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Posts Tagged ‘Night photography’

Tutorials: The Golden Hour and Fireworks

Here are two dandy tutorials: one shows you how to simulate the ‘Golden Hour’ and the other one’s a tutorial on a special type of Night Photography – fireworks.

Mimicking the Golden Hour

David Hobby on Strobist was miffed at some clouds for obscuring the sun one evening when he wanted to take portraits of a pair of pretty flautists posing against the woods.  So he ‘faked’ the ‘Golden Hour’!  If you look at his photograph you may well conclude that it is indeed naturally lit with nothing but a large reflector fairly close to the camera.

Hobby used a monolight with – and here’s the trick – “a Rosco #08 straw gel” and also set it 50 feet away from the subjects.  He explains that the “#08 gel is like a ¼ CTO.”  (CTO is an abbreviation for ‘Colour Temperature Orange’; a warming gel.)  This was for rim lighting and highlights, besides what was reflected off the umberellas in front.

In front, he used a more conventional clamshell setup – speedlights in umberellas angled up and down.  That said, this setup actually mimicked what would have been natural, directional sunlight reflected off the umberellas.

Hobby also teaches you how to light and shoot a faux ‘studio’ portrait outdoors.

A Firework Spectacular

Darlene Hildebrandt writing in DPSchool states up front that shooting fireworks is “all about practice, experimentation” and “trial and error.”  The fifteen tips that she proceeds to give were evidently learnt in this way by her.  

A few tips may seem intuitive, such as the need to use a really good, “sturdy” tripod (though these ‘obvious’ tips are great to have because this makes the tutorial comprehensive and complete).  Others may either seem counter-intuitive until you read the reasoning or may be altogether expert knowledge.

For example, it’s best to keep long-exposure noise reduction off.  Another thing to turn off is autofocus.  Instead, prefocus (and considering the distance to the subject, i.e. near-infinity, that shouldn’t be too hard).

She also offers more mechanical guidance, such as advising that an aperture of f/8 is the ‘go to’ aperture for Fireworks Photography.

Hildebrandt creates striking images by keeping the shutter open long enough to capture two or more clearly different fireworks bursts in a single exposure.  Indeed, she explains, “Or you can switch to Bulb and just open and close manually when you feel you’ve captured enough bursts in one image.”

You can also learn a lot about Fireworks Photography by studying Hildebrandt’s photographs, a few of which are quite spectacular.

A few of her photos are not about just fireworks; they show fireworks in their setting with an urban landscape and human viewers; thus, such images are also excellent compositions and can be seen as (comparatively hard-to-shoot) photojournalism.

 

Light Painting with Darlene Hildebrandt

If HDR is yesterday’s craze then Tilt-Shift and Light Painting are probably duking it out to be crowned today’s craze.  For those who’re inclined to give their vote to the latter, Darlene Hildebrandt presents the first of a multi-part lesson on Light Painting in DPSchool.

This article is unusually systematic and logical in its organization; it’s more like a chapter of a Photography Book than your usual tutorial.

First, Hildebrandt provides an outline of her tutorial’s contents.  The systematic approach is shown by her setting out the equipment first and even dividing this into “The ‘Must Haves’” and “The ‘Really Nice to Haves’.”  With a beginning like this you know the author is going to be thorough.  (How thorough? This thorough: “a penlight or small flashlight [your cell phone can work in a pinch] to be able to check camera settings and find an item in the bottom of your bag . . .”)

On to Camera Settings where the author gets into the principles of the technique as she explains how to achieve correct focus and the use of Bulb – open-ended shutter speed.  The most informative nugget falls in the ISO bullet point, however.  Even though you’re shooting at night you’re advised “it is always best to choose the lowest ISO possible” to minimize noise and also bypass the wait that the long exposure noise reduction feature on newer cameras will entail.

Hildebrandt’s thoroughness transitions into helpfulness as she makes several suggestions on finding, and even devising, good subjects to light-paint on in the dark, especially if you’re a beginner.

The technique of actual light painting is the real ‘meat’ of this valuable tutorial.  This section has information ready and available that one would otherwise learn only through much trial and error:–  How close to get to the subject, how to achieve an abstract look, where to aim the flashlight, to ‘keep moving’ – all these tips and many more will get you from square zero all the way to square ten, so to speak, on Light Painting.  Learning and applying these tips and tricks will almost surely make your first foray a qualified success.

Part 1 even provides a handy-dandy diagnostic checklist at the end so you can make any necessary tweaks and adjustments.

 

Exhibitions and Images; Eerie and Intriguing

Living in Mexico, born in Congo, father from Belgium and mother from Hungary.  And now featured in a solo exhibition, Alice in the Land of Zapata, at the Hungarian House of Photography, is Nadja Massun whose photographs bespeak sensitivity most of all, a sensitivity probably heightened and refined by her peripatetic childhood.

“I am especially intrigued by faces and their expressions,” explains Massun, “the gestures and the movements of the body that encompass a particular state of mind or mood while also telling a story.”  Strangely, even when no living person’s face or expression is in-picture, one of Massun’s photographs fascinatingly conveys “a particular state of mind or mood.”  Would you agree that it is atmospheric and sort of haunting?

I wish Hungarian House had published more of Massun’s photographs.  As things stand, we have only a hint that this may be a very fine exhibition indeed.

A photographer and a poet have teamed up to present and interpret “the night – a mysterious time, full of darkness and secrets, shadowy corners and brief flurries of activity.”  Granted, it may sound like an artsy-fartsy project but Night Photography is an unusual specialization, and that in and of itself makes this project intriguing and attention-catching.  

Deserted downtowns, archways, ruins, graveyards (of course), all lend themselves to night shooting and Alison Wills and Hazel Hammond have hit upon a novel way of conveying the bewitching splendours of the night in a photo-poetry exhibit, The Woman who slept with Bones, at the Bristol Poetry Festival.  (Some more photos on the website, please?)

Remember that cheesy 70’s song Killing me Softly?  In the song, the ‘soft-killing’ is done with . . . a song; on the current Vogue Hommes cover, the soft-killing’s done with a gentle hand that playfully chokes a model.  Does that photo project, encourage or glamourize violence towards women?  A number of American watchdog organizations think so:– 

“While this cover was perhaps intended to shock and thrill potential readers, the truly shocking fact is that it glorifies violence against women as an act of love,” is how they admonish the magazine’s publishers in their screed.  “Choking is not a fashion statement, and certainly not something that should be used to sell magazines.” 

Is this typical American Political Correctness run amok?  Or does this photo cross a red line?  It’s definitely a ‘shade’ of ‘grey’ . . . but for a magazine cover, it is a valid expression of photographic imagery that should not be subject to any censorship.

 

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