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Archive for April, 2014

3 Ways to Get Killer Portraits Using a Tripod

21 Apr

As photographers, you’re all looking to “wow” the people we’re taking pictures of, whether they’re clients or just friends. When you show final images, there’s that sense of anticipation, excitement and nervousness as you gauge reactions. And when you hear the words “amazing” or “I love them,” it’s truly a great feeling. So how do you get the “wow” and avoid the “just okay?” Well that’s not always easy. With so many good photographers out there and so much of their work getting exposure via social networks, expectations for good photography is as high as it’s ever been.

shutter-drag-wedding-photography

Here are three ways to achieve killer portraits with the use of a tripod that we use in our studio. These include the following, all of which we’ll show you – keep reading:

  1. Shutter Drags
  2. Composites
  3. HDRs

Required Equipment

  • Sturdy tripod – that old hand-me-down tripod might not be stable enough, as any movement will show in the images
  • Shutter release – using a cable release will help you avoid touching the camera and causing movement
  • Wide angle lens – as you can see from the images in this article, a wider lens is going to bring out many of the “wow” elements like the clouds, the ocean, the streaking lights, and more
  • Camera – as with any type of photography, the camera is only as good as the photographer. You can get amazing results with both entry level DSLRs and full frame cameras.

1. Shutter Drags (Long Exposure Photography)

Dragging the shutter refers to using slower shutter speeds to capture movement. This captures motion of anything in your frame that is moving, while keeping the static objects in the scene nice and crisp. If you can get your couple to hold still, you have the opportunity to create awesome effects with moving people, cars or waves like you see in the image below. Additional saturation and contrast is added in post production using some Lightroom Presets.

wedding-photography-los-angeles

Shutter Drag Quick Tips:

  • How slow do you go? – well that depends entirely on how fast the other elements in the scene are moving. If cars are zooming by, you can get away with faster shutter speeds like 1/60 or 1/30, but if you are capturing moving people and they are slowly strolling, you may have to drop it even lower like 1/10th or even lower. For water, like the shots above, we are generally around 1/2 to 1 second.
  • Ensure that your subjects are holding really still – instruct your subjects to hold very still, avoid blinking during the shot or sequence of shots, and even hold their breath.
  • Utilize static poses –  posing for these types of photos will have to be static. Dips, jumps, and walks will add too much motion in the scene and result in blurry photos. However, static does not have to mean boring. You can still have them in flattering, romantic poses.
  • Snap a few extra shots to ensure you have one crisp photo – take a few extra shots because a photo may look crisp on the back of your camera, only to show noticeable motion blur as it’s taken into post production.

2. Composites

wedding-photography-composites-1

Compositing multiple photographs into one is sometimes the best solution when it’s unreasonable to have your couple hold still for as long as you need to achieve the desired effect. For example, if you’re looking to capture the beautiful stars in a night sky or if you’re looking combine multiple streaks of passing car lights –  the five, ten, or even 30 second exposure time is much too long to expect any live subject to be still. Below is an example where our couple would have had to hold still for around 15 seconds as we spin flaming steel wool just behind them.

wedding-photography

Composite Tips:

The tips for capturing composites are actually very similar as the tips for capturing shutter drags. For example, you still need a sturdy tripod and a shutter release; and you should certainly snap a few extras to make sure you have enough choices to work with in post-production. In addition, here are some more quick tips for capturing composite photos.

  • Expose for the couple’s skin tones first – your lighting can be anything from flash to constant lights; but the most important thing is to focus primarily on the subject.
  • Have the subjects exit the scene – after you’re sure you have a shot with a good pose and good lighting, you can have them exit the scene.
  • Then adjust your settings as needed to expose for the background and create your desired effects. For example, if you’re looking to capture the streaking lights, adjust your shutter speed down and wait for the cars to pass.
  • If you can keep the overall exposures identical between shots, compositing will be incredibly simple. Just layer the images in Photoshop, and then mask in and out elements on each layer. However, if the exposures and look of each image varies, then it will require quite a bit more advanced compositing work which would be beyond the scope of this article.

3. Try HDR Portrait Photography

hdr-wedding-photography-1

While HDR Photography gets a bad rap sometimes for being gaudy and fake, when done correctly, you have the opportunity to create memorable, distinct photography. This is especially true with outdoor scenes on a cloudy day. Grab your tripod, pose your couple in a static pose, dial in the right settings, and shoot away. What are the right settings? Well start with ISO 100 and a decent aperture (f/4 and up). From there, the shutter will vary depending on the brightness of the scene. For more information, feel free to check out some of these HDR tips on dPS.

hdr-architecture-wedding-photography

HDR Quick Tips:

Here are a few more things to keep in mind.

  • Study how to bracket exposures on your specific camera. Almost all cameras have the AEB (Auto Exposure Bracketing) feature, but you will need to know how to access it to dial in the correct settings.
  • Keep your minimum shutter speed at 1/200 or higher. Any movement in the couple or background can cause unnatural “ghosting,” so keeping the shutter speed high will really help you save time in post production.
  • Avoid strong and overpowering flares. If you’re shooting into the sun, strong flares can desaturate your image and create a loss of sharpness. If you are shooting into the sun for compositional purposes, choose an angle where the flare isn’t going to distract from the subject.
  • Choose the right time of day. Sunrise and sunset are still going to one of best times to shoot, as you are most likely to have amazing color in the sky during that time. Remember that the same general photography rules still apply when shooting HDR, we simply are using the HDR process to bring out more detail.
  • Watch the weather report. Partly cloudy days are great times to shoot HDR photography. Capturing all of the contrast and interest in the clouds, as you see in the sample images in this article, really add the “wow” factor.

Conclusion

intimate-hdr-poses

By no means are these three techniques enough for a solid session. In fact, the majority of the photos you take during any portrait session should revolve around candid posing, story-telling, and emotion. For us, we use these dramatic environmental shots to “set the stage” in a final album, canvas mural or other print medium. They are the big grand images that sets the scene, and they are followed by the close up candid images showing the couple interact in said scene and environment.

These techniques are also wonderful in creating “wow” shots, i.e. the shots they share on Facebook and the shots they end up printing on a canvas at their wedding. The shots that make everyone else go, “how’d they do that!?”

Do you have any other killer tips you’d like to share? Please do so in the comment section below.

sunset-hdr-wedding-photography

The post 3 Ways to Get Killer Portraits Using a Tripod by Post Production Pye appeared first on Digital Photography School.


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21 April, 2014 – Panasonic GH4 Review

21 Apr

The Panasonic GH4 is a new micro four thirds system camera that is fully competitive in terms of features, functionality and image quality with anything currently on the market. It leaves little undelivered for stills work. If a 16MP image size is adequate for your shooting (and it is for mine), then you’ll likely find the GH4 a very practical and enjoyable stills camera.

When it comes to video, the GH4 is in a class of its own. There is nothing currently on the market, or even announced from any manufacturer, that can trump the GH4 when it comes to video in a DSLR / CSC form factor. This is the only camera of its type that can shoot 4K to an internal card, and which also features variable frame rates in HD mode. 

You can win an all-expenses paid photographic expedition to Antarctica, along with air fare from anywhere in the world. The value of this prize is $ 15,000.

The Luminous Landscape wants you to try any of our more than 60 training or travel videos and our new free video player. Each purchase is an entry, and an annual subscription that includes all previous as well as new videos counts as six entries. The winner of a free lifetime subscription is also chosen from each month’s entries.

 

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Internet Explorer 11 – Place Sites Directly in the Start Menu for Easy Access

21 Apr

Add links to frequently-visited websites directly to the Windows Start Menu.

Are there websites you visit often enough with Internet Explorer 11 that you would like to make opening them up more convenient? Instead of navigating the Favorites menu of IE11, you can pin links to websites directly to the Windows Start Menu.

After opening the website from Internet Explorer 11, perform the following steps depending on your Windows interface:…

Read more at MalekTips.
New Computer and Technology Help and Tips – MalekTips.Com

 
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Waterfall Photography Video Tips

21 Apr

To help you out with this week’s photography challenge of waterfalls, I found a few video tutorials to walk you through how to photograph a waterfall. I also shared a collection of stunning waterfall images to get you inspired, if you missed it you can see those here.

This first video shows you the two choices you have when photographing a waterfall. You can either freeze or blur the water. Watch as he walks you through the camera settings for both options.

In this quick tip Tony Northrup goes over such tips as using a sturdy tripod, using shutter priority mode, and using a Neutral Density filter to block some of the light so you can get longer exposures, and finding a unique camera angle.

In this last video the photographer goes over step by step how to get that nice milky looking water. He talks about using a Polarizing filter, a tripod, and back button focus to help you get everything else in the photo nice and sharp.

I hope those help you get a handle on some of the technical aspects of waterfall photography. Now get out there and get shooting for this week’s challenge!

The post Waterfall Photography Video Tips by Darlene Hildebrandt appeared first on Digital Photography School.


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Mozilla Firefox – Plugins and Extensions – Grab a Word Count and Readability Score of Selected Text

21 Apr

Need a quick count of the number of words or characters on a webpage or section of text?

Typing a comment on a webpage and curious if you’re getting a little long-winded? Writing a blog post for an assignment and need to satisfy a word count minimum? Or writing an article and want to get an estimated readability score to help ensure your text can be understood by as many people as possible?

The “Word Count Tool” extension for Mozilla Firefox lets you select a block of text on a webpage and see the word and character counts in the Add-On bar. Pressing Ctrl + Alt + C (or navigating the right-click menu) shows an enhanced details screen displaying the number of sentences, paragraphs, average word length, estimated readability score, and more….

Read more at MalekTips.
New Computer and Technology Help and Tips – MalekTips.Com

 
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Brushed Off: 12 Dried Out & Abandoned Car Washes

21 Apr

[ By Steve in Abandoned Places & Architecture. ]

abandoned car washes
Hold the hot wax and spare the soap, these abandoned car washes have blow-dried their last vehicle and will no longer thank you for coming again.

Scentless In San Mateo

abandoned Hillsdale car wash San Mateo(images via: phillipalden/abandonedplaces/LiVEJOURNAL)

Hillsdale may not be what it used to be but this little slice of suburbia in San Mateo, California still boasts the 120-store Hillsdale Shopping Center and the convenient Hillsdale Caltrain Station. Perhaps the popularity of the latter has caused a drop in private auto ownership, thereby reducing business at the former Hillsdale Car Wash to an unsustainable level.

abandoned Hillsdale car wash San Mateo(image via: phillipalden/abandonedplaces/LiVEJOURNAL)

As photo-documented by Phillip T. Alden, the Hillsdale Car Wash appears to have been relatively recently abandoned and most of its machinery and signage is intact, if a little worse for wear. OK, maybe more than a little. One imagines the car-owners of Hillsdale will now have to search far and wide for a car wash that offers custom interior fragrances such as Summer Breeze, New Car, Baby Powder, and Jasmine.

Dry Down Under

abandoned car wash Adelaide Australia(images via: Ryan Smith)

That’s not a car wash, THIS is a car wash and if any place NEEDS a car wash it’s Australia, what with all that red dust flying about. Flickr user Ryan Smith (RS 1990) captured this long-abandoned 1988 Kleindienst Euro-Combi car wash in Salisbury, a northern suburb of Adelaide, South Australia. As might be expected in one of the more arid areas of OZ, the car wash is more dusty than rusty. Sorry Mad Max, you’ll have to take your filthy Falcon XB Pursuit Special somewhere else.

Abandon All Soap

abandoned Detroit car wash church(image via: Detroit Liger)

Praise the Lord and pass the hot wax! Credit Flickr user Detroit Liger (Robert Monaghan) with this hauntingly beautiful image of a former Detroit car wash reborn (no pun intended) as a community church, then abandoned once more.

abandoned Detroit car wash church(images via: Detroit Liger and Houses Of God)

Located on on Mack Avenue two blocks east of Detroit’s historic Indian Village neighborhood, the “Gospel Hands Car Wash” has been shuttered so long it’s not certain whether it functioned first as a car wash and then as a church, or operated as a curious combination of both. Pimp my ride? No thanks, but how ’bout baptizing my Buick?

Cubs Club

abandoned car wash parking Chicago (image via: I Hate Clark Street!)

It isn’t easy being a Cubs fan, and living within shouting distance of Wrigley Field ain’t no bowl of cherries neither. A few privileged car-owners have found a sheltered oasis just off Clark Street, however, as this long-abandoned Chicago car wash now provides a precious few parking spaces conveniently close to The Friendly Confines.

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Brushed Off 12 Dried Out Abandoned Car Washes

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20. April 2014

20 Apr

Ein Beitrag von: Gino00

unbenannt-81 © Gino00


kwerfeldein – Fotografie Magazin | Fotocommunity

 
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If you could only see

20 Apr

Die Serie „If you could only see“ von Andrea Hübner entstand an einem grauen Novembertag. Eine perfekte Atmosphäre für die geplanten Aufnahmen, die an die Bücher von Jane Austen und Charlotte Bronte erinnern. Die Location hatte Andrea bei einem kleinen Spaziergang entdeckt. Leonies Gesicht passte für sie perfekt zu der Idee, die sie im Kopf hatte.

Ich hätte mir kein besseres Modell vorstellen können. Die Kleidung hatten wir vorab zusammen ausgesucht, die Frisur habe ich geflochten, bevor wir uns auf den Weg zur Location gemacht haben. Alles harmonisierte für mich an diesem Tag wunderbar und so ging ich zufrieden und mit vollen Speicherkarten nach Hause.

© Andrea Hübner

© Andrea Hübner

© Andrea Hübner

© Andrea Hübner

© Andrea Hübner

© Andrea Hübner

© Andrea Hübner

Andrea Hübners Bilder begleiten uns schon lange. Bereits 2010 schrieb sie für uns einen Gastartikel und erklärte ausführlich, was die analoge Fotografie für sie bedeutet. Die Serie „If you could only see“ zeigt eine ihrer digitalen Arbeiten.

Mehr von Andrea findet Ihr auf ihrer Homepage, auf Facebook oder auf Flickr.


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browserFruits April, Ausgabe 3

20 Apr

Wir wünschen Euch einen schönen Ostersonntag! Vergesst beim Eiersuchen nicht, auch hin und wieder ein Erinnerungsbild zu schießen und wenn Ihr ganz besonders ordentlich sucht, findet Ihr vielleicht ja sogar noch versteckte Eier vom Vorjahr. Soll es ja alles schon gegeben haben. Unsere browserFruits sind bis auf das Fotospecial wenig österlich ausgefallen. Wir hoffen, sie munden Euch trotzdem.

 

Fotospecial: Osterhase

Flickr

500px

 

Deutschsprachig

• Warum Politiker sich nur noch selten als Machtikonen inszenieren und wie Fotos in den Medien gezielt so inszeniert werden, dass sie unseren Erwartungen entsprechen, beleuchtet die Süddeutsche.

• Fünf Jahre lang als Fotograf auf einem Kreuzfahrtschiff. Bildwerk3 hat ein interessantes Interview.

• Die Reform der Künstlersozialkasse verspricht deren Erhalt und somit weiter Renten-, Kranken- und Pflegeversicherung für rund 170.000 freie Künstler.

 

International

• Passend zu Ostern: 25 Bilder von Hasenfreundschaften.

• Joey L. meint: Seine Arbeiten im Netz zu teilen ist genauso wichtig wie das Fotografieren selbst. Er erklärt es anhand eines Jobs, den er kürzlich so bekam.

• Zwei der Pulitzer-Preise 2014 gehen an die NY Times. Im Blog werden die preisgekürten Serien gezeigt und Hintergründe erläutert.

• Eine herrlich ironische Serie, die damit spielt, dass viel zu viele von uns viel zu oft die Welt verpassen, weil sie ständig auf ihr Handy starren.

• 25 lustige tierische Fotos, die genau im richtigen Moment aufgenommen wurden.

• Auf ServusTV gibt es eine lange Doku über den New Yorker Modefotografen Bill Cunningham. Es ist unglaublich, was dieser Mann auf die Beine gestellt hat.

• Schnecken leben in einer magischen Welt.

• Martin Parr fotografierte den Jersey Liberation Day, der das Ende der Besatzung der Nazis im zweiten Weltkrieg feiert. Die Bilder werden nun bis Mai im Jersey Heritage ausgestellt.

• Instagram stellt den Stream der Fotojournalistin Anastasia Taylor-Lind vor. Wie? Mit einem ihrer Videos, in dem sie ihre Arbeitsweise kurz vorstellt.

• Ein Mann fotografierte im Dunkeln mit Blitz und wurde fast zu Tode erschreckt.

• In Hak Nam (Stadt der Dunkelheit) lebten einst über 50.000 Menschen. Diese Bilder erinnern daran.

 

Neuerscheinungen und Tipps vom Foto-Büchermarkt

Buchtipps

• In sehr intimen Selbstportraits hat die Fotografin Jen Davis sich 11 Jahre lang mit Unsicherheiten bezüglich ihres Körperbilds auseinandergesetzt. Das Buch dazu heißt „Eleven Years“* und ist beim Kehrerverlag für 39,90 € erschienen. Zeit Online zeigt Bilder daraus.

• Die Galerie Vevais publiziert wundervolle Bücher. Eines davon Agafias mystische Märchenwelt. Polaroids von Agafia Polynchuk. Das handgebundene Buch ist limitiert auf 100 Exemplare und kostet 75 €.

 

Zitat der Woche

I never have taken a picture I’ve intended. They’re always better or worse.

Diane Arbus –

Mehr Zitate

 

Videos

Der 88-jährige Saul Leiter in einem Gespräch mit Brigitte Woischnik und seiner Assistentin Margit Erb.

 

* Das ist ein Affiliate-Link zu Amazon. Wenn Ihr darüber etwas bestellt, erhalten wir eine kleine Provision, Ihr bezahlt aber keinen Cent mehr.


kwerfeldein – Fotografie Magazin | Fotocommunity

 
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In photos: ‘Paris in the Springtime’

20 Apr

DSC_7148.jpg

‘Paris in the Springtime’ is a new photography exhibition at the Beetles+Huxley gallery in London featuring notable photographers such as André Kertész, Robert Doisneau, Henri Cartier-Bresson, Willy Ronis and Elliott Erwitt. These classic black and white images are some of the scenes that have defined Paris’ romantic street life cliché found in modern pop culture. The collection of mid-twentieth century photos are on display from April 7 – May 3. See gallery

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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