Miquel Julia
Member
This is an object lesson in great portrait lighting.
Gold star Miguel.
Pentax 645NII, 120 macro View attachment 295194
Thank youNice Portrait, congratulations
Excellent portrait!
What lens was this taken with?
Aero EktarWhat lens was this taken with?
Ah, nice! Thanks for letting me know.Aero Ektar
Excellent portrait!
I told you will bore you with my limited portfolio.
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Portrait Of My Daughter Bianca by Ashley Hoff, on Flickr
Toyo 45A, Caltar 210MM F6.3, Arista EDU Ultra 400
LOL. I needed to post this somewhere else that wasn't Instagram! And I was being lazy.And we're expecting more because you promised.
Very nice. Challenging light by the looks of things (different temps)An environmental portrait:
View attachment 296224
LOL. I needed to post this somewhere else that wasn't Instagram! And I was being lazy.
Yes, this was a single large softbox to photographers right. There is a bit of light scattering around as well, as this was in my garage with white ceilings and concrete floor
An environmental portrait:
View attachment 296224
There is nothing wrong with using white walls. The first time I tried large format portraits, I just bare bulbed the sucker off the back wall in our lounge room. Gave a wall of light for the entire room and worked exactly how I wanted (I will post these pictures at another time - I don't want to be a post hog).I think that's what I might see. The catchlights don't quite tell the whole tale, but it feels not quite dark enough. Like under her chin. Works well, concrete floor is as good as a proper reflector!
I asked because I'm getting back to playing with studio lighting for the first time in many, many years. Gotta' ask to learn sometimes.
The light reminds me of my "fill" when I used to photograph guitars, which was actually a white wall just out of frame.
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The weird catchlight is a window that I'd opened as I was packing up. The cat was just being a pain and rolling around on the backdrop, so I took the shot. The reflection off the wall made a really nice fill on the shaded side and she's on a light tan carpet, which is filling under her chin.
There is nothing wrong with using white walls. The first time I tried large format portraits, I just bare bulbed the sucker off the back wall in our lounge room. Gave a wall of light for the entire room and worked exactly how I wanted (I will post these pictures at another time - I don't want to be a post hog).
I need to work on my technique. I look at what Miquel posted up above and he's managed to get a nice little rim of light just under the chin. But also, I don't want to over complicate setups. I look at what Tariq Tarey does on instagram with LF and the majority of its single light.
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