No offence to a site sponsor/advertiser with a vested interest in artificial lighting but the sort of portraiture that interests me isn't studio, beauty, glamour or anything else that artificially enhances the subject; not that there's anything wrong with that. I'm more interested in capturing the person than what they "look" like, that's all. I may also invest in studio lighting kit at some point, but I want to explore the limits of natural lighting first and besides reflectors are cheaper than strobes and other modifiers.
Last edited by WhoDo; 12-01-2012 at 9:55pm.
Waz
Be who you are and say what you mean, because those who matter don't mind don't matter and those who mind don't matter - Dr. Seuss...
D700 x 2 | Nikkor AF 50 f/1.8D | Nikkor AF 85 f/1.8D | Optex OPM2930 tripod/monopod | Enthusiasm ...
Thanks, good tips and links.
Nice tip, simple and concise :-)
Thanks for both videos. I'm thinking about doing some portraiture practice soon so these will be helpful.
Kind regards
Sandra
great info thanks for the link
Fantastic resource, cheers!
Both videos are great, the second one i would of like some tips on how to use the reflector
Thanks that's useful info
Thanks for sharing the vid. Good tips.
Excellent tutorials,
Cheers
Peter
Cheers Peter
D700, 20mm f2.8, 24-70mm f2.8, 50mm f1.4, 70-200mm f2.8
i like this 3 tips that are easy to remember
Always willing to Learn
Canon 400D,5D MII Canon 70-200 f/2.8,Canon 100mm Macro f/2.8,Canon 24-104 f/4,Canon 17-40 f/4,Canon 15mm Fish Eye f/2.8,70-300 f/4,Speedlite 430ex & 580ex II,Canon 2x extender.