Charlie Chan > www.charlie-chan.co.uk > > > > > > _______________________________________________ > Leica Users Group. > See http://leica-users.org/mailman/listinfo/lug for more information >