Wading into Flash

 

So, I am learning. Taking pictures when I can using this basic knowledge and making mistakes constantly, just to prove how little I know. Down this route, however, lies some amazing photographs and indeed photographs with value, real cash value. I can see how people get the bug for playing with flash and moreover how magazines and papers love resulting photos.

I have often wowed at the photographs of Lyndon Wade. Not only for his ability to invent and tell crazy stories through his images, his talent at producing the unreal and sometimes terrifying but also the elastic, plastic quality of the pictures themselves.

I wondered how he was able to create that carnival look, and so pumped a few search terms into our old friend google and came out with this page. Rightly or wrongly it explains, in brief, the lighting setup used by Lyndon for one of his most famous pieces.

It’s a lot of lights, strategicaly positioned. I thought, perhaps this was how he does it! And it is. So, as is so foten the case for me, I took a great idea and tried my own, half arsed version of it.

I wanted to take a two part photo series of my friends Graham and Bee (newly engaged no less! Congrats again you two!), in one photo they would be standing, static in each other arms, the next woudl be a flurry of mayhem in mid throws of a ‘lovers tiff’.

I had little kit and thought that to create the light I wanted I had to fill the room as best I could. I took my speedlight, set it up with an umbrella and set it to about half power just to camera right, flooding the room. This gave me even coverage, but cast shadows wherever the light couldn’t reach. A kitchen is full of obstacles.

So I added another strobe (no more light modifiers, as I had no more), this time in front of the camera to the left, hidden in a cupboard. I don’t know the setting of this one as its an old Vivitar and the setting are not clear to me yet… This started to produce the spread of light I was after.

Then my model stepped into the frame and began to cast further shadows. So I had to deploy my last strobe. I wanted uniform light

throught the scene, so I asked Graham to put the flash in his back pocket. I could then fire it directly against the back wall and hopefully eliminate any additional shadows.

Then I took the first shot, nice and easy, static, simple. Then came the action shot. I had included the ‘props’ to be used in the action shot (a box of cereal and a full glass of water) so that there was a little bit of story telling going on.

Unless we wanted to have to clean up and go again we had one shot to get it on, so a joint count down and then, GO! We just about got it…

Posted in PhotoTips

Strobing

I have just recently started to play around with strobes in my photography. This is largely down to my friend Graham who about 18 months ago decided to get involved with taking pictures. He quickly mastered the basics of exposure and got to grips with his Nikon and before long was searching for more interesting things to do with his new found toy. Armed with a couple of bots of basic lighting gear (a studio strobe, stand and a Nikon speedlight) he went about flashing!

I followed his pictures closely on flickr and as he posted on twitter. The progress was clear and after an initial jump, linear. As he was learning to control the light, the photographs grew in complexity and propriety. The trick, as he would later tell me, was to take the flash off the camera and remotely trigger it. Although I had been growing my knowledge in the photographic world I had stuck firmly to the use of natural light, so much of this was new to me.

The purchase of a few bits of tiny East Asian technology proved to be the catalyst for a whole new world of photographic enjoyment and from a pecuniary point of view, valuable.

Great portraits are more often than not, taken using flash. Off camera flash.

So I ventured into the arena myself, first with my own set of Yongnouo triggers. eBay is often your friend in these matters of procuring ‘fringe’ technologies from foreign lands. With little expenditure I already had all the bits and piece I needed to start making light I could control and capturing people standing in it… that’s the pretty simple reality of it.

The complexity of managing artificial light is great, but relies on a few key concepts, light diminishes and spreads over distance exponentially being the key one, and that by controlling the aperture and shutter speed on my camera I can influence the amount of light I capture from my subject and then my background. Studio flash is one thing, if you are just looking to seperate your subject from the world entirely, but the real excitement comes from going out into the world and bring your subject closer to their surroundings. Armed with my rudimentary knowledge of these concepts I found I was in control…. This is when you start to see the potential.

Posted in Uncategorized

Layered Portraits

I loved Jeremy Cowart’s illustration videos he did on Vimeo so thought I would have a crack at something similar myself. So far, just two images, one of my favourite artist, Bob Dylan (made using various images grabbed online) and one of my good friend Joe, made from an original photograph and then many images sourced online of things related to him.

Bob Dylan - With images from all over the web

Check out the Cowart here:

And here is another one I did of my friend Joe:

Joe - With images from all over the web

Posted in portraits

Lost

Something went wrong with my previous wordpress blog and I could not recover it. So all those posts I’ve written are gone, which is a big shame cause I enjoyed writing them and had some great comments too.

I guess its time to start again from scratch… :(

Posted in Uncategorized