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P H OTO T R A D E S EC R E T S VOL . 1
EXPERT LIGHTING TECHNIQUES ZEKE KAMM
PEACHPIT PRESS
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EXPERT LIGHTING TECHNIQUES
ST ROBIST P H OTO TR AD E S ECRE TS VO L . 1 E XP ERT LIGHTI NG TECHNI Q U E S Published by Peachpit Press. For information on Peachpit Press books, contact: PE AC H P IT P RES S 1249 Eighth Street Berkeley, CA 94710 (510) 524-2178 Fax: (510) 524-2221 Find us on the Web at www.peachpit.com To report errors, please send a note to
[email protected] Peachpit Press is a division of Pearson Education Text and illustrations copyright © 2011 Trade Secret Cards, LLC; all photographs separately copyrighted by their photographers.
EDITOR: Zeke Kamm PRODUCTION EDITOR: Lisa Brazieal PROJECT EDITOR: Rebecca Freed COVER AND INTERIOR DESIGN: Mimi Heft COVER PHOTO: Danny Ngan COMPOSITOR: Zeke Kamm N OT I C E OF RI G H TS All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without the prior written permission of the publisher. For information on getting permission for reprints and excerpts, contact
[email protected].
NOTIC E O F LIABILITY The information in this book is distributed on an “As Is” basis, without warranty. While every precaution has been taken in the preparation of the book, neither the authors nor Peachpit Press shall have any liability to any person or entity with respect to any loss or damage caused or alleged to be caused directly or indirectly by the instructions contained in this book or by the computer software and hardware products described in it. TR ADEM AR K S Throughout this book trademarked names are used. Rather than put a trademark symbol in every occurrence of a trademarked name, we state we are using the names only in an editorial fashion and to the benefit of the trademark owner with no intention of infringement of the trademark. Strobist is a trademark of David Hobby. Used with permission. ISBN 13: 978-0-321-75287-1 ISBN 10: 0-321-75287-2 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 Printed and bound in the United States
“While passionately photographing life, don’t forget to live life passionately.” Photo of author and son taken by wife
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EXPERT LIGHTING TECHNIQUES
I NT R ODUCT I O N P H O T O G R A P H Y I S A B O U T light, simple as that. Learning to control light is a critical step in becoming a better shooter.
You are holding in your hands a book of inspiration: The work of two dozen photographers who know how to use light. Flip each page over and see how they created these dynamic photos, so you can make images like this, too.
T H E R E ’ S A S E C R E T in photography: Learning how
to light isn’t hard. It doesn’t take thousands of dollars worth of gear. Not even hundreds. You don’t need to memorize complex theorems or massive texts. All you need to light your photos like an expert is a few concepts, a few tools—many you already have, and a few minutes to think about the image you want to take before you take it.
The very first thing in your tool kit should be a willingness to experiment. Photo Trade Secrets is designed to help you do just that.
The best thing about the techniques in this collection is they easily scale up or down. Whatever situation you’re in, you can use this knowledge to make your photographs better. Tear out an image or technique that inspires you. Bring it to your next shoot. And give it your best shot!
— David Hobby Photographer & Editor, Strobist.com
— Zeke Kamm Editor, NicePhotoMag.com
EXPERT LIGHTING TECHNIQUES © 2011 TradeSecretCards.com
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Work Light
K EN B R OWN 61 Aston Martin GT Zagato
Long Exposure
Ken Brown borrowed a $20 hardware-store work light to photograph this $5,000,000 Aston Martin Zagato. How did he make it look so good with just one light? Working in a pitch-black room, Ken left the shutter open for 21 seconds while he waved the light around the front and down the side of the car, creating a huge virtual softbox. With a little trial and error you can use this technique to get big-budget results for little to no money.
Photo © Ken Brown
T H I N K Y O U D O N ’ T have enough lighting gear to take great images?
Shoot-Through Umbrella
ST E PHA N I E B E L L Letting Go W A Y B A C K I N 2006, Stephanie Bell from Emerging Design & Photography took the image “Letting Go” in her first attempt at off-camera lighting outside the studio. She started by overpowering the daylight with a fast shutter. Then she used a single flash set to full power and blasted it into a shoot-through umbrella. By keeping the ambient light low, she was able to stop the motion of the falling feathers with the flash and create an image worth holding on to.
Flash emergingphoto.ca
Ambient Underexposed 3 Stops
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EXPERT LIGHTING TECHNIQUES
Photo © Stephanie Bell
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EXPERT LIGHTING TECHNIQUES Exposed for Background
GARY WILLIAMSON
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Flash Lit Foreground
T H I S D R E A M L I K E I M A G E by Gary Williamson was taken in a field
just outside the airport in Geneva. He slowed the shutter down to 1/25 of a second at a 5.6 f stop to lock in the sky, and then brought up the flowers in the foreground with just a single flash camera left. Exposing for the background and lighting for the foreground can help turn a simple setup into a powerfully good image, especially when Mother Nature plays along.
Photo © garywilliamson.co.uk
Sunflowers
EXPERT LIGHTING TECHNIQUES © 2011 TradeSecretCards.com
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Strobe w/ Grid
Strobe w/ Grid Strobe w/ Grid
JE R E M E Y B A R R E T T
Beauty Dish
Soft
box. So how does he get such a soft light? A 22-inch beauty dish, that’s how. Pop a decent beauty dish nice and close to your model and you’ll get that pretty, soft light, too. Jeremey then brings in three more strobes, each with a grid. By restricting the light with grids, Jeremey gets that sculpted edge along the model’s face as well as that circular glow on the background.
Photo © Jeremey L. Barrett
J E R E M E Y B A R R E T T ’ S I M A G E titled “Soft” doesn’t actually use a soft
EXPERT LIGHTING TECHNIQUES © 2011 TradeSecretCards.com
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Paper Clip in a Wind Tunnel
Water-Filled Cast Iron Pan
P A P E R C L I P I N a Wind Tunnel is another clever example of brains over brawn. Jeff lit this shot with one strobed softbox. But in this case it’s not the light that counts so much as the removal of light. By placing a set of window blinds between his subject and the softbox, Jeff created the graphic lines that twist as their reflection rides the curves created by the paper clip dipping along the water’s surface.
Blinds
Softbox
Photo © Jeff Davis
JE F F D AV I S
EXPERT LIGHTING TECHNIQUES
Flash
SE A N O . S . BA R LE Y
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Umbrella
Photo © Sean O.S. Barley
I F Y O U A R E going to title a self-portrait “Grit,” you’re going to have to deliver a gritty look. Sean Barley brings that grit to his image with a single flash into an umbrella camera left. The side angle of the light divides the lines of the face mask into sharp highlight and shadow areas, creating that eye-catching pattern. More importantly, by raking the light across his face at an angle, the skin texture becomes sharply exaggerated, dramatically adding to the intensity of the image.
sosb.net
Grit
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MARTIJN KOEVOETS Flash
W H O S A Y S Y O U need a light stand to shoot off-camera flash? Martijn Koevoets shot this car with the sun coming in from camera right. Then he added an off camera flash coming from camera left to bring the back of the car out from the shadows. Only he didn’t use a light stand for the flash. He asked the car’s driver to hold it. More brains = less gear. Don’t let a lack of photo gear stop you from getting the shot you want.
Sun Photo © Martijn Koevoets MartijnFoto.nl
Audi TT 3.2 Quattro S-Tronic
EXPERT LIGHTING TECHNIQUES Side View Flash
Shipping Tube
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Camera
DAVE H O F F M A NN
Flash w/ Snoot
D A V E H O F F M A N N U S E D a shipping tube to deliver a photograph that pops. To create this dramatic image Dave fired one flash straight down through a 15-inch cardboard shipping tube, creating a nice crisp spotlight feel on the basketball. This created a contrast from the hard light that put the lower end of the ball into near darkness, so Dave brought it back up by throwing a touch of fill at the bottom half of the ball from a snooted strobe low and upfront, so he wouldn’t lose that spotlight effect.
Photo © Dave Hoffmann
Basketball
EXPERT LIGHTING TECHNIQUES Bounce Card
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Bounce Card
Flash
M R . M A T T H E W G . Monroe turned his boredom with the typical product shot into inspiration for the “The Magic Floating Organic Carrot.” By bringing the carrot away from the background and using a short depth of field, Matthew keeps your eye where he wants it. Just one flash lights the scene. Aimed into a softbox camera right, the light spreads out to hit the bounce cards and a piece of foil. The foil helps bring some snap to the bottom rim of the orange veggie by changing the quality of the light.
Photo © Matthew G. Monroe
Magic Floating Organic Carrot
Softbox
matthewgmonroe.com
Foil
MATTHEW G. MONROE
EXPERT LIGHTING TECHNIQUES
Flash
Flash
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Softbox
EVAN C AT E
W H E N E V A N C A T E risks life and limb by standing his subject over him on a piece of Plexiglass, he makes sure the lighting will pay off. For “Calm Before The Storm” he used a small D.I.Y. softbox camera left to help overpower the ambient light. Then he clamped a bare flash high up on a ladder for a touch of rim light. A little help from Mother Nature’s cloud cover adds the finishing touch. It’s lighting anyone can try, but please DON’T suspend your subjects above you without the help of trained professionals.
Photo © Evan Cate
Calm Before The Storm
EXPERT LIGHTING TECHNIQUES
Softbox
Strobe
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Reflector on Floor
LU K E C OP P I N G
PC Cord to Softbox
L U K E C O P P I N G ’ S P O R T R A I T titled “Marie” uses a softbox high up to camera left triggered by a PC/sync cord. Luke lights the background with a strobe triggered via an optical slave. A silver reflector at the model’s feet completes the package by reflecting the light from the softbox back up to add dimension to the model’s jawline. Sometimes a little bounce can add the perfect touch. Plus, reflectors never run out of batteries.
Photo © Luke Copping
Marie
EXPERT LIGHTING TECHNIQUES Flash
Fluorescent Lights
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T A K E O N E G L O O M Y British car park, a Goth-clad model, a photographer
with an eye for composition, and a flash with a CTO gel and you’ve got the makings of one eye-catching photo. For “Isolate,” Danny Pack set his camera’s color balance to the warm side of tungsten and used the CTO gel on the flash to help with the color cast. By lining the light up just right, Danny gives it the effect of a “practical light” or light that closely resembles real life. That’s just how the big shots at the movie studios do it, too.
Photo © Danny Pack
Isolate
dannypack.co.uk
DAN N Y PACK
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Side View
PAU L D U N CA N Umbrella Bounce In Your Stride
Flash Is Hidden Inside Umbrella
a stroll in the park into a clever, graphically interesting image. In his photograph “Umbrella Bounce In Your Stride,” Paul Duncan takes a funny idea and elevates it to a great photograph by powering the flash above the ambient and firing it into the underneath of his umbrella. Too much power and the idea would have fallen apart into an overexposed mess, too little and it wouldn’t draw the eye.
Photo © Paul Duncan
A N I N E X P E N S I V E F L A S H and wireless trigger was all it took to turn
Street Lamp Wall
Flash
JON AT H A N B AGBY
Flash
One Subject w/ 1 Flash Popped 3 times
Untitled O N E L O N G E X P O S U R E and a cheap flash are all Jonathan Bagby needed to create this interesting image. No, those silhouettes aren’t painted on the wall. Jonathan locked the shutter open on his camera. Then he fired the flash into the wall with his body between camera and light, creating that perfect cut out. Three poses. Three pops of the flash. The trick to this technique is the object you want to splatter your silhouette across needs to be as close to black as you can get it before you start.
Flash
Long Exposure
JonathanBagby.com
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EXPERT LIGHTING TECHNIQUES
Photo © Jonathan Bagby
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Blue Gel
ST E V E S H A R P Loaded S T E V E S H A R P L O C K E D his shutter open for six minutes to capture his image “Loaded.” Six minutes not only nailed the sky’s beautiful colors, but also gave him time to pop his flash off several times as he ran around the truck. He even had time to sneak a blue gel over the flash when he lit the cab section. The low camera angle and wide lens complete the package, bringing the old clunker back to life in a cool and eerie way.
1 Flash Popped 5 Times
Long Exposure
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EXPERT LIGHTING TECHNIQUES
Photo © Steve Sharp stevesharpphotography.com
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Flash Side View
JOSH UA S T E I N K E Yellow Pepper W I L L P H O T O G R A P H E R S S T O P at nothing to get the shot? Joshua Steinke cut open this defenseless pepper in order to light it from the inside with flash shot through a snoot made from tinfoil. Another flash shot through a snoot made from a breakfast cereal box lights the stem from the outside left. Illuminating it from the inside, the pepper acts as its own gobo, keeping the light from polluting the shadowy creases above and creating a wonderfully three-dimensional image.
Foil Snoot
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EXPERT LIGHTING TECHNIQUES
Flash Photo © Joshua Steinke IFLPhoto.com
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EXPERT LIGHTING TECHNIQUES
Flash
PA B L O A R E L L A N O MA R CE L O
Shoot-Through Umbrella
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Side View
O N E S M A L L F L A S H and a shoot-through umbrella was all the gear it
took to get “Pinhole” looking just the way Pablo wanted it. He moved the umbrella up close enough to the needle to create a large white reflection and a ton of soft light. Pablo borrowed a macro extension tube from his “broin-law” so he could focus in nice and close, creating an abstract from reality and very cool-looking graphic image without the need for a complicated or expensive light setup.
Photo © Pablo Arellano Marcelo
Pinhole
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PET E R KR E M ZA R
Octabox
W H A T ’ S T H E F I R S T thing you think of when you see two Slovenian girls dressed only in their underwear hanging out at a bar? Seven-foot octa-box. Right? That’s what Peter Kremzar was thinking when he set up this eye-catching portrait. Peter took the giant, rounded softbox and put it on axis with the camera but slightly above, bathing the models in supersoft light. The close proximity of light to subject created the dramatic dropoff from light to dark both on the subjects and the background.
Photo © Peter Kremzar
Untitled
EXPERT LIGHTING TECHNIQUES Flash w/ Snoot
Flash w/ Grid
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A D A M B E N JA M I N JOH N S M I R N I O S
Long Exposure
Pondering Control I T ' S T H E T H O U G H T that counts. Adam Benjamin and John Smirnios wanted to put their newly acquired Strobist skills to use. Keeping the subject a fair distance from the background gave them the black backdrop they were after. Then they built the light up on Adam with a flash from the front through a D.I.Y. cardboard grid and a snooted flash from the back for separation. They left the shutter open long enough for John to “paint” in the curious circle overhead with an LED flashlight, and a great image was born.
Photo © Adam Benjamin and John Smirnios
Flashlight
EXPERT LIGHTING TECHNIQUES
The Second Flash Is Fired Into a Large Bounce Card (not shown) Above Spoon
Flash
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Egg and Spoon
sgrayphoto.co.uk
C O M P L I C A T E D L I G H T S E T U P ? Nope. This image uses just two flashes: one fired through a small piece of frosted Plexi to create the soft light that wraps around the eggs, the other bounced off a large white card above the spoon to give it that mirrored look. It seems the most complicated part of making the image was getting the eggs to stand up without seeing the egg carton. Samuel’s solution? He tossed the carton and stood the eggs in a baking dish filled with sand.
Photo © Samuel Gray Photography
Flash
SA M UE L GR AY
Plexiglass
EXPERT LIGHTING TECHNIQUES © 2011 TradeSecretCards.com
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Strip Light
Gobos
Flash w/ Grid
NORMAN MONTIFAR
W H O W O U L D T R A S H a perfectly good fork just to make a perfectly interesting photograph? Norman Montifar, that’s who. By bending and twisting the fork for his image “The Petrified Diner” he implied a story, a life the fork lived before the image was shot. To light it he used a D.I.Y. strip light and a few gobos to get his desired reflection on the fork. Then he backlit the other forks with a gridded second flash, creating the long shadows that add to the drama of the brutalized cutlery.
Photo © Norman Montifar
The Petrified Diner
EXPERT LIGHTING TECHNIQUES
Flash
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DAN N Y N G A N Practicing My RunningOver-Water Skills
idea to light. The idea? He wanted it to look like he was running over water. To achieve this he used a circular polarizer to bring out the clouds and knock the reflection down on the water. Then he set up a low camera angle to keep the ground from view. But the most important part of this kind of shot has to be the timing it takes to capture a self-portrait at just the right moment. Yep, it’s a self-portrait. Pretty tricky.
Photo © Danny Ngan
J U S T A S I N G L E bare flash at one-quarter power brought Danny Ngan’s
EXPERT LIGHTING TECHNIQUES Side View
Softbox
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Green Gel
JOSHUA TARGOWNIK
Flash
Untitled
used two strobes. One strobe lit the broccoli from directly above with a 15x15-inch softbox, large from the broccoli’s point of view. The second strobe gets a green gel and a little gobo action before it is aimed at a white curtain to create the complementary background. Together the contrast, color, and texture create an image that looks as good on a wall as it would on a plate. Better even.
Photo © Joshua Targownik
T O B R I N G O U T the beauty of a lonely broccoli crown, Joshua Targownik
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Second Flash Is Hidden Inside Lampshade
The Reading Lamp I N S P I R E D B Y P A U L Duncan’s “Umbrella In The Field” photograph, John Sumrow took it indoors and put a lampshade on his head. To capture this comic self-portrait John bounced a flash off the ceiling to create some fill light. But the money for this image is under the lampshade: a flash tied to his head with a ball bungie and diffused with a coffee filter. Clever or crazy? John said the ball bungie took a few hairs with it when he took it off, but it was worth it. I think you’ll agree.
Photo © John Sumrow johnsumrow.com
JOH N S U M R OW
Flash Bounced Off Ceiling