Monthly Archives: December 2008

12/24 Shooting with Sarah again.

  • So I spent Christmas Eve shooting with Sarah, whom I had not shot with in a pretty long time. We meet at 930 so we could get her to her hair appointment. From there it was off to Macy’s to see Sara for makeup. Sarah is Middle Eastern so make done just right would create a beautiful tone. Thankfully Sara is nothing short of brillant when it comes to this. (Sarah is the model, Sara is the make up artist!)
  • Our first location was an unspecified field. All I know is that I wanted a field. Once we found it, we had to contend with the weather. It was cold, but the wind was really the killer. I used only one of the larger flashes to save on set up time. The model of course waited in the car. Something a bit new I did, as seen in the photograph on the right was not use the flash for the face. I used ambient light for the face while the flash served as a rim light. I usually have my polarizer all the way dark. The trick for me in these situations is exposing the sky properly. The polarizer & flash help me bring all the range of stops in such a scene under control so the camera can capture it without blowouts or blackouts.
  • The wardrobe is all mine. Everything came from thrift stores. I have several in town I stop by on a regular basis and raid. The deals are unbelievable. Usually I buy 2s or 4s. I carry bulldog clips for anything that doesn’t fit right.

12/20 Shoot With Heather

Saturday’s shoot with Heather went extremely well. She is a posing machine, one of the best I have worked with. We shot both outside at various places in downtown St. Louis and back in the studio. One thing I wanted to do in the studio is work on some specific lighting schemes. I have been getting a lot of advice from Stephen Eastwood who is one of the Canon print masters. I think one of the most important things I learned from him was the importance of grids to control light. Fairly expensive, but worth the cost. For these shots I had a bare bulb flash grided from camera rear right angled down on her. The light was meant to leave just a shadow on the right side of the face. Just left center was a 32×40 grided soft box. Now, even with the grids, I was getting to much spill. I remember Stephen saying he would grid his grids if he could. I couldn’t do that, but what I did do is I cut a strip of black muslim I had and covered up half of the soft box. I almost created a strip box, but the exception was there was still light coming through the muslim. The result was a tight, mid contrasty light effect that almost made her glow. Note I was using a thunder gray background, the light was so tight that I had almost 0 spill! Now that’s control. (Click on photo for a larger view)

1st Post

I have finally gotten around to starting a blog. I will be adding to it over the next couple of weeks as I get it set up. Please check back often for updates.

June - January 5, 2009 - 2:06 am

Hello! Your photographs are beautiful and amazing! I am a recent college graduate, I received my Bachelor of Fine Arts Degree in Photography this past December. Are you interested in hiring an assistant? I photographed fashion week 2007 for ALIVE magazine, and I was the photography editor of the SIUE newspaper, The Alestle. You can email me at jmariefarley@gmail.com, and if so we could meet for you to review my portfolio. Thank you for your time! -June M Farley

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