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1st Annual Steve Dantzig Outdoor Photo Contest (1 viewing) (1) Guest
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TOPIC: 1st Annual Steve Dantzig Outdoor Photo Contest
#2629
coastalfog (Admin)
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1st Annual Steve Dantzig Outdoor Photo Contest 1 Year, 4 Months ago Karma: 0  
Keep em coming... looking good everyone.

Cris...
 
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#2630
jensmith71 (User)
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1st Annual Steve Dantzig Outdoor Photo Contest 1 Year, 4 Months ago Karma: 0  
My entry is from Memorial Day. Setting was 1 pm in the afternoon (12:52pm to be exact), clear, sunny skies with Mississippi River in the background. Sun was to right of subject (left in frame), high in the sky and starting to fall on his right cheek.

Before image was taken with camera on "P" setting and AWB.

For after image: I used my Sekonic L-358 on ambient light setting. Meter reading was ISO 100, 1/125 and f/4.0. Because of reflection off of water I had to stop down my lens to f/8 to get detail in the background. Used ETTL to achieve the fill on the face with the Lumiquest Big Bounce. That's it. Oh - and I used my grey card to custom WB.

Enjoy!
 
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#2634
SteveDantzig (Moderator)
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1st Annual Steve Dantzig Outdoor Photo Contest 1 Year, 4 Months ago Karma: 0  
Thanks Jodi--just a reminder: the rules clearly state that the photographer's copyright information or logo needs to be in the photographs. Please repost any images that do not contain this information.
 
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Aloha,

Steve

_____________________________________________
http://www.dantzigphotography.com/
Softbox Lighting Techniques for Professional Photographers
Master Lighting Techniques for Outdoor and Location Digital Portrait
Photography
Lighting Techniques for Fashion and Glamour Photography
NOW Available:
Order your personally signed copy HERE:
http://www.dantzigphotography.com/Bookstore.htm
Visit my "ASK STEVE" Forum at:
http://www.prophotoresource.com
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#2655
bodstrup (User)
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1st Annual Steve Dantzig Outdoor Photo Contest 1 Year, 4 Months ago Karma: 0  
Here is my entry - just in time:

Scene 1: Very high contrast, clear sunny day in the garden

I placed my models in the shade of a large pine tree with the sunlit garden in the background and fired a shot in Auto mode. The result was predictable, the light on the faces are too dim and flat, the highlights are blown and the foilage looks fluorescent:

http://www.prophotoresource.com/gallery/p17_sectionid/16/p17_imageid/183
f5.0 1/60 ISO 100

I then activated my Bowens 500ws strobe fitted with a 100cm Lastolite Umbrella Softbox. As the sunny area metered 1/160 at f11, I set my strobe to give f11 under the chin of the model

http://www.prophotoresource.com/gallery/p17_sectionid/16/p17_imageid/184

The result is much improved, rich saturated colors in the background, blue sky and a warm light on the models.

The warm light is cause partly by setting the camera white balance on flash while using a softbox that reduces the color temperature with about 800K

Scene II - The Beach

Next, I decided to go to the beach to look for another background.

Arriving late in the early evening, I found that the sun was low in the sky and casting a huge reflection on the surface of the quite calm water. Shooting in the direction of the sun was not desireable

About 45 degrees from the sun (of the North - West facing beach), the sky was a uniform light blue with a slight white haze low over the horizon. No nice fluffy clouds to add interest.

I decided to turn 180 degrees and use the nicely illuminated forrest behind the beach as a backdrop. With the sun low, the forrest and dunes get a nice textured look and the light is obviously warmer than at noon.

With a still strong sun in the background argumented by a wide and strong water surface reflection there were lots of light on the background, and placing my model in direct sunlight would cast some ugly shadows on her face - and a very long, unattractive shadow from her body.

This pictures gives an impression of the conditions.
http://www.prophotoresource.com/gallery/p17_sectionid/16/p17_imageid/178


Rather than attempting to balance a small diffuser in my left hand taking pictures with my right, I looked for natural shade and found it behind a long boathouse.

I placed my model on a small dune close to the boathouse making sure that her entire body was in shade and took the first picture in aperature mode with an exposure compensation of -1/3 stop to reduce the risk of over exposure:

The dune had some pretty flowers adding some color to the picture, but more importantly, effectively reduced the visible shaded area to a few feet behind the model. This was important for the following flash shot.

http://www.prophotoresource.com/gallery/p17_sectionid/16/p17_imageid/179
1/80 at F 8.0.

The image did not turn out too bad, the low sun had a lot less power than at noon (where there would be no shade here anyway). There are no blown highlights in the background or sky, but I don't like the contrast and low saturation. The light on the face of my model is too flat too.

I then set up a 500WS Bowens strobe fitted with an umbrella softbox - placed a little more than 2 meters from the model, on the axis towards the sun.

The sunny background metered f9.0 at 1/160 (ISO 100). I set the strobe to give f9.0 under the chin of my model at took the second shot:

http://www.prophotoresource.com/gallery/p17_sectionid/16/p17_imageid/180

The result was much better. The flash gave me a perfect exposure of my model and balanced the visible part of the shade with the background light.

Had I placed the model on a flat area, there would have been a much longer shaded area behind her, out of reach of the flash. Moving her back towards the end of the shade would have put her face in direct sunlight.

Finally, I added a bit of saturation in Lightroom before exporting the final image:

http://www.prophotoresource.com/gallery/p17_sectionid/16/p17_imageid/181

I was delighted to see that the EOS 5D did handle the shot in Aperature mode with no flash so well, having enough dynamic range to cover both shade and highlights.

My final observation: You don't always need an expensive, pro strobe set with light modifiers - at close range, the 5D + 580ex handles fill flash very well.

The last image of my daughter on the beach - with her face in direct (evening) sunlight shows no bad shadows or specular highlights:

http://www.prophotoresource.com/gallery/p17_sectionid/16/p17_imageid/185
1/400 f8.0 ISO 100, Exposure Compensation -2/3


Regards
Michael B. Hansen
 
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#2657
Rosemary R (User)
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1st Annual Steve Dantzig Outdoor Photo Contest 1 Year, 4 Months ago Karma: 0  
StephenDantzig:
Sorry Rosemary,

I just saw your post. How'd it go?


Steve,

I did great but I see from the rules that I need model releases and since this was a school outing and there are dozens of little unreleased models, I'll back away from the contest.
 
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#2684
SteveDantzig (Moderator)
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1st Annual Steve Dantzig Outdoor Photo Contest 1 Year, 3 Months ago Karma: 0  
Hi Michael,

Yes photographing young children can be a challenge--and I hold the most respect for those of you who can do it so well! You are also correct that green reflects [and ironically--absorbs] much more than we realize. Your calculations for the "Sunny 16 rule" were spot on. I don't use ETTL...can you explain what yuo did? Did you set you flash to a certain output, or does the camera control that when you set the exposures?

I understand about having to shoot fast with kids--but from my perspective, I would have liked to have seen a little softer light for her, but the overall efffect is much better--deeper skies and less green skin tones are always a good combination! Very good example of setting your foregroundto match the background.

bodstrup:
This is hardly competition worthy, but I like to get a bit of life here, so this is my first entry:

I was playing around with my daughter Sunday, enjoying the warm sun. I had my camera + a Canon 580 Speedlite with me, and decided to to a quick comparison between a typical snapshot on auto - and a shot with a few adjustments. I was actually quite suprised by on of the differences:



The blown highlights in both her skin and the sky is expected, but look at her skin tone and eyes... The bright green grass was a quite effective reflector. It is not quite obvious in the scaled down picture above, but she is green!

The camera selected 1/60 at F8.0 in AV mode. (ISO 400)

I then changed to manual, used the good old Sunny 16 rule (here 1/200 F8 ISO 400 with a 2 stop polarizer mounted) and turned on the flash:



Even though she did not want to pose, the difference is obvious; a much more plesant image. With a kid this size, constantly moving about, there is no time for metering and manual flash exposure, so the ETTL is an appropriate choice here. The flash was fired directly forward, no diffusion of any kind.

What I like about this is the fact that it only required a few seconds of calculation and a change of camera settings, something that can be achieved by most cameras.

Regards
Michael
 
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Aloha,

Steve

_____________________________________________
http://www.dantzigphotography.com/
Softbox Lighting Techniques for Professional Photographers
Master Lighting Techniques for Outdoor and Location Digital Portrait
Photography
Lighting Techniques for Fashion and Glamour Photography
NOW Available:
Order your personally signed copy HERE:
http://www.dantzigphotography.com/Bookstore.htm
Visit my "ASK STEVE" Forum at:
http://www.prophotoresource.com
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